The Mbuti pygmies live in the Ituri forest, causing them to rely on hunting, gathering, and trading to survive. The men are in charge of organizing the hunting but the women are still able to help them with the nets for trapping animals. The Mbuti women are the main caretakers of the children; also they are in charge of collecting foods from the forest for the tribe to eat and for possible trades with villagers. The men are also able to help the women in gathering food. When the time comes to trade the collections of forest food and results of the hunt, the women are usually the ones to go out and do the actual trade of physical goods. On the other hand, both Mbuti men and women are able to trade labor for goods with the villagers.
The men and women assume their gender roles. The good thing is that they are not so strictly confined to what their gender is supposed to do for the tribe. They help each other in order to be effective in survival rather than judgmental. Also, the women are able to talk on the same level as men in a serious discussion. This shows that women are not looked down upon as inferior to men. The Mbuti pygmies have a great understanding of equality between the sexes and their successful lifestyle shows it.
Nadine, P.
2010 The Mbuti of Northeast Zaire Cultural Survival. Electronic document, http://www.culturalsurvival.org/ourpublications/csq/article/the-mbuti-northeast- zaire, accessed March 24, 2015.
Wednesday, March 25, 2015
Tuesday, March 24, 2015
Commercialization of the Mbuti Meat Trade
The Mbuti have used net-hunting
techniques for many generations to hunt antelope for their meat in the Ituri
rainforest of Zaire. Traditionally,
these techniques provided them with meat to use for trade in a reciprocity
system of mutual benefit with the local villagers, as described by Karli Holt
in her post about Mbuti politics and economy. These exchanges hold more of a
cultural meaning for the Mbuti and are not only essential to their economy but
also hold religious value and are vital in maintaining their relationship with
the villagers.
However, since the 1950s,
commercial meat traders have been attempting to infiltrate and exploit the
Mbuti net-hunters. While their reciprocity with the local villagers is mutually
beneficial and quite flexible, their relationship with the meat traders is not
always so. The commercial meat traders set fixed prices and attempt to
monopolize the Mbuti’s hunting grounds; this leads to overhunting, a problem
that could potentially cause an antelope shortage that would devastate the
Mbuti way of life.
Fortunately, the Mbuti have managed
to successfully combat these commercial meat traders thus far. While the
traders attempt to manipulate all aspects of Mbuti meat trade, the Mbuti have
found ways to control the use of credit to their own benefit and in a sense use
the meat traders to gain certain goods they would not otherwise have access to.
Still, the meat traders will continue to affect the lives of the Mbuti and
there are still many potential consequences that could arise from this attempt at
exploitation.
1978 From subsistence to market: a case study of the Mbuti net hunters. Human Ecology 6(3):325-353.
Monday, March 23, 2015
Religion
The
Mbuti religion is focused on the forest and sees the forest as a very sacred
place. They consider themselves as “children of the forest”. There are two
central rituals in the Mbuti religion; the molimo and the elima. The molimo is
a musical instrument that the people use in the “Song of the Forest”, which is
a festival they have that lasts about a month. They see the
molimo as a living thing when it is being used to play music. They consider the molimo so alive that they
feed it, give it water, warmth, and shelter. Their society believes in
the balance between silence and noise. When there are imbalances between the
two they bring the molimo out to play music. The molimo is the Mbuti’s way of communication
between the forest and the people and overall serenity.
The
elima is a formal ritual to mark a young woman’s first menses. It is a time of
sexual freedom to help her select a future partner. During this time the women
are taught the elima songs as well as how to be a mother. This is a very joyous
time for the Mbuti tribe. At the end of the ceremony the girls as considered in
the Mbuti tribe as adult women.
Fuentes, C.
2005 Mbuti pygmies. In Encyclopedia of anthropology. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications. Electronic document, http://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/sageanth/mbuti_pygmies/0
The Mbuti Economy & Politics
The Mbuti have settled in parts of
the Ituri Forest of northern Zaire. They have been developing their village for
approximately 2,000 years now. All Mbuti live as forest specialists in
association with agricultural groups. This interaction is key to their welfare.
The Mbuti use the more elaborate political structure of villagers to regulate
certain aspects of their own social system.
Mbuti and the villagers have a food
trade that makes up their economic aspect. Year round, starch foods from
villagers’ make up a large part of Mbuti diet. Sporadically, Mbuti will provide
villagers with “prestige foods” including meat and honey from the forest. They
help clear and harvest the gardens and participate in seasonal fishing
expeditions. Mbuti also proved various forest products. These items may include
construction materials, medicinal plants, firewood, etc. These exchanges don’t
have exact trade values. There is rarely cash involved. Sometimes a product is
giving without receiving anything in return.
Citation:
Hart, John
2010 The Mbuti of Zaire. Electronic document, http://www.culturalsurvival.org/publications/cultural-survival-quarterly/democractic-republic-congo/mbuti-zaire, accessed March 23, 2015
Hart, John
2010 The Mbuti of Zaire. Electronic document, http://www.culturalsurvival.org/publications/cultural-survival-quarterly/democractic-republic-congo/mbuti-zaire, accessed March 23, 2015
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