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3 votes
Which excerpt best justifies this conclusion?

The sky god is powerful, but can change from nurturing to vengeful depending on our behavior.
Sometimes Enkai is Enkai Narok, the Black God, happy with us and blanketing the sky with dark clouds that pour out rain to nourish the plains.
In these times, the sun grows incredibly hot until the earth dries up and becomes barren.
My father tells me that the eruption was so violent that it broke the earth away from the sky and flung Enkai and all of the cattle high up into the hea

2 Answers

6 votes

Answer:

Sometimes Enkai is Enkai Narok, the Black God, happy with us and blanketing the sky with dark clouds that pour out rain to nourish the plains.

Step-by-step explanation:

User Marko Savic
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2 votes

Answer: "Sometimes Enkai is Enkai Narok, the Black God, happy with us and blanketing the sky with dark clouds that pour out rain to nourish the plains."

Explanation:

In "The Beginnings of the Maasai" the myth of the Maasai people is told by Neiterkob's daughter to tell the readers about the origins of these people. The particular excerpt where the speaker talks of Enkai having different identities shows or tells how the weather changes. Enkai changes to Enkai Narok or the Black God. And when he's happy with the people, he covers the sky with dark clouds and provides rain to nourish the land.

User Pantelis Sopasakis
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4.2k points