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 5 of 5)
In midafternoon, about 20 children between the ages of 3 and 5 stream unaccompanied into the clearing where their parents are fashioning beehive huts. "Pygmies know the forest from a young age," Mesumbe says, adding that these children followed jungle paths to the clearing.
It is nearing dusk when the three Bantu make their threatening entry into the clearing, demanding that we all return to the roadside village. When the villagers defy Joseph Bikono, the Bantu chief demands 100,000 francs ($200) from me as a bribe to remain with the Pygmies. First I ask him for a receipt, which he provides, and then, with one eye on his machete, I refuse to give him the money. I tell him that he's committed a crime and I threaten to return to Djoum and report him to the police chief, with the receipt as evidence. Bikono's face falls, and the three Bantu shuffle away.
The Pygmies greet their departure with singing and dancing, and they continue almost until midnight. "The Pygmies are the world's most enthusiastic partygoers," David Greer would tell me later. "I've seen them sing and dance for days on end, stopping only for food and sleep."
Over the next three days, I accompany Awi and his clan deeper into the forest to hunt, fish and gather edible plants. In terms of their welfare, the Baka here seem to fit somewhere between the Bayaka of a decade ago in the Central African Republic and the Batwa I had just visited in Uganda. They've abandoned net hunting and put out snares like the Bantu to trap small prey.
Sometimes, Awi says, a Bantu will give them a gun and order them to shoot an elephant. Mesumbe tells me that hunting elephants is illegal in Cameroon and that guns are very rare. "But highly placed policemen and politicians work through village chiefs, giving guns to the Pygmies to kill forest elephants," he says. "They get high prices for the tusks, which are smuggled out to Japan and China." The Pygmies, Awi says, get a portion of the meat and a little cash.
The Baka here have clearly begun accepting Bantu ways. But they cling to the tradition of revering Ejengi. On my final night with them, as light leaches from the sky, women in the clearing chant a welcome to the great rain forest spirit. The men dance wildly to the thud of drums.
As among the Bayaka, no sooner has the sky darkened than Ejengi emerges from the gloom, accompanied by four clansmen. The spirit's raffia strips are ghostly white. It dances with the men for about an hour, and then four little boys are brought before it. Ejengi dances solemnly among them, letting its raffia strips brush their bodies. "Ejengi's touch fills them with power to brave the forest's dangers," Awi says.
Unlike in Mossapola, where Ejengi lent the occasion the exuberance of a nonstop dance party, this ritual seems more somber. Nearing dawn, five teenagers step forward and stand shoulder to shoulder; Ejengi pushes against each of them in turn, trying to knock them off their feet. "Ejengi is testing their power in the forest," Awi tells me. "We Baka face hard times, and our youngsters need all that power to survive as Pygmies." The five young men stand firm.
Later in the day at Djoum, I meet the province administrator, a Bantu named Frédéric Makene Tchalle. "The Pygmies are impossible to understand," he says. "How can they leave their village and tramp into the forest, leaving all their possessions for anyone to steal? They're not like you and I. They're not like any other people."
Paul Raffaele is the author of Among the Cannibals.
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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