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Dancing a new face contemporary Sala Mpasu masquerades.


The Sala Mpasu are a people who have repeatedly reinvented themselves during the twentieth century. The last of the peoples in the Congo (1) to be conquered by the Belgians, the Sala Mpasu had succeeded in keeping outsiders away by combining outstanding fighting skill with a reputation of being savage "cannibals. "(2) This carefully developed reputation backfired in the second half of the twentieth century, acting as a barrier to the aspirations of ambitious Sala Mpasu who attempted to break into social, political, and economic positions in a wider arena than the small Sala Mpasu area itself.

The Sala Mpasu reputation, made concrete by their men's society and their masquerades, served to protect their independence for perhaps as long as 200 years. For centuries, art played a part in protecting the Sala Mpasu from outside incursions and helped to preserve cultural, political, and economic institutions. Toward the end of the nineteenth and into the twentieth century, the Sala Mpasu and their neighbors met outside forces that they could not overcome.

Before Belgian conquest, individual and group independence had been a hallmark of the Sala Mpasu society. Each man strove strove  
v.
Past tense of strive.


strove
Verb

the past tense of strive

strove strive
 to achieve prominence by generating personal wealth and reputation through membership in a men's society, community leadership, and clan affiliation. Group independence proved more of a challenge since the Sala Mpasu area was rich in both natural resources, such as large iron deposits and fertile agricultural areas, and human resources The fancy word for "people." The human resources department within an organization, years ago known as the "personnel department," manages the administrative aspects of the employees. , including a sophisticated blacksmithing tradition. The combination of these natural and human resources attracted the attention of neighboring neigh·bor  
n.
1. One who lives near or next to another.

2. A person, place, or thing adjacent to or located near another.

3. A fellow human.

4. Used as a form of familiar address.

v.
 peoples such as the Lunda, to the south, who strove to absorb this area into their own domain. The men's society, therefore, also served as a militia to fight off forceful attacks from the outside. The Sala Mpasu's cultivation of a reputation as fierce, cannibalistic can·ni·bal  
n.
1. A person who eats the flesh of other humans.

2. An animal that feeds on others of its own kind.



[From Spanish Caníbalis,
 warriors aided their bid to retain independence by keeping their enemies off balance. Any potential interloper would think twice before putting himself at risk of being eaten and thus not receiving proper funeral rites.

Early accounts report that masqueraders participated in generating this reputation by joining battles and terrorizing encroaching communities by night. Not only did militia groups use masquerades in fighting, organized masquerades also played an integral role in marking individual Sala Mpasu men's positions in society and in generating personal wealth. Each man had to both perform certain feats and pay expensive fees to the men who already had the right to perform a specific masquerade. Once a man had bought the right to a mask, other men would have to pay him for that privilege.

The Sala Mpasu applied the same techniques of image management to their encounters with Europeans that they had already used successfully with their neighbors. Taking advantage of the Belgians' own stereotypes about Africans, Sala Mpasu men regaled many early missionaries and colonial officials with tales of human feasts, complete with large iron pots, and claimed that Belgians listed as missing had been served up as appetizers. The Belgians, in one of their few colonial retreats, withdrew. They assigned one officer to the area who, for over twenty years TWENTY YEARS. The lapse of twenty years raises a presumption of certain facts, and after such a time, the party against whom the presumption has been raised, will be required to prove a negative to establish his rights.
     2.
, concentrated all his efforts on subduing the Sala Mpasu. They finally surrendered in the mid-1930s, making this area the last in the Congo to be occupied by the Belgians.

The Sala Mpasu, in spite of this subjugation Subjugation
Cushan-rishathaim Aram

king to whom God sold Israelites. [O.T.: Judges 3:8]

Gibeonites

consigned to servitude in retribution for trickery. [O.T.: Joshua 9:22–27]

Ham Noah

curses him and progeny to servitude. [O.
 to colonial forces, retained their ideals of individual initiative and wealth, although concepts of what constituted wealth changed. Rather than control of iron, blacksmiths, and oil palm groves, men now computed their wealth in bicycles, fired-brick houses, and wax-dyed cloth. As the focus of economic possibilities moved from the men's society to the new regional marketplaces, the Sala Mpasu turned to agriculture and regional trade. Their savage reputation, however, became an impediment A disability or obstruction that prevents an individual from entering into a contract.

Infancy, for example, is an impediment in making certain contracts. Impediments to marriage include such factors as consanguinity between the parties or an earlier marriage that is still valid.
 to personal economic advancement and to the economic stability and growth of the entire area. For example, although in the late 1980s the Sala Mpasu spent their own money to repair their ferries and worked independently to fix the roads, most people were still afraid to go into the area to trade or attend weekly markets. It was said that people who went into the area never returned. The Sala Mpasu who went to the city to seek his fortune was shunned as a backward, dangerous cannibal. To avoid this fate, he would claim a different ethnicity.

Faced with such dilemmas, the Sala Mpasu took active steps to rehabilitate re·ha·bil·i·tate
v.
1. To restore to good health or useful life, as through therapy and education.

2. To restore to good condition, operation, or capacity.
 their image. For instance, through iconoclastic i·con·o·clast  
n.
1. One who attacks and seeks to overthrow traditional or popular ideas or institutions.

2. One who destroys sacred religious images.
 purges in 1962 and 1988, Sala Mpasu men publicly broadcast an end to the men's society and its associated masquerading 1. (networking) masquerading - "NAT" (Linux kernel name).
2. (messaging) masquerading - Hiding the names of internal e-mail client and gateway machines from the outside world by rewriting the "From" address and other headers as the message leaves the
. Instead, Sala Mpasu masquerade in the late 1980s and early 1990s cultivated a connection with le Scouts, a nationally recognized and government-sponsored organization similar to the Boy Scouts. In September, 1989, I was present when the village of Sambuyi publicly celebrated the return of newly circumcised and initiated "Scouts" with masquerade performance. Privately, the men involved with the camp stressed to me that this represented a re-formation of the men's society.

I was unaware of the upcoming events at Sambuyi until the day before, when a man approached me at a Saturday market and told me that if I was interested in masquerades, I should be at Sambuyi at noon the next day. I arrived just as the church service was letting out and all the people moved from the church to the performance area just outside. I was welcomed and told I could photograph the events. The musicians began to play (Fig. 2) and the masquerades to arrive.

[FIGURE 2 OMITTED]

This performance was vastly different from those reported in the limited literature in both the location of the performance space and the make-up of the audience. In the past, the masquerades were only performed in a specially prepared and protected space in a nearby forest and only before initiated eyes. The Sambuyi performance, on the other hand, was in the center of the village and before the eyes of the entire community. As I observed and photographed the event, I noticed that I did not see many women along the edge of the dance arena. I turned around and found all the women directly behind me. They were very nervous about seeing the masqueraders and perhaps felt that the presence of the foreign female photographer would somehow protect them from what, in the past, had been dangerous and forbidden. My presence also made other differences, as the masqueraders occasionally stopped in their performance to pose for my camera (Fig. 1). As the boys approached and the masqueraders disappeared, the women behind me informed me that these were Scouts returning from training camps. During the next week I was able to interview the men involved in the camp and tried to unravel the layers of meaning behind this event.

[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]

In the 1989 initiation, the boys were first circumcised at a public health clinic, and then the initiated men removed them to a secluded se·clud·ed  
adj.
1. Removed or remote from others; solitary.

2. Screened from view; sequestered.



se·clud
 camp away from town where they learned the esoteric es·o·ter·ic  
adj.
1.
a. Intended for or understood by only a particular group: an esoteric cult. See Synonyms at mysterious.

b.
 and practical knowledge necessary for manhood MANHOOD. The ceremony of doing homage by the vassal to his lord was denominated homagium or manhood, by the feudists. The formula used was devenio vester homo, I become you Com. 54. See Homage.  and for membership in the society. Before the newly initiated boys returned to the village, five masks danced in the center of the village next to a Protestant church (Figs. 3-5). As in the past, Sala Mpasu men still paid those who already had the rights for permission to wear the masks.

[FIGURES 3-5 OMITTED]

In preparation for the performance, a dance area was marked off with white flour. Both men and women strictly observed this restricted area, crowding to the edge but not going over the line. Each masquerade performed in turn with little interaction with the audience. Most simply ran around the edge of the dance arena (Figs. 3 and 5), occasionally stopping to have their picture taken (Fig. 1). Mukungua-nkilili twirled blindly, occasionally stepping over the white line with a resulting scattering of the audience (Fig. 4). Mukungu-a-nkilili was one of the more prestigious masks (3) and was therefore one of the final masks to perform. After the final masquerader mas·quer·ade  
n.
1.
a. A costume party at which masks are worn; a masked ball. Also called masque.

b. A costume for such a party or ball.

2.
a.
 was in the dance arena, the gathered community spotted the boys approaching and attention shifted from the arena to the road.

The boys returned to the village in military formation. Once they arrived in the village, they performed maneuvers and danced with staffs. These staffs were appropriate for Scouts but also could be interpreted as covert references to the swords and guns previously carried by the men's society militia. Each newly initiated boy continued to dance until his mother turned over the required amount of money and he was released to return to his family.

This 1989 performance demonstrates the Sala Mpasu's continued reinvention and manipulation of their own identity and reputation, remaking re·make  
tr.v. re·made , re·mak·ing, re·makes
To make again or anew.

n.
1. The act of remaking.

2. Something in remade form, especially a new version of an earlier movie or song.
 the feared men's society into widely accepted Scouts. It also shows that while the Sala Mpasu's reputation and outside identity may be stage-managed--both now and in the past--the underlying values of the society have not changed. Prestige is still evaluated by individually gained wealth, however that may be socially defined at the moment, and expressed in control of masquerades.

(1.) Currently, the country name is the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

(2.) Debate continues about the difference between Sala Mpasu reputation and reality. No physical evidence proves that the Sala Mpasu were indeed cannibals, One school of thought contends that cannibalism cannibalism (kăn`ĭbəlĭzəm) [Span. caníbal, referring to the Carib], eating of human flesh by other humans.  is the ultimate insult and threat and never really existed. Other scholars hesitate to discuss issues like cannibalism that seem to denigrate den·i·grate  
tr.v. den·i·grat·ed, den·i·grat·ing, den·i·grates
1. To attack the character or reputation of; speak ill of; defame.

2.
 African peoples The term African people can be used in two ways. First, it may refer to all people who live in Africa, see also demographics of Africa. Second, it is commonly used to describe people who trace their recent ancestry to indigenous inhabitants of Africa, in particular Sub-Saharan  who were already slandered through colonialism. As time separates us from the early twentieth century, we may never know the reality of the situation, but an understanding of the events in this area cannot avoid a discussion of cannibalism.

(3.) Prestige of masquerades is reflected in the cost to the performer.

References cited

Cameron, Elizabeth L. 1991. Reclusive re·clu·sive  
adj.
1. Seeking or preferring seclusion or isolation.

2. Providing seclusion: a reclusive hut.
 Rebels: Au Approach to the Sala Mpasu and Their Neighbors. San Diego San Diego (săn dēā`gō), city (1990 pop. 1,110,549), seat of San Diego co., S Calif., on San Diego Bay; inc. 1850. San Diego includes the unincorporated communities of La Jolla and Spring Valley. Coronado is across the bay. : San Diego Mesa College San Diego Mesa College is a public, two-year community college located in the Kearny Mesa neighborhood of San Diego, California. Academics
Mesa College is coeducational. It has a semester-based academic calendar and resides on a campus of 104 acres (421,000 m²).
.

--. 1988. "Sala Mpasu Masks." African Arts African arts

Visual, performing, and literary arts of sub-Saharan Africa. What gives art in Africa its special character is the generally small scale of most of its traditional societies, in which one finds a bewildering variety of styles.
 22, 1:34-43.

Pruitt, William Franklin William Franklin (1731-December 13, 1813) was the last Colonial Governor of New Jersey. William was a steadfast Loyalist throughout the Revolutionary War, despite his father's role as one of the most prominent Patriots during the conflict, a difference that tore the two apart. . 1973. "An Independant People: A History of the Sala Mpasu of Zaire and Their Neighbors." Ph.D. dissertation, Northwestern University Northwestern University, mainly at Evanston, Ill.; coeducational; chartered 1851, opened 1855 by Methodists. In 1873 it absorbed Evanston College for Ladies. .
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Title Annotation:photo essay
Author:Cameron, Elisabeth L.
Publication:African Arts
Geographic Code:6ZAIR
Date:Jun 22, 2004
Words:1681
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