The Shuar Indians live in the Amazon Basin of Ecuador. They are a sub tribe
of the notorious Jivaro. In addition to the Shuar, there are three other
sub-tribes of the Jivaro, they are the Ashuar, the Aguaruna, and the Huambisa
. Although many peoples through out the world have taken the heads of their
enemies, the Jivaro are the only ones to practice head shrinking. The shrunken
heads are called tsantsa. The Jivaro were fierce warriors. A Spanish governor
who was greedy for gold was killed by pouring molten gold down his throat. The
notoriety of this incident and their practice of taking and shrinking heads
kept outsiders at bay. Thus they were never conquered by the Spaniard and are
called "the unconquered ones".
-------------------------------------------------------
The Shuar have a population of approximately seventy-three thousand, while the
Huambisa in Peru have an approximate population of fifty-five hundred; both
tribes occupy the basins of the Santiago, Yaupi, Zamora, and Morona rivers.
Another smaller tribe, the Achuar, occupies borderland east of the Shuar and
Huambisa along the Pastaza River. They number around seven thousand in Ecuador
and forty-eight hundred in Peru.
The name "Jivaro" shares its roots with the word
savage. This named was originally assigned to the indians of the South East
orient of Ecuador by the first European explorers to become aware of their
existence. Jivaro is the name that linguists and anthropologists have assigned
to the Amazon tribes Shuar, Huambisa, Aguaruna, Achuar and Shiviar who share the
same language with slight variations in dialect. The historical center of the
Jivaro was in Macas, Ecuador. Over the years after the Spanish conquest they
migrated south, eventually occupying territory in what is now Peru. Currently
the Jivaro occupy nearly seven-and-a-half million acres of jungle land along the
Peru-Ecuador border.
Households often consist of one man, his two wives, and their
offspring. Households function independently within the tribes and are
self-sufficient. The houses are approximately 30’ x 50’ constructed with palm
trees with doors on each end. The ceilings are likely to be 15 feet with 7 feet
walls. The family may dwell in each house for up to 9 years depending on the
local firewood, vegetation and game. Gender roles are that the men protect,
hunt, fish, clear forest, and cut wood. The women cultivate the land, cook, make
beer, care for the children and animals. The two separate entrances to the house
are gender specific, and the woman will only enter the man’s side when she is
serving the food.
There are 3 main sources from which the Jivaro derive their
subsistence. 1) farming, 2) hunting and fishing and 3) gathering various species
of insects, fruits and plants. The Jivaro are also known to keep domestic
animals such as chickens, ducks, and pigs. These are kept in case they host a
large number of guests, or if there was no game on hand. Common crops that
households grow are sweet manioc, sweet potato, white maize, squash, gold
bananas, peanuts, sugar cane, and cotton. The men will usually not travel no
further than a day’s walk, about 8 miles to search for game. Common prey are
Anaconda, toucan, monkeys, peccary and armadillo. They use blowguns and well as
rifles to catch their prey. The Jivaro will go to local streams and rivers to
fish, and use methods such as bare-handed fishing, hook-and-line fishing and a
complex system of river poisoning.
The Jivaro's practice of head-hunting and their ability to shrink heads may be one
of the most well known aspects to the Jivaro culture. Today, the practice is
limited, though raids used to occur twice monthly. The process of shrinking a
head may take up to six days and results in the size of a man's fist. Here is an
excerpt from M. Harners book People of the Sacred Waterfalls:
"The process of preparing a tsantsa [shrunken head] has a number of
steps. With the aid of a machete or a steel knife, the victim's skin is peeled
back from the uppermost part of his chest, shoulders and back, and the head and
neck are cut off as close as possible to the collarbone... here he makes a slit
up the rear of the head and carefully cuts the skin from the skull and throws
the latter into the river as a gift to the anaconda. The skin is boiled for half
and hour. It is then dried. Then the skin is again scraped... the slit in the
rear is sewn... Heated stones or sand then is rolled around in the head... Three
pins are put through the lips and lashed with string. The skin is rubbed daily
with charcoal so it will become blackened..."
(The text above is an excerpt from Eric Schniter's
Shuar of Ecuador web site.)
-------------------------------------------------------
Photos property of Hands Around the World.
For some pictures, click on the
blue-bordered thumbnail for a full-size picture, then click the top-left BACK button to return.
Shuar Indians