Mundari people
African traditional religion | |
Related ethnic groups | |
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Karo people, other Nilotic peoples |
The Mundari are a small
The group is composed of
Tribal land
The traditional Mundari tribal lands are located roughly 75 kilometers north of
The land, like much of South Sudan, is predominantly flat and marked by occasional isolated large hills. The low-lying land contains many rivers and lakes and is prone to flooding during the
Culture
The Mundari, like other Nilotic tribes, are very cattle-oriented: cattle serves as a form of currency and a mark of status. Marriages are arranged by the prospective groom offering cattle to the bride's family and husbands may take as many wives as they can support. The Mundari engage in perennial cattle raiding wars with the Bor Dinka during the dry season.
Mundari men sometimes bathe their hair in cow urine; the uric acid gives the hair a red, yellow, or orange color, which they regard as beautiful.[2][3]
The Mundari also cultivate sorghum and catch fish using nets and spears.
In common with other Nilotic tribes in Sudan, the Mundari practice ritual scarification as a rite of passage into adulthood for young men. The typical Mundari scar pattern consists of two sets of three parallel lines, each on either side of the forehead, extending in a downward slope and unconnected in the middle.
Gallery
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Boy milking cow in Mundari tribe, South Sudan.
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Mundari man putting ashes on a cow.
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Mundari men wrestlling a prestigious game within the Mundari.
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A young Mundari boy scoops fish from a fishing boat in South Sudan.
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Mundari people collecting the cow dong to burn it.
References
- ^ "The Mundari people of South Sudan". Africa Geographic. 2021-04-28. Retrieved 2024-03-18.
- ^ Thomas Page, The Mundari: The tribe dying for their cows, CNN (August 31, 2016).
- ^ Levison Wood, Encounters: A Photographic Journey (Octopus Books: 2020).