Names of Zeus: Ngai

Ngai or Enkai is the representation of Zeus in much of the pantheon of the Kikuyu and certain other groups in modern day East Africa, including the Pastoralists named the Masaai. He is held to be the personification of the Sun, the Moon, the lightning and thunder, but is also synonymous with cows and the bull in symbolism.

SYMBOLISM OF NGAI

The word “Ngai” represents the word sky in the Maa language. In regard to Enkai, which is the Maa language of the Maasai people, this means "Supreme Being of the Skies". In the Massai cosmology, the earth and skies were held to be one, before being split into two. The Kikuyu peoples were separated by caste and their consumption: as warriors, the Maasai were given the right to herd and eat cattle, while the other groups resident in the region had to subsist off of farming grains and hunting.

Any pursuit other than a pastoral one was considered insulting to Ngai and profoundly demeaning. for the soil was sacred on account of its producing grass which fed the cattle which belonged to God. No Maasai was willing to toe the soil, even to bury the dead within it.

Due to the pastoral privileges the God meted out to them, the Maasai hold Ngai to be particularly important to cattle and bulls. These animals are held with reverence as they symbolically feel he expresses himself through them. The majority of Maasai rites are accompanied with copious beef-eating and milk consumption due to this symbolism.

As Ngai is a sky God, thunder became the interpretation of the movements of God. Lightning is Ngai’s weapon; he uses this to clear the ways in moving from one sacred place to another. One of his titles, “Mwene-Nyanga”, reflects this tendency, as it means Shining One.

Like many Bantu deities, he is androgynous and often represented in a feminine manner.

It is believed he resides fig trees where sacrifices are made to him at different times for different purposes, facing Mount Kenya.

THE ROLES OF NGAI

There are anthropomorphic aspects. The Kikuyu say that he lives in the sky or in the clouds. It is also said that he comes to earth from time to time to inspect it, bestow blessings and mete out punishment.

Whenever Ngai comes to the Kenyan people, he rests on Mount Kenya and four other sacred mountains, similarly to the Chinese idea of five sacred mountains. Ngai to the Kikuyu people created his home in the sky and on earth upon Kĩrĩ-Nyaga (Mount Kenya), the mountain of brightness, the second highest mountain in Africa, and to the Maasai, his dwelling place is the "Mountain of God", Ol Doinyo Lengai, located in northernmost Tanzania.

At birth, Ngai gives each man a guardian spirit to ward off danger and carry him away at the moment of death. The evil are carried off to a desert, while the good unsurprisingly go to a land of rich pastures and many cattle. Enkai's wife is Olapa, the Moon.

Engai has a dual nature: Engai Narok (Black God) representing benevolence, and Engai Na-nyokie (Red God) signifying wrath, emphasizing his role as a creator who sustains natural harmony, so he is separated into a red and black aspect. The black aspect of Ngai is considered to be benevolent, kind and useful, while the red aspect tends to be associated with rages and storms.

LAIBON

The Laiboni are the priests of the Maasai. They practice divination through using stones in the horn of a cow, typically regarded as a central way of communicating with divinity as in most Bantu groups. Like many priesthoods across the planet, the position is inherited.

Laibon priests interpret messages and also function as medicine men, to the point where most medical prognostics are combined with their advice well into the era of Christianization and Islamization in Kenya.

Certain beliefs of the Maasai reflect the idea of the antediluvian flood and a prophet giving multiple commandments to them. It is unknown if this originated from direct enemy influence, Islamic influence or some sort of correspondence with Babylon and Egypt, both of which were known to interact with the East African coast strongly. Certain aspects of Maasai rituals point scholars toward the latter:

The dead man is laid upon his right side, with his head resting upon his hand, as though he were sleeping. A woman is laid in the same manner but on the left side. The face ia turned to the East or the West. This contracted form of burial was used in Canaan, also in Babylon, as it was in Egypt.
Journal in Kenya, C.C.L.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Journal in Kenya, C.C.L

Ngai, Encyclopedia of African Religion

Ngai and the Message of Life, Oxford Reference,

Ngai & Origins of the Agĩkũyũ of Kenya, The Aegis Institute

Engai, Google Arts and Culture

Maasai – Religion and Beliefs, bluegecko, Jens Finke

CREDIT:

Karnonnos [TG]

MWENE NYAGA (textual references to mountains, numerous suggestions, mythology)