Ethnic Cleansing and Human Evolution

March 7, 2008 RSS Feed Print

Please pardon my recent radio silence. I evidently haven't mastered the art of simultaneously blogging and reporting for print, and I've been occupied with the latter this week. That's why this blog hasn't been updated since I blogged, well, about breaking my radio silence. Since then, I've been hard at work on a story about light pollution, which I hope will be ready to showcase in this space within a few days. In the meantime, let's talk about ethnic conflict and human evolution. (Disclaimer: What follows is more scientific hypothesis than journalistic fact. I welcome any data that confirm or refute what I'm about to suggest.)

It's not often that calls for ethnic cleansing relate in any way to human evolution. But I think I found one in a discouraging but beautifully written article about the historical roots of Kenya's current problems. The article shows how long-simmering conflicts over land ownership underpin much of the post-election violence currently seething across Kenya.

The Washington Post's Stephanie McCrummen, reporting from conflict-wracked Elmenteita, Kenya, wrote:

The family of former president Daniel arap Moi is similarly flush with fertile land, including a vast swath near this Rift Valley town, where preelection local radio broadcasts urged "the people of the milk," a reference to the Kalenjin [tribe], to "clear the weed," the Kikuyu [a rival tribe], according to a recent report by the International Crisis Group.

Now, I don't know much about the Kalenjin or the Kikuyu, but I do know that the former have traditionally been pastoralists, or animal herders, and the latter, farmers. I also know that conflicts between animal herders and farmers are nearly as old as the firmament. (Just think of the allegory of Cain, the farmer, and Abel, the shepherd.)

I suspect there's a link between the metonyms the violence-inciting broadcaster used—"people of the milk" and "the weed"—and the social and genetic histories of the two tribes he or she was alluding to.

Around the world, many people (like virtually all other mammals) are unable to drink milk as adults. Lactose intolerance, in a sense, is nature's default state. But lactose tolerance has evolved in many groups of people whose ancestors have herded mammals for centuries. These people have had a long-standing evolutionary incentive, so to speak, to be able to drink milk throughout their lives. So it makes sense that the pastoralist Kalenjins drink milk.

And the "weeds"? Well, that sure sounds like an unsubtle—not to mention offensive—reference to the way the Kikuyus, like Adam and Eve, by the sweat of their brows, learned long ago to coax a living from the soil.

Tags:
Kenya,
evolution,
genocide

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This Kenyan ethnic conflict has been explicitly linked by the contending people themselves to "milk". What else could "people of the milk" mean, but people who by ancestry are lactose tolerant?

That's evolution. The use of dairy animals creates a new environment, and a mutation for adult lactose tolerance, which would have been useless before then and selected against, turns useful and confers a selective advantage. Natural selection then causes the fraction of the population carrying that genetic change to rocket from near zero, to near 100%. We see it has happened again and again, in Africa, India, and Europe. And where there are no dairy animals, there is little to no adult lactose tolerance: China (for the most part), other sections of Africa, and so on.

Doug Hensley of TX 11:39AM February 06, 2009

This is all very interesting but as one living at Elmenteita the situation is so much more complicated and urgent than one can imagine. Right now we need more long drops because the facilities are inadequate. There is a mobile medical unit that comes every 2 weeks but that is not enough. We are doing are best just to discover who s actually in need and those who are taking advantage of the stricken. The rains have begun and needs are ever more pressing and the demands are increasing. If anyone wants to really help then contact us and we will do our best to get the help to the people who are really in need.

Kathryn 10:35AM April 12, 2008

Actually Ben Herder has an intriguing, well not hypothesis, but still at the very least a meme. By explaining violence through linking land tenure to ethnic identity and way of life, he is following a path well troden.

Blut und Boden anyone?

The evolution bit is easier to understand, Kenya being the cradle of mankind and all that, hence 'we' are closer to nature and swing machetes in warfare as opposed to 'they' the rational ones who'd split the atom on top of people's heads to immolate them instead.

Entertaining enough, nothing to get too worked about, just good clean fun.

Mkenya pia 6:31AM March 16, 2008

Thinking Harder

This blog is the public workshop of U.S. News writer and editor Ben Harder. In articles published in the magazine, he has covered a range of sciences, including medicine, human behavior, prehistory, and evolution. Here, he can explore those and other scientific fields more fully and more informally than is possible in print. He'll share whatever seems noteworthy or potentially useful, and he invites readers to do the same.

WTOP Audio
On Feb. 24, 2008, Ben discussed the link between artificial light and cancer on WTOP radio. Listen to the interview at WTOP News. He again talked about light pollution on WTOP on March 22, exploring its environmental effects.

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