Were human babies used as bait
in crocodile hunts in colonial Sri Lanka?
Anslem de Silva 1 & Ruchira Somaweera 2
1 Amphibian
and Reptile Research Organisation of Sri Lanka, 15/1, DolosbageRoad, Gampola, Sri Lanka
2 Biologic
Environmental Survey, 50B, Angove St, North Perth, WA 6006, Australia
1 kalds@sltnet.lk, 2 ruchira.somaweera@gmail.com (corresponding author)
Abstract: Use of live animals as bait is not an uncommon
practice in hunting worldwide. However,
some curious accounts of the use of human babies as bait to lure crocodiles in
sport hunting exist on the island of Sri Lanka, where sport hunting was common
during the British colonial period. Herein we compile the available records, review other records of the
practice, and discuss the likelihood of the exercise actually having taken
place.
Keywords: Ceylon, colonial period, Crocodylus porosus, Crocodylus palustris, live bait, sport hunting.
doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.11609/JoTT.o4161.6805-9
Editor: B.C. Choudhury (Retd.),
Wildlife Institute of India, Dehradun, India. Date
of publication: 26 January 2015 (online & print)
Manuscript
details: Ms #
o4161 | Received 28 September 2014 | Final received 26 November 2014 | Finally
accepted 03 January 2015
Citation: de
Silva, A. & R. Somaweera (2015). Were human babies used as bait in crocodile hunts in
colonial Sri Lanka? Journal of Threatened Taxa7(1): 6805–6809; http://dx.doi.org/10.11609/JoTT.o4161.6805-9
Copyright: © de Silva
& Somaweera 2015. Creative Commons Attribution 4.0
International License. JoTT allows unrestricted use
of this article in any medium, reproduction and distribution by providing
adequate credit to the authors and the source of publication.
Funding: Self-funded.
Competing
Interest: The authors declare no competing interests.
Acknowledgements: We thank
Franklin Hughes, Johan van Rooijen, Rohan Wijesekera, Aaron. M. Bauer, David Rhind and
Henrik Bringsøe for their help in securing some literature. Charlie Manolis,
John Rudge and Rohan Pethiyagoda made useful
suggestions to improve the manuscript and two anonymous reviewers provided
useful comments. Literature and old newspapers were accessed through the
Library of Congress, Biodiversity Heritage Library and National Library of
Australia.
Hunting for wild animals is
stimulated by the many different human uses of faunal resources. Hunting for sport is one of the oldest
recreational uses of wildlife and existed for more than 2500 years since
Ancient Greek times. It was largely
practiced by royalty, the upper social classes and colonial rulers (Coningham 1995; Smalley 2005; Griffin 2007). Among the many large animals hunted for sport were crocodilians. Accounts of the hunting of crocodiles are
common in the 19th and early 20th century literature, and
such hunting was particularly common in the British colonies (MacKenzie 1997; Taylor 2004), including the island of Sri
Lanka (then called Ceylon), where several early writers described the practice
of hunting and catching crocodiles (e.g., Bennett 1843; Sirr1850; Baker 1854; Tennent 1861; Clark 1901; Hornaday 1901; Wright 1907; Hagenbeck& Hoeven 1942).
During a recent review of the
historical literature pertaining to the crocodiles of Sri Lanka, we came across
some curious accounts of the use of human babies as bait to lure crocodiles in
sport hunting on the island. We compile
these records here, and review other records of the practice.
Babies as bait
Two species of crocodiles inhabit
Sri Lanka: the Saltwater Crocodile Crocodylus porosus, which is largely restricted to the
coastal areas of the south and south-west, and the Mugger C. palustris which occurs throughout the lowland dry zone
(Whitaker & Whitaker 1979; Santiapillai & de
Silva 2001; de Silva 2013). The
historical distribution and abundance of both species was greater than today (Kelaart 1852; Ferguson 1877; Deraniyagala1939), and, given that they were not legally protected until recently, hunting
of the animals was also common (Deraniyagala 1930; Tutein-Nolthenius 1934; Ahlip1965). Among the many historical reports
of hunting crocodiles on the island, the following accounts in early newspapers
report the use of human babies as bait to lure crocodiles for hunting.
The Graphic, a London-based newspaper, included in its 21 January
1888 issue three interesting sketches of the method of using a baby to lure a
large crocodile (Fig. 1). Captioned ‘Sport
in Ceylon—Shooting a Man-eating Crocodile’, the figure depicts: (1) an European
man estimating the size of a crocodile to be a ‘twenty footer’; (2) hiring a
baby from the locals as bait, and (3).the concealed hunter shooting the
crocodile that has been lured to the baby tied to a bush on the bank. The preferred bait is specified as ‘a chubby,
rice-distended and squally infant’.
Several contemporaneous
newspapers, including The Red Cloud Chief (6 April 1888), The Helena
Independent (18 April 1890), Desert Evening News (29 April 1890), Roanoke
Times (20 July 1890) and those cited below each contained a news item
titled ‘Babies for Crocodile Bait’. They
all referred to a newspaper advertisement captioned ‘Babies wanted for
crocodile bait. Will be returned alive’
that was published in the Ceylonese newspaper Ceylon Catholic Messenger. Our
attempts to locate the original article failed, hence the note which appeared
in the Roanoke Times is reproduced here as Fig. 2. The notes state that Ceylonese parents have
unbounded confidence in English crocodile hunters. They would rent their babies out to be used
as bait to lure crocodiles for a small consideration, and it is not difficult
for an English crocodile hunter to secure the bait (Mower County Transcript:
23 July 1890). The articles further
mention that after the crocodiles had been attracted to the dark-brown infant
on the bank, the hidden hunter would shoot the animal as it approaches the live
‘bait’. The sportsman would then secure
the skin and the head of the crocodile, and the natives would make use of the
rest of the carcass. Some report that,
‘The baby is taken home to its loving parents, to be used for the same purpose
next day’. Several newspapers, including the Omaha Daily Bee (5 March
1888), Western Kansas World (30 June 1888) and Barton County Democrat(29 March 1888) referring to these reports, stated that ‘This way of
securing crocodiles might be objected to by American mothers. The American infant imagination might be
shuttered by the devouring gaze of a healthy saurian who hasn’t had his dinner;
but we are creditably informed by certain English crocodile hunters that the
average Ceylon infant displays a passive indifference to his advances, and the
only thing which frightens him is the report of the gun’.
Possibly the same story reappeared
in The Valentine Democrat (1 October 1896) which describes how ‘a nice,
fat baby is tied by the leg to a stake near some pond or lagoon where
crocodiles abound. Soon the child begins
crying and the sound attracts the crocodiles within hearing distance. They
start out immediately for the wailing infant…’. The writer further mentions that ‘So expert are many of the hunters that
they do not shoot the alligator (correctly, the crocodile) until it has approached
to within a few feet of the baby’. The
article was accompanied by a sketch in which the hunter is positioned
immediately next to the baby but concealed among the bushes (Fig. 3).
A third set of reports that
appeared in American and Australian newspapers Cameron County Press(‘Babes and Bait’—12 December 1907), The Daily News (Perth, WA) (‘Babies
as Bait!’—11 April 1908), The Columbian (‘Baby Bait for Crocodile’—2
July 1908), Healesville and Yarra Glen Guardian (‘Baby Bait for Crocodiles’—23
August 1910), The Southern Record and Advertiser (‘A New Use for
Babies’—26 November 1910), Shiner Gazette (‘Use Live Babies as Bait’—26
January 1911), and Kilmore Free Press(‘The Baby and the Crocodile’—1 June 1911: Fig. 4), detail a sailor’s account
of using babies to lure crocodiles in Ceylon. He states that Cingalese (= Sinhalese, some
early western authors spelt this as Cingalese)
mothers regularly (up to four times a week) hire out babies for two shillings a
day (currency used in early British Ceylon until it was replaced by the Rupee
in 1852. Currently a shilling would
equal US¢ 8½, but its purchasing power was arguably much greater in early
1900s). He further mentions that ‘baby
bait is the only bait for crocodiles and everyone uses it’. The sailor claims to have shot as many as
four crocodiles with just one baby in a single morning and the babies are
unharmed in the process. Similar to the
account in Ceylon Catholic Messenger, this story states that human
babies are the best bait to get the attention of crocodiles and lure them to
the bank for shooting.
Records from elsewhere
Records of using babies as bait
for crocodiles also exist elsewhere. The Richmond Dispatch (10 July
1894) and the Record-Union (1 September 1894) printed an article on ‘How
British Sportsmen Hunt Crocodiles in India’ where an ex-officer of the British
Army was quoted as saying, ‘We used to have a great sport in India going out
after crocodiles with Hindu babies as bait’. He mentions that native women will flock to rent their babies for six
cents per day and some would not even insist on a guarantee of their safe
return (and that some crocodiles in fact got away with the ‘bait’). The officer claimed to have shot more than
100 crocodiles with just one chosen baby girl as bait. He added that he could not find an infant for
rent to follow the same procedure in hunting an alligator in Florida, USA.
Anecdotal reports of the use of
human babies as bait for crocodilians do exist, nevertheless, in American
newspapers. In a compilation of records
of the use of African-American babies as bait for alligators in the USA,
Gilliam (2014) records that in 1908 the Washington
Times reported that a keeper at the New York Zoological Garden baited
‘Alligators with Pickaninnies’ (a derogatory term for
African-American children) and that ‘The alligators were “coaxed” ‘into their
summer quarters by plump little Africans’. The Oakland Tribune on
21 September 1923 contained the article ‘Pickaninny bait
lures voracious gator to death’, where Villiers (1923) describes in detail the
procedure of using black babies as live bait (for $2) and further states that
‘there is nothing terrible about it, except that it is spelling death for the
alligators’. In July 1968, the Los Angeles Times ran an article about the
baseball player Bob Gibson in which he mentions an inhabitant of Georgia
stating that ‘Negro youngsters’ were used in baiting alligators (Chapin
1968). The use of African-American babies as live bait for alligators has been
also used in American movie plots, including Alligator Bait (1900), The
Gator and the Pickaninny (1900) and Untamed
Fury (1947), and also used in postcards (Abagond2010; Hughes 2013; Gilliam 2014).
Melina da Fonseca Rorke in her book The Story of Melina Rorke, describes an incident where African babies were
used by their fathers to lure crocodiles (possibly Nile crocodiles). She writes ‘…..in a few moments, though, the
children who had previously been ignored, became the centre of attention; they
were suddenly scooped up from the ground and carried swiftly down to the river
bank in front of the screen where they were laid in the mud about 10 feet
apart. To my unspeakable horror, I
realised that those poor little piccaninnies were to serve as live bait for the
crocodiles…..’(Rorke 1938). In this incident, a group
of men has hunted the crocodiles with spears and have used several children and
infants (possibly their own) as bait.
Discussion
Written records of crocodile hunts
in Sri Lanka span thousands of years. Even the Great Chronicle of Sri Lanka, the Mahāvamsa,
records that a man-eating crocodile at Gal-Oya was
hunted down by King Rajasinghe II (1629‒1687
CE). Records from the 17thcentury onwards show that the Portuguese, Dutch and the British hunted
crocodiles as sport and in order to remove ‘man-eaters’ (Haughton 1916; Deraniyagala 1939; Hagenbeck& Hoeven 1942; de Silva 2013). Hunting crocodiles for sport was banned in
1964 with the listing of both Sri Lankan species as protected species, but they
nevertheless continue (illegally) to be hunted out of fear and in the hope of preventing future attacks (Somaweera& de Silva 2012) as well as for meat and hide (Madawalaet al. 2013; Samarasinghe 2014).
These early records are
fascinating as recent island-wide surveys of crocodilians themselves, their
attacks and human perceptions towards crocodiles in Sri Lanka, did not
encounter any records or even folklore or myths referring to the use of humans
as bait for crocodiles (de Silva 2010, 2013). The references to this practice on the island were published during the
middle British period in Sri Lankan history (the British colonial period in Sri
Lanka lasted from 1802 to 1948), in printed media abroad. However, a review of early, more-detailed
literature on hunting and catching crocodiles in the island (Bennett 1843; Sirr 1850; Baker 1854; Tennent1861; Suckling 1876; Clark 1901; Hornaday 1901;
Wright 1907; Haughton 1916; Deraniyagala 1939; Hagenbeck & Hoeven 1942),
including those prior, contemporary and subsequent to the media records above,
and communications with sociologists, historians, archeologistsat the University of Peradeniya (one of the leading
research institutes in the relevant fields), has failed to uncover any
additional records of human babies being used as bait. It is surprising that none of the more
detailed accounts in the books and journals reported this practice indeed given
that it appears to have been both common (e.g., some articles quote ‘baby bait
is the only bait for crocodiles and everyone uses it’) and effective (e.g., the
account in Richmond Dispatch states that as many as half a dozen crocodiles could
come hurrying from as many different parts of a river towards a baby within
five minutes of it being positioned) as claimed in the newspaper articles. It is also important to note that the
frequency of reporting of these cases does not necessarily imply that the
practice was common or widespread. Indeed, it appears that an article in one newspaper was picked up and
reproduced by other newspapers, even at a much later date (e.g., after eight
years in one case above), just as it does nowadays, albeit electronically and
much faster.
However, using live dogs as well
as dead animals (chicken, dogs, monkeys, cattle etc.) as bait to lure
crocodiles was reported at several locations during our surveys, a practice
that has its roots in early Ceylon. Ahlip (1965)
reports the use of monkey meat as bait for Muggers and Clark (1901) states that
crocodiles in Ceylon are most easily shot from points of ambush near the
carcasses of cattle or a young ‘pariah’ dog (possibly referring to a stray
dog), or a puppy that has been tied up at the bank. The yelping of the puppy is said to attract
the crocodiles and bring them within easy shooting distance. Deraniyagala (1939)
reported how live dogs were used to lure crocodiles, and the usage of living as
well as dead animals as bait was a common practice (Rajakarurnnayake2000). Given that these authors
explicitly cite the use of other live bait for crocodiles, it is surprising
that they did not encounter any incidents in which babies were used as bait.
Many hunting strategies involve
live bait to lure prey to the hunter, but very few involve using humans as
bait. Among current examples are members
of certain African tribes using their feet as lures to extract pythons from
burrows (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kqVfgJrDYS0) and fishermen in the southern
United States ‘noodling’ for large catfish offering their hands
as lures (Salazar 2002). In both cases
the hunter uses his own body as a lure, whereas in historical times hunters
sometimes used other humans as bait to attract their prey. For example, African ‘coolies’ were used to
lure lions for shooting during the construction of the Mombasa-Uganda railway
in East Africa in 1898 (Mannix 1978). However, these probably involved adult humans
rather than infants. Hence these
anecdotal reports of using human babies as live bait in sport hunting
constitute an important record in early hunting practices, as well as shining a
new light on our colonial history.
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