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[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
1 1 ll A =1 RITES OF BIRTH AND INITIATION 263 outside the village club-house, with their backs to the door, facing away from it, and are given stern injunctions that on no account are they to look round. The dubut now come up from behind carrying sticks and bunches of leaves from the nettle~ tree, and each of them in turn belabours all the boys with his stick and rubs the leaves up and down the back of each. The pain which the poor lads have to bear is intense, and often a man will have on his back scars resulting from this ordeal. After this trial of endurance the boys are allowed to go, and the men occupy themselves for the remainder of the day in preparing the “ medicine â€ù which is to be used on the morrow for treating the novices after their operation. The following morning, before the boys enter the ghamal bagho, they are taken down to the river or sea and circumcised all at the same time. One man holds the boy from behind, clasping him with his hands across the chest, while another operates. A piece of wood is inserted under the foreskin, and a dorsal slit made with a bamboo knife ; then the foreskin is cut round on either side to the ligature below, the fragment thus detached being thrown away into the water} The fruit of the wild orange is now roasted and the hitter fumes allowed to pass over the wound to stop the flow of blood, after which it is dressed with the medicine prepared the previous day and bound round with a grass called 1b'1.-ml. As soon as this operation is over, the novices are led away to the ghnmal bagho, where they are to be secluded for the next thirty days. During the ï¬Årst seven days of this period they have to observe oertain food tabus ; they may eat only roasted yams, and -may drink only a very little water. It is said that were they to do otherwise sores would develop on their penises. Through- out the whole time, too, they may only eat yams supplied to them by their guardians; should the father of any boy bring yams to his son, the latter could not eat them. Further, during the ï¬Årst seven days and nights, the mugh vzl are not allowed to sleep, and to ensure that they shall not do so, a dance called nilit is performed continuously, or some terrifying "hoax", 1 Although the Big Nambas are aware that among their neighbours there exist forms of deat.l1—rnagic which are worked over such things as nail and hair gznngs, they themselves do not practise any such magic, and for this reason ve no Xear that the piece of foreskin thus thrown away may be used for malevolent purposes by a. s0rcerer.—-A. B. D.
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