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Unbelievable: Inside Indonesia’s Tree-Dwelling Cannibal Tribe Who Had No Idea Other People Existed Till 1970s (Photos)

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Unbelievable: Inside Indonesia’s Tree-Dwelling Cannibal Tribe Who Had No Idea Other People Existed Till 1970s (Photos)


A tree-dwelling cannibal tribe who had no idea that other people existed until the 1970s, has been unveiled in Indonesia.

The Korowai people of West Papua in Indonesia

These incredible images reveal Indonesia’s tree-dwelling cannibal tribe who had no idea other people existed until the 1970s.

The pictures show the Korowai people of West Papua in Indonesia building their treehouses, marching off to hunt and carrying their children in huge nets over their shoulders.

A Korowai woman carrying her child in a net  in amazing pictures taken 17 years ago

Other striking shots show one tribesman with an enormous nose ring, mothers tending to their children near open fires and a traditional meal of sago larvae.

The candid photographs were taken by Eric Baccega in 2000 – but they have only just come to light.

A man climbing to his house on a ladder cut out in a trunk; the tribe live in the tall trees of Western Papuasia, Indonesia

The Korowai, also called the Kolufo, are the people who live in south-eastern West Papua in the Indonesian Province of Papua, close to the border with Papua New Guinea. They number about 3,000.

It is possible that the Korowai were unaware of the existence of any people besides themselves, before outsiders made contact with them in 1970.

Korowai men dressed in little but a stretch of twine around their waists build  a house on top of a 25-metre tree

The Korowai have been reported to be cannibals but anthropologists suspect that it is is no longer practised.

Recent reports suggest that certain clans have been coaxed into encouraging tourism by perpetuating the myth that it is still an active practice.

A female member of the tribe sits at home by the fire nursing her child

The majority of the Korowai clans live in tree houses on their isolated territory. Since 1980 some have moved into the recently opened villages of Yaniruma at the Becking River banks, Mu, and Mbasman.

The Korowai are hunter-gatherers and horticulturalists who practice shifting cultivation. They have excellent hunting and fishing skills.

A man wearing a huge nose ring and traditional jewellery in a candid photograph taken by Eric Baccega

The first documented contact by Western scientists with members of a band of western Korowai, or eastern Citak, took place on March 17 and 18, 1974.

The expedition was co-led by anthropologist Peter Van Arsdale, now of the University of Denver, geographer Robert Mitton, and community developer Mark Grundhoefer.

Korowai hunters in the rainforest searching for the day’s food

Thirty men were encountered on the south bank of the Upper Eilanden River, approximately 12 miles east of its junction with the Kolff River and 10 miles north of the Becking River.

A basic word list was generated and observations were recorded regarding such things as fire making techniques.

A mother climbs the treehouse ladder to her home with her child wrapped around her neck and holding on to her head

These are the tribe’s traditional homes, perched high in the trees

A traditional meal of the Korowai – sago larvae

A tribeswoman presses out the pulp of a sago tree in the village where the tribe were once reported to practice cannibalism

The majority of the Korowai clans live in tree houses on their isolated territory but since 1980 some have moved into the recently opened villages nearby

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Culled from The Sun UK

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