Jean-Pierre Dutilleux Stated; "If the Toulambis are actors, we should give them a
César Award."
The Toulambi
In the
XXI century the team of Jean-Pierre Dutilleaux explorer and ethnographer had the privilege to contact in
1998, after many obstacles, with Los Toulambis a tribe that had never seen a white man, or had been involved with the outside world.
Jean-Pierre Dutilleux was born in Malmedy,
Belgium is director, anthropologist, explorer and defender of
Indian rights
In
1973 he made his first contact with the hostile tribe Txuccaramaes (those who hit with sticks strokes) of the
Kayapo, the savage heart of
Matto Grosso, there almost lost his life in the hands of the tribe, the chief
Raoni saved his life .
Since then,
Jean Pierre was dedicated to saving the territory of this tribe, of government of that country, making a world tour with the chief Raoni where senior leaders received, the nobility and
Pope John Paul II
Raoni's message was "My name is Raoni, I am the chief of the Kayapo.
People are destroying the forest, are wiping out wildlife, fatally wounding my people, killing the
Earth.
Help me, before it is too late! "
Dutellieux visited the most remote places in search of primitive tribes, such as the Toulambis living in the
Stone Age and are being decimated by logging of their forests, and diseases like malaria.
Toulambi
1976 contact: fact or fable - BY PETER KRANZ
EXTRACTS FROM BELGIAN filmmaker
Jean Pierre Dutilleux's first contact with a tribal people known as the Toulamis have recently been posted on Youtube.
This claimed first contact was said to have been as recently as 1976 and the extracts can be seen here and here.
The footage is moving and poetic and appears to be authentic. More information about
Dutilleux's films can be found on his website here.
His film was first aired on
French TV in the mid1990's.
Perhaps because it has not been widely shown to
English-speaking audiences, it has aroused keen interest and many favourable comments since its recent Youtube posting.
This controversial film also has been the subject of much scholarly debate in the
Francophone world, and even threats of legal action.
It was severely criticised by French anthropologist and
PNG specialist
Pierre Lemonnier in his academic paper
A la chasse à l'authentique (In pursuit of the real thing) published by
Terrain, the
European ethnological review in
1999, which is available here.
In this paper,
Lemonnier points out that the Toulambis of the film are really the Ankave-Anga people from near Menyamya. The records indicate that these people were visited by at least six
Australian government patrols between 1929 and
1972: 1929
Middleton;
1950 Chester, 1951 Mathieson;
1965 O'Brien; 1967
Police patrols; 1972 Meikle.
In fact Meikle found the people talking basic Tok Pisin learned at Menyamya.
Historical sources reveal that the so-called Toulambis had steel tools and western implements more than 40 years before their encounter with Dutilleux, and were regular visitors to the administrative center of Menyamya the early
1970's - which was only a few days walk for them.
This familiarity with the outside world is confirmed by ethnography, and in particular one Toulambi man spent two months in prison in Menyamya in the early '70's. Admittedly some remote groups may not have had regularly contact with the
Australian administration before the 1960's, but they certainly did by the time Dutilleux encountered them.
When Lemonnier viewed the film for the first time he exclaimed: "I'm outraged!" He described the Dutilleux production as "untruthful, racist, revolting".
Apparently Lemonnier recognised immediately the place where the fake "first encounter" had been filmed. The stream is known as
New Year Creek, and the members of the "unknown tribe" probably walked for about a day from their settlement to reach the appointed well-lit meeting-place.
This had been conveniently cleared for the filming, with a few logs thrown into the creek so that the people could emerge confidently from the jungle (most unusual behaviour) and move naively towards the camera crew.
Lemonnier adds: "At that spot, they were about a four-day walk from an administrative centre with a schoolteacher, airstrip, radio, nurse and
Seventh-Day Adventist preachers. Nearby, the navigable river
Vailala enables the
Papuans to reach the coast, where they exchange bark capes for tools."
For his criticism, Lemonnier faced a court case for slander in
1997, but the historical records support his case.
So how was the film made?
Simple - the locals were paid for their performance and rehearsed in how to act their parts. In fact they were enterprising enough to have done this for several other 'first-contact' filmmakers before and after Dutilleux.
Interestingly, Jean-Pierre Dutilleux is also cited in the article, defending himself that:
"If the Toulambis are actors, we should give them a César Award."
- published: 19 Jul 2011
- views: 1681353