Raffaele Among the Korowai
Paul Raffaele describes his adventures (and misadventures) in Indonesian New Guinea, reporting on the Korowai
- By Paul Raffaele
- Photographs by Paul Raffaele
- Smithsonian.com, August 01, 2006, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 8)
Carey: You're a tough bird, I'll admit; still, at our age, we have to be more careful than we were when we were a few decades younger. I'm sure [a mutual friend] mentioned your infection but in fact it didn't really register on my addled brain. I thought he was merely--well, hardly merely--referring to your scabies problem. In any case, I hope the antibiotics work; this is nothing to take lightly.
April 25th, 2006
Paul: Thanks mate. I'm up reading, first time in days. This afternoon, the antibiotics seem to have kicked in, the arm seems to be healing quite well and I've been spared the terrors of 'soccer ball stomach' for some hours. The scabies has also cleared up, and so once again I seem to have escaped the horrors of the jungle. Maybe I should go looking for a desert for the next story.
Truly, I don't take the nasties of the jungle lightly, and that's why I always go there armed with a solid medical pack. That said, you have to take some risks in these places. Very few Korowai ever get to meet their grandparents, because the grandparents are usually dead by the time they're born, either from warfare or disease. The prevalence of disease in the jungle forms the basis of the khahkua cannibal cult, a Stone Age rationale for death by disease. The Korowai believe death is caused by a sorcerer, called a khahkua. The khahkua is killed and eaten in revenge—payback is one of the dominant cultural imperatives in most Melanesian cultures.
April 25th, 2006
Carey: It's going to be an amazing story.
May 3rd, 2006
Paul: It's evening and I'm about to begin writing the Korowai story. I apologise for taking so long to start, but I've been through mini-hell the past sixteen days, though nowhere near as bad as hell in the jungle. Because I'm still not 100% OK, I'll probably restrict the writing to about four hours a day, as against my usual eight to ten, and that means I won't have the finished first draft to you until the Friday after next, 12th May. I'm raring to go, and so I'll be fine.
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Comments (3)
can you please provide an email address for Paul Raffaele. I would like to ask him a question about his article "Keepers of the Lost Ark". Thanks for your assistance.
Posted by Carole Wolanow on January 16,2008 | 06:30 PM
I found it most interesting. I've read many articles by Mr.Raffaele. His ability to give a clear and informative writings on so many subjects.
Posted by Clare Harrison on December 6,2007 | 07:47 PM
Just a note to Paul Raffaele ie. KEEPERS OF THE LOST ARK? December 2007 issue. Page 47 you ask the question "Was the ark really there?" The answer is "NO". Read Revelation 11:19 in God's Word. You're welcome.
Posted by Janet Jackson on November 29,2007 | 02:37 PM