This time I choose Papua New Guinea as my destination to explore in internet. This country is very unique with its 250 tribes that has different costumes
The tree people, Korowai and Kombai, live in the basin of the Brazza River in
the vast lowland jungles. This is situated in the foothills of the Jayawijaya
mountain range, which is in the southwest part of the New Guinea Island in the
Indonesian province Papua (Irian Jaya). Mosquitoes and age-old rivalry forced
these tribes to build houses in the tops of trees. Some of them are placed as
high as 40 m.
High above the forest floor, deep in the swampy lowland jungles of Papua, tree houses greet the eyes of explorers trekking into what remains one of the last remote corners of the globe. The tree houses tower overhead at heights of over 80 feet above the ground, appearing to teeter but held firm by Sago palm tree fibres. These constructions are the homes of the Kombai and the neighbouring Korowai, tribal people numbering in the thousands who decorate their bodies with bones and may still count cannibalism among their customs.
The tree houses stand in clearings cut out of the forest
by the tribespeople, who fell trees using only the most rudimentary of
stone axes. These dwellings offer an escape from the heat and biting
insects below the jungle canopy, and are thought to have originated as a
safeguard against flooding during heavy rains while also providing
protection in periods of conflict. Enemy headhunting tribes like the
Asmat from the south used to maraud through these regions and the trees
may have been the only refuge for the Korowai and the Kombai.
The Korowai and the Kombai are distinct ethnic groups, each with their own language, but they do manage to interact and also share similar cultural practices. They are skilled hunter-gatherers whose men track prey including cassowary and wild boar. They still trade in objects like bone jewellery and knives, and may have only been introduced to metal and our idea of clothing in the 1970s, when the first missionaries arrived. Utensils such as bamboo shards are used to slice meat, shells to hold water, and heated stones in place of cooking vessels
Cannibalism is also common to the histories of both the Kombai and the Korowai. For the Kombai, it is apparently a form of tribal punishment, with only men identified as witches killed and eaten by the community in retribution for the souls devoured by the accused. Cannibalism is steeped in similarly supernatural belief for the Korowai and may also have been practiced as part of their criminal justice system. It seems these tree dwellers do not believe in natural death, but death caused by sorcery – also believed to be a cause of inter-clan warfare.
Pigs too figure largely in the rituals and belief systems of the Kombai and the Korowai. Domesticated, these animals are a kind of sacred currency in Kombai culture, used in dispute-settlements between families, and also sacrificed in complex ceremonies when their blood is let into the river as an offering to one of the gods. Pigs play a role in the religious life of the Korowai, too, which is filled with all kinds of spirits – above all the revered spirits of their ancestors to which the beasts are sacrificed in times of trouble.
A more festive custom enjoyed by both the Korowai and the Kombai is the eating of the Sago grub, the succulent larva of the Capricorn beetle, which is a delicacy the tribes harvest from rotting trees. Very occasionally the Kombai host parties to which guests from other tribes are invited and fed Sago grubs, while even more seldom still the Korowai will host a Sago grub festival to encourage fertility and prosperity. Such rituals seem to anchor the deeply spiritual lives of these people, who see spirits in the forest where outsiders would see none.
Revealingly, for Kombai clans, strangers are themselves referred to as
ghosts, and yet such ghosts are becoming an ever more concrete reality
as filming crews and adventure tourists make their presence felt in
their territory. The traditions of these once undisturbed tribes have
been affected by contact with the outside world, with some Korowai even
now paid to offer tours.
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