by Helle V.
Goldman
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The hunters heading back to Tandavili after our first encounter (photo Helle V. Goldman) |
The Small Indian
Civet (
Viverricula indica) is widespread in Asia, from Pakistan in the
west to easternmost China, and from the Sundaic region in the south to the
Himalayan foothills in the north (Choudhury et al. 2015). Its perineal gland
secretions prized as a perfume and medicinal ingredient in southern Asia, the Small
Indian Civet was imported – most likely from the Indian subcontinent – by
traders to various places in the Western Indian Ocean (Gaubert et al. 2017). At
some unknown point in the past, this included Pemba, the northern island in the
Zanzibar archipelago (Moreau & Pakenham 1941; Pakenham 1984; Walsh 2007; Choudhury
et al. 2015).
Like other
species of mammals introduced to Pemba, Small Indian Civets became naturalised
on the island. These crepuscular–nocturnal small carnivores were frequently
observed early in the morning or late in the evening by Pakenham, a colonial
officer stationed in Zanzibar from the late 1930s through WWII; “if one stood
motionless it would pass very close”, he wrote (Pakenham 1984: 46). (What some Zanzibaris
made of Pakenham’s keen interest in observing wildlife and collecting animal
specimens may be surmised on the basis of the account of an elderly Pemban, who
told me in 1993 that Pakenham was remembered for catching spirits in bottles.
It is likelier that he was after insects.) According to Pakenham, Small Indian
Civets were common on both Unguja and Pemba, the main islands of the
archipelago. Yet I never caught sight of one during my anthropological
fieldwork in Pemba in the early 1990s, and camera-trapping on Unguja in 2003
(Goldman & Winther-Hansen 2003), 2017, 2018 (Goldman & Walsh 2019a) and
2019 (unpublished) turned up no traces of Small Indian Civets.
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Mauwa and her aunt Raya in 1993 (photo: Helle V. Goldman) |
When I returned
in July 2019 to Mzambarauni, in north-central Pemba, to follow up on my earlier
studies with additional anthropological research, I did not anticipate that the
opportunity to observe a civet hunt would come my way. The chance presented
itself when I tagged along with Mauwa and a handful of her younger kin to her rice
field south of Mzambarauni. I had first known her in 1992, when I lived in the
thatched wattle-and-daub house across from Mauwa’s aunt.
On our way to
the rice farm, we walked in single file on the path as we headed south from the
village, exchanging greetings with folks encountered en route. Some worked
singly or in twos in their fields. Others collected fruit or firewood. A few
led zebu cows. We passed through a patchwork of small cultivated fields and
forest – a hodge-podge of wild trees and shrubs and clove, fruit and lumber
trees. Some of the cultivated trees appeared well tended; most were overrun by wild
vegetation.
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Mauwa and her adult daughter harvest rice (photo: Helle V. Goldman) |
At Mauwa’s rice
plot, we deposited our gear in the small patch of shade offered by the low
open-sided thatched hut beside the field. I made myself useful by planting the spinach
seedlings that Mauwa had brought with her in a sack, putting them in the ground
that she had previously prepared for this purpose. While the women set to work
in the rice field, Rayani – the young daughter of Mauwa’s eldest son – and I
played a game with twigs and pebbles that we invented on the spot. A soft-spoken
settler from the mainland who cultivated a nearby field came by to exchange
pleasantries and drink from the muddy spring next to Mauwa’s field. One of the
women harvesting rice found the nest of a Black-winged Red Bishop (
kweche;
Euplectes
hordeaceus) in the field. The red bishop feeds on rice and farmers consider the
bird a pest.
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Black-winged Red Bishop nest and eggs (photo: Helle V. Goldman) |
Mauwa took a
short break to boil a small pot of thin rice gruel. I took a few sips of the
refreshing porridge from my cup and gave the remainder to Rayani, who seemed to
be hungry. Back in the field again, the women chatted non-stop while the heaps of
rice ears grew high on the mats. They were periodically carried to the side of
the field, stuffed into a sack and beaten with a stout stick to separate the
rice grains from the stalks. (The husks would be removed later.) I worked much less
efficiently than my companions, though Mauwa heartily extolled my
rice-harvesting skills to passersby, which made me laugh.
Suddenly the
chaotic sounds of people whooping, dogs yipping and branches crackling reached
us from the forest edging the rice field. “What’s going on?” I asked Mauwa. Her
small knife never slowing as she clipped off ears of rice from the tall stalks,
she told me that it was just youths out after
wadudu.
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Mauwa harvesting rice (photo: Helle V. Goldman) |
Depending on
the context,
wadudu (singular
mdudu) is a term for insects and other small
invertebrates (including disease-causing parasites), small reptiles or undesirable
wildlife of various sizes, and unspeakable creatures whose names can’t be mentioned.
For example, on Unguja, Leopards (
Panthera pardus) are sometimes referred to
cagily as
wadudu, the speakers avoiding explicitly naming the greatly feared
animal, which has now in all likelihood been extirpated from the island (Goldman
& Walsh 2019b). There is no single English equivalent that covers all these
senses of the Swahili word, but “varmints” conveys what Mauwa meant in this case.
When I asked her
to clarify which
wadudu the boys were hunting, she said they were going for
ngawa.
On Unguja,
ngawa refers to the African Civet (
Civettictis civetta), a small
carnivore species that I camera-trapped in 2003 in Jozani–Chwaka Bay National
Park (Goldman & Winther-Hansen 2003, 2007). On Pemba, where there are no
African Civets,
ngawa refers to the Small Indian Civet (
Viverricula
indica).
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Small Indian Civet, camera-trapped near Ngezi (photo: Helle V. Goldman) |
A few days
before, I had asked Ilaria Pretelli, a friend doing research in a village at the edge of Ngezi
Forest, near the north-western tip of Pemba, to set up my camera trap near her
house for a couple of nights. The trap netted a single video of a Small Indian Civet.
Later, the trap was moved to inside Ngezi, where another civet was captured on
video.
As I snatched
up my notebook and camera and dashed off into the bush to find the hunters,
Mauwa called out to give them a head’s up: a European was coming to talk to
them. I found the youths close by. They had killed a civet just minutes before.
One of the young hunters held up the specimen for me to photograph. The group
comprised about ten youths in their teens and early twenties, accompanied by
their dogs. Having successfully bagged a civet, the boys were eager to go home and
rest but some of them allowed me to briefly detain them so I could ask some
questions.
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Three of the young hunters and their catch (photo: Helle V. Goldman) |
I learned that
they hailed from Tandavili, which was the closest village. They comprised a
loosely organised group of friends that had started out by catching the civets
that bothered their household chickens. Later they expanded their activities to
the bush surrounding the settlement. Every three or four days they set out to
hunt Small Indian Civets, Marsh Mongooses (
chonjwe;
Atilax paludinosus), Vervet
Monkeys (
tumbili;
Chlorocebus pygerythrus) and snakes of any variety. These are
all animals deemed harmful to people (snakes), crops (vervets) or poultry
(civets and mongooses). Sometimes they also go out singly or in pairs to hunt
birds with slingshots.
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The dead civet (photo: Helle V. Goldman) |
Whatever the
hunters catch, they feed to the dogs, they said. None of the targeted species contains
anything of medicinal value, they told me, and none of the meat is consumed by
people in the area. (Although there are local exceptions (Walsh 2007), Islam
prohibits the consumption of reptiles, monkeys and animals bearing fangs, i.e. carnivores.) The dead civet whose killing I had arrived just too late to
witness was going to be roasted over a fire to remove the fur and then given to
the dogs. (The dogs looked like they would have benefited from a good meal.) I gave
the most talkative of the youths the telephone number of my hostess in
Mzambarauni and he agreed to call the next time they were going hunting.
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Hunting (photo: Helle V. Goldman) |
According to
Walsh (2007), clubs that hunted civets were active at least up to the 1990s. Information
about such groups and their activities is scant. During his stay on Pemba over a
hundred years ago, Craster heard of Wild Boar (
nguruwe;
Sus scrofa) hunts there:
“they told me that a party of men armed with big knives would start out with as
many dogs as they could collect, and walk through the bush till the dogs found
a pig” (1913: 284). The boars, which had been introduced centuries earlier by
the Portuguese, were not eaten by Muslim islanders; the flesh was given to the
dogs, and non-Muslim Africans ate it too. Other species taken opportunistically,
such as the Blue Duiker (
paa;
Cephalophus monticola), were eaten irrespective
of religion (Walsh 2007: 88).
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Hunting dogs (photo: Helle V. Goldman) |
Writing about
20 years after Craster, Wilson observed that the main method of hunting pigs – animals
viewed by the colonial authorities as a serious impediment to agricultural
production – was with spears and dogs; pit-traps and snares may also have been
used (1939: 48). He complained that hunting was “often regarded [by Zanzibaris]
more as a sport than the reduction of a pest”. Along with setting out poison to
reduce the pig population, the British “encouraged the various pig hunting
clubs by the offer of prizes and rewards” (Wilson 1939: 49). Although the resulting
boost in hunting activity was short-lived, hunting continued on both islands. By
the time of my visit in 2019, Pembans whom I asked said that all, or almost
all, of the island’s boars had all been killed and consumed by villagers of Makonde
origin, whose roots lay in south-east Tanzania and northern Mozambique.
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Hunters crossing Mauwa's rice field (photo: Helle V. Goldman) |
After answering
my questions, the band of youths crossed Mauwa’s rice field and vanished among
the trees on the opposite hillside. Days passed while I investigated family
histories and other matters that had nothing to do with wildlife in Mzambarauni.
Two days before my departure from Pemba, when I had given up hope of hearing
from the young hunters, one of them rang my hostess in the evening with a
message for me: the boys were going hunting the next morning. I was to meet
them in Tandavili at six if I wanted to come along.
With
considerable reluctance, my hostess unbarred and unlocked the front doors of her
house and let me outside at 5.30 the following morning. She wasn’t happy about
me setting off in the predawn dark and “cold” (it was about 18°C). I knew that
she was concerned for my safety. In Pemba, malevolent spirits, often operating
at the command of witches, are believed to be common. To walk alone in the
night invites trouble. She was only slightly reassured by the knowledge that I
was going to meet up with my assistant on the way.
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Two of the hunting dogs, one with an amulet (photo: Helle V. Goldman) |
It was light by
the time we reached Tandavili. With the kind assistance of several villagers,
we located the dozen or so youths who were setting out to hunt that day: some
were just tumbling out of bed and pulling shirts over their heads upon our arrival, while the others had already loosely assembled at the edge of the forest. The
informal leader of the group was a young man who went by the moniker Maasai.
Another member was nicknamed Tekno. He brought his dogs Fanta, Ready and Simba.
Another boy was known as Taekwondo, who came with his dog Ashoo. Then there was
Abdalla and his dog Sharo. Ahmed, otherwise known as Hosama, and his friend
Hamadi brought their shared dog Firimbo. Unlike the other dogs, Firimbo was on
a lead because she had pups and would peel off to rejoin them if given half a
chance. The dogs were small and nervous and some of them were thin. They seemed
accustomed to ungentle handling.
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The hunters pause to consider their next move (photo: Helle V. Goldman) |
The group moved
almost without pause, up steep forested hills, down into rice valleys, through
mud and streams, across humpy cassava fields, and into dense stands of trees
and undergrowth. The morning dew made the going slippery in places. Striving to
keep up with lean young men one-third of my age (none of whom had my complement
of double hip replacements and a reconstructed anterior cruciate knee ligament),
I took photographs and video only when the group slowed down and was in fairly
open, flat terrain. When I lost sight of the hunters in the thicket or they
temporarily broke apart, the dogs’ yapping and the racket the youths made – a
continuous stream of whoops, exhortations and loud popping vocalisations
(alveolar clicks?) aimed at exciting the dogs – allowed me to keep tabs on
them.
Early on, excitement
ran high as the dogs surrounded an animal in a clump of thicket (this occurs in
the video below at about the 48-second mark). When the hunters realised it was a
bushbaby (
komba;
Otolemur garnettii, aka Greater Galago) they left it and
drew the dogs away. They don’t bother with bushbabies – not even to feed to the
dogs – since these small nocturnal primates are not considered pests.
The hunt was
called off about an hour and a half later. There had been no takings that day.
According to the youths, this is not an uncommon outcome: on some hunts they
kill one or two civets or other varmints, but more often they go home
empty-handed. They attributed this to the effectiveness of their hunting forays.
There was more I would have liked to inquire about, but I could not keep the
young men from their breakfasts any longer.
ReferencesChoudhury A.,
Duckworth J.W., Timmins R., Chutipong W., Willcox D.H.A., Rahman H., Ghimirey
Y. & Mudappa D. 2015. Viverricula indica. The IUCN Red List
of Threatened Species 2015: e.T41710A45220632. https://dx.doi.org/10.2305/IUCN.UK.2015-4.RLTS.T41710A45220632.en. Downloaded
on 12 March 2021.
Craster J.E.E.
1913. Pemba, The Spice Island of Zanzibar. London: T. Fisher Unwin.
Gaubert P.,
Patel R.P., Veron G., Goodman S.M., Willsch M., Vasconcelos R., Lourenço A.,
Sigaud M., Justy F., Joshi B. D., Fickel J. & Wilting A. 2017.
Phylogeography of the Small Indian Civet and origin of introductions to Western
Indian Ocean islands. Journal of Heredity 108: 270–279.
Goldman H.V.
& Walsh M.T. 2019a. First
videos of endemic Zanzibar servaline genet Genetta servalina archeri,
African palm civet Nandinia binotata (Mammalia: Carnivora:
Viverridae) and other small carnivores on Unguja Island, Tanzania. Journal
of Threatened Taxa 11(10), 14292-14300.
Goldman H.V. & Walsh M.T. 2019b. Classifying, domesticating and extirpating the Zanzibar leopard, a transgressive felid. Norsk Antropologisk Tidsskrift (Norwegian Journal of Anthropology) 30 (3-4): 205-219.
Goldman H.V. & Winther-Hansen J. 2003. First photographs of the Zanzibar servaline genet Genetta servalina archeri and other endemic subspecies on the island of Unguja, Tanzania. Small Carnivore Conservation 29: 1–4.
Goldman H.V.
& Winther-Hansen J. 2007. Lights,
camera, action. Africa Geographic 15: 24–25.
Moreau R.E.
& Pakenham R.H.W. 1941. The land vertebrates of Pemba, Zanzibar, and Mafia:
a zoogeographical study. Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London 110:
97-128.
Pakenham R.H.W.
1984. The Mammals of Zanzibar and Pemba Islands. Harpenden: privately printed.
Walsh M.T.
2007. Island subsistence: hunting, trapping and the translocation of wildlife in the Western Indian Ocean. Azania 42: 83-113.
Wilson F.B.
1939. Notes on Peasant Agriculture and Industries in Zanzibar Island. Zanzibar.
National Archives, File no. AU2/54.
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