About Konyak People |
The
Konyak are a Naga people, and are recognised among other Naga
by their tattoos, which they have all over their face and
hands. They are called the land of Angh's. They have the
largest population among the Nagas. The Konyak language
belongs to the Northern Naga subbranch of the Sal subfamily of
Sino-Tibetan.
The Konyaks can be found in Myanmar, in the Tirap and
Changlang districts of Arunachal, and in the Mon district of
Nagaland, India. They are known in Arunachal as Wancho Konyak.
The Konyaks people usually have a strong warrior tradition and
are well-known because they were still headhunting until the
late 1960′s-70′s. This is the reason why their villages are
only situated on hilltops, in order to prevent attacks from
other tribes.
Known as head hunters of North East India. In recent past they
were known as war loving and often attack adjacent villages of
other tribes and with their skill they used to cut head of the
opponent warriors and hang them in the Morong (A public
House). The number of head signifies the power of concerned
person and later becomes the village head. Though except these
cruel behaviors, among them they show very disciplined public
life where duty of every individuals is very strict.
It’s not difficult to recognise the last living Konyak
headhunters. As an honourary mark, a young man would receive a
prominent facial tattoo when he managed to take an enemy’s
head. It was believed that by taking the head of an enemy as
trophy, you would gain some of his power and soul. Those
enemies’s heads were then hanged on the holy ritual tree at
the entrance of every villages. This was a common practice
until Christianisation reached them and turn those violent
customs into dust.
Christian missionaries and British colonialists convinced or
forced the Konyaks to Christianity, in order to make them
giving up the habit of cutting off human heads, hence conquer
them easily. The Konyak tribe opposed christianization and
modernization for longer than most other Nagas tribes because
wars and headhunting were a necessary part of their ritual
life in the past. Despite that, Christianism reached them and
headhunting was no longer practised.
The Konyaks hunted human skulls because they believed only
these could guarantee the fertility of their fields and
people. This belief has not ended but today the skulls have
usually been substituted by wooden heads, and the rituals
still persist. Some rather recent head hunts have been
unofficially reported. When meeting the members of this tribe
you can sometimes easily feel the violent past in their blood,
which makes you realise how not far away from now it actually
is.
Konyaks people used tattoos to indicate status just as other
people might use ornaments or textiles. For example, Konyak
Naga girls wore a tattoo on the back of the knee if they were
married, as in Western cultures a finger-ring generally makes
this statement. The chest tattoo is another classic
traditional tattoo, which was a high social privilege and
could only be worn by the best and bravest warriors of all,
which make the few still alive even more difficult to meet.
Their specific traditional headhunters war hats were made of
hunted wild pigs horns, hornbill feathers and wild bear or
goat hair. Konyaks used a traditional basket specially made to
carry and bring back human heads from war. It was ornamented
with monkey skulls, wild pigs horns and sometimes hornbill
beaks. |
|
|
Konyak Village |
Every
Konyak village is ruled by one king, who obviously displays the
more and biggest skulls. This main king can have from 3 to 6
other sub-kings, according to the village size, in order to
maintain his social and war domination. Every sub-king is in
charge of a different part of the village and reports to the
main king. All kings are easily recognisable because of the
clear blue beads on their legs. The more blue beads layers they
wear, the most powerful and respected they are. In the past,
kings used to get bribes from the dominated villages all around,
even sometimes 50 km away from their own village, beating drums
on vast carved dead trees to pass messages from villages to
villages. |
|
|
Hornbill |
The
imposing hornbill is a Nagaland symbol which represents loyalty,
because of the female bird staying in the high nest and relying
on her male to feed her. In the past, the right to use hornbill
feathers had to be earned, feathers were not for sale, and only
those that excelled in warfare received the honor to decorate
themselves with the feathers. The Nagas tribes recently realized
the damages they have done on the specie, so they stopped
hunting them and they now protect them instead.
The hornbill was unfortunately not the only victim of the
Konyaks traditions and way of living. The Konyaks platation
system, as most the Nagas tribes, is the slash-and-burn
cultivation. As its name can tell, this type of cultivation
destroys the jungle and its whole biotope, forcing big wild
animals, such as bears, panthers and tigers which used to live
in this area, to totally disappear. The smaller animals, as wild
pigs, monkeys and birds, have now to hide even further into the
jungle, far from any human contact. The hunters complain about
that because it makes them walk way further to get any decent
catch. Konyaks use to keep animal skulls from those hunts into
their homes to protect the people living inside from the evil
spirits from the jungle. The amount of skulls displayed, inside
and outside the house, disclose the social status of the owner.
The more and bigger skulls, the highest the social status. |
|
|
|
|
|
|