Woman From Karo Tribe In Korcho Village In Ethiopia On October 29, 2008 -

ETHIOPIA - OCTOBER 29: Woman from Karo Tribe in Korcho village in Ethiopia on October 29, 2008 - The Karo (or Kara), with a population of about 1000 - 1500 live on the east banks of the Omo River in south Ethiopia. Their neighbors are the Hamar, Bana, Bashada, the famous Mursi and Nyangatom (on the other side of Omo River, who are their enemies). They speak a south Osmotic language. The Karo grow sorghum, maize and beans. Karo use to paint body and decorate their face. They use white chalk, charcoal, ochre and red earth... Karo women scarify their chests to beautify themselves .The scarification of a man's chest shows that he has killed an enemy or a dangerous animal. The scars are done with a knife or razor blade and ash is rubbed into. The wearing of a grey and ochre clay headdress also indicates the killing of an enemy or a dangerous animal. Hamar do the same. The women have a very nice hair dress: they put red clay mixed with butter and fat in their hair, so that the hair looks like a bunch of coffee beans. Women still wear leather clothing made from animal skins. The men all use a wood headrest to protect their hair bun, and they use it too to sit. They love to rest under the men house, the chifo. At the end of the harvest and at times of initiation and marriage, the Karo come together to enjoy dances with a lot of local beer. These happy times often lead to marriage after the young man has successfully accomplishing the bull jumping. A Karo man may take as many wives as he can afford, but usually he marries two or three. (Photo by Eric LAFFORGUE/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images)
ETHIOPIA - OCTOBER 29: Woman from Karo Tribe in Korcho village in Ethiopia on October 29, 2008 - The Karo (or Kara), with a population of about 1000 - 1500 live on the east banks of the Omo River in south Ethiopia. Their neighbors are the Hamar, Bana, Bashada, the famous Mursi and Nyangatom (on the other side of Omo River, who are their enemies). They speak a south Osmotic language. The Karo grow sorghum, maize and beans. Karo use to paint body and decorate their face. They use white chalk, charcoal, ochre and red earth... Karo women scarify their chests to beautify themselves .The scarification of a man's chest shows that he has killed an enemy or a dangerous animal. The scars are done with a knife or razor blade and ash is rubbed into. The wearing of a grey and ochre clay headdress also indicates the killing of an enemy or a dangerous animal. Hamar do the same. The women have a very nice hair dress: they put red clay mixed with butter and fat in their hair, so that the hair looks like a bunch of coffee beans. Women still wear leather clothing made from animal skins. The men all use a wood headrest to protect their hair bun, and they use it too to sit. They love to rest under the men house, the chifo. At the end of the harvest and at times of initiation and marriage, the Karo come together to enjoy dances with a lot of local beer. These happy times often lead to marriage after the young man has successfully accomplishing the bull jumping. A Karo man may take as many wives as he can afford, but usually he marries two or three. (Photo by Eric LAFFORGUE/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images)
Woman From Karo Tribe In Korcho Village In Ethiopia On October 29, 2008 -
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Bildnachweis:
Eric LAFFORGUE / Kontributor
Redaktionell #:
120402850
Kollektion:
Gamma-Rapho
Erstellt am:
29. Oktober 2008
Hochgeladen am:
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Releaseangaben:
Kein Release verfügbar. Weitere Informationen
Quelle:
Gamma-Rapho
Barcode:
4618
Objektname:
HQ2064920
Max. Dateigröße:
4961 x 3508 px (42,00 x 29,70 cm) - 300 dpi - 4 MB