The majority of Makaa are
subsistence farmers. Their settlements typically follow existing roads, making the typical village a linear string of houses facing the road and backed by forest. Fields are usually very small and planted in clearings cut out of the forest with axes and machetes and then burned. Major crops include
manioc,
plantains, and
maize, with
bananas,
cocoyams,
groundnuts, and various fruits raised in smaller quantities.
Livestock are typically small animals that may be left to roam unattended, such as
goats,
sheep,
pigs, and
chickens. A smaller number of Maka have obtained financial success in the
cocoa and
coffee plantations of Cameroon's forest region.
Hunting is another common pursuit, especially in the smaller villages.
Traps are the primary tool employed, though
firearms are increasingly used today.
Bushmeat caught in this way is becoming an important, if unsustainable, source of income for many people. The traditional Maka house is a rectangular structure made of mud bricks held together by a bamboo frame. The A-shaped roof is covered in
raffia palm leaves, though tin or aluminium roofing is today becoming more common. Wealthier Maka and those living in larger villages and towns often live in modern concrete-block houses, as well. Social organisation begins with the family, which consists of a man, his wife or wives, and his children. Several related families often live together to form a village. At the next level are several villages that claim common ancestry to form a
clan. In the past, these clan identities were of the utmost importance, determining one's friends, lineage, and potential spouses. This clan identity is much weaker today, however. Each clan is headed by a
chief, though the modern chiefs are little more than figureheads. The vast majority of Maka practice at least nominal
Christianity with a fairly even split between
Catholicism and
Protestantism. Vestiges of their native
animism still persist, however, especially in the realm of
traditional medicine. Folk
superstitions also remain, such as belief in
witchcraft. ==Notes==