Women Are Beaten And Scarred, Babies Killed For Growing Teeth In Ethiopia
No screaming is permitted by the men wielding the canes but the women
don't care. Instead of fleeing, they beg the men to do it again and
again until blood flows, dripping into the gritty red dust of the Omo
River Valley.
These striking images reveal the beauty of Hamar women in their orange
ochre make-up and bright beads, their skin scarred into intricate
patterns using thorns, resilient as they live a life that's precarious
at best and brutal at worst.
But not everything about the Hamar is troubling. For the Hamar, cattle
are everything, and for the men, they form a key part of the rite that
turns them from boy to man. At cattle jumping ceremonies, young men are
required to leap across 15 cows, smeared with dung to make them
slippery. If he fails, he cannot marry and will be beaten by the
watching women. At the same ceremony, his female relatives are beaten to
create a blood debt between the man and his sisters who show off their
scars with pride.
Totally committed to their initiated sons, the mothers are whipped to
blood, in order to prove their courage and accompany their sons during
the test.
But for Hamar women, beatings are not just part of an initiation ritual
- they are daily life until at least two children have been born.
Under Hamar rules, a man need not explain why he's delivering a
beating. It is his prerogative to mete out as he sees fit. Men can also
have more than one wife, with junior wives left to do the lion's share
of the planting and water gathering.
A photograpg who made a series of photographs depicting the culture,
tells the story of meeting a Hamar boy who had walked for several days
to a local town, just to see his favourite Premier League football team
on television.
"This guy was wearing a Chelsea T-shirt, but still had to jump over ten
bulls to be able to marry a girl in his tribe: a real culture shock.
They are all really into Chelsea, Arsenal, like many other Ethiopians,
who are just crazy about English football," he says.
FROM BEATINGS TO BEAUTY: ETHIOPIA'S HAMAR PEOPLE AT A GLANCE
The majority of the 20,000 strong Hamar people live in the Omo River
Valley, a fertile part of the vast Southern Nations, Nationalities, and
Peoples' Region of south-west Ethiopia, which is bordered by Kenya and
South Sudan.
Most still live in traditional villages, although growing numbers are
migrating to the region's cities and towns as well as the Ethiopian
capital, Addis Ababa.
Cattle form the axis around which the Hamar's world revolves, evidenced
by the fact that there are 27 different words to describe the colour of
a cow in the local language.
Men spend the majority of the time caring for the animals, which are
also used to pay bride prices when the man takes a wife - always a woman
from the Hamar tribe - and generally amounts to 30 goats and 20 cows.
Cows also form part of the male initiation rite, which involves
contenders attempting to leap over a row of 15 cows made extra slippery
with dung.
At the same ceremony, the man's sisters and other female relatives are
beaten bloody to create a blood debt so the man remembers to help them
should they face tough times in the future.
While cattle-leaping is relatively harmless, another practice, known as
'mingi' is more troubling. The Hamar tribe still practises ritual
infanticide. If the first tooth appears in the upper jaw, instead of the
lower, the child becomes what they called 'mingi' - this applies also
to the baby teeth and the adult teeth when the kids are seven or eight.
If a 'mingi' child is kept in the village by the mother, elders believe
droughts, famines and diseases will come in the community, so they kill
the babies. Most 'mingi' children are left in the desert alone to die,
although local charities now regularly check the area for abandoned
children which are then raised in orphanages away from the tribe.
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