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I first encountered Pygmies a decade ago, when I visited the Dzanga-Sangha Reserve in the Central African Republic, an impoverished nation in the Congo Basin, on assignment for Reader's Digest's international editions. The park lies about 200 miles southwest of the national capital, Bangui, along a dirt road hacked through the jungle. In good weather, the journey from Bangui takes 15 hours. When the rains come, it can take days.
We arrived at a village called Mossapola—20 beehive huts—shortly before dawn. Pygmy women in tattered sarongs squatted around several fires as they warmed water and cooked cassava. Most of the men were uncoiling large nets near the huts. About 100 Pygmies lived there.
Through William Bienvenu, my Bantu translator at the time, one of the Dzanga-Sangha Pygmies introduced himself as Wasse. When the translator told me Wasse was the greatest hunter in the Bayaka clan, his broad face broke into a smile. A woman walked down the slope and stood by him, and Wasse introduced her as his wife, Jandu. Like most Bayaka women, her front upper teeth had been carefully chipped (with a machete, my translator said) into points. "It makes me look beautiful for Wasse," Jandu explained.
Wasse had a coiled hunting net slung over his shoulder. He tugged at it, as if to get my attention. "We've talked enough," he said. "It's time to hunt."
A dozen Pygmy men and women bearing hunting nets piled into and on top of my Land Rover. About ten miles along a jungle track, Wasse ordered the driver to turn into the dense undergrowth. The Pygmies began shouting and chanting.
In a little while, we left the vehicle in search of the Pygmies' favorite food, mboloko, a small forest antelope also known as blue duiker. High overhead, chimpanzees scrambled from tree to tree, almost hidden in the foliage. As we climbed a slope thick with trees, Wasse raised an arm to signal a halt. Without a word the hunters swiftly set six vine nets into a semicircle across the hillside. Wooden toggles hooked onto saplings held the nets firm.
The Bayaka disappeared up the slope, and a few minutes later the jungle erupted in whoops, cries and yodels as they charged back down. A fleeing porcupine hurtled into one of the nets, and in a flash Jandu whacked it on the head with the blunt edge of a machete. Next a net stopped a terrified duiker, which Wasse stabbed with a shortened spear.
After about an hour, the Bayaka emerged carrying three duiker and the porcupine. Wasse said he sometimes hunted monkeys with a bow and poison arrows, but, he went on, "I prefer to hunt with Jandu and my friends." They would share the meat. When we reached the Land Rover, Jandu held up a duiker carcass and burst into song. The other women joined in, accompanying their singing with frenetic hand-clapping. The sound was extraordinary, a high-pitched medley of warbling and yodeling, each woman drifting in and out of the melody for the half-hour it took to return to Mossapola.
"Bayaka music is one of the hidden glories of mankind," Louis Sarno, an American musicologist who has lived with the Bayaka for more than a decade, would tell me later. "It's a very sophisticated form of full, rich-voiced singing based on pentatonic five-part harmonies. But you'd expect that, because music is at the heart of Bayaka life."
Drumming propelled their worship of the much-loved Ejengi, the most powerful of the forest spirits—good and evil—known as mokoondi. One day Wasse told me that the great spirit wanted to meet me, and so I joined more than a hundred Mossapola Pygmies as they gathered soon after dusk, beating drums and chanting. Suddenly there was a hush, and all eyes turned to the jungle. Emerging from the shadows were half a dozen Pygmy men accompanying a creature swathed from top to bottom in strips of russet-hued raffia. It had no features, no limbs, no face. "It's Ejengi," said Wasse, his voice trembling.
At first I was sure it was a Pygmy camouflaged in foliage, but as Ejengi glided across the darkened clearing, the drums beat louder and faster, and as the Pygmies' chanting grew more frenzied, I began to doubt my own eyes. As the spirit began to dance, its dense cloak rippled like water over rocks. The spirit was speechless, but its wishes were communicated by attendants. "Ejengi wants to know why you've come here," shouted a squat man well short of five feet. With Bienvenu translating, I answered that I had come to meet the great spirit.
Apparently persuaded that I was no threat, Ejengi began dancing again, flopping to the ground in a pile of raffia, then leaping up. The music thudded as the chanting gripped my mind, and I spun to the pounding rhythm, unaware of time's passing. As I left for my lodgings, at about 2 a.m., the chanting drifted into the trees until it melted into the sounds of the rain forest night.


Comments
A welcome article on the Pygmies of the Ituri Forrest. The last I had heard of them in print was that the government had armed them in an attempt to quell rebellion. Trucks hauled them to the "rebellion", they were let out of the trucks,they then disappeared into the headhigh grass never to be seen again. Question: Is there a reason for not offering a reference to Colin Turnbull,THE FOREST PEOPLE,Simon and Schuster, 1961???????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????? Fred
Posted by Fred Gibson on December 10,2008 | 08:50PM
I was intrigued with the article on the pygmies in Cameroon in the December issue of Smithsonian. I came in contact with the Negrito natives while stationed at Clark Air Base on the island of Luzon from 1960 until 1961. The tribe was given land on the base where they lived and carried out their native customs. Armed only with handmade bow and arrow they were a stealth deterent to anyone attempting to breach the perimeter of the base. Many a night one could observe a procession of torches carried by mourners as they proceeded up the mountain to bury their dead. As I was to learn these pygmies fought on the side of the allies during the occupation by the Japanes in the Phillippines during World War II. They would infiltrate Japanese camps at night while the men slept and slit the throat of every other Japanese soldier. I have often wondered what the plight of these people may have become after the eruption of the volcano on the island and the subsequent closing of Clark Air Base.
Posted by Edward J. Liberatore on December 12,2008 | 02:40PM
On September 21, 2009 my sister-in-law Elizabeth Whyte Webster, passed away. She was a missonary in the Congo 1955 through 1958. I had the honor of meeting Dr. Dibinga wa Said, who was a student of hers. He spoke eloquently at her funeral service about her tenure there. Through this association I have become aware of the plight of the these indigenous people of the Congo and am now involved with Dr. Dibinga and his mission with OBPO.
Posted by Marion P Ayers, EA on September 28,2009 | 05:13AM