The Mursi people of Ethiopia’s Omo Valley have been called “one of the most fascinating tribes in Africa.”
A pastoralist group originating in the Nile Valley, the roughly 7,500 Nilo-Saharan Mursi live in an isolated corner of southwestern Ethiopia, close to the border with South Sudan. Even today with improved roadways, their villages are remote: I was on a Piper Mackay photographic tour with a small group of photo-enthusiasts under the direction of photographer Ben McRae, and we had climbed into our Toyota Land Cruisers before dawn to undertake the bumpy two-hour drive from the nearest market town of Jinka, across Mago National Park, and into Mursi lands.
This remoteness probably helps the Mursi maintain their Animist religion and traditional rites of passage. Mursi women are among the few remaining tribes to continue to wear lip plates: I’ve shared pictures of these before (see: Meet the Mursi). According to accounts, Mursi men engage in ritualised violence in the form of ceremonial stick fighting (thagine).
We did not observe the stick fighting, but we were invited to participate in a young man’s first blood-letting: a dramatic ceremonial piercing of a cow’s neck artery so that the blood can be drunk. The injury is plugged up again after a bowl of blood has been taken, and the cow takes off – relatively unharmed – as soon as it is released.
“Pay-for-click” tourism has been an integral part of visiting the Omo Valley for many years, and in a way it encourages the tribes to maintain some of their traditional trappings. But it also makes the experience of visiting villages purely transactional, rather than friendly and mutually curious. I’ve commented before about how confronting I found the whole concept of bartering for every photograph, and the Mursi people have a reputation for being particularly “aggressive”. Still, this was our last day in the tribal regions, and I had a bundle of money and a “cloak of confidence” that made me proof against extortion: if you are not careful, the price-per-photograph can double in the course of a session!
Fortunately, I managed to avoid the arguments that happen regularly between villagers and visitors, and more importantly, managed to not get shot by one of the automatic weapons that are everywhere and seem to be tossed around rather cavalierly. I was not afraid of being an intentional target, but I am surprised that accidents don’t happen more often!
Come meet the men of the Mursi – all of them proud warriors.
It is certainly not an easy life!
I was pleased to have had a glimpse into a very foreign world, but I won’t pretend I even begin to understand it.
Until next time,
Happy Travels!
Photos: 23October2018
[…] have posted some of the pictures I “bought” in this Mursi village (see: The Mursi and Mursi Men). One of the biggest problems I had was the transactional nature of the exchanges, and the fact […]