Domesticating Women, Animals, the Environment, and Spiritual Entities: Navigating Boundaries in the Pastoral Community of Limi, Nepal
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Domesticating an Environment
2.1. Blurring Boundaries
Budiansky before them made the same point when he wrote that “where domestication is concerned, the terms artificial and natural lose any sharp meaning” (Budiansky 1999, p. x). If Limey herders consider the mountains as their home, but first and foremost as the kingdom of wildlife, how do humans, their livestock and wildlife manage to share a home while not being on an equal footing?Domestication challenges our understanding of human-environment relationships because it blurs the dichotomy between what is artificial and what is natural. In domestication, biological evolution, environmental change, techniques and practices, anthropological trajectories and sociocultural choices are inextricably interconnected. Domestication is essentially a hybrid phenomenon.
2.2. Being Made a Guest by Wildlife
On another occasion, I asked aw Norbu, “Do you love wildlife and domestic animals equally?” He gave this particularly insightful answer: “I love our animals more because wild yaks belong to the mountains, not to us”.Actually the wild yak has as much the right to be here as our own domestic animals; but we don’t feel as much compassion towards him because we don’t care for him like we care for our own animals. […] What’s more, the wild yak doesn’t give us anything: no meat, no milk. Only trouble.
3. Domesticating Bovines
3.1. Multispecies Kinship
the animals’ slow familiarization with the humans, well before the advent of Neolithic agriculture and breeding, and the biocultural process spanning thousands of years which saw domestic animals and plants adapting to humans just as much as human societies were shaped on the basis of the animals and plants they incorporated.
This behavior has also been observed among sheep, described as a “socially intelligent animal” that can distinguish among individuals of their kind based on physical and facial features (Despret and Meuret 2016; Armstrong 2016). They are also said to be able to tell one human from another based on physical and facial attributes (Goncalves et al. 2017).Like humans, they prefer to stay with those they already know. When they’ve been going to the pasturelands for many summers in a row with the same individuals, they prefer to stick with each other and not mingle with those they don’t know so well. But by the end of the season, they might all stay a bit closer to each other.
3.2. Making Domesticated Bovines Gendered Beings
I interpret this practice of putting a bell and woolen earrings on bovines as a way of honoring, controlling, and protecting them, in the same way that women are supposedly honored, controlled, and protected by their fathers first and husbands later on. Similar to women in many other societies, married Limey women wear specific jewelry and a striped apron after getting married to publicly indicate their marital status. Likewise, young bovines have their ears pierced and are adorned with colorful earrings, where the color and shape indicate the household they are a part of. Traditional garments do not afford women sufficient freedom of movement to wander far. Similarly, the bells on dio indicate to their owners their location, even when they are out of sight, making them easy to find and bring back. Lastly, just like girls before they get married, dio without offspring are given much more freedom and are sometimes even left with herds of yaks to graze without human supervision. Equally, as soon as a dio has a calf, she, her offspring and her milk are kept under close control by patriarchal, human-made structures. Domestic animals are, like women, protected from the outside world: from predators, human thieves, and unwanted suitors, such as the wild yak; the progeny resulting from these unions are referred to as nialu (male) and nialmo (female), the same words used for illegitimate human children. In other words, bovines are very much enmeshed in the social fabric of humans, to the point of having to conform to patriarchal and kinship norms that structure both human and multispecies relations.If some dio or yaks tend to lead the herd, we put a bell on them. But I have also put a bell with a high-pitched sound on one dio because she always manages to come into our tent to snatch food. That way, we can hear her coming and chase her away.
4. Domesticating Women
4.1. Enlarging the Domestic Sphere
4.2. Do Animal Intimacies Trump Gender?
5. Spiritual Domestication
5.1. Domesticating Oneself: The Moral Dimension of Domestication
5.2. Domesticating Gods and Spirits
5.3. Domesticating the Land through Gods and Spirits
6. Conclusions
Funding
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | Throughout this article, I will shorten the phrase “non-human animal” to “animal” for convenience’s sake, which does not imply that humans are not animals too nor that I ignore the literature’s debates on the matter. |
2 | Some argue it even happened before the Neolithic Era, at the end of the Paleolithic Era, with the domestication of the wolf. See Cyrulnik et al. (2000, pp. 97–102). Others argue that it had multiple origins rather than a single core in the Middle East (Allaby et al. 2011). |
3 | As my interlocutors explained, “Limi” is derived from “ley” (sle), a land surrounded by two rivers, and “mey” (mi), person or people. The ancient settlement of Limi, Tsamtso (also called Gumbayok), was indeed located between two rivers. Hence, the term its inhabitants use to refer to themselves (Limey) takes on its etymology, which already includes “inhabitants”. The inhabitants of Limi are often referred to in the literature as Limiwas, according to Tibetan logic. However, my interlocutors repeatedly confirmed referring to themselves as Limey, not Limiwas. Hence, I adopt their preferred self-appellation in my writing. |
4 | The closest Tibetan term would be ‘dul ba’ (in the Wylie transliteration), which Samuel defines as “taming, disciplining, and bringing under cultivation” (Samuel 2013, p. 77). But it is not used in Limi; hence, I choose not to turn to it here. However, my analysis echoes that of Samuel’s in his study of the dualities of tame and wild/disciplined and uncontrolled in Tibetan societies, and the place of Buddhist lamas in undertaking the taming (Samuel 1993, pp. 217–22). |
5 | There are other possible transliterations for these village names, such as Halji, Walze or Halje, and Zhang or Jang. I have chosen those that seem to be closest to how they sound in Limiekey. |
6 | Most village names in Humla and neighboring regions have both a Tibetan version and a Nepalese one, the latter of which I represent here with the abbreviation Np. |
7 | More on this in my doctoral dissertation, forthcoming. |
8 | Ow in Limiekey means father and is used to refer to men old enough to be one’s father. Aa (nasal,
in the phonetic alphabet) or ama means mother and is used to refer to women old enough to be one’s mother. Ay means elder sister and is used to refer to women slightly older than oneself. Aw means elder brother and is used to refer to men slightly older than oneself. Ippi means grandmother and is used to refer to women old enough to be one’s grandmother. Meh means grandfather and is used to refer to women old enough to be one’s grandfather. |
9 | I have consistently changed my interlocutors’ names to pseudonyms in order to preserve their anonymity. |
10 | Throughout this article, for readability’s sake, I will avoid the local lexicon, unless judged necessary. In that case, the transliterated word in Limiekey will be accompanied by its equivalent in standard Tibetan in the Wylie transliteration, signaled by the abbreviation W. |
11 | Throughout the article, I resort to he/him/his and she/her for animals instead of “it” in order to reflect the local linguistic use of he/she for animals and humans alike. |
12 | Kaang Rinpoche in Limiekey: literally “most precious snow”. |
13 | Inhabitants of Zang are called Zangba, those of Haltze, Halzia and of Til, Tilwa or Tilba. |
14 | Single mothers in Limi are often doomed to celibacy, as they can no longer marry. As such, they do not have in-laws to care for back in the village, nor sufficient fields, as those are inherited patrilinearily. |
15 | According to Tan (2016, p. 4) quoting Holler (2002, pp. 207, 218): “Freeing life (tshe thar) refers to the practice of liberating animals and occurs throughout Buddhist Asia (Holler 2002, p. 207). According to Holler, tshe thar refers both to the overall category of animal liberation that, nonetheless, involves different practices and motivations and to the specific practice of releasing one’s domestic animal intended for slaughter in order to gain merit”. |
16 | Tan writes in this regard: “Worldly deities and not-humans (mi ma yin) have la [“subtle life essence”, sometimes translated as “soul”] […] La attached to the principle of consciousness allows for an interpretation of expanded consciousness that can properly belong not only to humans but also to animals and worldly deities” (Tan 2016, pp. 8, 10). |
17 | |
18 | W. gsur or maybe W. bsur, sizzling, searing human flesh, perhaps a remnant of past practices of “red offerings”, i.e., blood offerings (Asboe 1936, pp. 75–76; Ramble 2008, p. 228; Dalton 2011, pp. 77–109, 219; Coblin and Li 2013, p. 127) now replaced by “white offerings”, namely bloodless offerings. |
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Bate, T. Domesticating Women, Animals, the Environment, and Spiritual Entities: Navigating Boundaries in the Pastoral Community of Limi, Nepal. Religions 2022, 13, 495. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13060495
Bate T. Domesticating Women, Animals, the Environment, and Spiritual Entities: Navigating Boundaries in the Pastoral Community of Limi, Nepal. Religions. 2022; 13(6):495. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13060495
Chicago/Turabian StyleBate, Tara. 2022. "Domesticating Women, Animals, the Environment, and Spiritual Entities: Navigating Boundaries in the Pastoral Community of Limi, Nepal" Religions 13, no. 6: 495. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13060495
APA StyleBate, T. (2022). Domesticating Women, Animals, the Environment, and Spiritual Entities: Navigating Boundaries in the Pastoral Community of Limi, Nepal. Religions, 13(6), 495. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13060495