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Small Enterprise Development Volunteer - Peace Corps Madagascar

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Famadihana, again



This isn’t the first time I’ve written about Famadihana, the Malagasy tradition of exhumation, but it will likely be the last because, well, tis the season but once a year.  The season usually coincides with the winter months here in Madagascar, roughly July until late October or early November.  Outside of this relatively temperate bracket the weather can become wretchedly hot and rainy.  Not ideal conditions to be pulling mummified bodies from their tombs and exposing them to the elements.  Because Malagasy people are particularly hospitable I was invited to a slew of Famadihanas last year only a few short months after arriving at site.  It was an eye-opening experience but unfortunately I was about as green as they come at that point and my Malagasy was nowhere near good enough to feel like anything more than an audience member in some bizarre cultural theatre.

This time around I can talk.  Over a year and a half into my service here I’ve gotten a pretty good handle on the language, enough so that I can wedge myself into a social event and hold my own as a part of it.  In fact, during this round of Famadihanas I had the chance to tag along and work at one with a buddy of mine, Ras, who is a mpampandihy here in Arivonimamo, which translates to ‘someone who makes people dance,’ or, I suppose, a DJ.

Ras had been hired to work two different Famadihanas, over a 4 day period from August 11th until the 14th.  I was invited to work them with him and his partner Zo but had to miss the first day of festivities because I was once again with my good friend from out East, James and his partner in crime, Tahiry.  The two of them had been planning to visit some of Tahiry’s family in the capital so figuring they’d already have  to come pretty far West I made a plea for them to keep on the same trajectory for another hour and come spend some time in Arivonimamo.  They agreed and Monday, August 12th James, Tahiry and I set out towards the town of Fonenana to catch the second day of celebrations and give James his first glimpse of this uniquely Malagasy custom.

The first day of any Famadihana consists mostly of preparations, the erecting of the tents, slaughtering of pigs, the arrival of the guests and what not.  By the time the darkness is setting on the first night much of the groundwork has been laid and people are ready to party.  By the time James, Tahiry and I arrived on the second day most of the people had been dancing and drinking non-stop throughout the night.  That, or they had managed to eke out a few hours of shut eye crammed onto straw filled mattresses or grass mats in dark corners of the mud house that served as the backstop of the Famadihana yard party.  Ras ushered us past bleary eyed merry-makers and crops of children clustered throughout the yard and up a rickety wooden staircase to a small balcony that housed the speakers through which he was running his mpampandihy operation. 

From up on high we could see Famadihana proceedings straddling the national road on one end, where people were congregating to get a look at the two vazah (foreigners) who had just arrived, and the red-earth house we were standing in.  Down in the yard there were the two dining areas off to the right, built from large branches or planks of wood stuck into the ground and encircled by colorful plastic sheeting. Inside people were being brought heaping portions of ‘vary be menaka’ which literally means, ‘rice with a lot of oil.’  What it is, is a Malagasy specialty, especially in the highlands, served at most noteworthy cultural events.  Because of that you might think it would be a big elaborate dish.  Unfortunately it is exactly what it translates to.  Guests are given a generous portion of rice while family members work the crowd with buckets and ladles, distributing chunks of pig fat soaked in oil.  The taste isn’t all that bad, but trust me, too much of vary be menaka will wreak havoc on a vazah digestive track.  Outside of the food tents there was an open space in the yard with ‘hira gasy’ musicians (traditional Malagasy music), arranged in a semicircle in the wings and people congregated in the center, dancing to the alternating currents of Ras’s music and hira gasy.

Once we’d gotten the lay of the land, Ras and Zo decided to lead James and I back down to the yard, to the outskirts of the party near the little tables stocked with booze.  ‘Up here,’ Ras suggested as he climbed into the back of an un-yoked Zebu cart that was pitched forward in a resting position. We clambered into the back of the slanting cart that was close enough to the beer stand that we could reach down and grab ourselves a round.  Ras, Zo and Tahiry, along with a few other Malagasy men that had gathered cracked the caps off the beers with the teeth and handed them around to us.  Now that we were settled we got to talking about the Famadihana a bit.  Knowing it was James’s first time around everyone wanted to pitch in their thoughts on what Famadihana means to Madagascar and Malagasy people.

‘There are a couple of important reasons for Famadihana that you’re going to want to remember,’ Ras began. 

James and I have both spent plenty of time hearing and reading about Famadihana and I’d been to my fair share so I was interested to hear his take.

‘First, you’re paying homage to those who have come before you, paying respect to the ancestors, or the ‘razana,’ he said.  So far that was something I knew, it was pretty much what I expected him to say. 

‘Second, it brings all of your family together, which is a lot of people in your average Malagasy family.  It’s a kind of reunion where you can catch up with those you haven’t seen in ages and celebrate the love of your family.’  That was also something that sounded in line with what I’d learned but it struck me as a little sentimental coming from him.

‘And third,’ he explained, with a coy smile spreading across his face as if he’d saved the best for last. ‘Thirdly, it’s a way for you to remember who exactly is in your family so you don’t accidentally date your sister.’

I can’t say the guy doesn’t have a sense of humor.  Like I’ve said before Malagasy families are enormous so maybe he has a point.

After James and I danced in the yard for some time to the hira gasy, intoning over and over again the repetitive yet somehow hypnotic melody, we were called out into the road for a photo shoot.  James and I had both brought our cameras along for the event, and since cameras don’t come around often for most Malagasy communities, and vazah come even less frequently, the entire community decided that it was imperative we take advantage of the situation.  For about 45 minutes James and I were shuffled around between different configurations of friends and family while Ras and Zo used our cameras to snap photos.  We staged dancing photos, were handed babies, and were the center-pieces in umpteen family portraits until it became time to make the journey to the tomb. 

At this point we were beginning to burn out of being the focal point and quite literally beginning to burn from the hours spent dancing in the sun.  As is quite usual here, the moment fatigue starts to set in is quite often the moment I’m thrust into the spot-light.  Right before the parade to the tombs began I was handed a t-shirt to put on.  It was the same one being worn by many of the family members who had organized the Famadihana.  It claimed that I was a descendent of a pair of brothers whom we were on our way to exhume, and I considered it quite an honor to have been included with the family.  I was given the t-shirt discretely by one of the family members and once the others saw it on me it set off a ripple of excitement through the ranks of the family.  I could tell from some of the furtive glances cast my way by some of the young drunk guys that one of their comrades had worked himself into a self-righteous drunken pout because a vazah was wearing one of the family shirts so I insulated myself with the majority of the family who had given it to me and were coaching me along.  I vowed to keep a low profile and a wary eye on some of the drunk guys. 

James and I floated along the edges of the march up to the tomb and slowly made our way towards the front of the cavalcade so that we could get some pictures of the flag bearer who was leading the procession.  At the head of the march, followed by a herd of hira gasy musicians and throngs of Famadihana goers, there is always one Malagasy man with the Malagasy flag strung up on a thin bamboo stalk and he leads the group of family and friends on the march to the tomb.  Upon seeing me taking pictures in my newly acquired Malagasy shirt, one of the family members had the idea to pass the flag off to me.  I didn’t want to miss the opportunity to lead a Famadihana but I was also wary of upsetting any cultural norms which might cross the delicate line I was already toeing with one of the hammered cousins.  In the end I decided to take hold of the flag and led the Famadihana across the grassy plain towards the tombs for about 15 yards until I was able to pass the flag back to its rightful owner.

Once we arrived at the outcropping of tombs the throngs of people gathered in a circle around the short, squat, cube shaped tombs, on top of which stood all the important male figures of the community.  A number of speeches were made in succession, extolling the virtues of Famadihana and joyousness of the occasion.  All the while, groups of young men removed large slabs of stone from the tomb’s entrances, sliding them off to one side to reveal a musty, cavernous darkness below. 

James and I had positioned ourselves near the entrance to one of the tombs with the hope of catching a glimpse inside.  A group of young men had already descended into one of the tombs and was emerging with the first ‘faty’ or dead body.  One of the older men from across the entrance noticed our fascination and asked emphatically, ‘would you like to go inside?’ 

We were dumb-founded; I was under the impression that it wasn’t proper practice to let just anyone tour the inside of a tomb, a most sacred places in a culture that holds its ancestors in the highest regard.  Still, I looked at James, who gave me a look of, ‘well if you’re game, then I am,’ and we both quickly agreed.  He pulled the two of us around to the front entrance and showed us down a small set of stone steps that led down into the tomb.

Inside the ceiling was just tall enough for James and I to stand up, having ducked through the small stone doorway to enter in.  The chamber had a dank, musty smell and the air felt warm with the faint, stale humidity of air that had ventilated through and around death for years.  We stood in the center of the cavity which was ringed by three levels of carved stone shelving on each wall and on the far side across from the doorway.  Our new friend explained that the most recent bodies are put into the tombs on the lower shelves and the ‘faty’ slowly graduate upwards the longer they’ve been in the tomb.  Having seen the tomb James and I quickly excused ourselves, not wanting to overstay our welcome, and rejoined the crowd of Malagasy people dancing with already extracted bodies. 

As things began to wind down, James came over to me and said that he and Tahiry would have to take off so that they could make it back to the capital before dark.  At that point I was worn out and happy for an excuse to take off.  Not to mention that the young drunk guy who had previously been giving me the evil eye had seemed to have settled himself and I wanted to take off before my luck changed.  The matriarch of the family also appeared to be looking for an excuse to take a little break and walked Zo, Ras, Tahiry, James and myself back to the main road so we could pack up our DJ equipment and send our two friends to Tana. 

I said goodbye to James and Tahiry and parked myself on the opposite side of the road with Ras, Zo and all of our equipment to wait for a taxi brousse (the local bus transport) to take us back towards Arivonimamo.  All of the sudden I hear a chorus of voices shouting from behind the main house, on the pathway that led from the tomb.  A hoard of men and women, all wearing my same Malagasy shirt that says we’re all from the same family come storming out from behind the house and at the center of the throng I saw a young woman balling her eyes out, held up by another young woman and a young man.  On the edges of the fray there were two young guys, veins bulging from their necks in anger and eyes the same blood-shot, cloudy hue that happens only when someone’s far gone on ‘taoka’ or Malagasy moonshine.  The whole family was screaming and failing their arms while some of the women cried hysterically and young drunk men circled the yard provoking each other. 

I quickly pulled a sweatshirt I had brought over the top of my family t-shirt at which point one of the older Malagasy men saw me and tried to explain the situation to me.  Unfortunately he was as lost in the haze of moonshine as the young men and couldn’t exactly piece together what he was trying to explain away.  He gripped my hand tightly and with eyes bulging from his head implored me to understand how sad it made him to see what was happening to the family.  How much it hurt his heart to see these young men acting this way. I assured him that I understood and he stumbled back in to mediate the dispute/provoke the young men.  I wanted to fade as much into the shadows as possible so I asked Ras to figure out what was going on. ‘Apparently that girl’s husband said a swear word which upset her and then her brother got upset with the husband,’ Ras explained.

Wait? That’s it?  This woman was wailing as if she’d just lost her first born child and the half the men at the Famadihana were strutting around like they might slit each other’s throat.  ‘Yea, that’s it, I guess,’ Ras said and shook his head.

The fight began to cross the street and the pack of angry men swung in front of me and veered off to the right.  For a moment I thought it had calmed down and then out of nowhere one young guy bolted across the street and head-butted another so hard that it knocked him off his feet and sent him sailing into a ditch 5 yards to my right. 

At this point I didn’t care to fade into the shadows anymore and just wanted to get back to Arivonimamo so Ras, Zo and I flagged the next brousse we could find, quickly threw our gear on top and hitched a ride back home.

On the way back the three of us re-hashed the situation.  Zo and Ras were both having a pretty good laugh at how out  of control all the drunkards had gotten but both of them were a little unsettled by how dark things had turned.  Of Ras’s three reasons for Famadihana, I could see he was definitely right about how important Famadihanas are for honoring the ancestors.  It also made sense that it would probably keep you from dating your sister. At least helps you remember who exactly makes up that gigantic Malagasy family of yours.  As for strengthening the love within a family?  I wasn’t entirely convinced.  Or maybe the take home message is that taoka gasy is a fierce drug not to be trifled with.  Either way, been there, done that, got the t-shirt.

Until next time,
Veloma.