The Pygmies' Plight
A correspondent who chronicled their lives in central African rain forests returns a decade later and is shocked by what he finds
- By Paul Raffaele
- Smithsonian magazine, December 2008, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 5)
About 30 Batwa sat dull-eyed outside their huts. The smallest adult Pygmy I'd ever seen strode toward me, introduced himself as Nzito and told me that he was "king of the Pygmies here." This, too, surprised me; traditionally, Pygmy households are autonomous, though they cooperate on endeavors such as hunts. (Greer later said that villages usually must coerce individuals into leadership roles.)
Nzito said his people had lived in the rain forest until 1993, when Ugandan "President Museveni forced us from our forests and never gave us compensation or new land. He made us live next to the Bantu on borrowed land."
His clan looked well fed, and Nzito said they regularly eat pork, fish and beef purchased from the nearby market. When I asked how they earn money, he led me to a field behind the huts. It was packed with scores of what looked like marijuana plants. "We use it ourselves and sell it to the Bantu," Nzito said.
The sale and use of marijuana in Uganda is punishable with stiff prison terms, and yet "the police never bother us," Nzito said. "We do what we want without their interference. I think they're afraid we'll cast magic spells on them."
Government officials rarely bring charges against the Batwa generally "because they say they're not like other people and so they're not subject to the law," Penninah Zaninka of the United Organisation for Batwa Development in Uganda, another nongovernmental group, told me later in a meeting in Kampala, the national capital. However, Mubiru Vincent said his group is working to prevent marijuana cultivation.
Because national parks were established in the forests where Nzito and his people used to reside, they cannot live there. "We're training the Batwa how to involve themselves in the nation's political and socioeconomic affairs," Zaninka said, "and basic matters such as hygiene, nutrition, how to get ID cards, grow crops, vote, cook Bantu food, save money and for their children to go to school."
In other words, to become little Bantu, I suggested. Zaninka nodded. "Yes, it's terrible," she said, "but it's the only way they can survive."
The Pygmies also face diseases ranging from malaria and cholera to Ebola, the often fatal virus that causes uncontrollable bleeding from every orifice. While I was with the Batwa, an outbreak of the disease in nearby villages killed more than three dozen people. When I asked Nzito if he knew that people nearby were dying of Ebola, he shook his head. "What's Ebola?" he asked.
Cameroon is home to about 40,000 Baka Pygmies, or about one-fifth of Africa's Pygmy population, according to the London-based group Survival International. In Yaoundé, the nation's capital, Samuel Nnah, who directs Pygmy aid programs for a nongovernmental organization called the Centre for Environment and Development (CED), tells me he struggles against a federal government that allows timber companies to log Cameroon's rain forests, driving the Pygmies out. "The Pygmies have to beg land from the Bantu owners, who then claim they own the Baka," Nnah says.
On the road last February from Yaoundé to Djoum, a ramshackle town near Cameroon's southern border, I pass more than a hundred timber trucks, each bearing four or five huge tree trunks to the port of Douala. (Cameroon's 1,000-franc note, worth about $2, bears an engraving of a forklift carrying a huge tree trunk toward a truck.) At Djoum, the CED's provincial coordinator, Joseph Mougou, says he's battling for the human rights of 3,000 Baka who live in 64 villages. "Starting in 1994, the government has forced the Baka from their homes in the primary forest, designating it national parks, but the Baka are allowed to hunt in the secondary forest, mostly rat moles, bush pigs and duiker," Mougou says. "But that's where the government also allows the timber companies free rein to log, and that's destroying the forests."
Forty miles beyond Djoum along a dirt track, passing scores of fully loaded timber trucks, I reach Nkondu, a Pygmy village consisting of about 15 mud huts. Richard Awi, the chief, welcomes me and tells me that the villagers, each carrying empty cane backpacks, are about to leave to forage in the forest. He says that the older children attend a boarding school, but the infants go to the village preschool. "They'll join us later today," anthropologist Mesumbe says.
"Goni! Goni! Goni bule!" Awi shouts. "Let's go to the forest!"
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Comments (11)
This article was very informative. It is sad that as an American I see how wasteful we can be, and to think of how conservative these indigenous people are. When will enough be enough?
Posted by Cynthia Bowers on April 9,2013 | 09:56 AM
I found this information one of the best sites to learn about native tripes.
Posted by Blake on March 12,2013 | 01:28 PM
It's ashame People of Africa are forever bullied. If not by white people it's by Africans themselves. It's probably best to stay out of Africa if good is not going to become of such a disastrous situation. We can do bad by ourselves. I watched the movie Roots therefore I'm not going to be quick to pass judgement on any of the African people. Jehovah bless those people. Send some sincere Jehovah's witnesses out to help. Please reveal who the real culprits are.
Posted by Chanel Life on January 10,2013 | 03:51 AM
love I have read, thank you for the post!
Posted by Lisa_Mia on September 28,2012 | 10:04 PM
I've personally trekked over 600 miles through the Congo river basin on a solo expedition. I lived and worked with the Baka pygmies. Thank you for this intriguing and perfectly accurate article on this unique culture.
Posted by Carson ward on December 1,2011 | 10:36 PM
I have a bow, quiver, and arrows plus other tools from a Pygmy group in Central Africa. It was purchased in the 1960s and was said to be very old at that time. I would like to send pics so that possibly you could give me some info on them. They were obviously used by the Pygmy who made and originally own it. Thank you, I hope you can help me.
Posted by Wesley Smith on July 1,2011 | 09:38 PM
what do they eat ??
Posted by marbella on May 18,2011 | 11:52 AM
that is a good story
Posted by james miller on May 10,2011 | 01:12 PM
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 | 08:13 AM
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 | 05:40 PM
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 | 11:50 PM