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Himba people

The Himba (singular: OmuHimba, plural: OvaHimba) are an indigenous people with an estimated population of about 50,000 people[1] living in northern Namibia, in the Kunene Region (formerly Kaokoland) and on the other side of the Kunene River in southern Angola.[1] There are also a few groups left of the OvaTwa, who are also OvaHimba, but are hunter-gatherers. Culturally distinguishable from the Herero people, the OvaHimba are a semi-nomadic, pastoralist people and speak OtjiHimba, a variety of Herero, which belongs to the Bantu family within Niger–Congo.[1] The OvaHimba are semi-nomadic as they have base homesteads where crops are cultivated, but may have to move within the year depending on rainfall and where there is access to water.

Himba
OvaHimba
Himba (OmuHimba) woman
Total population
about 50,000[1]
Regions with significant populations
 Namibia-
 Angola-
Languages
OtjiHimba (a variety of Herero)
Religion
Monotheistic (Mukuru and Ancestor Reverence)
Related ethnic groups
Herero people, Bantu peoples

The OvaHimba are considered the last (semi-) nomadic people of Namibia.

Culture Edit

 
Himba herders in Kaokoland

Subsistence economy Edit

The OvaHimba are predominantly livestock farmers who breed fat-tailed sheep and goats, but count their wealth in the number of their cattle.[1] They also grow and farm rain-fed crops such as maize and millet.[1] Livestock are the major source of milk and meat for the OvaHimba. Their main diet is sour milk and maize porridge (oruhere ruomaere) and sometimes plain hard porridge only, due to milk and meat scarcity. Their diet is also supplemented by cornmeal, chicken eggs, wild herbs and honey. Only occasionally, and opportunistically, are the livestock sold for cash.[1] Non-farming businesses, wages and salaries, pensions, and other cash remittances make up a very small portion of the OvaHimba livelihood, which is gained chiefly from their work in conservancies, old-age pensions, and drought relief aid from the government of Namibia.[1]

Daily life Edit

 
Himba woman preparing incense. The smoke is used as an antimicrobial body cleansing agent, deodorant and fragrant, made by burning aromatic herbs and resins.

Women and girls tend to perform more labor-intensive work than men and boys do, such as carrying water to the village, earthen plastering the mopane wood homes with a traditional mixture of red clay soil and cow manure binding agent, collecting firewood, attending to the calabash vines used for producing and ensuring a secure supply of soured milk, cooking and serving meals, as well as artisans making handicrafts, clothing and jewelry.[1] The responsibility for milking the cows and goats also lies with the women and girls.[1] Women and girls take care of the children, and one woman or girl will take care of another woman's children. The men's main tasks are tending to the livestock farming, herding where the men will often be away from the family home for extended periods, animal slaughtering, construction, and holding council with village tribal chiefs.[1]

Members of a single extended family typically dwell in a homestead (onganda), a small family-village, consisting of a circular hamlet of huts and work shelters that surround an okuruwo (sacred ancestral fire) and a kraal for the sacred livestock. Both the fire and the livestock are closely tied to their veneration of the dead, the sacred fire representing ancestral protection and the sacred livestock allowing "proper relations between human and ancestor".[2]

The OvaHimba use a heterogeneous pasture system that includes both rainy-season pastures and dry-season pastures. Dry-season pastures are rested during the rainy season which results in higher biomass production in the soil compared to constantly grazing all pastures.[3]

Clothing and hair style Edit

 
Pubescent Himba girl with hair headdress styled to veil her face
 
Young Himba girls in northern Namibia. The Erembe headdress indicates that they are no longer children.

Both the Himba men and women are accustomed to wearing traditional clothing that befits their living environment in the Kaokoland and the hot semi-arid climate of their area. In most occurrences this consists simply of skirt-like clothing made from calfskins and sheep skin or, increasingly, from more modern textiles, and occasionally sandals for footwear. Women's sandals are made from cows' skin while men's are made from old car tires.[citation needed] Women who have given birth wear a small backpack of skin attached to their traditional outfit. Himba people, especially women, are famous for covering themselves with otjize paste, a cosmetic mixture of butterfat and ochre pigment. Otjize cleanses the skin over long periods due to water scarcity and protects from the hot and dry climate of the Kaokoland, as well as from insect bites. It gives Himba people's skin and hair plaits a distinctive texture, style, and orange or red tinge, and is often perfumed with the aromatic resin of the omuzumba shrub.[1] Otjize is considered foremost a highly desirable aesthetic beauty cosmetic, symbolizing earth's rich red color and blood, the essence of life, and is consistent with the OvaHimba ideal of beauty.

From pubescence, boys continue to have one braided plait, while girls will have many otjize-textured hair plaits, some arranged to veil the girl's face. In daily practice the plaits are often tied together and held parted back from the face. Women who have been married for about a year or have had a child wear an ornate headpiece called the Erembe, sculptured from sheepskin, with many streams of braided hair coloured and put in shape with otjize paste. Unmarried young men continue to wear one braided plait extending to the rear of the head, while married men wear a cap or head-wrap and un-braided hair beneath.[4][5] Widowed men will remove their cap or head-wrap and expose un-braided hair. The OvaHimba are also accustomed to use wood ash for hair cleansing due to water scarcity.

Customary practices Edit

The OvaHimba are polygamous, with the average Himba man being husband to two wives at the same time. They also practice early arranged marriages. Young Himba girls are married to male partners chosen by their fathers. This happens from the onset of puberty,[1] which may mean that girls aged 10 or below are married off. This practice is illegal in Namibia, and even some OvaHimba contest it, but it is nevertheless widespread.[6]

Genetical testing was used in a 2020 study of a semi-nomadic group near the Angolan border. It showed that 48% of all children were conceived by a father outside of the marriage; and that more than 70% of the couples had at least one child from an extra-pair father. Furthermore, parents of both sexes could, with a reliability of 72 and 73% percent, tell which ones of their children were fathered by a man outside of the marriage.[7]

Among the Himba people, it is customary as a rite of passage to circumcise boys before puberty. Upon marriage, a Himba boy is considered a man. A Himba girl is not considered a fully-fledged woman until she bears a child.

Marriage among the OvaHimba involves transactions of cattle, which are the source of their economy. Bridewealth is involved in these transactions; this can be negotiable between the groom's family and the bride's father, depending on the relative poverty of the families involved.[8] In order for the bride's family to accept the bridewealth, the cattle must appear of high quality. It is standard practice to offer an ox, but more cattle will be offered if the groom's father is wealthy and is capable of offering more.

Societal participation Edit

Despite the fact that a majority of OvaHimba live a distinct cultural lifestyle in their remote rural environment and homesteads, they are socially dynamic, and not all are isolated from the trends of local urban cultures. The OvaHimba coexist and interact with members of their country's other ethnic groups and the social trends of urban townsfolk. This is especially true of those in proximity to the Kunene Region capital of Opuwo, who travel frequently to shop at the local town supermarkets for the convenience of commercial consumer products, market food produce and to acquire health care.[1]

Links with Western culture Edit

Some Himba children attend Western schools, and some young people leave the homelands to live in towns.[9]

Tribal structure Edit

 
A traditional regional Leader or Headman of the OvaHimba - Chief Kapuka Thom († 2009) of the Vita (Thom) Royal House[10] with his grandson

Because of the harsh desert climate in the region where they live and their seclusion from outside influences, the OvaHimba have managed to maintain and preserve much of their traditional lifestyle. Members live under a tribal structure based on bilateral descent that helps them live in one of the most extreme environments on earth.

Under bilateral descent, every tribe member belongs to two clans: one through the father (a patriclan, called oruzo) and another through the mother (a matriclan, called eanda).[11] Himba clans are led by the eldest male in the clan. Sons live with their father's clan, and when daughters marry, they go to live with the clan of their husband. However, inheritance of wealth does not follow the patriclan but is determined by the matriclan, that is, a son does not inherit his father's cattle but his maternal uncle's instead. Along with the inheritance of wealth, moral obligations are also important within the tribal structure. When a person dies, the OvaHimba evaluate the care of those who are left behind, such as orphans and widows. Access to water-points and pastures is another part of the OvaHimba inheritance structure.

Bilateral descent is found among only a few groups in West Africa, India, Australia, Melanesia and Polynesia, and anthropologists consider the system advantageous for groups that live in extreme environments because it allows individuals to rely on two sets of kin dispersed over a wide area.[12]

History Edit

The OvaHimba history is fraught with disasters, including severe droughts and guerrilla warfare, especially during Namibia's war of independence and as a result of the civil war in neighboring Angola.

In the 1980s it appeared the OvaHimba way of life was coming to a close due to a climax in adverse climatic conditions and political conflicts.[13] A severe drought killed 90% of their livestock, and many gave up their herds and became refugees in the town of Opuwo living in slums on international humanitarian aid, or joined Koevoet paramilitary units to cope with the livestock losses and widespread famine.[13] OvaHimba living over the border in Angola were occasionally victims of kidnapping during the South African Border war, either taken as hostages or abducted to join the Angolan branch of the People's Liberation Army of Namibia (PLAN, army of SWAPO).[13]

Religion Edit

The OvaHimba are a monotheistic people who worship the god Mukuru, as well as their clan's ancestors (ancestor reverence). Mukuru only blesses, while the ancestors can bless and curse.[14] Each family has its own sacred ancestral fire, which is kept by the fire-keeper. The fire-keeper approaches the sacred ancestral fire every seven to eight days in order to communicate with Mukuru and the ancestors on behalf of his family.[15] Often, because Mukuru is busy in a distant realm, the ancestors act as Mukuru's representatives.[15]

The OvaHimba traditionally believe in omiti, which some translate to mean witchcraft but which others call "black magic" or "bad medicine".[16] Some OvaHimba believe that death is caused by omiti, or rather, by someone using omiti for malicious purposes.[17] Additionally, some believe that evil people who use omiti have the power to place bad thoughts into another's mind[18] or cause extraordinary events to happen (such as when a common illness becomes life-threatening).[19] But users of omiti do not always attack their victim directly; sometimes they target a relative or loved one.[20] Some OvaHimba will consult a traditional African diviner-healer to reveal the reason behind an extraordinary event, or the source of the omiti.[19]

Since Namibian independence Edit

 
Himba mobile school

The OvaHimba have been successful in maintaining their culture and traditional way of life.

As such, the OvaHimba have worked with international activists to block a proposed hydroelectric dam along the Kunene River that would have flooded their ancestral lands.[21] In 2011, when Namibia announced its new plan to build a dam in Orokawe, in the Baynes Mountains. The OvaHimba submitted in February 2012 their protest declaration against the hydroelectric dam to the United Nations, the African Union and to the Government of Namibia.[22]

The government of Norway and Iceland funded mobile schools for Himba children, but since Namibia took them over in 2010, they have been converted to permanent schools and are no longer mobile. The Himba leaders complain in their declaration about the culturally inappropriate school system, that they say would threaten their culture, identity and way of life as a people.

Human rights Edit

Groups of the last remaining hunters and gatherers Ovatwa are held in secured camps in the northern part of Namibia's Kunene region, despite complaints by the traditional Himba chiefs that the Ovatwa are held there without their consent and against their wishes.[23]

In February 2012, traditional Himba chiefs[24] issued two separate declarations[25][26] to the African Union and to the OHCHR of the United Nations.The first, titled "Declaration of the most affected Ovahimba, Ovatwa, Ovatjimba and Ovazemba against the Orokawe Dam in the Baynes Mountains"[22] outlines the objections from regional Himba chiefs and communities that reside near the Kunene River. The second, titled "Declaration by the traditional Himba leaders of Kaokoland in Namibia"[25] lists violations of civil, cultural, economic, environmental, social and political rights perpetrated by the government of Namibia (GoN).

In September 2012, the United Nations special rapporteur on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples visited the OvaHimba and heard their concerns that they do not have recognized traditional authorities and that they are placed under the jurisdictions of chiefs of neighboring dominant tribes, who make decisions on behalf of the minority communities. In his view, the lack of recognition of traditional chiefs, in accordance with Namibian law, relates to a lack of recognition of the minority indigenous tribes' communal lands.[27] On November 23, 2012, hundreds of OvaHimba and Zemba from Omuhonga and Epupa region protested in Okanguati against Namibia's plans to construct a dam in the Kunene River in the Baynes Mountains, against increasing mining operations on their traditional land and human rights violations against them.[28]

On March 25, 2013, over 1,000 Himba people marched in protest again, this time in Opuwo, against the ongoing human rights violations that they endure in Namibia. They expressed their frustration over the lack of recognition of their traditional chiefs as "Traditional Authorities" by the government;[29] Namibia's plans to build the Orokawe dam in the Baynes Mountains at the Kunene River without consulting with the OvaHimba, who do not consent to the construction plans; culturally inappropriate education; the illegal fencing of parts of their traditional land; and their lack of property rights to the territory that they have lived upon for centuries. They also protested against the implementation of the Communal Land Reform Act of 2002.[30]

On October 14, 2013, Himba chief Kapika, on behalf of his region Epupa and the community which was featured in German RTL reality TV show Wild Girls condemned the misuse of Himba people, individuals and villagers in the show, and demanded the halt of broadcasting any further episodes as they would mock the culture and way of being of the Himba people.[31]

In March 2014, OvaHimba from both countries, Angola and Namibia, marched again in protest against the dam's construction plans and against the government attempt to bribe their regional Himba chief. In the signed letter of the Himba community from Epupa, the region that would be directly affected by the dam, the traditional leaders explain that any consent form signed by a former chief as a result of bribery was not valid, as they remain opposed to the dam.[32]

Anthropological investigations Edit

Color perception and vision Edit

 
Names of colors in Otjiherero

Several researchers have studied the OvaHimba perception of colours.[33] The OvaHimba use four colour names: zuzu stands for dark shades of blue, red, green and purple; vapa is white and some shades of yellow; buru is some shades of green and blue; and dambu is some other shades of green, red and brown.[34]

Like many traditional societies, the Himba have exceptionally sharp vision, believed to come from their cattle rearing and need to identify each cow's markings.[35]

Notable Ovahimba Edit

See also Edit

Literature Edit

  • Kamaku Consultancy Services cc., Commissioned by: Country Pilot Partnership (CPP) Programme Namibia (2011). (PDF). Windhoek, Namibia: The Ministry of Environment and Tourism, Republic of Namibia. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2014-08-04.
  • Bollig, Michael (2006). Risk Management in a Hazardous Environment: A Comparative Study of two Pastoral Societies. New York: Springer Science+Business Media, Inc. ISBN 9780387275819.
  • Sherman, Rina. Ma vie avec les Ovahimba.
  • Bardet, Solenn. Pieds nus sur la terre rouge.
  • Bardet, Solenn. Rouge Himba.

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Kamaku Consultancy Services cc., Commissioned by: Country Pilot Partnership (CPP) Programme Namibia (2011). (PDF). Windhoek, Namibia: The Ministry of Environment and Tourism, Republic of Namibia. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2014-08-04.
  2. ^ Crandall 2000, p. 18.
  3. ^ Müller, Birgit; Linstädter, Anja; Frank, Karin; Bollig, Michael; Wissel, Christian (2007). "Learning from Local Knowledge: Modeling the Pastoral-Nomadic Range Management of the Himba, Namibia". Ecological Applications. 17 (7): 1857–1875. doi:10.1890/06-1193.1. ISSN 1939-5582. PMID 17974327.
  4. ^ Kcurly (4 January 2011). "Himba Hair Styling". Newly Natural. Retrieved 2012-08-04.
  5. ^ . Africa Travel. About.com. Archived from the original on 2012-05-26. Retrieved 2012-08-04.
  6. ^ Kangootui, Nomhle (26 May 2016). "Opuwo's lonely voice against child marriages". The Namibian. p. 1.
  7. ^ B. A. Scelza; S. P. Prall; N. Swinford; S. Gopalan; E. G. Atkinson; R. McElreath; J. Sheehama; B. M. Henn (2020-02-19). "High rate of extrapair paternity in a human population demonstrates diversity in human reproductive strategies". Science Advances. 6 (8): eaay6195. Bibcode:2020SciA....6.6195S. doi:10.1126/sciadv.aay6195. PMC 7030936. PMID 32128411.
  8. ^ Crandall, D. (1998). The Role of Time in Himba Valuations of Cattle. The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 4(1), 101-114. doi:10.2307/3034430
  9. ^ "Namibia's Himba people caught between traditions and modernity". BBC News. 2017-08-30. Retrieved 2022-09-09.
  10. ^ Friedman, John (2011). Imagining The Post-Apartheid State: An Ethnographic Account of Namibia. Oxford, New York: Berghahn Books. p. 204. ISBN 9781782383239.
  11. ^ Crandall 2000.
  12. ^ Ezzell, Carol (17 June 2001). . Scientific American. 284 (6): 80–9. Bibcode:2001SciAm.284f..80E. doi:10.1038/scientificamerican0601-80. PMID 11396346. Archived from the original on 12 October 2007. Retrieved 20 July 2007.
  13. ^ a b c Bollig, Michael (2006). Risk Management in a Hazardous Environment: A Comparative Study of two Pastoral Societies. New York: Springer Science+Business Media, Inc. pp. 167–168. ISBN 9780387275819.
  14. ^ Crandall 2000, p. 188.
  15. ^ a b Crandall 2000, p. 47.
  16. ^ Crandall 2000, p. 33.
  17. ^ Crandall 2000, pp. 38–39.
  18. ^ Crandall 2000, p. 102.
  19. ^ a b Crandall 2000, p. 66.
  20. ^ Crandall 2000, p. 67.
  21. ^ "Namibia: Dam will mean our destruction, warn Himba". IRIN. United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. 18 January 2008.
  22. ^ a b "Declaration of the most affected Ovahimba, Ovatwa, Ovatjimba and Ovazemba against the Orokawe Dam in the Baynes Mountains". Earth Peoples. 7 February 2012. Retrieved 2012-04-06.
  23. ^ Cupido, Delme (28 February 2012). . OSISA. Archived from the original on 4 March 2012. Retrieved 2012-02-28.
  24. ^ . Galdu. Agence France-Presse. Archived from the original on 2013-10-17. Retrieved 2012-04-06.
  25. ^ a b . Earth Peoples. 20 January 2012. Archived from the original on 2018-07-27. Retrieved 2012-04-06.
  26. ^ . Newsodrome. Archived from the original on October 17, 2013. Retrieved 2012-04-06.
  27. ^ "Statement of the Special Rapporteur on the rights of indigenous peoples, James Anaya, upon concluding his visit to Namibia from 20-28 September 2012". OHCHR. 28 September 2012. Retrieved 2012-11-28.
  28. ^ Sommer, Rebecca (23 November 2012). "Namibia: Indigenous semi-nomadic Himba and Zemba march in protest against dam, mining and human rights violations". Earth Peoples. Retrieved 2012-11-24.
  29. ^ "German GIZ directly engaged with dispossessing indigenous peoples of their lands and territories in Namibia". earthpeoples.org. Retrieved 2013-03-30.
  30. ^ Sasman, Catherine. "Himba, Zemba reiterate 'no' to Baynes dam". Allafrica. Retrieved 2014-03-29.
  31. ^ . Earth Peoples. Archived from the original on 2016-04-07. Retrieved 2013-10-16.
  32. ^ Sommer, Rebecca. "NAMIBIA Semi-nomadic HIMBA march again in protest against dam construction and government attempt to bribe Himba chief's consent". earthpeoples.org. Retrieved 2014-03-29.
  33. ^ Roberson, Debi; Davidoff, Jules; Davies, Ian R.L.; Shapiro, Laura R. "Colour Categories and Category Acquisition in Himba and English" (pdf). The Department of Psychology. University of Essex. Retrieved 2012-05-28.
  34. ^ Reiger, Terry; Kay, Paul (28 August 2009). "Language, thought, and color: Whorf was half right" (PDF). Trends in Cognitive Sciences. 13 (10): 439–446. doi:10.1016/j.tics.2009.07.001. PMID 19716754. S2CID 2564005. Retrieved 2012-08-29.
  35. ^ Robson, David (26 June 2020). "The astonishing vision and focus of Namibia's nomads". Retrieved 27 June 2020.

Further reading Edit

  • Crandall, David P. (2000). The Place of Stunted Ironwood Trees: A Year in the Lives of the Cattle-Herding Himba of Namibia. New York: Continuum International Publishing Group Inc. pp. 18, 33, 38–39, 47, 48, 66, 67, 102, 188. ISBN 0-8264-1270-X.
  • Peter Pickford, Beverly Pickford, Margaret Jacobsohn: Himba; ed. New Holland Publishers (UK) Ltd, 1990; ISBN 978-1-85368-084-7
  • Klaus G. Förg, Gerhard Burkl: Himba. Namibias ockerrotes Volk; Rosenheim: Rosenheimer Verlagshaus, 2004; ISBN 3-475-53572-6 (in German)
  • Rina Sherman: Ma vie avec les Ovahimba; Paris: Hugo et Cie, 2009; ISBN 978-2-7556-0261-6 (in French)

External links Edit

  • Himbas, struggle for survive; a long term documentary by photojournalist and filmmaker Delmi Alvarez
  • A Peace Corps volunteer works among the Himba
  • HIMBA CUSTOMS from Namibia. Extract from Last Free Men by José Manuel Novoa
  • HIMBA DANCE in Omuhonga, Kaokoland, Namibia, video by Rebecca Sommer
  • Association Kovahimba, created by Solenn Bardet

Photographs Edit

  • The Ovahimba Years – photography by Rina Sherman
  • The Himba Tribe – photography by Klaus Tiedge
  • Photos of the Himba People in Okangwati 2014-08-15 at the Wayback Machine – photography by Benjamin Rennicke
  • – photographs and information
  • – photographs and information

Movies Edit

  • The Himba are shooting – movie by Solenn Bardet (French and English)

himba, people, himba, singular, omuhimba, plural, ovahimba, indigenous, people, with, estimated, population, about, people, living, northern, namibia, kunene, region, formerly, kaokoland, other, side, kunene, river, southern, angola, there, also, groups, left,. The Himba singular OmuHimba plural OvaHimba are an indigenous people with an estimated population of about 50 000 people 1 living in northern Namibia in the Kunene Region formerly Kaokoland and on the other side of the Kunene River in southern Angola 1 There are also a few groups left of the OvaTwa who are also OvaHimba but are hunter gatherers Culturally distinguishable from the Herero people the OvaHimba are a semi nomadic pastoralist people and speak OtjiHimba a variety of Herero which belongs to the Bantu family within Niger Congo 1 The OvaHimba are semi nomadic as they have base homesteads where crops are cultivated but may have to move within the year depending on rainfall and where there is access to water HimbaOvaHimbaHimba OmuHimba womanTotal populationabout 50 000 1 Regions with significant populations Namibia Angola LanguagesOtjiHimba a variety of Herero ReligionMonotheistic Mukuru and Ancestor Reverence Related ethnic groupsHerero people Bantu peoplesThe OvaHimba are considered the last semi nomadic people of Namibia Contents 1 Culture 1 1 Subsistence economy 1 2 Daily life 1 3 Clothing and hair style 1 4 Customary practices 1 5 Societal participation 1 6 Links with Western culture 2 Tribal structure 3 History 3 1 Religion 3 2 Since Namibian independence 3 3 Human rights 4 Anthropological investigations 4 1 Color perception and vision 5 Notable Ovahimba 6 See also 7 Literature 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External links 10 1 Photographs 10 2 MoviesCulture Edit nbsp Himba herders in KaokolandSubsistence economy Edit Further information Subsistence economy The OvaHimba are predominantly livestock farmers who breed fat tailed sheep and goats but count their wealth in the number of their cattle 1 They also grow and farm rain fed crops such as maize and millet 1 Livestock are the major source of milk and meat for the OvaHimba Their main diet is sour milk and maize porridge oruhere ruomaere and sometimes plain hard porridge only due to milk and meat scarcity Their diet is also supplemented by cornmeal chicken eggs wild herbs and honey Only occasionally and opportunistically are the livestock sold for cash 1 Non farming businesses wages and salaries pensions and other cash remittances make up a very small portion of the OvaHimba livelihood which is gained chiefly from their work in conservancies old age pensions and drought relief aid from the government of Namibia 1 Daily life Edit nbsp Himba woman preparing incense The smoke is used as an antimicrobial body cleansing agent deodorant and fragrant made by burning aromatic herbs and resins Women and girls tend to perform more labor intensive work than men and boys do such as carrying water to the village earthen plastering the mopane wood homes with a traditional mixture of red clay soil and cow manure binding agent collecting firewood attending to the calabash vines used for producing and ensuring a secure supply of soured milk cooking and serving meals as well as artisans making handicrafts clothing and jewelry 1 The responsibility for milking the cows and goats also lies with the women and girls 1 Women and girls take care of the children and one woman or girl will take care of another woman s children The men s main tasks are tending to the livestock farming herding where the men will often be away from the family home for extended periods animal slaughtering construction and holding council with village tribal chiefs 1 Members of a single extended family typically dwell in a homestead onganda a small family village consisting of a circular hamlet of huts and work shelters that surround an okuruwo sacred ancestral fire and a kraal for the sacred livestock Both the fire and the livestock are closely tied to their veneration of the dead the sacred fire representing ancestral protection and the sacred livestock allowing proper relations between human and ancestor 2 The OvaHimba use a heterogeneous pasture system that includes both rainy season pastures and dry season pastures Dry season pastures are rested during the rainy season which results in higher biomass production in the soil compared to constantly grazing all pastures 3 Clothing and hair style Edit nbsp Pubescent Himba girl with hair headdress styled to veil her face nbsp Young Himba girls in northern Namibia The Erembe headdress indicates that they are no longer children Both the Himba men and women are accustomed to wearing traditional clothing that befits their living environment in the Kaokoland and the hot semi arid climate of their area In most occurrences this consists simply of skirt like clothing made from calfskins and sheep skin or increasingly from more modern textiles and occasionally sandals for footwear Women s sandals are made from cows skin while men s are made from old car tires citation needed Women who have given birth wear a small backpack of skin attached to their traditional outfit Himba people especially women are famous for covering themselves with otjize paste a cosmetic mixture of butterfat and ochre pigment Otjize cleanses the skin over long periods due to water scarcity and protects from the hot and dry climate of the Kaokoland as well as from insect bites It gives Himba people s skin and hair plaits a distinctive texture style and orange or red tinge and is often perfumed with the aromatic resin of the omuzumba shrub 1 Otjize is considered foremost a highly desirable aesthetic beauty cosmetic symbolizing earth s rich red color and blood the essence of life and is consistent with the OvaHimba ideal of beauty From pubescence boys continue to have one braided plait while girls will have many otjize textured hair plaits some arranged to veil the girl s face In daily practice the plaits are often tied together and held parted back from the face Women who have been married for about a year or have had a child wear an ornate headpiece called the Erembe sculptured from sheepskin with many streams of braided hair coloured and put in shape with otjize paste Unmarried young men continue to wear one braided plait extending to the rear of the head while married men wear a cap or head wrap and un braided hair beneath 4 5 Widowed men will remove their cap or head wrap and expose un braided hair The OvaHimba are also accustomed to use wood ash for hair cleansing due to water scarcity Customary practices Edit The OvaHimba are polygamous with the average Himba man being husband to two wives at the same time They also practice early arranged marriages Young Himba girls are married to male partners chosen by their fathers This happens from the onset of puberty 1 which may mean that girls aged 10 or below are married off This practice is illegal in Namibia and even some OvaHimba contest it but it is nevertheless widespread 6 Genetical testing was used in a 2020 study of a semi nomadic group near the Angolan border It showed that 48 of all children were conceived by a father outside of the marriage and that more than 70 of the couples had at least one child from an extra pair father Furthermore parents of both sexes could with a reliability of 72 and 73 percent tell which ones of their children were fathered by a man outside of the marriage 7 Among the Himba people it is customary as a rite of passage to circumcise boys before puberty Upon marriage a Himba boy is considered a man A Himba girl is not considered a fully fledged woman until she bears a child Marriage among the OvaHimba involves transactions of cattle which are the source of their economy Bridewealth is involved in these transactions this can be negotiable between the groom s family and the bride s father depending on the relative poverty of the families involved 8 In order for the bride s family to accept the bridewealth the cattle must appear of high quality It is standard practice to offer an ox but more cattle will be offered if the groom s father is wealthy and is capable of offering more Societal participation Edit Despite the fact that a majority of OvaHimba live a distinct cultural lifestyle in their remote rural environment and homesteads they are socially dynamic and not all are isolated from the trends of local urban cultures The OvaHimba coexist and interact with members of their country s other ethnic groups and the social trends of urban townsfolk This is especially true of those in proximity to the Kunene Region capital of Opuwo who travel frequently to shop at the local town supermarkets for the convenience of commercial consumer products market food produce and to acquire health care 1 Links with Western culture Edit Some Himba children attend Western schools and some young people leave the homelands to live in towns 9 Tribal structure Edit nbsp A traditional regional Leader or Headman of the OvaHimba Chief Kapuka Thom 2009 of the Vita Thom Royal House 10 with his grandsonBecause of the harsh desert climate in the region where they live and their seclusion from outside influences the OvaHimba have managed to maintain and preserve much of their traditional lifestyle Members live under a tribal structure based on bilateral descent that helps them live in one of the most extreme environments on earth Under bilateral descent every tribe member belongs to two clans one through the father a patriclan called oruzo and another through the mother a matriclan called eanda 11 Himba clans are led by the eldest male in the clan Sons live with their father s clan and when daughters marry they go to live with the clan of their husband However inheritance of wealth does not follow the patriclan but is determined by the matriclan that is a son does not inherit his father s cattle but his maternal uncle s instead Along with the inheritance of wealth moral obligations are also important within the tribal structure When a person dies the OvaHimba evaluate the care of those who are left behind such as orphans and widows Access to water points and pastures is another part of the OvaHimba inheritance structure Bilateral descent is found among only a few groups in West Africa India Australia Melanesia and Polynesia and anthropologists consider the system advantageous for groups that live in extreme environments because it allows individuals to rely on two sets of kin dispersed over a wide area 12 History EditThe OvaHimba history is fraught with disasters including severe droughts and guerrilla warfare especially during Namibia s war of independence and as a result of the civil war in neighboring Angola In the 1980s it appeared the OvaHimba way of life was coming to a close due to a climax in adverse climatic conditions and political conflicts 13 A severe drought killed 90 of their livestock and many gave up their herds and became refugees in the town of Opuwo living in slums on international humanitarian aid or joined Koevoet paramilitary units to cope with the livestock losses and widespread famine 13 OvaHimba living over the border in Angola were occasionally victims of kidnapping during the South African Border war either taken as hostages or abducted to join the Angolan branch of the People s Liberation Army of Namibia PLAN army of SWAPO 13 Religion Edit The OvaHimba are a monotheistic people who worship the god Mukuru as well as their clan s ancestors ancestor reverence Mukuru only blesses while the ancestors can bless and curse 14 Each family has its own sacred ancestral fire which is kept by the fire keeper The fire keeper approaches the sacred ancestral fire every seven to eight days in order to communicate with Mukuru and the ancestors on behalf of his family 15 Often because Mukuru is busy in a distant realm the ancestors act as Mukuru s representatives 15 The OvaHimba traditionally believe in omiti which some translate to mean witchcraft but which others call black magic or bad medicine 16 Some OvaHimba believe that death is caused by omiti or rather by someone using omiti for malicious purposes 17 Additionally some believe that evil people who use omiti have the power to place bad thoughts into another s mind 18 or cause extraordinary events to happen such as when a common illness becomes life threatening 19 But users of omiti do not always attack their victim directly sometimes they target a relative or loved one 20 Some OvaHimba will consult a traditional African diviner healer to reveal the reason behind an extraordinary event or the source of the omiti 19 Since Namibian independence Edit nbsp Himba mobile schoolThe OvaHimba have been successful in maintaining their culture and traditional way of life As such the OvaHimba have worked with international activists to block a proposed hydroelectric dam along the Kunene River that would have flooded their ancestral lands 21 In 2011 when Namibia announced its new plan to build a dam in Orokawe in the Baynes Mountains The OvaHimba submitted in February 2012 their protest declaration against the hydroelectric dam to the United Nations the African Union and to the Government of Namibia 22 The government of Norway and Iceland funded mobile schools for Himba children but since Namibia took them over in 2010 they have been converted to permanent schools and are no longer mobile The Himba leaders complain in their declaration about the culturally inappropriate school system that they say would threaten their culture identity and way of life as a people Human rights Edit Groups of the last remaining hunters and gatherers Ovatwa are held in secured camps in the northern part of Namibia s Kunene region despite complaints by the traditional Himba chiefs that the Ovatwa are held there without their consent and against their wishes 23 In February 2012 traditional Himba chiefs 24 issued two separate declarations 25 26 to the African Union and to the OHCHR of the United Nations The first titled Declaration of the most affected Ovahimba Ovatwa Ovatjimba and Ovazemba against the Orokawe Dam in the Baynes Mountains 22 outlines the objections from regional Himba chiefs and communities that reside near the Kunene River The second titled Declaration by the traditional Himba leaders of Kaokoland in Namibia 25 lists violations of civil cultural economic environmental social and political rights perpetrated by the government of Namibia GoN In September 2012 the United Nations special rapporteur on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples visited the OvaHimba and heard their concerns that they do not have recognized traditional authorities and that they are placed under the jurisdictions of chiefs of neighboring dominant tribes who make decisions on behalf of the minority communities In his view the lack of recognition of traditional chiefs in accordance with Namibian law relates to a lack of recognition of the minority indigenous tribes communal lands 27 On November 23 2012 hundreds of OvaHimba and Zemba from Omuhonga and Epupa region protested in Okanguati against Namibia s plans to construct a dam in the Kunene River in the Baynes Mountains against increasing mining operations on their traditional land and human rights violations against them 28 On March 25 2013 over 1 000 Himba people marched in protest again this time in Opuwo against the ongoing human rights violations that they endure in Namibia They expressed their frustration over the lack of recognition of their traditional chiefs as Traditional Authorities by the government 29 Namibia s plans to build the Orokawe dam in the Baynes Mountains at the Kunene River without consulting with the OvaHimba who do not consent to the construction plans culturally inappropriate education the illegal fencing of parts of their traditional land and their lack of property rights to the territory that they have lived upon for centuries They also protested against the implementation of the Communal Land Reform Act of 2002 30 On October 14 2013 Himba chief Kapika on behalf of his region Epupa and the community which was featured in German RTL reality TV show Wild Girls condemned the misuse of Himba people individuals and villagers in the show and demanded the halt of broadcasting any further episodes as they would mock the culture and way of being of the Himba people 31 In March 2014 OvaHimba from both countries Angola and Namibia marched again in protest against the dam s construction plans and against the government attempt to bribe their regional Himba chief In the signed letter of the Himba community from Epupa the region that would be directly affected by the dam the traditional leaders explain that any consent form signed by a former chief as a result of bribery was not valid as they remain opposed to the dam 32 Anthropological investigations EditColor perception and vision Edit nbsp Names of colors in OtjihereroSee also Linguistic relativity and the color naming debate Several researchers have studied the OvaHimba perception of colours 33 The OvaHimba use four colour names zuzu stands for dark shades of blue red green and purple vapa is white and some shades of yellow buru is some shades of green and blue and dambu is some other shades of green red and brown 34 Like many traditional societies the Himba have exceptionally sharp vision believed to come from their cattle rearing and need to identify each cow s markings 35 Notable Ovahimba EditVipuakuje Muharukua member of Namibia s ParliamentSee also EditHerero people Nama people Oorlam people Ovambo people Zemba people nbsp Himba village about 15 km north of Opuwo Namibia nbsp Himba woman working Namibia nbsp Male Himba herders nbsp Himba girl tending cattle nbsp Himba woman prepares a fire Himba huts in the background nbsp As is customary in Himba culture and climate a Himba girl of northern Namibia wears a traditional skirt made from calfskin leather headdress and jewelry which signify her social status nbsp Himba woman milking a cowLiterature EditKamaku Consultancy Services cc Commissioned by Country Pilot Partnership CPP Programme Namibia 2011 Strategies That Integrate Environmental Sustainability Into National Development Planning Process to Address Livelihood Concerns of the OvaHimba Tribe in Namibia A Summary PDF Windhoek Namibia The Ministry of Environment and Tourism Republic of Namibia Archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2014 08 04 Bollig Michael 2006 Risk Management in a Hazardous Environment A Comparative Study of two Pastoral Societies New York Springer Science Business Media Inc ISBN 9780387275819 Sherman Rina Ma vie avec les Ovahimba Bardet Solenn Pieds nus sur la terre rouge Bardet Solenn Rouge Himba References Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Kamaku Consultancy Services cc Commissioned by Country Pilot Partnership CPP Programme Namibia 2011 Strategies That Integrate Environmental Sustainability Into National Development Planning Process to Address Livelihood Concerns of the OvaHimba Tribe in Namibia A Summary PDF Windhoek Namibia The Ministry of Environment and Tourism Republic of Namibia Archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2014 08 04 Crandall 2000 p 18 Muller Birgit Linstadter Anja Frank Karin Bollig Michael Wissel Christian 2007 Learning from Local Knowledge Modeling the Pastoral Nomadic Range Management of the Himba Namibia Ecological Applications 17 7 1857 1875 doi 10 1890 06 1193 1 ISSN 1939 5582 PMID 17974327 Kcurly 4 January 2011 Himba Hair Styling Newly Natural Retrieved 2012 08 04 Tribes of Africa The Himba Africa Travel About com Archived from the original on 2012 05 26 Retrieved 2012 08 04 Kangootui Nomhle 26 May 2016 Opuwo s lonely voice against child marriages The Namibian p 1 B A Scelza S P Prall N Swinford S Gopalan E G Atkinson R McElreath J Sheehama B M Henn 2020 02 19 High rate of extrapair paternity in a human population demonstrates diversity in human reproductive strategies Science Advances 6 8 eaay6195 Bibcode 2020SciA 6 6195S doi 10 1126 sciadv aay6195 PMC 7030936 PMID 32128411 Crandall D 1998 The Role of Time in Himba Valuations of Cattle The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 4 1 101 114 doi 10 2307 3034430 Namibia s Himba people caught between traditions and modernity BBC News 2017 08 30 Retrieved 2022 09 09 Friedman John 2011 Imagining The Post Apartheid State An Ethnographic Account of Namibia Oxford New York Berghahn Books p 204 ISBN 9781782383239 Crandall 2000 Ezzell Carol 17 June 2001 The Himba and the Dam Scientific American 284 6 80 9 Bibcode 2001SciAm 284f 80E doi 10 1038 scientificamerican0601 80 PMID 11396346 Archived from the original on 12 October 2007 Retrieved 20 July 2007 a b c Bollig Michael 2006 Risk Management in a Hazardous Environment A Comparative Study of two Pastoral Societies New York Springer Science Business Media Inc pp 167 168 ISBN 9780387275819 Crandall 2000 p 188 a b Crandall 2000 p 47 Crandall 2000 p 33 Crandall 2000 pp 38 39 Crandall 2000 p 102 a b Crandall 2000 p 66 Crandall 2000 p 67 Namibia Dam will mean our destruction warn Himba IRIN United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs 18 January 2008 a b Declaration of the most affected Ovahimba Ovatwa Ovatjimba and Ovazemba against the Orokawe Dam in the Baynes Mountains Earth Peoples 7 February 2012 Retrieved 2012 04 06 Cupido Delme 28 February 2012 Indigenous coalition opposed to new dam OSISA Archived from the original on 4 March 2012 Retrieved 2012 02 28 Indigenous Himba Appeal to UN to Fight Namibian Dam Galdu Agence France Presse Archived from the original on 2013 10 17 Retrieved 2012 04 06 a b Declaration by the traditional Himba leaders of Kaokoland in Namibia Earth Peoples 20 January 2012 Archived from the original on 2018 07 27 Retrieved 2012 04 06 Namibian Minority Groups Demand Their Rights Newsodrome Archived from the original on October 17 2013 Retrieved 2012 04 06 Statement of the Special Rapporteur on the rights of indigenous peoples James Anaya upon concluding his visit to Namibia from 20 28 September 2012 OHCHR 28 September 2012 Retrieved 2012 11 28 Sommer Rebecca 23 November 2012 Namibia Indigenous semi nomadic Himba and Zemba march in protest against dam mining and human rights violations Earth Peoples Retrieved 2012 11 24 German GIZ directly engaged with dispossessing indigenous peoples of their lands and territories in Namibia earthpeoples org Retrieved 2013 03 30 Sasman Catherine Himba Zemba reiterate no to Baynes dam Allafrica Retrieved 2014 03 29 Indigenous peoples Himba community condemn RTL TV series Wild Girls asking Earth Peoples co founder Rebecca Sommer for help to intervene on their behalf and stop it Earth Peoples Archived from the original on 2016 04 07 Retrieved 2013 10 16 Sommer Rebecca NAMIBIA Semi nomadic HIMBA march again in protest against dam construction and government attempt to bribe Himba chief s consent earthpeoples org Retrieved 2014 03 29 Roberson Debi Davidoff Jules Davies Ian R L Shapiro Laura R Colour Categories and Category Acquisition in Himba and English pdf The Department of Psychology University of Essex Retrieved 2012 05 28 Reiger Terry Kay Paul 28 August 2009 Language thought and color Whorf was half right PDF Trends in Cognitive Sciences 13 10 439 446 doi 10 1016 j tics 2009 07 001 PMID 19716754 S2CID 2564005 Retrieved 2012 08 29 Robson David 26 June 2020 The astonishing vision and focus of Namibia s nomads Retrieved 27 June 2020 Further reading EditCrandall David P 2000 The Place of Stunted Ironwood Trees A Year in the Lives of the Cattle Herding Himba of Namibia New York Continuum International Publishing Group Inc pp 18 33 38 39 47 48 66 67 102 188 ISBN 0 8264 1270 X Peter Pickford Beverly Pickford Margaret Jacobsohn Himba ed New Holland Publishers UK Ltd 1990 ISBN 978 1 85368 084 7 Klaus G Forg Gerhard Burkl Himba Namibias ockerrotes Volk Rosenheim Rosenheimer Verlagshaus 2004 ISBN 3 475 53572 6 in German Rina Sherman Ma vie avec les Ovahimba Paris Hugo et Cie 2009 ISBN 978 2 7556 0261 6 in French External links EditHimba at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Definitions from Wiktionary nbsp Media from Commons nbsp News from Wikinews nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Textbooks from Wikibooks nbsp Resources from Wikiversity Himbas struggle for survive a long term documentary by photojournalist and filmmaker Delmi Alvarez A Peace Corps volunteer works among the Himba HIMBA CUSTOMS from Namibia Extract from Last Free Men by Jose Manuel Novoa HIMBA DANCE in Omuhonga Kaokoland Namibia video by Rebecca Sommer Association Kovahimba created by Solenn BardetPhotographs Edit The Ovahimba Years photography by Rina Sherman The Himba Tribe photography by Klaus Tiedge Photos of the Himba People in Okangwati Archived 2014 08 15 at the Wayback Machine photography by Benjamin Rennicke Photos from Himba village near Opuwo Namibia photographs and information Africa on the Matrix Himba People of Namibia photographs and informationMovies Edit The Himba are shooting movie by Solenn Bardet French and English Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Himba people amp oldid 1179198119, 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