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[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
TOTEMISM 611 ' The signiï¬Åczmce of the " baby Kabul " is not clear, nor as will be seen in the following chapter do any rnyt.hs concerning the Kabul throw any light upon it. The dressing-up of men in women's garments, and the carrying about of babies in the form of yams and a " baby Kabul " doubtless symbolize fertility. LAMBUMBV V That totemism exists in Lambumbu is indicated by a briei note to the effect that the totem oi the village Liiwag is nï¬Åwang, the cabbage. Beyond this we have no evidence of the existence oi any beliefs concerning descent from or respect for any particular speCieS by any clan. The close cultural similarities between this district and Scniang will probably justify us in assuming that this one reference to tctcmisrn implies that here, too, Deacon found this institution in the same form that he had found it in the south. There is, moreover, deï¬Ånite evidence that in Lam< bumbu, as i.n Mewun and Seniang, most, if not ail, descent localities have a sacred place, 11/14! maul,‘ and perform a ceremony to increase a certain foodstuff. This ceremony is the mgham ; thus there, is a nogharo of the yarn at Lombelag, Timbini, and Piri; pf‘ the bread-fruit (Nagharo Nembzt) at Tambinbon, Lowag, and Tivlamp, and the clan Ran Nembew performs the nogham oi ‘pigs, (Nagharo Nimbuuh). It is perhaps signiï¬Åcant that the totemypnd mzghayo object of Lowag are distinct. Of the nature 9‘ hh-gutkflghnro rites we are ignorant save for a short account of the;,N§yg]pqro,}Yimb¢qah: bamboo vessel; kept specially for the ¢§rem(>ny,and handedwdown irornUeach’clan_n1agician to his successor, is_talgen to the.stream‘called-nï¬Åwei namg ‘and ï¬Ålled with water, Iheyleaves oi nisivumg and nimumwmgk’ are then squeezedinto the. water and the bamboo carried to the middle of the dancing-ground. Herc, standing between the gongs, the magician pours the infusion on to the ground while muttering the words : “ The sows’ bellies swell up ; the sows, become they great, bear they pigs] " y It will he noticed that in this account there is no mention oi any invocation of a temes nor is there any evidence that tame: * Maul is the word generally an ‘for any object which is potent or dangerous from its associations with magioi—A. B. D. l l l > l
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