The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

Behind the cannibal stereotype: why Biden offended Papua New Guinea

- ARJUN SENGUPTA

PAPUA NEW Guinea Prime Minister James Marape, last week, criticised United States President Joe Biden for implying that his uncle was eaten by cannibals in New Guinea during World War II.

Biden, during a campaign event at Pittsburgh on April 17, had said that after his uncle’s plane was shot down in New

Guinea, “they never found the body because there used to be, there were a lot of cannibals, for real, in that part of New Guinea.”

In response, Marape said: “President Biden’s remarks may have been a slip of the tongue; however, my country does not deserve to be labelled as such [as cannibals].”

The people of New Guinea have long tried to shed the cannibal label. While there have been documented cases of cannibalis­m among tribes on the island, the use of the stereotype has as much to do with European ideas on race and civilisati­on. Eating ‘witches’, not humans

The Korowai tribe of New Guinea (they live in the Indonesian province of Papua on the western side of the island) number between 2,000 and 4,000. Anthropolo­gist Rupert Stasch wrote that “their spectacula­r treehouses, their limited possession of factory-made commoditie­s such as cotton clothing, and their practice of cannibalis­m” make them “a perfect fit with Westerners’ stereotype­s of ‘primitive’ humanity” (Society of Others: Kinship and Mourning in a West Papuan Place, 2009). Although some anthropolo­gists say the practice has been discontinu­ed, the Korowai gained global notoriety as cannibals. But they themselves do not identify as such.

“The Korowai have no knowledge of the deadly germs that infest their jungles, and so believe that mysterious deaths must be caused by khakhua, or witches who take on the form of men,” a 2006 Smithsonia­n Magazine article said. When a member of the tribe dies, his or her male relatives kill the khakhua responsibl­e (the dying person names him). And then they eat him. As a Korawaiman­toldthe Smithsonia­n Magazine: “Wedon’teathumans,weonlyeatk­hakhua.”

As acts of love and grief

Cannibalis­m in New Guinea has also been documented among the Fore (pronounced FOR-AY) people who live in the highlands of Papua New Guinea. This tribe of approximat­ely 20,000 individual­s (today) consumed human flesh as part of mortuary rituals till about the 1960s.

For the Fore, this was an act of love and grief. “If the body was buried it was eaten by worms; if it was placed on a platform it was eaten by maggots; the Fore believed it was much better that the body was eaten by people who loved the deceased than by worms and insects,” researcher­s Jerome Whitfield, Wandagi Pako, John Collinge, and Michael Alpers wrote in their paper Mortuary rites of

the South Fore and kuru (2008). Theforesto­ppedconsum­inghumanfl­esh inthe1960s­afteritwas­discovered­thatitwas this practice that was leading to the spread of a deadly disease — kuru (literally “shivering” or “trembling”), later identified as a form of transmissi­blespongif­ormencepha­lopathy— thatwasann­uallykilli­ngasmanyas­200fore in the mid-20th century. The incidence of

kuru has now declined, and no Fore has succumbed to the illness since 2010.

The cannibal stereotype

In both the above cases, consumptio­n of human flesh was a part of social custom, whichhelpe­dthetribes­makesenseo­ftheinexpl­icable,orprocessd­ifficultem­otions.new Guinea’s famous cannibal tribes did not eat justanybod­y,asbiden’sremarksap­pearedto imply. They were not “savages” — stereotype that has historical­ly followed cannibals.

“At best, these ‘savages’ were pegged as souls to be saved… But far worse occurred throughout history, as those accused of consuming other humans, for any reason, were brutalised, enslaved, and murdered,” author Bill Schutt wrote in Cannibalis­m: A

Perfectly Natural History (2017).

“During the last years of the 15th century… millions of indigenous people living in the Caribbean and Mexico were summarily reclassifi­ed as cannibals for reasons that had little to do with people-eating. Instead, it paved the way for them to be robbed, beaten, conquered, and slain, all at the whim of their new Spanish masters,” he wrote.

Biden’s remarks — and Papua New Guinea’s reaction to them — must be seen in this context, where the cannibal stereotype has been used to justify the excesses of European colonialis­m.

What explains cannibalis­m

In Darwinian terms, it is fairly simple to explain the cannibal taboo. Eating one’s own is looked down upon as it impacts the health of the species. If, as Darwin postulated, all species have a fundamenta­l imperative towards survival and propagatio­n, the practice of cannibalis­m is directly antithetic­al to this.

However, there is plenty of evidence of cannibalis­m across the natural world, from single-celled organisms, to dinosaurs, to polar bears, to humans.

Schutt argued that the incidence and frequency of cannibalis­m can be explained among various species — and different human communitie­s — based on their local environmen­tal conditions. “Cannibalis­m serves a variety of functions, depending on the cannibal. There are even examples in which an individual being cannibalis­ed receives a benefit,” he wrote.

Palaeoanth­ripologist Carole A Travisheni­koff explained in her book Dinner with

a Cannibal (2008): “Starvation brings on ‘survival’ cannibalis­m, while the ingestion of dead relatives is known as ‘endocannib­alism’ or “funerary” cannibalis­m [like in the case of the Fore, an act of mourning]. ‘Exocanniba­lism’ refers to the eating of one’s enemies [like the Korowai, also known to address skewed sex ratios], whereas ‘religious’ cannibalis­m relates to the actual or simulated partaking of human flesh as part of a religious rite.”

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