Chok people


The Chok were a society that lived on the Elgeyo escarpment in Kenya.

Etymology

It is noted that the old men living in Pokot during the early 20th century were unanimous in declaring that;

Territory

Their territory was "on the Elgeyo Escarpment" and while they lived on the Elgeyo escarpment the Kerio Valley was occupied by the Sambur. "..If ever the Suk descended from their fastness, they were raided and harried by this tribe".

Way of life

Residence

Von Hönnel writing following his journey to Lake Turkana, remarked on the residences of the Suk, using much the same terms that other writers would make use of;

Agriculture

Beech noted that the Chok were a "purely agricultural people, cultivating millet and eleusine grain grown in the cold air of the summit and possibly a little tobacco." The "millet grown on the fertile and well watered flats at the base of the Elgeyo escarpment, and watered by means of irrigation, while eleusine grain grown high upon the hill sides and was dependent on rain". The irrigation system as Beech noted, "is most ingenious, and its original construction must have required a vast amount of toil and patience". MacDonald who came across an agricultural 'Suk' village during the last decade of the nineteenth century described a similar subsistence pattern.
This way of life was captured in family traditions of a Pokot man named Dounguria.

Industries

The Chok had two notable industries, pottery and iron-smithing, the former performed by women and the latter by men.
The significance of the Chok smithing industry is illustrated in a tradition captured among the Nandi in the early 20th century. There the Uasin Gishu smiths said in regard to their ancestors arrival in Nandi; that a man named Arap Sutek had been the only smith in the country then but that after the Uasin Gishu Maasai quit their homes and split up in different directions, some of those who wandered into Nandi were hospitably received by Arap Sutek and by the early 20th century every clan had a smith.
There was also a sword in use among the Nandi by then known as rotuet-ap-chok which was being manufactured alongside the previous rotuet that had been made in Nandi. It is possible though not clear that the Chok had exported these weapons prior to this time.

Trade

The Chok obtained donkeys from the Turkana and it would appear they took a number with them to Nandi but were obliged to get rid of them as it was felt that they would spoil the grazing for cattle.

Culture

The most noted item of their culture was the Chok from which they got their name. Beech notes that as of 1911 it was only women he saw carrying these swords "...on their way to the grain fields".

Marriage

A custom unique to the Chok was the payment of dowry in palm wine or honey.

External relations

Loikop people

Samburu traditions describe their relationship with the Pokot as one of inter-ethnic lang'ata i.e. a close yet circumspect bond best perceived as a friendship born as a resolution to past conflict.
The Samburu place the oath beyond living memory, and with many knowledgeable Samburu informants giving detailed oral history going back to at least the 1880s it is likely that this relationship was established with the Chok.
Certain traditions state that the oath was renewed around the time when the Merisho age-set were murran indicating a renewal of the oath following the assimilation of the Chok into Pokot identity.

Decline

The Chok were raided by the Laikipia Masai forcing some of them to flee to Kapukogh in Uganda.

Dispersal

Uasin Gishu Maasai

The Nandi smiths narrative identifies their ancestors who arrived from the Uasin Gishu plateau with a sword known as rotuet-ap-chok as the Uasin Gishu Maasai. Similarly immigrants from their neighboring community were known as the Segelai Maasai.

Assimilation & Expansion

Chok traditions recall their territorial expansion under their new identity, they remember that a time came when "... there arose a wizard among the Suk who prepared a charm in the form of a stick, which he placed in the Loikop cattle kraals, with the result that they all died."
After defeating the Loikop, a settlement was established at En-ginyang, likely by a group of Pokotozek. This event signified the establishment of the pastoral Chok, i.e. Pokot, community.
With the Pokot community established, a desire arose many Chok to adopt pastoralist culture. The aim and ambition of every agricultural Chok became to amass enough cattle to move into the Kerio Valley and join their pastoral kin. They achieved this through attaining cattle as the bride-price of their female relations or through adoption, in the latter case, poor Chok youth would be adopted by members of the emerging Pokot community primarily as herds-boys.
By the early 20th century, the Pokot community was expanding as many of the Chok joined their rank and by that time, many Pokot who were termed Suk by the colonial administrators did not recognize this name for their tribe.