With an estimated annual birth rate of 3.5%, one of the highest in the world, Kenya’s population is expected to triple by the year 2020. This rate of population growth poses particular problems for Kenya, given the limited availability of arable land. Only 18% of Kenya’s land can support agriculture without irrigation. These regions are now generally overpopulated. This population growth rate reflects, an increasing birth rate with a reduced death rate, particularly infant mortality, resulting from improved standards of nutrition and hygiene. The Luhya in particular are struggling to maintain their language and traditions due to encroaching modernity and intermingling with outside groups. However, the Luhya are among those tribes that actively educate their young people about their tribe's culture and traditions
The luhya dress just like Kenyans, they wear locally manufactured and imported dresses, pants, shirts and many more. Traditional clothing is usually worn during special occasions and only by certain people. In cultural dances, performers can put on feathered hats and skirts made of sisal strands. For the luhya groups that still maintain the traditional circumcision rites. During war even luhyas used to paint themselves with frightening colors and wore frightening apparel such as horns. Women never wear pants because if they wear them they are considered to be abnormal. It is particularly inappropriate for women to wear pant or a short skirt or dress in the presence of their father-in-law. Earrings, necklaces and bangles bracelets are commonly worn by women. Luhya men used to wear the skin of a goat or a calf. It was passed under one armpit and fastened with a strap over the opposite shoulder. The skin hung in this position, it was not sufficient enough to cover the whole body; what th
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