Mbuti Pygmies of the Ituri Forest
The Mbuti pygmies are a nomadic tribe who inhabit the southern and central portions of the Ituri forest, in the Republic of Congo. They are an ethnocentric and homogenous society whose traditions, gender relations, kinship, social organization have remained unchanged until the last fifty years. The Mbuti tribe is divided into two sub-groups, the Efe and the Mbuti. Currently there are between 20,000 and 50,000 Mbuti people in the Congo (Ojo, 1996). The Mbuti pygmies are hunter-gatherers and have practiced hunting and foraging for thousands of years. Many of the foods they find in hunting and foraging expeditions, especially meat and wild honey, are used as trade items with neighboring tribes like the Bila or Bira people. The Mbuti pygmies are primarily net hunters while the Efe sub-groups of the Mbuti tribe use the bow and arrow. According to Denslow and Padoch (1988) in a typical net hunt, a Mbuti camp may trap and kill as many as 10 animals in comparison to three animals killed in a bow and arrow hunt. Although the Mbuti are an egalitarian culture, males and females have distinctive gender roles. Their social organization, based on kinship bonds, promotes cooperation among the Mbuti community members (Sutton & Anderson, 2010). The Mbuti tribe's traditions and traditional hunter- gatherer way of life are currently at risk due to modern society and colonialism. The Mbuti, long revered by the other Africans for their supernatural hunting abilities, were decimated in the Congo civil war by rebel soldiers who killed and cannibalized them (Watson & Stone, 1995). Without some effort, on the part of the Mbuti people and the Congo government Mbuti culture will cease to exist. An examination of gender relations, kinship, social organization and the impact of modern society and social change are essential in understanding present day Mbuti culture.
The Mbuti pygmies of the Ituri forest are classified as a hunter gatherer society. They derive their foods exclusively from hunting and gathering activities or trading. The Mbuti people are recognized by most indigenous Africans for their superior hunting abilities. According to other African tribes, Mbuti pygmies have supernatural abilities, which they use to track game in the Ituri forest (Sutton & Anderson, 2010). Mbuti hunts are community events. The Mbuti pygmies use either a net or bow and arrow during to capture and kill a wide variety of edible mammals. All of the tribal members including men, women, and children participate in the hunt. The nets, used in hunting are made from the skin of the soudi and ukusa plants. The hunting nets are one meter high and 30 to 100 meters long. During the hunt, a series of multiple nets over one kilometer in length are used to trap the forest animals. During a typical net hunt, the Mbuti men set up a large net in the forest and position themselves along the length of the net. The Mbuti women and children also participate, as drum beaters, to drive the animals into the nets. The men, waiting at the net, usually club or spear the animals before they can escape. The net hunt requires at least 15 to 30 Mbuti people (Denslow & Padoch, 1988). Denslow and Padoch describe the amount of labor necessary for a Mbuti community net hunt:
As most game only gets temporarily tangled in the nets, all of the men of the camp are positioned at intervals along the barrier, ready to spear the trapped animals. Not only does it require many men to secure a one kilometer-long net but someone must still be available to drive the game. (p.122-123)
The Mbuti pygmies hunt and consume 60 varieties of Ituri forest animals. Like other hunter gatherer societies, they practice dietary restrictions. Some foods are labeled kweri, which is the Mbuti word for poison. Foods, which are kweri, are believed to cause disease and are avoided by the Mbuti people. Besides hunting, the Mbuti people also forage for edible plants, insect, snails, larvae, shellfish, vegetables, roots, leaves fruits and wild honey in the Ituri forest (Kent, 1996). Because the food resources in the Ituri forest are abundant, the Mbuti pygmies have a rich and varied diet. There is a saying in the Congo which states, a hungry Mbuti is a lazy Mbuti (Sutton & Anderson, 2010 p. 170). The statement is a testament to the Mbuti skill at hunting and gathering a variety of edible foods in the Ituri forest.
Some of the animal meat from the Mbuti hunt is used for trade with other neighboring tribes, like the Bila, or Bira tribe (Ojo, 1996). Because the Mbuti...
Mbuti Unmovable: The Mbuti of the Ituri Forest For more than 2,000 years, the world has been aware of the Mbuti (Pygmy) hunter-gatherers that reside in the Ituri Forest of northern Zaire. References have been made to Pygmies that date as far back as Ancient Egypt, with mentions made by Herodotus, Aristotle and Homer (McDonald, 2004). Little however, was known about the daily lives of the Mbuti Pygmies until the 1950's. In
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