(Page 3 of 5)
I left Dzanga-Sangha reluctantly, happy that I'd glimpsed the Pygmies' way of life but wondering what the future held for them.
Upon my return to the Central African Republic six years later, I found that Bayaka culture had collapsed. Wasse and many of his friends had clearly become alcoholics, drinking a rotgut wine made from fermented palm sap. Outside their hut, Jandu sat with her three children, their stomachs bloated from malnutrition. A local doctor would tell me that Pygmy children typically suffer from many ailments, most commonly ear and chest infections caused by lack of protein. At Mossapola I saw many kids trying to walk on the edges of their soles or heels—trying not to put pressure on spots where chiggers, tiny bug larvae that thrive in the loose soil, had attached themselves.
Wasse gave me a wistful welcoming smile and then suggested we go to the nearby village of Bayanga for palm wine. It was midmorning. At the local bar, a tumbledown shack, several half-sozzled Bantu and Pygmy men greeted him warmly. When I asked when we could go hunting, Wasse sheepishly confided that he had sold his net and bow and arrows long ago. Many Pygmy men there had done the same to get money for palm wine, Bienvenu, my translator again on this trip, would tell me later.
So how do the children get meat to eat? Bienvenu shrugged. "They rarely get to eat meat anymore," he said. "Wasse and Jandu earn a little money from odd jobs, but he mostly spends it on palm wine." The family's daily meals consist mostly of cassava root, which fills the stomach but doesn't provide protein.
When I asked Wasse why he stopped hunting, he shrugged. "When you were here before, the jungle was full of animals," he said. "But the Bantu poachers have plundered the jungle."
Pygmy populations across the Congo Basin suffer "appalling socio-economic conditions and the lack of civil and land rights," according to a recent study conducted for the London-based Rainforest Foundation. They have been pushed from their forests and forced into settlements on Bantu lands, the study says, by eviction from newly established national parks and other protected areas, extensive logging in Cameroon and Congo and continued warfare between government and rebel troops in Congo.
Time and again on this visit, I encountered tales of Bantu prejudice against Pygmies, even among the educated. On my first trip to Mossapola, I had asked Bienvenu if he'd marry a Pygmy woman. "Never," he growled. "I'm not so stupid. They are bambinga, not truly humans, they have no civilization."
This belief that Pygmies are less than human is common across equatorial Africa. They "are marginalized by the Bantu," says David Greer, an American primatologist who lived with Pygmies in the Central Africa Republic for nearly a decade. "All the serious village or city leaders are Bantu, and they usually side with other Bantu" in any dispute involving Pygmies.
The Ruwenzori Mountains, also known as the Mountains of the Moon, straddle the Equator to form part of the border between Uganda and Congo. The forests here have long been home to the Batwa, at 80,000 the largest Pygmy tribe; they are also found in Rwanda and Burundi. I visited them this past February.
On the Uganda side of the border, our Land Cruiser trundled over a dirt road high along the flanks of the steep foothills. The hills have long been stripped of trees, but their slopes plunge to verdant valleys—a vast rain forest set aside as a national park.
Several hours from Fort Portal, the nearest large population center, we stopped at a Bantu town swarming with people. It was market day, and scores of vendors had spread out their wares—goat carcasses, sarongs, soap, mirrors, scissors. My guide, John Nantume, pointed to a huddle of mud huts about 50 yards away and identified it as the local Pygmy village.
I was surprised that the Pygmies were living so close to their traditional enemies. Mubiru Vincent, of Rural Welfare Improvement for Development, a nongovernmental organization that promotes Batwa welfare, later explained that this group's displacement from the rain forest began in 1993, because of warfare between the Ugandan Army and a rebel group. His organization is now trying to resettle some of the Batwa on land they can farm.


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