Arrows and bows

Weapons, such as bows and arrows, had practical, as well as ritual uses among the Kuma, as Marie Reay found during her fieldwork. Dancers regularly hold spears, axes, and bows and arrows as "strength-giving ornaments" in the ceremonial dances during the Konggol. The shafts of arrows are sometimes decorated with burnt designs.

The elaborate carving of arrows is not just decorative, but also functional, as many are designed to rip or tear the skin in particular ways. Reay noted that one particular type of serrated arrow was meant "to tear the flesh of the victim when the weapon is removed." Her informants told her that during war, more casualties were caused by arrows than by the spears and axes, and that the general aim was to wound their enemies with arrows, and then send in those armed with spears and axes to finish off the wounded warriors.

In her book The Kuma: Freedom and Conformity in the New Guinea Highlands, Marie Reay noted that, 

"Sorcerers shoot arrows from toy bows in the direction of enemy territory when they kill fowls and piglets to propitiate ancestral spirits.... Warfare is valued for its own sake, and it expresses the aggressive attitude men admire but cannot indulge to any extent within the community...The assertion of this value in ritual is an important way of maintaining and transmitting it to younger men."

 

Ceremonial dancers with bows and arrows [ANUA 440-1197]

Ceremonial dancers with bows and arrows [ANUA 440-1197]

Obontr wa Bow 1955, bamboo Kugika Clan, South Wahgi Valley, Western Highlands, Papua New Guinea From Kabi, Kugika Clan. Made by Kabi for shooting birds and has incised zig-zag pattern along length.

Obontr wa Bow 1955, bamboo Kugika Clan, South Wahgi Valley, Western Highlands, Papua New Guinea From Kabi, Kugika Clan. Made by Kabi for shooting birds and has incised zig-zag pattern along length.

Detail of Obontr wa bow

Detail of Obontr wa bow

Ceremonial dancers holding bows and arrows [ANUA 440-1201-14]

Ceremonial dancers holding bows and arrows [ANUA 440-1201-14]

Man in ceremonial dress holding bow [ANUA440-1198]

Man in ceremonial dress holding bow [ANUA440-1198]

Black Palm Bow 1954, black palm, bamboo Kuma, Wahgi Valley, Western Highlands, Papua New Guinea

Black Palm Bow 1954, black palm, bamboo Kuma, Wahgi Valley, Western Highlands, Papua New Guinea

Detail of black palm bow 1954, black palm, bamboo Kuma, Wahgi Valley, Western Highlands, Papua New Guinea

Detail of black palm bow 1954, black palm, bamboo Kuma, Wahgi Valley, Western Highlands, Papua New Guinea

Ceremonial dancer with bow, arrows, and axe [ANUA 440-1201-24]

Ceremonial dancer with bow, arrows, and axe [ANUA 440-1201-24]

War arrows always have black palm heads. The shaft is plain or stencilled with geometric designs and the junction between head and shaft may be covered with a ring of finely woven cane and tufted with human hair (no hair on specimen).

War arrows always have black palm heads. The shaft is plain or stencilled with geometric designs and the junction between head and shaft may be covered with a ring of finely woven cane and tufted with human hair (no hair on specimen).

Man holding bows [ANUA 440-1190]

Man holding bows [ANUA 440-1190]

Arrows 1954, pit-pit cane, bamboo Kuma, Wahgi Valley, Western Highlands, Papua New Guinea Arrows for shooting birds. These arrows are usually three pronged with the shaft made of a single length of pit-pit cane.

Arrows 1954, pit-pit cane, bamboo Kuma, Wahgi Valley, Western Highlands, Papua New Guinea Arrows for shooting birds. These arrows are usually three pronged with the shaft made of a single length of pit-pit cane.

Detail of arrows for shooting birds. These arrows are usually three pronged with the shaft made of a single length of pit-pit cane.

Detail of arrows for shooting birds. These arrows are usually three pronged with the shaft made of a single length of pit-pit cane.

Bow and arrows being given to a child in ceremonial dress [ANUA 440-1190]

Bow and arrows being given to a child in ceremonial dress [ANUA 440-1190]

Man in traditional dress holding bow and arrows [ANUA 440-1198]

Man in traditional dress holding bow and arrows [ANUA 440-1198]

War Arrows from Kuma, Wahgi Valley, Western Highlands, Papua New Guinea. Shaft is length of pit-pit cane stencilled with geometric designs. The junction between head and shaft covered with ring of finely woven cane. Head is black palm and barbed.

War Arrows from Kuma, Wahgi Valley, Western Highlands, Papua New Guinea. Shaft is length of pit-pit cane stencilled with geometric designs. The junction between head and shaft covered with ring of finely woven cane. Head is black palm and barbed.

Detail of barbed war arrow

Detail of barbed war arrow

Man in ceremonial dress holding bow [ANUA440-1190]

Man in ceremonial dress holding bow [ANUA440-1190]

Man in ceremonial dress holding bow [ANUA440-1190]

Man in ceremonial dress holding bow [ANUA440-1190]

Man in ceremonial dress holding bow and spear [ANUA440-1198]

Man in ceremonial dress holding bow and spear [ANUA440-1198]