The
Ethiopian tribes who use BUTTER to style their hair: Incredible photos
reveal the elaborate curled creations of the Afar people, and the Hamer
who mix ghee with red ochre to spectacular effect
Traditional: Men from the Karrayyu tribe cover their beautifully cut afro hairstyles, known as gunfura, with butter as a means of keeping the look in place.
- The Afar tribe is famous for its butter-covered 'asdago' afro styles and elaborately curled 'dayta' 'do
- But the Afar aren't the only ones to use dairy products as an unguent - the Bofana and Hamer also do
- Particularly spectacular is the look adopted by the Karrayyu tribe who allow butter to drip through their hair
By SARAH BRIDGE and RUTH STYLES
Whether you use serums, oil or
gels, for most of us, lovely locks are an everyday essential. But for
the Afar tribe who live along Ethiopia's northeastern border with
Djibouti and Eritrea, the pursuit of a gorgeous 'do involves one very
unusual ingredient.
Their distinctive 'asdago' Afro
hairstyle is created using butter, which lends their locks a slightly
ashy appearance as well as protecting it from the sun and keeping it
perfectly supple.
But it's not just asdago hairdos
that benefit from a spot of butter: another look, the 'dayta', also
relies on dairy as a means of keeping the elaborate curls, created using
a stick, in place.
The Afars, who are grouped into
unique mini-kingdoms, each ruled by its own sultan, also like across the
border in neigbouring Eritrea and suffered much persecution under the
Communist Derg regime. More than 20 years after dictator
Mengistu Haile Mariam was forced to flee, the people's fortunes - and
talent for hairdressing - have recovered, although like other tribes
living traditional lifestyles, they are under threat from encroaching
modernity.
Impressive though the Afars' grasp
of hair dressing is, they aren't the only Ethiopians to use butter to
keep their hair in tip top condition. The Karrayyu, are an
ancient nomadic group who live in the Awash Valley in the Fantalle
district of Ethiopia, also create elaborate looks using the foodstuff.
Sadly, like the Afar, their way of
life is also under threat, largely as a result of persecution during
the last century of their ethnic parent group, the Oromo, as well as the
establishment of national parks and the construction of sugar and
cotton plantations which have deprived them of their land.
Traces: This man's intricate dayta hairstyle bears clear traces of the large amount of buttery unguent needed to create it
Traditional: Men from the Karrayyu tribe cover their beautifully cut afro hairstyles, known as gunfura, with butter as a means of keeping the look in place.
Tribesman
from the Karrayyu tribe wear their head in a distinctive afro hairstyle
called a gunfura, and will make a hole in it when married and add
butter to it.
The rules, which divide the tribespeople into around 11 strictly-observed group, governs
the life of individuals in Oromo society from birth to death,
controlling everything from economics, art, history, property ownership
and making laws. Every eight years under a full
moon, around 10,000 people - strictly no tourists - gather for the Gada
ceremony to transfer power from one group to the next.
There's no such prohibition on
watching the Karrayyu hairdressers at work however, creating intricate
looks that can take up to a day to complete.
'Karrayyu young men who are newly
married make a hole in their "gunfura" (afro haircut) and put some
butter in the morning, reveals Lafforgue. 'All day long, the butter goes
through the hair and down in the neck. It's natural for them!' And the buttery look isn't
reserved solely for the men, as Lafforgue points out: 'Karrayyu girls
also put butter on the hair. Sometimes you can see the men from the
family spitting on the top of the head full of butter, which, although
it sounds disgusting, is actually a blessing.'
The Hamar, a semi-nomadic tribe of
cattle herders, have a set of unique rituals surrounding the use of
butter as a beauty product. The food is most often used by newly-wed
women, who are completely covered in a butter and ochre mixture and shut
in their home alone for six months after the wedding to ensure that any
child she has belongs to her husband. But it's not solely a wedding
tradition: Women also use the mixture to keep their dreadlocks in place.
'Hamer women use butter and a little red soil to put on their dreadlocks, explains Lafforgue.
'They put so much that it streams
down the back and looks a lot like blood.' To keep the look tidy,
regular haircuts are also on offer, although as Lafforgue explains, they
aren't of the type found in a high street salon. 'They take a stone and a knife to cut them with,' he explains. 'A few minutes and it is done!'
Elaborate: Hamer women use a mixture of butter
and red ochre to keep their dreadlocks neatly in place. They are cut
using a knife and a stone
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