User:Physis/Spiritual culture of the Hadzabe

Dear Kwamikagami,

Ludwig Kohl-Larsen is a notable expert in the topic, he has not been discredited, he is often cited: also Berezkin's online motif catalog cites Ludvig Kohl-Larsen ("[Людвиг] Коль-Ларсен") in the Hadza ("хадза")-related items.[1][2][3] Thus Kohl-Larsen's approach and opinion must not be deleted: in any case it must be mentioned, at least as a notable opinion. Of course any other approaches can be mentioned alongside, if they are sourced.

I admit that in some myths Haine has indeed some creator-like, demiurgical features and plays a primary role even contrasted to Ischoko. Despite of that, in generally Kohl Larsen's book does not seem for me to support the opinion that Haine could be called "God", because

  • Haine's figure is often strongly anthopomorphized
  • in most other occurrences, the other mythological figure Ischoko has much more features that we could call god-like (being addressed in luck-wishing formulae, featuring more in demiurgical roles, capable of deciding about the fate of human from birth etc.) In the summary part of his book and in the endnotes, Kohl-Larsen seems to attribute some God-like features to Ischoko, moreover, he often refers to this figure as "deity".

In any cases I'd be very cautious about terming mythological figures of hunter-gatherers as "god". Although I cannot exclude the possibility (as I do not know all hunter-gathereres, far from that), but I suspect that we are always very inclined to project our own views onto peoples whom we do not understand completely. I think hunter-gatherers have to cope with different problems and have tried different solutions. This is reflected in mythologies which differ greatly from ours (and even from each other). I propose being over-cautious. Even in cases where they have some figures that look like creator / god, I think eventually it turns out that these superficially god-seeming figures are far from that.

There is also another danger: most hunter-gatherer societies have already been influenced by large paradigms (Islam, Christianity, modernity). As a result, there are syncretisms emerging. We have to keep in mind, when we are recording a syncretisms, and in such cases we must not suggest to the readers that it would be authentic.

Critics against Urmonotheism seem to support my caution. According to the Urmonotheism hypothese: hunter-gatherers have, had or used to have a "primeval monotheism" that lies in the root of their beliefs, and the many animistic, magical etc. features are just on the surface. But this hypothese has not been validated, as far as I know.

In any case I'd like to delete any mentioning of God attributed to Haine from the Kohl-Larsen-cited sentences, because the sources at hand do not support such connotations yet. Even if in the future somebody would find sources about such approaches / opinions, or even if somebody would find such variants of Hadzabe myths / beliefs that are indeed monotheistic, even in this case these thoughts must be mentioned in standalone sentences / sections, and they must not be attributed to Kohl-Larsen. In such a situations, the different approaches must be mentioned separately (Wikipedia:Neutral point of view), naming the reference for each alternative approach, or the source of the alternative myth variant (Wikipedia:Verifiability). For example:

  • "according to ... author, Haine can be regarded as a God figure"
  • "in the syncretic variant of ... myth, Hadzabe regard Haine as a God".

Linguistical arguments in proving non-linguistical claims

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Your remarks about grammatical gender are very valuable, I think You can add them if they can be supported by references, together with the sources. Notes and references about Hadzabe language are surely not off-topic here! But care must be taken:

Original research by synthesis

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Although grammatical considerations can impose conjectures about mythology, but they do not suffice as evidence. Wikipedia prohibits original research by synthesis as part of its Wikipedia:No original research policy. If a reference, a notable author definitely and directly declares that Haine and Ischoko was such and such gender, then it can be accepted. But if a consequence can be only obtained by deduction from different sources, withut any source supporting it directly, care must be taken. For example if source A says that male and female gender can be recognized by such and such suffixes, and source B narrates about Haine and Ischoko, then the Wikipedia editor is not justified to put together these two facts, he is not justified to deduce at all: he must not declare that Haine and Ischoko were such and such gender on the sole basis of grammatical considerations. Either he finds an indirect reference for the claim, or he must try to publish it himself as a conjecture in a notable medium and wait for acceptance from the scientific community (or at least a notable publisher).

Coherence in pragmatics and mythology

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In addition to Wikipedia's prohibition against original research by synthesis, life is not always logical. Mythology is not always coherent (it has a certain degree of coherence, but we can find the extreme of coherence rather in the misbeliefs of a paranoiac or in the lies of a fraud).[4][5]

Neither is the use of language (pragmatics) entirely coherent. A Hungarian cursing, a concise and "thick" sentence, attributes to God both

  1. a capacity to take part in a sexual intercourse as a male
  2. an attribute that is expressed materially by the same word that is also used for "prostitute" in slang

and it would be risky to conclude that Hungarian slang attributes to God both male and female features. It is better to accept pragmatics as a dynamic thing, giving special semantics to phrases, or to accept that words can have multiple meanings in different contexts etc.

In German, gender is not consequently related to the semantics. I admit that my counterexamples may be irrevelant here: if Hadza language indedd marks genders in a consequent way, then my example about pragmatics of a cursing is not the right example, and also the appeal to the incoherence in German genders turn out to be irrelevant. But in any case, we pay due care to proofs that try to deduce non-linguistical consequences solely from linguistical premises.

In any case, we do not know the exact conditions of Kohl-Larsen's fieldwork, maybe he used simplifying considerations in his records in order to keep some order among the many myth variants. Moreover, the "Tsikayo" myth depicts Haine as a powerful figure who bears a child --- and at the same time Kohl-Larsen refers to Haine by masculine pronoun "er" in this myth, probably because the myth goes on as Haine becoming a father, then a grandfather! The motif of "a male who bears a child" seems to prohibit deductions based solely on commons sense arguments.[6] See details in section #Varying genders.

In any case, even if a reference declared directly that Haine's and Ischoko's gender was definite and not subject to variations, Kohl-Larsen's contradicting opinion (about variations in gender) must be mentioned. Because Kohl-Larsen's approach is easily verifiable by the readers: several online sources say the same: Haine can be either a man or a woman in different myth variants[7], and also Ischoko's role varies — Ischoko is usually a creator, demiurge and culture hero, but in some variants she is Haine's wife[8]. I admit that these online sources may be not independent from Kohl-Larsen, and Berezkins's online motif catalog definitely does cite Kohl-Larsen in Hadza-related items. In any case, this opinion must be kept in any case, at least as a notable opinion, because it is both notable and easily verifiable (even online).

Userbox on German language knowledge

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The fact that i have not userboxed my German knowlegde does not refute my ability to understand and trandlsate German sources. It would not be good if any such things could matter on Wikipedia: user page contents cannot affect credibility (maybe except for some rare exceptional cases). I do not think that Wikipedia's policies would change in any such direction even in the future. User page contents are composed solely by "taste and judgmnent" of individual choice.

Although it does not (and must not) matter, I try to explore the reason why I have never thought of mentioning German knowledge at all. I live in Hungary, Central Europe. To mention German knowledge for a Central European? I have not even thought of that, it is as natural as taking breath. Half of written history of Hungary is intertwinned with that of Austria. German was a de facto lingua franca here even in the beginning of XXth century.

I have userboxed Hungarian because it is my native language. I have userboxed Russian because it is not a trivial thing. But German? I suppose You speak Swahili, and in any case, You speak English. You have not userboxed them, either. I could have userboxed a lot of trivial things yet, but I have not done so, and mentioning German is one of such unuserboxed trivial things. Even my family comes from Austria, from both the paternal and maternal lines — not a rare situation in Hungary. I speak an Austrian German dialect instead of the standard High German, as a family heritage.

To prove all that, You can pose a time period (e.g. 03:05–06:09) from the Hadzabe video "Die letzte Wildbeuter in Ostafrika", and I shall render it in English. Thus I cannot cheat by translation bots. (But I can do all that only daytime evening, with public internet cafés' open-time in Hungary, because the video does not start on my home machine.)

Transcription

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Authentic or consequent, no ad hoc modifications

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The transliteration must be kept consequent or authentic, and not changed in an ad hoc basis. Either Kohl-Larsen's original notation must be kept entirely unchanged, or it must be replaced coherently for a correctly elaborated one. Till a well-sourced transcription system is not provided, I'd like to restore Kohl-Larsen's notation: despite of any possible weaknesses or weirdness, it is at least authentic: it satisfies Wikipedia's requirement about verifiability, while an ad hoc modified one fails to. Thus, till then I'd like to restore "Ischoko" instead of "Ishoko".

Analogy of Uralic Phonetic Alphabet

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Transliteration, update from Kohl-Larsen's transcription system to a modern one needs experts. I have seen the interesting audio and IPA materials You all provided on Hadza language article, for example UCLA Phonetics Lab Archive.[9] I suppose, an updating to such a modern, sophisticated system is inherently an information-increasing process, thus, much knowledge about Hadza phonetics must be devoted to such a work.

I suppose Kohl-Larsen's transcription tries to designate phonemes. What is the exact sounding of his phonemes? What kind of rules has he taken as granted for their pronunciation? We do not know. If he was not entirely precise, what kind of simplifications has he done? We do not know.

We should decide choices, but any mistake results in distortion. An analogy from the praxis of programming: "Premature optimization is the root of all evil!" It is better if we delay decisions, for example with introducing abstraction. Better if we keep transcription system abstract or uncertain, because then at least we do not fake it.

In other words, we must handle Kohl-Larsen's transcription as an abstract phoneme transcriptions whose exact rules we do not know. If we do not want to "decode" it in a distorted, unauthentic form, then we must keep it intact.

Our situation is similar to the problem of phonetics of restituted Uralic languages: we do not know the exact phonetics of proto-Uralic, thus we have to use abstraction, using phonemes whose exact pronunciation we do not know. That's why Uralic Phonetic Alphabet has been introduced instead of simply using International Phonetic Alphabet. IPA forces us to make choices, and if we are not mature yet to decide them ,then we must introduce abstract or uncertain signs. Kohl-Larsen's notation sytem is at least authentic, any dilettant ad hoc modification would be a distortion of facts.

I am not against an update for a modern transliteration, but that must be an expert work, completed with full heart and knowledge.

Alternatives mentioned

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We must avoid ad hoc modification in any case. If You want a less weird transliteration than Kohl-Larsen's, then we can devote a standalone section that mentions the alternative transcriptions. There are very interesting English and Russian transcriptions. I have an online English source, which uses "Ishoko", and there are also surprizingly many and detailed Russian sources ("Ишоко", "Ишойе",[8] "Хайнэ"[7]).

Hadzabe mythological figures
Celestial connotation Kohl-Larsen's Russian My approximating IPA suspections
Sun Ischoko Ишоко [iʃoko]?
Ischoye Ишойе [iʃojje]? [iʃoje]?
Moon Haine Хайнэ [hajne]?
Tsikayo Тсикайо [tsikajo]? [tsikajjo]?
Morning Star Schaschaya Шашайя [ʃaʃajja]? [ʃaʃaja]?
Indaya Индайя [indajja]? [indaja]?

By the way, the plethora of Russian materials are interesting not only because the transcription system they use, but they are relevant also because their content. For example they shed light also to the celestial connotations other mythological figures: not only Haine is the moon and Ischoko the sun, but also Haine's grandson Schaschaya (= Шашайя) has become the Morning Star.[2][1] (An unsourced online catalog seems to reinforce Schaschaya's celestial connotation, although it regards Schschaya as female, and attributes also "goddess"-ness to her.[1] Kohl-Larsen's record attributes male gender to Schaschaya, it is clasified under the "Venus is a man" motif in Berezkin's online catalog,[3] citing Kohl-Larsen). Schsachaya's mother and Haine's daughter is Tsikayo (Тсикайо), her story is linked to that, it is summarized online,[2] it cites Kohl-Larsen. A similar, but more compound variant is recorded in the earlier Kohl-Larsen collection.[10]

Syncretism

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Are You sure Your source about Haine as "god" is not surveyed in a time/place where already a syncretism has taken place?

Mythological figures among Hadzabe

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Strong anthropomorphism for Haine

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Haine has very strong anthropomorphic features. Moreover, he is fallible, vulnerable, mortal (even dies eventually).

As the tale about "Tsikayo" depicts, Haine is a "big" and strong man, he could bind elephants onto his hips, he hang rhinoceroses onto his leg, the earth quaked under his steps, this old man dug his spear into the earth, he called his daughter aloud, he has been tricked by deceit (the tricksters imitated the voice of his daughter, thus they seduced him), he turned angry, killed the animals, but he became very tired, he eventually died of poisonous snake bite.[10]

As the tale about "Haine's death and the his recompensation by Ischoko" depict, Haine has quarreled because of a girl with the hyenas, the hyenas became his enemy, they have taken his son, forced Haine to fight, made him exhausted, killed him with poisonous arrow, eaten his flesh (!!!).[11]

He is not called "god" in the myths themselves. At most, he is called a "great chief", see details in section #Varying genders.[6]

Examples for anthropomorhic figures in other cultures

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Besides of these Haine-examples, I think aso the "god"-concepts of many other hunter-gatherers can be also strongly anthropomorphized.

As for the Bushmen, also they have some myths that depict "god" in a strongly anthropomorphic form.[12]

Mythological figure of Life among Siberian Yupik

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Also among Ungazigmit, the mythological figure /kiˈjaʁnɨq/ (Life) is strongly anthropomorphized.[13] Despite of that, I admit, this figure is indeed translated as "god" by the author in the Russian text. But the author does not comment this choice of term.[14] Another author describes this figure as without definite depiction, having creator and life-giving features, having several names adjusted to the situation (tale, song, incantation), and featuring in very anthropomorphized and realistic scenes (has a kayak, he is himself a great hunter etc.).[15]

Very important roles for Ischoko

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As for online sources, there are also Eglish-language mentioning about Ischoko as featuring in demiurgic, god-like roles, moreover, Haine is also here depicted as Ischoko's wife:[2]

The environment of the page seems to be "uncivil" with its mysterious popup windows, thus I propose also another online source about this topic, sufficiently detailed,[8] its language is Russian (translate.google.com is a great help[3]).

I admit, I found also a published online reference, a Norwegian-language paper.that regards both Haine and Ischoko as deities, and regards Ischoko as solar, female, and Haine as lunar, male:[16]

I admit this supports Your opinion in regards of genders of both figures, and also it support You by regarding Haine as a deity, but still, this forces me to be cautious about any attribution of monotheism: although Haine is male and a deity, but he is not the sole deity. His dominant role (contrasted to Ischoko) is not mentioned in the paper. Moreover, this paper names an online Norwegian newspaper as reference, and this attributes animism to Hadzabe.[17]

I admit, also an online German-language mentions Haine among the "supreme deities", but also here the role of "supreme deities" is shared between Ischoko and Haine. a Genders are not mentioned, but celestial connotations are:[18]

(According to the mythical beliefs of the Tindiga (East Africa), the elephants have been created by the supreme beings Ischoko (sun) and Haine (moon) out of people who played a prohibited game) The usage of plural ("beings") does not seem to support a monotheistic approach.

I admit, that this myth (also present in Kohl-Larsen's records) seems to correspond well with Your suggestion. Here[19]

  • Haine is male, Ischoko is female (Haine's wife),
  • Ischoko seems to play a secodary role compared to Haine
  • Haine not only rules judges people, but he has also some creator-like, demiurgical features.

(Emphasis added) (Ischoko asked now: «You, Lord, what sall we reply for this game?» Haine answered: «We do not want to waste many words, we shall make these people into steppe animals!» Haine arranged the people into two rows. He said: «I have» created you to be people, but now you want to harm to the trees with your game, you show with this that you want to turn into animals!»)

This elephant story seems to support Your approach very much. Also in another myth, Haine features alone and the people are regarded as Haine's own creatures. Moreover, here Haine seems to have some resemblances to the Jewish monotheistic God: in the cited myth variant Haine regards both Hadzabe and alien tribes as his creatures, regards both as human alike, protects the victims, tries to help to the errant, punishes insumisions, seems to follow Hadzabe with benevolent attention [20] But I must add that in another myth it is Ischoko who fills in a very similar role, as arranging a quarrel among different tribes (both aliens and Hadzabe) about scarce water resources.[21]

Summarizing the plethora of many myths and their variants, I have not seen at Kohl-Larsen any definite mentioning of Haine being god-like. Also Котляр definitely summarizes that it is rather Ischoko who inititates the demiurgical and culture hero achievements, and it is rather Haine who only executes Ischoko's commands.[7] If we want to call someone "god", Ischoko seems to be a much better candidate. Kohl-Larsen names him "Gottheit der Tindiga" (deity of the Tindiga),[22] He calls this figure the supreme being ("das höchste Wesen"). Haine seems to be treated in the second place:[23]

(The supreme beings of the Tindiga are Ischoko and Ischoye, both the expression for the same, the sun. Alongside them is Haine, Ischoko's wife, a lunar figure, who features mostly as a female, but sometimes as a male figure.)

In a story, the role cast between Ischoko and Haine seems to be the right converse than in the previous elephant story. Here it is Ischoko who is male and has creator, demiurgical features, and it is Haine who plays a secondary role, a soft-hearted woman who wants to placate his angry husband Ischoko. In the story, a woman breaks Ischoko's food restriction commandment. The infringement of the food restriction results in illness of the whole population. Ischoko wants to impeach them (call them account), but her wife Ischoko asks him to heal the ill people first.[24]:

(Everybody was bleeding till midday. Then Ischoko came down with his wife Haine and said to them: «What is that, people? I have commanded you to eat only few from the foods!» Ischoko's wife, Haine, said: « You, my husband, heal them first, so that not all of them perish! What is your win if all your creatures perish?»)

By the way, as the phrases above reveal, people are often regarded as Ischoko's creatures.Also in other myths, for example in the myth about the !esengego cannibal giant, Ischoko's words reveal that. Here, Ischoko accuses aloud the cannibals: "I believed, I have created people, but you turned out to be no people any more, as you are incined to devour your fellow-beings!"[25]

Thus, Ischoko's roles seem indeed ramified, including creator, demiurgical and other god-like features:

  • His name is spelled in good wishes for succesfull hunt (see the myth about giant !hongongoschá),[26]
  • He features often in origin myths, see below
  • He seems to be able to decide about the fate of the individual: in a myth, a blind man's blindness is regarded as ordered by Ischoko. The blind man behaves unsocially (hitting a companion hard), the victim cries for revenge, the old people are unwilling: "The fact that he has no eyes belongs to Ischoko! If the blind will be evil, it is our matter to abandon him!"[27]
  • Ischoko is given meat as sacrifice[8]
  • In the myth about the !esengego giant, Ischoko raises persons from the dead[25]

Ischoko in origin myths

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Kohl-Larsen groups together origin myths under name "Ursprungssagen".[28] In several of them, Ischoko is the protagonist:

  • Ischoko creates the Hadzabe out of pavians, and designates habitat and subsistence for them[29]
  • Ischoko decides also about the life of several other tribes. He asks them to swallow his, the Hadzabe are unwilling, the other tribes obey, the obedients get goods of agriculture, the Hadzabe are left on their own in the steppe.[30] In another myths Ischoko can also later arrange quarrels among entirely different tribes.[21]
  • Ischoko gives the possiblilty of revival to the dead. The companions must burry the dead Hadzabe, but they can fetch him from the land of Isanzu alive again.[31] Later Ischoko retracts this way of revival: "I, deity, … want to see [the dead] forever in front of my eyes. I do not want to let him back to the earth any more. The only one who should see him is me, Ischoko!".[32] This story is incorporated also in another myth.[33]
  • Ischoko introduced the Epembe dance. Indaya, the dead who could yet revive before Ischoko's retract, brought also a ritual to the Hadzabe from the deity: thus, it was eventually Ischoko who introduced the Epembe dance. Ischoko also ordered the separation of men from women and children during meal.[34]
  • Ischoko also introduced other food orders commandments: prohibition of eating food older than three days, sharing of food (including game and honey) among companions and the whole horde. He also gave natural assistants to people: the honeyguide. He ordered the division of labour between genders: men hunt and take honey, women gather. Ischoko also established collaborative connections between the hunter-gatherer Hadzabe and the hoe-farming Isanzu.[35]
  • Ischoko decied about animals, gives them command for their behavior to follow: the tortoise must hide in dry weather and appear in rain. It is also Ischoko who has given the game (tortoise, ostrich) to Hadzabe for subsistence.[36] It is also Ischoko who commanded the practical hunting methods (how to trace ostrich).[37]

Haine as great chief, messenger or companion

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All this stands in harsh contrast with Haine's role: Haine is definitely not regarded a god in most occurrences. At most, he is called a "greater chief" [i.e. greater than Indaya, who is mostly depcted as a chief], see details in section #Varying genders.[6]:

In an occurrence Haine plays a messenger role for Ischoko: Ischoko gives fire and the ability of sitting to Hadzabe via Haine. It is also him who takes the initiative to roll together sky and earth like two sheets of leather and swap their orders, and it is Haine who follows the proposal.[38]

(There lived once a man, called Tsogwana. Ischoko had Haine tell him: «It is the best if You sit down!» In that time the people were unable yet to sit.)

It is Ischoko who recompensates for Haine's death: it is Ischoko who punishes the Haine's killers:[39]

(As they had satisfied themselves, Ischoko came and said: «You have killed Haine, have eaten him up, and now you have even eaten all his meat store! What shall I do with you?» Utsameya replied: «Yes, lord, you must judge over us, we cannot judge ourselves!»)

In a variant of the myth about giant Senganii, Senganii has the role of an appointed representative/resident/governor/viceking of Haine. Haine gives him the right to decide and judge on his own towards people. Senganii gives impossible orders to people, and people begin to contradict him and thez refuse the obedience. Senganii refers to the fact that it was Haine who has given him the right to judge and decide. People seem not to be swept by this argumentation:

(Senganii said: «why should I not decide about you? It is not my affair, the might over you is given by Haine to me!» The pople replied: «Yes, even if this is commanded to you, we don't want it!»)

Moreover, the people killed the giant later, and then the myth ends. There is no mentioning about any revenge for that, Haine does not even appear in the myth any more except for the very beginning.

Varying genders

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I have already given the references in the article for the ambiguity in various myth variants about Haine's (and Ischoko's) gender. Many detailed online available ones in Russian.[7][1] here I add just one surprising detail. We can experience the variation not only among the myths variants, but also inside a single myth. The myth about "Tsikayo" depicts Haine as a strong and powerful figure (addressed by the masculine pronoun "er", becoming a father, then a grandfather), who bears a child (called Tsikayo):[6]

thus he becomes the father of this child, a daughter:[40]

Later this daughter of Haine becomes pregnant, thus Haine becomes a grandfather:[41]

(Emphasis added.)

Monotheism

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Although there may exists phenomena among hunter-gatherers that resemble superficially to monotheism, but I think in several cases these are different from that.

Origin of Jewish monotheism

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Jewish monotheism is a very special, and rather late phenomen. Centralization in acient states triggered monotheistic tendencies elsewhere as well (Aten cult by Akhenaten), but it was the Jewish state(s) where it was not overcome by resistence of opponent priest interests, and could survive the fall of the military and political origanization. Its ancient forms were far form monotheism (deity of storm, deity of a local tribe conglomeration, idolatry and henotheism). Jewish monotheism developed it specific features as a result of prophets, the calamities of the history, the belief that the calamities and the enemies are God's mere tools to punish his otherwise loved and selected people that gave Jewish monotheism its specific features.[42]

Tokaryev stresses the effect of centralization in the develpoment of monotheism.[43]

But what about hunter-gatheres? I admit, there are some phenomena that resemble to monotheism. I shall list them below. But I write also concerns why we must be cautious and not term them simply as "monotheism", and also we must be very cautious with term "god" too.

Urmonotheism

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Tokaryev mentions the efforts of some missionaries to explain some interesting features of hunter-gatherer mythologies with the presence of a primeval monotheism. Such monoitheism used to be attributed to Australian Aborigines (see the mythological figures "sky heroes"),[44] Tasmanian Aborigines,[45] Semang,[46] Andamanese,[47] Yahgan,[48] Bushmen (for Cagn),[49], Pygmies.[50] In each case, Tokaryev regards such approaches as merely historical, not valid, contradicting to finer details, based on oversimplifications, or overgeneralization of arbitrary selected details.

Similar remarks apply for the #Great Spirit concepts.[51]

Deus otiosus

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Among several pre-state cultures, the figure of "god" is in fact a rather hidden one. Although maaybe this "deus otiousus" took part in creaton or accomplished crucial things in the past, but then this figure has withdrawn from everyday life, thus now people's life is rather affected by spirits or other beings.[52]

See also "old god" concepts. African hunter-gatherers may have a "god", but its figure is unspecified,[53] for example among Pygmies[54] and Bushmen, among the latter there are also some myths depicting "god" in a strongly anthropomorphic form.[12]

Unseparated roles

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In the introductory part to mythologies in Afrika, Котляр summarizes the Afrika's hunter-gatherer in the following way. Concentrating about the example of Bushmen, he writes that the the roles of the demiurge, culture hero and trickster are not separated yet. He exemplifies such a figure with Cagn,[55] for whom he devotes a standalone article.[56] Котляр does not suggest that it would be a kind of monotheism, and he also sees for me using the term "deity" and "god" with care, using rather terms like "central mythological figure". Rather, at least for Bushmen, he mentions totemistic features and anthropomorphization of nature.[57]

In their summary article about mythologies of Africa's hunter-gatherer peoples, an author pair stersses features like blurring border beween people and nature (especially animals, also mentions animalism.[58] For Bushmen and Pygmies they mention features that they regard as early forms of totemism. Also for Bushmen they claim that the spirit and soul concept is blurred and of an early stage. They acknowledge that there are mythological figures that unite several roles and features, but they do not explain that with monotheism. They emphasize that these figures are of a blurred nature, and their united roles are in fact a result of the early stage of beliefs: the scopes are not differentiated "yet".[59]

Although I am sceptic about some evolutionistic cultural theories in some points, but I suppose that cultures of hunter-gatherers can differ largely from ours and have several specific features, and we must pay due care to avoid any projection of our ideas onto theirs.

Logos concepts among pre-state societies

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Sometimes a concept of kind of logos is attributed to some pre-state or even hunter-gatherer peoples. Something consisting of word, air, wind or breath that can permeate nature and it can be present also in people.

Sila

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Among the many various Eskimo cultures, term silap inua / sila, hillap inua / hilla (among Inuit), ellam yua / ella (among Yup'ik) is used with some diversity.[60] In many instances it refers “outer space”, “intellect”, “weather”, “sky”, “universe”:[61][62][60][63][64] there may be some correspondence with the presocratic concept of logos.[65][61]

Shamanhood among Eskimo peoples was a diverse phenomenon, just like the various Eskimo cultures themselves. Among Copper Inuit, shamans were believed to obtain their power from this “Wind Indweller”, thus even their helping spirits were termed as silap inue.[66]

Among Siberian Yupik, /sl̥am juɣwa/ was depicted as a mighty hunter, catching game just like earthly men, but being capable of controlling whether people paid attention to customs and traditions.[67]

In Sireniki Eskimo language, the word /siˈlʲa/ has meanings “universe”, “outer world”, “space”, “free space”, “weather”.[68]

Great Spirit concepts

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As mentioned, Tokaryev writes that Great Spirit concepts are not authentic, these are attributed to Indians by misssionaries and spread by popular romans. The original authentic concepts about Wakan, Manitu, Orenda are mana-like inpersonal forces. This class of beleiefs is called animatism.[69]

Environment for Eskimos

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There are some arguments, that the difference between our beliefs and the several Eskimo belief systems can be suggested by the environment. The argumentation seems for me to be an ecological approach.

According to this ecological argumentation, the environment of the Eskimos is harsh, life is hard. There is no benevolent deity in Eskimo beleif systems. There is no need for such omnipotent benvolent figure. The environment is full of hostile forces, but people can be optimistic: the good can defend himself standalone, although he must be always vigilant.[70][71] Other authors seem to support the approach that diffuse fear was indeed absent among Eskimos.[72]

I must admit that ecological approaches are sometimes challenged.[73]

I must admit also that the mythological figure of Life among Siberian Yupik seems for me to definitely very benevolent, moreover, the ethnologist translates his name as "God". That said, this figure is very strongly anthropomorphized.

Sky heroes

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There are certain mythological figures, "sky heroes" (Baiame, Daramulum, Nurunderi, Bunjil, Goin, Biral) in the Eastern samples of Australian Aboriginal mythologies.[74]

I admit they have features that resemble to those of "our" God (forming nature to its recent shape, leading people to their recent habitat, giving them laws, introducing rites and material goods, living in the sky, being omnivident and omniscient, being visited by the medicine men and the dead,[75] being depicted as an omnipotent father figure[76]).

But I have not seen yet Elkin mentioning "monotheism" for this. Moreover, he does not even use the term "god" (at least the Hungarian publication does not suggest that). He uses term "sky heroes" for a collective term over the samples of the various tribes. And in the general introductory part, he characterizes the spiritual life of Indigenous Australians as animistic and believing in magic.[77] At other parts he mentions how keen they are of the interrelated network system of signs nature has: sounds of certain species and appearance of certain constellation "sign" the availability of important games /plants.[78]

Thus, I should be cautious about any mentioning of "monotheism" about several hunter-gatherer cultures. I suppose, despite of some superficial resemblances, in the depth the emphasis must be lain onto other things.

Notes

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  1. ^ a b c Березкин (a) (see online in Russian)
  2. ^ a b c Березкин (b) (see online in Russian)
  3. ^ a b Березкин (c) (see online in Russian)
  4. ^ Geertz 1973 (see a summary page about this Geertz-writing online)
  5. ^ Geertz 1994: 185
  6. ^ a b c d Kohl-Larsen 1956a: 16
  7. ^ a b c d Котляр 1980–1982b: Хайнэ (see online)
  8. ^ a b c d Котляр 1980–1982a: Ишоко, Ишойе (see online)
  9. ^ Ladefoged & Maddieson & Sands 1991 (see online)
  10. ^ a b Kohl-Larsen 1956a: 15–21
  11. ^ Kohl-Larsen 1956a: 21–25
  12. ^ a b Turnbull 1970: 178–179
  13. ^ Рубцова 1954: 179–182 / 187–191 (= № 13 (238)–(398))
  14. ^ Рубцова 1954: 182 / 191 (= № 13 (398))
  15. ^ Menovščikov 1968: 447–448
  16. ^ Bjørnsvik 2005: 86 (see online (PDF) in Swedish
  17. ^ Franck-Nielsen 2003 (see online in Norwegian)
  18. ^ Baumann & Ranke 1979: 1307
  19. ^ Kohl-Larsen 1956a: 61–64
  20. ^ Kohl-Larsen 1956a: 147–149
  21. ^ a b Kohl-Larsen 1956a: 145–147
  22. ^ Kohl-Larsen 1956a: 226 (= note 22)
  23. ^ Kohl-Larsen 1956a: 13
  24. ^ Kohl-Larsen 1956a: 79—82
  25. ^ a b Kohl-Larsen 1956a: 127
  26. ^ Kohl-Larsen 1956a: 130, 227 (= note 51)
  27. ^ Kohl-Larsen 1956a: 188
  28. ^ Kohl-Larsen 1956a: 24–86
  29. ^ Kohl-Larsen 1956a: 24–35
  30. ^ Kohl-Larsen 1956a: 35–37
  31. ^ Kohl-Larsen 1956a: 37
  32. ^ Kohl-Larsen 1956a: 38
  33. ^ Kohl-Larsen 1956a: 153–154
  34. ^ Kohl-Larsen 1956a: 38–39
  35. ^ Kohl-Larsen 1956a: 39–40
  36. ^ Kohl-Larsen 1956a: 53
  37. ^ Kohl-Larsen 1956a: 53–54
  38. ^ Kohl-Larsen 1956a: 42
  39. ^ Kohl-Larsen 1956a: 24–45
  40. ^ Kohl-Larsen 1956a: 19
  41. ^ Kohl-Larsen 1956a: 16–17, 20
  42. ^ Hahn 1982
  43. ^ Tokarjev 1966: 351
  44. ^ Tokarjev 1966: 42
  45. ^ Tokarjev 1966: 48
  46. ^ Tokarjev 1966: 83
  47. ^ Tokarjev 1966: 86
  48. ^ Tokarjev 1966: 91
  49. ^ Tokarjev 1966: 119–120
  50. ^ Tokarjev 1966: 120
  51. ^ Tokarjev 1966: 104
  52. ^ Tokarjev 1966: 139
  53. ^ Turnbull 1970: 162–163
  54. ^ Turnbull 1970: 52
  55. ^ Kotljar 1988a: 281
  56. ^ Котляр 1980–1982c: 290–291 (see online in Russian)
  57. ^ Kotljar 1988b: 284–285
  58. ^ Katona & Ecsedi 1985: 12
  59. ^ Katona & Ecsedi 1985: 13–16
  60. ^ a b Kleivan & Sonne 1985: 31
  61. ^ a b Mousalimas 1997: 23–26
  62. ^ Nuttall 1997: 75
  63. ^ Merkur 1985: 235–240
  64. ^ Gabus 1970: 230–234
  65. ^ Saladin d'Anglure 1990 (see abstract)
  66. ^ Merkur 1985: 230
  67. ^ Menovščikov 1968: 447
  68. ^ Меновщиков 1964: 195
  69. ^ Tokarjev 1966: 104
  70. ^ Freuchen 1961: 210
  71. ^ Burch & Forman 1988: 90
  72. ^ Kleivan & Sonne 1985: 32
  73. ^ Bodenhorn 1997
  74. ^ Elkin 1986: 193–194
  75. ^ Elkin 1986: 193
  76. ^ Elkin 1986: 194
  77. ^ Elkin 1986: 186
  78. ^ Elkin 1986: 40

References

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Latin
  • Baumann, Lotte (1979). "Elefant". Enzyklopädie des Märchens. Handwörterbuch zur historischen und vergleichenden Erzählforschung (in German). Berlin • New York: Walter de Gruyter. ISBN 9783110082012. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help) Title means Encyclopedia of tales. Manual for historical and comparative research of narratives.
  • Bjørnsvik, Torunn Elisabeth (2005). Hvilken rolle spiller Norsk Luthersk Misjonssamband i den kulturelle globaliseringsprocessen i Tanzania? En studie av utviklingshjelpens kulturelle og religiøse påvirkningskraft (PDF) (in Norwegian). University of Bergen. The paper treats What role does the Norwegian Lutheran missionary connection play in the cultural globalization process in Tanzania? A study on the cultural and religious influence of the developmental aid.
  • Bodenhorn, Barbara (1997). "Person, Place and parentage. Ecology, Identity and Social Relations on the North Slope of Alaska". In S. A. Mousalimas (ed.). Arctic Ecology and Identity. ISTOR Books 8. Budapest • Los Angeles: Akadémiai Kiadó • International Society for Trans-Oceanic Research. pp. 103–132. ISBN 963-05-6629-X.
  • Burch, Ernest S. (junior) (1988). The Eskimos. Norman, Oklahoma 73018, USA: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 0-8061-2126-2. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)CS1 maint: location (link)
  • Elkin, Adolphus Peter (1974) [1938]. The Australian Aborigines. London • Sydney • Melbourne • Singapore • Manila: Angus and Robertson Publishers.
  • Elkin, Adolphus Peter (1986). Ausztrália őslakói (in Hungarian). Budapest: Gondolat. ISBN 963-281-628-5. Translation of Elkin 1974.
  • Franck-Nielsen, Øystein (June 7, 2003). "Hadzaene — eldgammel kultur". Vårtland. A Norwegian article: "Hadzabe, an ancent culture".
  • Freuchen, Peter (1961). Book of the Eskimos. Cleveland • New York: The World Publishing Company.
  • Gabus, Jean [in French] (1944). Vie et coutumes des Esquimaux Caribous (in French). Libraire Payot Lausanne.
  • Gabus, Jean [in French] (1970). A karibu eszkimók (in Hungarian). Budapest: Gondolat Kiadó. Translation of the original Gabus 1944.
  • Geertz, Clifford (1973). "Thick Description: Toward an Interpretative Theory of Culture". The Interpretation of Cultures. NY: Basic Books. pp. 3–30.
  • Geertz, Clifford (1994). "Sűrű leírás. Út a kultúra értelmező elméletéhez". Az értelmezés hatalma. Antropológiai írások. Századvég Könyvtár (Antropológia) (in Hungarian). Budapest: Századvég Kiadó. pp. 170–199. ISBN 963-8384-52-2. Translation of Geertz 1973.
  • Hahn, István (1982). "Az ótestamentumi monoteizmus születése". Hitvilág és történelem. Tanulmányok az ókori vallások köréből (in Hungarian). Budapest: Kossuth Könyvkiadó. pp. 121–149. ISBN 963-09-1896-X. The chapter means: “Birth of the monotheism of the Old Testament”, the booktitle means: Beliefs and history. Studies on religions of ancient history.
  • Katona, Imre (1985) [1970]. "Afrika". In Bodrogi, Tibor; et al. (eds.). Mitológiai ábécé (in Hungarian). Budapest: Gondolat. ISBN 963-281-464-9. {{cite book}}: Explicit use of et al. in: |editor= (help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help) Chapter means "Afrika", title means Mythological alphabet.
  • Kleivan, Inge (1985). Eskimos: Greenland and Canada. Iconography of religions, section VIII, "Artic Peoples", fascicle 2. Leiden, The Netherlands: Institute of Religious Iconography • State University Groningen. E.J. Brill. ISBN 90-04-07160-1. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  • Kohl-Larsen, Ludwig (1956a). Das Elefantenspiel. Mythen, Riesen und Stammessagen. Volkserzählungen der Tindiga. Das Gesicht der Völker (in German). Eisenach • Kassel: Erich Röth-Verlag. The book is a collection of Hadzabe myths about giants, also some tribe myths about culture heroes, and anecdotical tales.
  • Kotljar, Je. Sz. (1988a). "Afrikai népek mitológiája". In Tokarjev, Sz. A. (ed.). Mitológiai Enciklopédia I (in Hungarian). Gondolat: Budapest. pp. 281–282. ISBN 963-282-027-4. The lexicon item means "Mythologies of Afriacan peoples", the whole encyclopedia itself is the Hungarian translation of Токарев 1980–82.
  • Kotljar, Je. Sz. (1988b). "Afrikai népek mitológiája". In Tokarjev, Sz. A. (ed.). Mitológiai Enciklopédia I (in Hungarian). Gondolat: Budapest. pp. 284–285. ISBN 963-282-027-4. The lexicon item means "Bushman mythology", the whole encyclopedia itself is the Hungarian translation of Токарев 1980–82.
  • Ladefoged, Peter (1991). "Hadza". UCLA Phonetics Lab Archive. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  • Menovščikov, G. A. (= Г. А. Меновщиков) (1968). "Popular Conceptions, Religious Beliefs and Rites of the Asiatic Eskimoes". In Diószegi, Vilmos (ed.). Popular beliefs and folklore tradition in Siberia. Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó.
  • Merkur, Daniel (1985). Becoming Half Hidden: Shamanism and Initiation among the Inuit. Acta Universitatis Stockholmiensis • Stockholm Studies in Comparative Religion. Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiksell. ISBN 91-22-00752-0.
  • Mousalimas, S. A. (1997). "Editor's Introduction". Arctic Ecology and Identity. ISTOR Books 8. Budapest • Los Angeles: Akadémiai Kiadó • International Society for Trans-Oceanic Research. pp. 1–30. ISBN 963-05-6629-X.
  • Nuttall, Mark (1997). "Nation-building and Local Identity in Greenland: Resources and the Environment in a Changing North". In S. A. Mousalimas (ed.). Arctic Ecology and Identity. ISTOR Books 8. Budapest • Los Angeles: Akadémiai Kiadó • International Society for Trans-Oceanic Research. pp. 69–83. ISBN 963-05-6629-X.
  • Saladin d'Anglure, Bernard (1990). "Brother-Moon (Taqqiq), Sister-Sun (Siqiniq) and the Intelligence of the World (Sila) - Inuit Cosmology, Arctic Cosmography and Shamanistic Space-Time". Études Inuit Studies (in French and abstract also in English). 14 (1–2).{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: unrecognized language (link)
  • Tokarjev, Szergej Alekszandrovics Tokarjev (1966). Vallás és történelem. A vallás a vilég népeinek tükrében (in Hungarian). Budapest: Kossuth Könyvkiadó. Translation of the Russian original Токарев 1964.
  • Turnbull, Colin (1966). Tradition and Change in African Tribal Life. Cleveland • New York: The World Publishing Company..
  • Turnbull, Colin (1970). Az afrikai törzsek élete (in Hungarian). Budapest: Gondolat. Translation of Turnbull 1966.
Cyrillic
  • Березкин, Ю. Е. (a). "Солнце — мужчина и Луна — женщина". Тематическая классификация и распределение фольклорно-мифологических мотивов по аералам. Аналитический каталог (in Russian). Item means "Sun is a man and Moon is a woman", title means Thematical classification and distribution of folklore and mythological motifs on various areals. Analytical catalog.
  • Березкин, Ю. Е. (b). "Солнце и Месяц — мужчины". Тематическая классификация и распределение фольклорно-мифологических мотивов по аералам. Аналитический каталог (in Russian). Item means "Sun and Moon are men", title means Thematical classification and distribution of folklore and mythological motifs on various areals. Analytical catalog.
  • Березкин, Ю. Е. (c). "Венера — мужчина". Тематическая классификация и распределение фольклорно-мифологических мотивов по аералам. Аналитический каталог (in Russian). Item means "Morning Star is a man", title means Thematical classification and distribution of folklore and mythological motifs on various areals. Analytical catalog.
  • Котляр, Е. С. (1980–1982a). "Ишоко, Ишойе". In Токарев, Сергей Александрович (ed.). Мифы народов мира (in Russian). Москва: Советская Энциклопедия. Lexicon item means: "Ischoko, Ischoye", title means: Myths of the peoples of the world.
  • Котляр, Е. С. (1980–1982b). "Хайнэ". In Токарев, Сергей Александрович (ed.). Мифы народов мира (in Russian). Москва: Советская Энциклопедия. Lexicon item means: "Haine", title means: Myths of the peoples of the world.
  • Котляр, Е. С. (1980–1982c). "Цагн, Цгаан, Цгааген". In Токарев, Сергей Александрович (ed.). Мифы народов мира (in Russian). Москва: Советская Энциклопедия. Lexicon item refers to Cagn, title means: Myths of the peoples of the world.
  • Меновщиков, Г.А. (1964). Язык сиреникских эскимосов. Фонетика, очерк морфологии, тексты и словарь (in Russian). Москва • Ленинград: Академия Наук СССР. Институт языкознания. The transliteration of author's name, and the rendering of title in English: Menovshchikov, G.A. (1964). Language of Sirenik Eskimos. Phonetics, morphology, texts and vocabulary. Moscow • Leningrad: Academy of Sciences of the USSR.
  • Рубцова, Е. С. (1954). Материалы по языку и фольклору эскимосов (чаплинский диалект) (in Russian). Москва • Ленинград: Академия Наук СССР. Rendering in English: Rubcova, E. S. (1954). Materials on the Language and Folklore of the Eskimoes (Vol. I, Chaplino Dialect). Moscow • Leningrad: Academy of Sciences of the USSR.
  • Токарев, Сергей Александрович (1964). Религия в истории народов мира (in Russian). Москва.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Токарев, Сергей Александрович (1980–1982). Мифы народов мира (in Russian). Москва: Советская Энциклопедия. Title means: Myths of the peoples of the world.
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Video
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Text
  • Franck-Nielsen, Øystein (June 7, 2003a). "Et sårbart folk". Vårtland. A Norwegian article: "A vulnerable people".
  • Franck-Nielsen, Øystein (June 7, 2003b). "Hadzaene — eldgammel kultur". Vårtland. A Norwegian article: "Hadzabe, an ancient culture".
  • Franck-Nielsen, Øystein (June 7, 2003c). "Solnedgang og sang". Vårtland. A Norwegian article: "Sunset and song".


Thank You very much for making me to find a lot of useful resources that I had not find otherwise (e.g. those Norwegian articles, and Berezkins's huge online motif catalog). Much luck to Your studies / jobs.

Do You speak (the/an) language(s) of Hadzabe? I am interested very much in that. I learn at least one language of hunter-gatherer people (Ungazigmit and Sireniki Eskimo language), but I am very interested also in Bushman languages and that/those of Hadzabe — I have no manuals yet.

Best wishes,

Physis (talk) 08:30, 7 August 2008 (UTC) — Physis (talk) 13:25, 19 August 2008 (UTC)

Response

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Hi Physis,

Some of this I've addressed elsewhere. Set up your email (under your preferences) and I'll write you directly.

Hey, I'm not challenging your fluency in German! I was just curious where you got the KL material from. Since you speak German, it's no longer a question.

I agree about using the term 'monotheistic'.

I don't understand why Haine being anthropomorphic makes you doubt he's a deity. Jehova is anthropomorphic, as are many other deities around the world. What am I missing here? The Christian god is big (great), the earth quakes before him, he rides a chariot and sits in a throne, throws lighting bolts, fathered a child, and he (as his child) was killed by mere mortals, and we eat his flesh! (Hyenas dispose of the Hadza dead by eating them, so that passage is culturally relevant.) Also, Haine is not called "great chief" in Hadza. There is no word for "chief" in Hadza. They are, after all, foragers. But regardless, Jehova is called "Lord", which is essentially the same as "great chief".

I'm leery of a literal reading of Kohl-Larsen's accounts, since he didn't preserve the original, and what we have was first translated into Isanzu (which has no gender, and which KL did not understand), then by a second person (who understood nothing of Hadza) into Swahili (which was not understood by any of the Hadza), and then finally from Swahili into German. KL's student Berger had a similar setup, but did preserve the Hadza (phonetically) so we can compare. In many places Berger's German translation is heavily distorted, and I have low expectations of the accuracy of KL because of this. Something like Haine bearing a child could simply be him fathering a child; Haine being the wife of Ishoko could be Haine having Ishoko as a wife. Put this paragraph into Babblefish and see how it comes out in Hungarian--that's about the quality of the translations KL was working with. (KL did transcribe a few isolated words, and some were pretty bad.) Certainly any esoteric details would be likely to be lost. Hadza gender is completely regular: "Haine" is grammatically masculine and can only be referred to as "he", "Ishoko" is grammatically feminine and can only be referred to as "she". Whether KL is quoted in the lit is irrelevant: There's only one person in the world who could confirm or discredit him, Woodburn, and he's hardly published a thing in the 50 years he's worked with the Hadza. Anyway, I partially agree with you, but this would be better if taken to email. kwami (talk) 01:45, 20 August 2008 (UTC)

PS. "Es lebte einmal ein Mensch mit Namen Tsogwana": Ts'okwana is "giraffe". "Utsameya erwiderte": Udzame is "hyena". (Udzameya "it's hyena".) kwami (talk) 02:02, 20 August 2008 (UTC)