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<1~. >..l r‘ ix ‘a s. it I Fl 4‘ THE NALAWAN SOCIETY 423 During this seclusion, which lasts for a year, the candidates have to observe certain tabus, particularly i.n connection with food. They must avoid eating all short round things, such as short varieties of yam, also bread-fruit, and anything which has been touched by a woman, as, for instance, a coco-nut which a woman has husked, and the only kind of banana allowed to them is the nemunggut nimnmt, which womcn are never permitted to eat. It is recorded further that all cooked food is proscribed to the candidates, but this statement may not he entirely reliable, for it is said elsewhere that they may consume ï¬Åsh and pig, and there is no suggestion that these are eaten raw. Specimens of all the tabued foods are put in the " eternal ï¬Åre â€ù, the naamb mbatam- bni, and thus are ritually burntr; it is after they have been thus consumed that they are prohibited to the candidates. Should a man wish to break one oi these food tabus, he takes some leaves of two “ sacred " plants, the red cmton nimbile and an unidentiï¬Åed shrub nembewus, and rubs them between his hands so that their juice falls on the forbidden food which he desires to eat. It is said that the nembal/as is a "strong" tree, and that its spirit devours the evil principle in the tabued foods, and so renders them harmless to the candidate.‘ When the year's seclusion is over, the men go out and cut barnboos and erect a kind of platfonn along one side of the amel, and, the whole building is made gay with red leaves and flowers. lntront of, the platform masks are hung, which are called tamer by the women but nitevis by the men, and are therefore probably functionally similar in some way to the nitel/is erected at entrance to many otthe Nalawan grades. The women and children of the ‘village retire to where they cannot see what is taking place at the amel, and the candidates are brought out on to the platform. Here they sit down, one behind each mask, and in this way all have their faces completely hidden. Two men now appear from the bush, each carrying a bow and arrow. They approach the amel, dancing back and forth, passing and repassing each other, to the rhythm of the gongs. When they are close to the platform, the gongs become quiet; each dancer draws his bow I 1t is interesting that the same foods which are tnbu to the candidates ol IV_ulau/an Varrrmmp are also tabu to 1 sorcerer who is engaged in making death magic. The nxml>uml7a_l tree, 91 which the leaves or fruit an put into the lama: xmagggl to be burnt, rs a vanety which is used in the making oi death magic.~
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