Yali Tribe
Papua pygmey cannibals
Papua Yali tribe– traditional man dress
Papua Yali tribe– women dress
Yali tribe is most likely the smallest of Papuan nations.
I wrote “likely” because I am convinced that not all the nations living in New
Guinea (including Irian Jaya), have yet been discovered.
Yalis were discovered no sooner than in 1961.They make
their homes in the highlands; this is what inhabited areas of mountains are
called in Papua. Inland, and especially areas near the mountains, are the least
accessible territories which were thus discovered most recently.
Papua– Yali tribe– story of cannibalism
Papua Yali tribe– mountain Yali
Papuan Yali tribe belonged to the most dreaded cannibals
of the western part of the New Guinea Island (Irian Jaya). They are ranked
among the pygmy group of nations (dwarf nations), and more precisely among
pygmy negrits.
Papua Yali tribe– mountain Yali
Despite the fact that mature men are scarcely taller than
150 cm, and that they have never been head-hunters, they are respected by
their enemies. The fear reached such a degree that the Yalis couldn’t visit
each other. As a result, in every valley the language developed in a different
way. The difference was so striking that the Yali tribe members themselves
claim that the valleys don’t understand each other.
The reason why, the
group of cannibals called Papuan Yalis were particularly dreaded, was because
they totally destroyed their enemies. They did not only eat the body, but they
allegedly grinded the bones to dust, which was then thrown into the valley.
They did all this to prevent the victim from ever returning. People from the
neighboring villages were not only killed for revenge, sometimes just formeat.Papua Yali– trekking in Highland
Papua mountain Yali tribe lives in very steep, but very
beautiful highlands in west Papua.
Papua pygmey– Mountain Yali
Papuan mountain Yali tribe members dwell some 2500– 2000m
above the sea level. There are two ways to reach them. First, there is a very
difficult but also beautiful trek. This several day long trek starts at wamena (18000m). It traverses the Jayawijaya mountain
range, and a mountain saddle situated at 4000m above the sea level, not far
from the summit of Mount Elit. The trek is so strenuous because the Papua
mountains are very rugged and steep.
You won’t avoid trekking, even if you decide for the
second alternative– a plane. To see the Yalis you flew in to see, you will have
to follow them to their villages, which lie in the mountains. If you want to
see also the lowland Yali tribe members, who live 1500– 1000m above the sea
level, you’ll have to extend your trek by several days. You won’t regret
though. The fantastic sceneries, which will be offered as a reward for this
effort, will remain your lifelong memories. Take my word on that.
Papua mountain Yali tribe– culture
Petr Jahoda, Papua guide, with Yali women
The Papuan mountain Yali tribe members live in round huts
build from cut planks and roofs made of pandan leaves. Women and men live
separately. Women have their own houses, and men live in community houses
(honai).
Men wear traditional big “rattan” skirts and kotekas. The
skirts are composed of large number of separate approximately 5mm wide strips
of rattan, which are coiled around the body like a tire. These “tires” are
connected on several places. The result is a kind of skirt. This skirt covers
the body of Yalis from breasts down to knees. The front of this skirt is
supported by a koteka, a “penis tube” made of wooden fruit of a bottle plant.
Papua Mountain Yali children carrying pandanus from the
lowland
Yali women wear traditional small and short skirts made of
grass. Their breasts are left bare, similarly as in the rest of Papuan tribes.
The skirts merely cover their genitals. They consist of two parts– the front
one and the rear one. A small string encircles their waists, and the rear part
of the skirt is usually worn beneath their butts. A part of their dress is also
a bag woven from threads made of orchid fibers. The bag, full or empty, covers
the women’s back and butt. Often it ends down at their knees. The skirt
consists of four layers. The first layer is given to girls, when they reach
approximately four years of age. One layer is added every four years. As soon
as the number of layers reaches four, it means that the girl is mature and she
can marry
Papuan lowland Yali– culture
Papua Yali tribe – lowland women dress
Papuan lowland Yali tribe members are significantly
different from highland Yali. Men don’t wear rattan skirts, only kotekas. Women
don’t wear small four-layer skirts, but long skirts made of grass. It could be
hence said that they are not as interesting as the mountain Yali, but the
opposite is true. Lowland Yali almost live in isolation and are thus affected
by outside influence only to a very small degree. It is fantastic to visit both
cultures during one trek. Adescent from the mountains to the lowland can be a
very pleasant experience, considering that our diet changes as well. The diet
of sweet potatoes might change to buamera (pandan fruit) or even sago. All in
all, one should explore as many things during a trek as possible, don’t
youthink?
Papua Yali tribe– lowland Yali man working with sago
Papua Yali tribe – lowland Yali child with a banana
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