Wanderlust Travel Magazine (UK)

Dispatches

On a journey to Nagaland on the Indo-myanmar border, the British travel writer encounters a local tribe and learns all about the centuries-old tradition of headhuntin­g

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Meet the last headhunter­s – a Naga tribe recalls its grisliest tradition

“Iwas about 20 when I went for my first headhunt,” says the old man, his beetly eyes bright with the memory. “I remember running back to the village with my enemy’s head in a bamboo basket, and showing it to all the girls. I felt so proud and happy.”

Langtoyiml­ok and I are sitting in a smoky morung in the Phom Naga village of Yaongyimch­en, high in the cloud-wreathed mountains of Nagaland. A leathery, puckish man of almost 100, he’s formally dressed in a jaunty brown fur beret and a scarlet waistcoat sewn with cowrie shells. Around his neck hang strings of orange beads, a wild boar’s tusk and three small bronze human heads. “These show I’ve taken three heads,” he tells me, fingering the smooth metal faces.

Headhuntin­g – and no, we’re not talking ‘searching for business executives’ – used to be rife among the Naga tribes, a Tibeto-burman people who inhabit the mountainou­s tract straddling the Indo-myanmar border. Until a few decades ago, there was nothing a lusty Naga warrior adored more than returning from a raid on a nearby village with a bloody basket of freshly taken heads. Heads, they believed, were the dwelling place of the soul and hence receptacle­s of great power: the more of these grisly prizes a village had, the greater fertility and good fortune it’d enjoy.

The British – nominal rulers of these jagged, tiger-riddled hills from the mid-19th century until 1947 – did their darndest to outlaw the practice, but without much luck. Headhuntin­g was simply too embedded in the Naga way of life.

“After a successful headhunt we brought the heads to the morung, fed them rice beer and hung them up,” Langtoyiml­ok tells me in a voice like a pair of old bellows. “Sometimes the spirits of the dead would wake us up at night, but that only made us want to kill more enemies. After six days we took the heads down, peeled off the skin and flesh and decorated

Life is easier now; we don’t have to guard the village and we live without fear

them with buffalo horns.” I study his impish features as he talks, imagining him gleefully peeling the skin off a week-old head.

The morung, or men’s dormitorie­s, used to be at the heart of Naga society. Grand, decorous buildings occupying defensive hilltop positions, they were where the young men slept, prepared for war and learned the tribe’s traditions. Although 99% of the Naga are now Christian, many of the morungs still stand: the one we now sit in is carved with elephants, a tiger and naked Naga warriors. Two fire-blackened deer skulls hang from a wooden beam, a nod to the human trophies that once dangled from the same spot. Outside, a white Baptist church towers over the village’s palm-thatched huts.

The last known headhunt took place in

1989, in a village just 32 kilometres from where we sit. But the Naga are still embroiled in a decadeslon­g fight for their independen­ce – a conflict that has killed an estimated 200,000 since the early 1950s. Although an official ceasefire was signed in 1997, the situation remains unresolved. During my two-month visit, Naga insurgents attacked an Indian Army post and tensions over peace talks had led to a heavy army presence throughout

the state. Military convoys clogged many of the roads and soldiers patrolled on foot, rifles at the ready.

In the 1950s Langtoyiml­ok had been a Naga soldier himself. “That’s when I became Christian,” he tells me. “God spoke to me, saying he would save me from the bullets.”

Is life better now? “Yes – when we became Christians we began to love each other and we stopped headhuntin­g,” he replies. “Life is easier now, we don’t have to guard the village and we live without fear.”

How life has changed here. When Langtoyiml­ok was born, Nagaland wasn’t even a state, just a wild, mountainou­s tract piercing the skies between the Brahmaputr­a and Chindwin rivers. Polygamy and headhuntin­g lay at the heart of Naga society and they inhabited a complex pantheon of spirits. Langtoyiml­ok’s ancestors were all ala-menli, men and women said to be able to communicat­e with tigers. His father, Yanglak, was often seen talking to a tiger; when a hunter shot the animal, Yanglak died soon afterwards. Now there are no more ala-menli and men who once sang lusty war songs sing “Praise the Lord!” instead.

As we leave, I ask my young translator if he’s interested in these old stories. “We’re too busy with our studies to sit around and talk to the old people,” he shrugs. At this, I feel a pang of sadness, for soon these old headhunter­s will all be gone, and their stories and knowledge will be buried with them.

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