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THE HADZA TRIBE cont'd
written by Katherine Millett
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Hunting
Men and boys hunt with bows and arrows, and they almost
always hunt alone. Women and girls do not hunt. By the
age of 10, an Eastern Hadza boy will have made himself
a sturdy bow and a set of arrows to kill hyrax, rabbits,
squirrels and birds.
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Men tend to make long bows, about six feet in length,
which are exceptionally powerful and heavy to pull.
By testing several Hadza bows in the field using a spring
balance, Woodburn determined that more than 100 pounds
of force were required to draw an average bow fully.
He concluded that Hadza hunters prefer powerful bows
to accurate ones, which matched his observation that
the Hadza hunt from very close range, 25 to 50 yards
to shoot impala, zebra, eland or giraffe. Some Hadza
also eat predators, including lion, leopard, and other
wild cats, or perhaps scavengers like jackal, hyena
and vulture, but they draw the line at reptiles like
monitors, snakes and lizards. They use poisoned arrow
tips to hunt large animals. Once a beast has been wounded,
the hunter waits a few hours for the poison to act and
then tracks the wounded animal until it dies.
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Most meat is eaten where it falls. Hunters
take each day as it comes and generally hunt alone to
feed themselves. They take meat back to camp only if
there is a surplus and they feel like making the effort.
Woodburn's articles are laced with references to the
laid-back ways of the Hadza, who "meet their nutritional
needs easily without much effort, much forethought,
much equipment, or much organization." Most men do not
hunt large game at all, he notes, but content themselves
with vegetable foods and small animals. Far from resenting
these non-hunters, the few big-game hunters readily
share meat with them as well as with women and children.
The tenet "from each according to his ability to each
according to his need" seems to apply to the Hadza.
Good hunters hunt, and hungry people eat. Naturally
a good hunter will be favored by women and will tend
to be welcome, perhaps even pampered, when he joins
a camp, but the interactions of Hadza people seem remarkably
free of jealousy, resentment, elitism, tyranny, or any
concept of private property. (See more on this under
the heading "Social Life" below.)At about age 45 men
stop hunting, but they continue to carry their bows
for the rest of their lives.
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Woodburn documented only a single situation
in which Hadza men hunt as a group. They occasionally
go out at night, encircle a troop of baboons, and kill
them all. How similar this seems to the behavior of
chimpanzees observed in Gombe National Park and the
Mahale Mountains, who occasionally form hunting parties
to go on binges and wipe out large numbers of red colobus
monkeys. Neither the Hadza nor the chimpanzees really
need the meat they get from these encounters, so their
violent clashes with members of another species must
be about something else. (See Thomson Safaris' May newsletter
for more information on chimpanzees.)
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Gathering
Gathering begins early in Hadza childhood, when babes
help their mothers, big brothers and sisters pick berries,
dig edible roots, and gather seeds and pulp from baobab
trees. This food supplies 80 percent of the normal diet
by weight. Hadza people obtain the remaining 20 percent
of their food from meat brought back to camp and wild
bee honey taken from hives in the bush.
The Hadza are remarkably unconcerned about
food conservation. When they dig up roots, they leave
no part of the plant in place to sprout again. When
they harvest honey, the seldom bother to seal the broken
honeycomb with mud or a stone, which would encourage
the bees to return and make more honey. They may know
how to dry or smoke meat, but they tend to avoid the
effort. Instead, they live for the present.
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Gambling Game
To while away the afternoon in the manner of many Hadza
men, follow these simple instructions:
1. Find one to three other players.
2. Make one large disc from the bark of a baobab tree.
3. Each player makes a smaller disc from bark or wood.
(Tops and bottoms of discs must appear different.)
4. Choose one person, usually the loser of the last
game or a newcomer to the group, and give all the discs
to him or her.
5. This person piles the little discs on top of the
big one and throws the whole stack at a tree. The discs
fall on the ground and roll about.
6. The winner is the player whose disc
is the only one to land the same way "up" as the large
disc. (Keep throwing until only one player's disc matches
the master disc.)
7. Bet any valuable thing you own on winning this game.
Hadza men lose their bows, arrows and food this way
all the time, according to James Woodburn.
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Dress and Ornaments
Women wear three pieces of clothing. They make skirts
from the skins of female impala, softened with fat and
rubbed until supple, sometimes decorated with beads,
cowrie shells and bells. The skirt covers the buttocks
and hips. A second garment, made of cloth and beads
for a married woman, or strings and beads for an unmarried
woman, hangs in front. The upper garment, also made
from impala hide, can be used for warmth or to carry
berries, babies, firewood or meat.
Men and boys of the Hadza tribe wear the
skin of a small animal as a loincloth, its tail hanging
down between their legs. The hide is held in place by
a leather belt which may also hold a sheathed knife.
Men, women and children wear sandals to
protect them from the thorns on the savanna. These were
traditionally made from zebra or wildebeeste hide, but
soles made from old car tires are now more popular.
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Social Life
Hadza people generally come and go as they like. They
may travel alone, join a camp, move to a different camp,
or gravitate to a small area and live there with any
group that happens to come along. The major exception
is demonstrated by married couples, who stay together
an average of 20 years and tend to live with the wife's
mother. If husband and wife live apart for two weeks
or more, they are likely to be considered unmarried.
Spouses of either gender may abandon the marriage and
seek a new partner by reverting to the dress of unmarried
members of the tribe.
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A camp has no organized leadership and no sense of
itself as a permanent group. The idea of private property
must seem absurd to people who carry everything they
own on their backs or heads. The Hadza similarly disdain
the concept of private territory. They wander and settle
where they can. If some other tribe takes over a site
they have been accustomed to using, they are far more
likely to move on than create conflict. Even within
the Eastern Hadza tribe, Woodburn noted, dissidents
are more likely to leave a camp than face a conflict.
Conflict is often concealed behind ecological excuses,
such as an announcement that the berries are better
or the game more plentiful somewhere else.
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Sources:
James Woodburn, an English social anthropologist, studied
the 400 Eastern Hadza people intensively from 1958 to 1960
and revisited them frequently in later years. The following
information is derived from his numerous published articles.
© 2002 Katherine Millett and
Thomson Safaris, Inc.
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