The hard life of African albino blacks. The terrible fate of albinos in Tanzania (11 photos)

Eduardo was born and raised in a fishing village on Lake Tanganyika. He was the fifth child in an ordinary family of Tanzanian fishermen who make their living in lake waters. He himself, like his parents and brothers and sisters, was a typical Tanzanian - dark-skinned with black curly hair.

When the time came, he married his neighbor, the pretty black girl Maria, whom he had his eye on as a teenager. The young people settled in a separate hut. Eduardo adored his wife and was over the moon when she became pregnant.

The family idyll ended as soon as Eduardo looked at the newborn - a white-skinned girl with whitish fluff on her head. The husband, in a rage, showered his wife with a hail of reproaches, accusing her of all mortal sins: she supposedly contacted evil spirits, she was burdened by a family curse, and the gods sent her a “zera” (“ghost” in the local dialect) as punishment. To top off the scandal, Eduardo brutally beat Maria and kicked her and her child out of the house, depriving her of all help and support.

The unfortunate woman was not accepted by her parents either. Only the 70-year-old grandfather, who lived in a squalid shack on the outskirts of the village, took pity on her.

Maria had a hard time. The villagers shied away from her as if she were plagued. She somehow earned food for herself and her daughter Louise through hard daily work, and the baby remained under the supervision of her grandfather all day.

When Luisa was eight months old, Eduardo and three accomplices burst into the hut. Everyone was very drunk. In front of the grandfather's eyes, numb with horror, they cut the girl's throat, drained her blood into a placed wineskin, tore out her tongue, cut off her arms and legs...

Further dismemberment was prevented by the terrible scream of Maria returning from work. The woman lost consciousness. And the criminals, grabbing a wineskin with blood and cut off body parts, rushed away.

Louise's remains were buried right there, in the hut, so that other albino hunters would not encroach on her bones.

Africa is hell for the “colorless”

Unfortunately, this tragedy is typical for the countries of South-East Africa. The percentage here is abnormally high albinos- people with congenital absence of pigment in the skin, hair and iris of the eyes. If in Europe and North America there is one albino per 20 thousand people, then in Tanzania this ratio is 1:1400, in Kenya and Burundi - 1:5000.

It is believed that this disease is caused by a genetic defect leading to the absence (or blockade) of the enzyme tyrosinase, which is necessary for the normal synthesis of melanin, a special substance on which the color of tissues depends. In addition, scientists claim that an albino child can only be born when both parents have the gene for this disorder.

In Tanzania and other East African countries, albinos are outcasts and forced to marry only among themselves. This could be considered the main reason for the high proportion of albinos among the local population, because such families usually produce white children.

However, they are often born into families where there has not been a single albino in the entire chain of generations. So science throws up its hands, unable to explain the reason for such a high percentage of albinism in these territories.

Africa is a living hell for albinos. The burning rays of the tropical sun are destructive to them. Their skin and eyes are especially susceptible to ultraviolet radiation and are practically not protected from it, and therefore by the age of 16-18, albinos lose 60-80% of their vision, and by the age of 30 they have a 60% chance of developing skin cancer. 90% of these people do not live to be 50 years old. And in addition to all the misfortunes, a real hunt has been announced for them.

Crime and Punishment

Why didn't their white-skinned brothers please the black Africans? Not knowing the true nature of this genetic deviation, local residents, most of whom cannot read or write, explain the appearance of an albino child as a generational curse, damage, or God's punishment for the sins of the parents.

For example, the aborigines believe that the father of such a child can only be an evil spirit. One of the albinos says this:

I am not from the human world. I am part of the spirit world.

According to another version, prevailing in African society, albinos are born because their parents had sex during the period when the woman was menstruating, or during the full moon, or it happened in broad daylight, which is strictly prohibited by local rules.

And therefore, some village sorcerers, who still enjoy great authority among the population, consider albinos cursed, bringing the evil of the other world, and therefore subject to destruction. Others, on the contrary, claim that the flesh of albinos is healing, there is something in their blood and hair that brings wealth, power and happiness.

And that’s why healers and sorcerers pay hunters for albinos a lot of money. They know that if you sell the victim's body in parts - tongue, eyes, limbs, etc. - you can earn up to 100 thousand dollars. This is what an average Tanzanian earns over 25-50 years. Therefore, it is not surprising that the “colorless” are mercilessly exterminated.

Since 2006, about a hundred albinos have died in Tanzania. They were killed, dismembered and sold to sorcerers.

Until recently, hunting for albinos was almost not punished - the system of mutual responsibility led to the fact that the community basically declared them “missing”. This gave rise to a sense of impunity in the hunters, and they behaved like real bloodthirsty savages.

So, in Burundi they broke into the clay hut of the widow Genorose Nizigiyimana. The hunters grabbed her six-year-old son and dragged her outside.

Right in the yard, having shot the boy, the hunters skinned him in front of his hysterical mother. Having taken the “most valuable” things: tongue, penis, arms and legs, the bandits abandoned the mutilated corpse of the child and disappeared. None of the local residents helped the mother, since almost everyone considered her cursed.

Sometimes the killing of the victim occurs with the consent of relatives. Thus, Salma, the mother of a seven-year-old girl, was ordered by her family to dress her daughter in black and leave her alone in the hut. The woman, not suspecting anything, did as she was told. But I decided to hide and see what would happen next.

A few hours later, unknown men entered the hut. They used a machete to cut off the girl's legs. Then they cut her throat, drained the blood into a vessel and drank it.

The list of such atrocities is very long. But the Western public, outraged by the brutal practices in Tanzania, forced local authorities to take up the search and punishment of cannibals.

In 2009, the first trial of the killers of an albino took place in Tanzania. Three men killed a 14-year-old boy and cut him into pieces to sell to sorcerers. The court sentenced the villains to death by hanging.

Eduardo, whose crime was described at the beginning of this article, was subjected to the same punishment. His accomplices were sentenced to life imprisonment.

After several such ships, the hunters became more inventive. They stopped killing albinos, and just mutilated them by cutting off their limbs. Now, even if the criminals are caught, they will be able to avoid the death penalty, and will receive only 5-8 years for grievous bodily harm. Over the past three years, almost a hundred albinos have had their arms or legs cut off, and three have died as a result of such “operations.”

The African Fund for Albinos, financed by Europeans, the Red Cross Society and other Western public organizations are trying to provide all possible assistance to these unfortunate people. They are placed in special boarding schools, they are given medicines, sunscreens, dark glasses...

In these establishments, behind high walls and under reliable security, the “colorless” are isolated from the dangers of the outside world. But in Tanzania alone there are about 370 thousand albinos. You can’t hide everyone in boarding schools.

Nikolay VALENTINOV, magazine "Secrets of the 20th Century" No. 13, 2017

In many African countries, centuries-old traditions laid down by their ancestors are honored. Including the most cruel ones. Ritual killings and witchcraft are still part of everyday life for Africans. The most terrible thing that Westerners cannot understand is that children regularly become victims of shamans and healers on the Dark Continent. Although the authorities are trying to fight this, there has not yet been much success in eradicating barbaric customs. Lenta.ru looked into the nuances of African views on life and death.

Albino Hunting

Albinos (light-skinned blacks with impaired skin and hair pigmentation) are perhaps the most persecuted group on the Dark Continent. The birth of such a child, according to beliefs in a number of countries in Central Africa, is a very bad sign. But from the organs and parts of an albino’s body, with proper witchcraft accompaniment, it is possible to make the most powerful amulets and healing amulets. The organs of “whites” are in particular demand among healers in Kenya, Congo and Tanzania. The price for individual body parts of killed albinos can reach up to $1,000. A complete “set” for 75 thousand, for most Africans the money is simply crazy. Amulets made from the genital organs are in special and very high demand. The reason for this is the spread of AIDS. There is a belief that eating dried genitals will cure this disease. As well as from many others.

Albino hunters remained virtually unpunished for a long time. Their victims were simply declared missing. The first verdict in such a case in Tanzania was made only in 2009. The murderers were hanged. Now hunters do not kill their victims, but cut off their limbs. As a result, if they fall into the hands of Themis, they are tried under the article of causing grievous bodily harm, which is punishable by a prison term of five to eight years. Last year, a six-year-old albino child had his arm chopped off in Tanzania. The boy's father was among the attackers.

Photo: Haydn West / Zumapress / Globallookpress.com

Special guarded boarding schools are being built for albino children. However, this does not always save. There are known cases when guards, in exchange for bribes, helped hunters enter the territory of an institution to kidnap children.

Damned children of Ivory Coast

According to local traditions, a child whose mother dies during childbirth is declared “cursed.” It is believed that he can bring trouble to others. It is not only possible, but also necessary to get rid of such children. That is, they must be killed. The same applies to disabled children. A physical defect may not appear until several years after birth (for example, deafness), but this does not cancel the death sentence.

Such children are most often drowned or poisoned. And no one will ever say that the baby was killed. Here they say: “the child went home to his real parents,” meaning spirits and local gods. The killer is called the “accompanying”.

Photo: eye ubiquitous / hutchison / Globallookpress.com

The authorities are trying to fight this terrible custom, but criminal prosecution stops few people. And shelters for the “damned,” which exist on donations from philanthropists, can only accommodate children up to 15 years of age. After this, they return to the society that rejected them and sentenced them. And this sentence, although delayed, will most likely be carried out.

The second one must die

Tribes in Madagascar have a belief that the birth of twins threatens the death of the entire family. Twins are automatically sentenced to death. Often together with the mother, who desecrated herself by communication with evil spirits and thereby brought a curse on the whole family. However, local leaders and shamans are trying to keep up with the times and have softened their morals somewhat: now one of the twins - the one born first - is left alive.

On the other side of Africa, in Nigeria, things are a little more complicated with twins. There is a sign here: if twins become different over time, then one of them will soon die. To deceive evil fate, parents dress the twins in identical clothes and give them identical hairstyles. It is believed that twins have one soul and one destiny between them. If one of them dies, the second must put a yellow flower on the grave of the deceased and say: “I give you a yellow flower, and you give me white light” - this will protect him from death.

Young sorcerers

In Nigeria, witchcraft is prohibited by law. Anyone guilty of performing magical rituals will face prison for many years. But the fight against witchcraft often takes on very perverted forms. For example, not only an adult, but also a child can be accused of the evil eye and causing damage. Several years ago, European volunteers literally saved a two-year-old boy from starvation, who was declared a sorcerer and kicked out of his home. How the baby could have harmed his relatives remains a mystery. Some older children, who have been in the shoes of outcast sorcerers, in conversations with their saviors recall the circumstances under which they found themselves outside the family. “My parents died, my grandfather got sick, my aunt accused me of being a witch: “Why is everyone around me getting sick? They are suffering because of you,” said Naomi from Kinshasa (Democratic Republic of Congo). Hundreds of similar cases have been recorded in the country. How many of them are outside official reports is unknown.

Photo: Jorn Stjerneklar / Impact Photos / Globallookpress.com

The DRC authorities have adopted a special law protecting minors from accusations of witchcraft. However, this practically did not change the situation. According to representatives of various charitable foundations that help children, the problem here is not only due to superstitions. In large families, parents are simply unable to feed everyone and, under the pretext of accusations of witchcraft, get rid of the extra mouth.

Murder for luck

In the spring of 2013, Humane Africa published a shocking report, “Human casualties and mutilation of children in Uganda.” According to his data, child sacrifices are regularly carried out in the country, with at least one child dying every week. Moreover, ritual murders have turned into a real business. According to clients, child sacrifice contributes to success in business. A few years ago, in the Ugandan capital of Kampala, a wealthy businessman who ordered the murder of a boy was arrested and sentenced to life imprisonment. He buried parts of the child's body on his site, where construction was going on. And this is not a unique case. Local entrepreneurs are trying in this way to enlist the “support” of spirits before launching a large project. Even close relatives are brought to the slaughter of sorcerers. In 2011, one client brought his 12-year-old nephew to the priest, saying that the spirits needed the child’s blood, and in return he would receive power. Sometimes sorcerers resort to tricks, demanding that clients sacrifice their own children. As a result, some parents abandon the ritual. 2008, Uganda is not the only country where creepy rituals are practiced. Similar incidents were also recorded in South Africa and Mozambique. The vast majority of victims are children between 3 and 18 years old. Sometimes pregnant women are killed in order to remove and kill the fetus.

African witches, or those who are considered such, periodically find themselves victims. In 2014, in a village in Tanzania, there were seven people whom local residents suspected of performing magical rituals. Up to 500 healers die every year. But as they say, a holy place is never empty. New ones take their place and continue the work of their ancestors.

Albinism (Latin albus, “white”) is a congenital absence of pigment in the skin, hair, iris and pigment membranes of the eye. There are complete and partial albinism. It is currently believed that the cause of the disease is the absence (or blockade) of the enzyme tyrosinase, which is necessary for the normal synthesis of melanin, a special substance on which the color of tissues depends.

In Europe and North America, there is one albino for every 20 thousand people. In Africa their number is much higher - one per 4 thousand people. According to Mr. Kimaya, there are about 370 thousand albinos in Tanzania. The government of the country cannot guarantee the safety of any of them. It so happened that the Africans, who by a whim of nature turned out to be white, had to flee from their own neighbors. Their life often resembles a nightmare when you don’t know whether, when you wake up in the morning, you will be able to live until the evening. Apart from ignorant people, albinos are mercilessly tormented by the hot African sun. White skin and eyes are defenseless against powerful ultraviolet radiation. Such people are forced to rarely go outside or apply copious amounts of sunscreen, which many simply do not have the money for. Because there is simply no one there who doesn’t have them!
In South Africa there is a belief that an albino disappears after death, as if melting into thin air. In this regard, there are always several “defects” who want to check: is it true or not? And... they kill albinos!
The African authorities blame the village shamans for the current situation, whose opinions the population still listens to; they simply sacredly and stupidly believe them. Attitudes towards albinos are ambiguous even among the “black magicians” themselves: some attribute special positive properties to their bodies, while others consider them cursed, bringing the evil of the other world. Albinos in Tanzania live in constant fear for their lives. Local shamans pay for their blood, eyes and other body parts, which are used in pagan rituals. It is believed that a person who kills an albino gains special power by coming into contact with the other world. Despite the efforts of the authorities, it has not yet been possible to stop the wave of reprisals against citizens without pigmentation.

On October 19, 2008, a demonstration in defense of albinos took place in the city of Dar es Salaam. The white-skinned Africans plucked up courage and went out into the streets. But that evening one of them was tracked down, captured and tried to cut off his hands. One of the limbs was left hanging and subsequently had to be amputated. The pagans cut off the other and fled.
In Africa, the killing of albinos has become an industry where the majority of the population cannot read or write and generally considers it an absolutely unnecessary activity, and even less understanding of medical nuances.

But there are various superstitions in use here. Residents believe that an albino black man brings misfortune to the village. The dismembered organs of albinos are sold for a lot of money to buyers from the "I'd like to notice" Democratic Republic of the Congo, Burundi, Kenya and Uganda. People blindly believe that the legs, genitals, eyes and hair of people with albinism confer special strength and health. The killers are driven not only by pagan beliefs, but also by the thirst for profit - the hand of an albino costs 2 million Tanzanian shillings, which is about 1.2 thousand dollars. For Africans this is just crazy money!
Just recently, more than 50 people who differed from their compatriots in skin color were killed in Tanzania. They were not just killed, they were dismantled for organs, and the organs of albino blacks are sold to shamans. It so happens that those who hunt albino blacks don’t care who they kill: a man, a woman or a child. The product is scarce and expensive. Having killed one such victim, the hunter can live comfortably, by African standards, for a couple of years. Below, Mabula, 76, squats in his dirt-floored bedroom next to the grave of his granddaughter, five-year-old Mariam Emmanuel, a small albino who was killed and dismembered in the next room in February 2008. The girl was buried right in the hut so that hunters for albino body parts would not steal her bones. Mabula says that there have already been raids on his house a couple of times, after the death of his granddaughter, hunters wanted to take her bones. The photo was taken on January 25, 2009 in one of the villages near Mwanza. Mabula guards her house day and night.
A Tanzanian teenage girl is pictured sitting in the girls' dormitory of a public school for the disabled in Kabanga, a town in the west of the country near the town of Kigomu on Lake Tanganyika, June 5, 2009. The school began accepting albino children late last year after In Tanzania and neighboring Burundi, albinos began to be killed in order to use parts of their bodies in witchcraft rituals. The children's school in Kabang is guarded by soldiers of the local army, but this does not always save children from hunters for their bodies; cases where soldiers collude with criminals have become more frequent. Children cannot even take a step outside the walls of their classrooms.
Little nine-year-old Amani sits in the recreation room of Mitido Primary School for the Blind, photographed January 25, 2009. He was admitted there after the murder of his sister, five-year-old Mariam Emmanuel, an albino girl who was killed and dismembered in February 2008.
The picture shows small albino children at recess in the courtyard of a primary school for the blind in Mitido, the pictures were taken on January 25, 2009. This school has become a real refuge for rare albino children. The school in Mitido is also guarded by army soldiers, children feel safer than at home with their parents.
In this photo taken on January 27, 2009, Nima Kayanya, 28, makes a clay pot at her grandmother's house in Ukerewa, Tanzania, where her brother and sister, who are also albinos like her, now live. Ukerewe, an island on Lake Victoria located near the city of Mwanza, is a safe haven compared to other regions of Tanzania.
African sorcerers say that amulets made from albino blacks can bring good luck to the house, help in a successful hunt, and win the favor of a woman. But amulets made from the genitals are in particular demand. It is believed to be a powerful remedy that cures all diseases. Almost any organ is used. Even bones, which are ground and then mixed with various herbs, are used in the form of decoctions to impart mystical power.
The youngest victim was seven months old. Her relatives took part in the killing. Salma, the girl's mother, was ordered by her family to dress her daughter in black clothes and leave her alone in the hut. The woman, suspecting nothing, did as she was told. But I decided to hide and see what would happen next. A few hours later, unknown men entered the hut. They used a machete to cut off the girl's legs. Then they cut her throat, drained the blood into a vessel and drank it.
These hunters are real bloodthirsty savages; they are not afraid of anything. So in Burundi they burst straight into the mud hut of the widow Genorose Nizigiyimana. They grabbed her six-year-old son and dragged him outside. Right in the yard, having shot the boy, they skinned him in front of his hysterical mother. Having taken the “most valuable” things: tongue, penis, arms and legs, the bandits abandoned the mutilated corpse of the child and disappeared. None of the local villagers will help the mother, since almost everyone considers her cursed. Albino Society of Tanzania chairman Ernest Kimaya says albinos face discrimination both at school and at work. He said: “People believe that a woman who gives birth to an albino child is cursed. In the past, midwives killed such children.”

Fishermen in Tanzania believe that if you weave red hair from an albino’s head into a net, their magical golden shine will increase the catch several times. Local miners wear “ju-ju” amulets around their necks and hands, made with a mixture of albino ashes. Some of them bury bones at excavation sites.
In early November 2008, the Daily News wrote about a fisherman from Lake Tanganyika who tried to sell his albino wife for $2,000 to businessmen from Congo. Another case tells of a man caught at the country's border with the head of a child. He told the police that the shaman promised to pay him for the goods by weight.
A small island of relative safety for albinos is the Oncological Institute in Dar es Salaam. In the alley outside the hospital stand Africans with milky skin and rust-colored hair.
Their bodies are covered with burns and scabs - in addition to albinos shamans, skin cancer affects them. Unlike Europe, where people with congenital lack of pigmentation can receive timely, qualified help, in Africa they rarely live past 40 years.
An albino woman named Zihada Msembo says that until recently her only enemy was the sun. Now, when going out into the street, she is more frightened by passers-by, who every now and then throw out phrases: “Look - “zeru” (in the local dialect “ghost”). We can pin her down."
In this photo taken on May 28, 2009, human body parts, including a thigh bone, and flayed skin can be seen on display in a courtroom during the trial of 11 Burundians. The defendants are accused of killing albino blacks whose limbs were sold to healers from neighboring Tanzania, in Ruyigi. During the trial, the Burundian prosecutor, Nicodeme Gahimbare, demanded a sentence of one year to life imprisonment for the defendants. Gahimbare had sought life imprisonment as punishment for three of the 11 accused, eight of whom were in the dock for the murder of an eight-year-old girl and a man in March this year.
The well-known organization the Red Cross is actively recruiting volunteers, conducting its propaganda all over the world, very often Africans themselves join it. Pictured July 5, 2009, a Tanzanian Red Cross Society (TRCS) volunteer holds the hand of an albino toddler at a picnic organized by TRCS at a government school for the disabled in Kabanga, in the west of the country near the town of Kigomu on Lake Tanganyika.

A disease characterized by a congenital absence of pigment in the skin, its appendages, iris and pigment membranes of the eyes is commonly called albinism. The color of body tissues depends on a special substance - melanin, the normal synthesis of which requires the enzyme tyronase. When this enzyme is missing, the pigment is also missing. and albinos have hair from birth. Albino blacks are no exception. In most cases, convergent strabismus and reduction are observed. There are no effective methods for treating the disease. Patients are advised not to expose themselves to sunlight, and when going outside to use light-protective means: darkened lenses, sunglasses, filters. It is not difficult to maintain the health of people with such a pathology, but this little albino black man (photo below) has practically no chance of living to see his fortieth birthday.

Scientists cannot answer the question of why in Tanzania and other East African countries there are times more albinos born than the average on the planet. An albino black man is very vulnerable because, no matter how crazy it may sound, he is the object of a real hunt. "Classic Negroes" chop them into pieces and then eat them as medicine.

According to ancient belief, albino flesh has healing properties. Local sorcerers and healers even treat AIDS, prescribing the dried genitals of a “transparent” relative as a healing potion. The killings of white-skinned blacks are widespread. There is evidence that since 2006, 71 albino blacks have died at the hands of hunters, and more than 30 managed to escape from the killers. The excitement of the hunters is quite understandable: albino flesh, sold in parts, brings in income calculated in a very decent amount: from 50 to 100 thousand dollars.

Until recently, cannibals managed to evade responsibility. The abducted and murdered albino black man was declared “missing,” and the authorities made no attempt to find him or punish the criminals. However, the brutal practices in Tanzania caused and continue to cause outrage in the West, so the authorities had to start punishing the human hunters. Relatively recently, in 2009, three men were sentenced to death after they caught and cut into pieces a 14-year-old white-skinned youth. This was the first trial of cannibals, forcing them to change tactics. From now on, a captured albino black man has a chance to remain alive, although pretty crippled - without arms and legs. Human hunters have switched to cutting off the limbs of albinos, which, if the criminals are caught, threatens them with 5 to 8 years of imprisonment for grievous bodily harm.

Let's look at a few more sad statistics. Over the past 3 years, 90 albinos have been deprived of limbs, three of them died from their injuries. The reason that only 2% of Tanzanian blacks diagnosed with albinism survive to the age of 40 is not only their extermination for the sake of eating. In conditions of poverty, it is difficult to ensure the preservation of vision, which albinos, barely achieved, lose by 60-80%. An albino person at age 30 has a 60% chance of getting skin cancer. Residents of one of the poorest countries on the planet who were born with albinism need support from the civilized world community.