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Marind people

Marind people
Marind-Anim people
Marind-Anim men dressed for ceremony, south coast Dutch New Guinea.jpg
Marind-Anim men dressed for ceremony, south coast Dutch New Guinea. c 1920's.
Total population
(11,000)
Regions with significant populations
Southern coast of Papua Province, Indonesia. Also known as West Papua
Languages
Marind Family of the Trans–New Guinea Phylum of Papuan languages
Religion
Christianity (predominantly), Indigenous beliefs
Related ethnic groups
Indigenous Papuan peoples of West Papua and Papua New Guinea, other Melanesians

Marind or Marind-Anim are people living in South New Guinea.

The Marind live south of the lower parts of river Digul, east of Yos Sudarso Island, mainly west of Maro River (a small area goes beyond Maro at its lower part, including Merauke). Today the area inhabited by Marind-anim is contained by Papua province of Indonesia.

In the past, the Marind were famed because of headhunting. This was rooted in their belief system and linked to the name-giving of the newborn. The skull was believed to contain a mana-like force. Headhunting was not motivated primarily by cannibalism, but the already killed person's flesh was consumed.

The people lived spread in several extended families. Such an extended family derives its origin up to a mythological ancestor. Ancestor veneration has a characteristic form here: these mythological ancestors are demon-like figures, they feature in myths, and act as culture heroes, arranging the ancient world to its recent state, introducing plants, animals, cultural goods. They have often the form of plants or animals; there is a kind of totemism, but it is not accompanied by a regular food taboo of the respective animal or plant. Totems can appear both in artefacts and myths.

The word for such an ancestral spirit being is dema in the Marind languages. The material similarity of this word to “demon” is incidental. Each extended family keeps and transfers the tradition, it is especially the chore of the big men of the respective family. The influence of these big men does not go beyond their extended family.


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