James Morgan is a UK photographer who
documented the lives of the Southeast Asian culture, the Bajau Laut.
These people are nomads who live at the sea and survive by fishing for
food.
The Bajau are a nomadic Malay people who have lived at sea for centuries, primarily in a tract of ocean by the Philippines, Malaysia, and Indonesia.
Bajau
traditionally live on handmade "lepa-lepa" boats, bringing everything
they need to sea, including cooking utensils, kerosene lamps, food,
water, and even plants. They come to shore only to trade or fix their
boats.
Traditionally
hunter-gatherers, the Bajau have provided for themselves primarily by
spearfishing. They are highly skilled free divers, swimming to depths up
to 100 feet to hunt for grouper, pearls, and sea cucumbers.
Diving is an everyday activity, causing the Bajau to rupture their ear drums at an early age.
The
Bajau people encounter constant danger, which prevents many from living
to an old age like this woman. Many are crippled or die from "the
bends." This decompression sickness occurs when people dive and then
rise to the surface before allowing their bodies to depressurize.
Living on the sea has become increasingly difficult in recent years, as the Bajau have over-fished their habitat.
Bajau make a living by selling the grouper and Napoleon wrasse fish to Hong Kong fishing companies.
The
Bajau's destructive fishing techniques began when soldiers during World
War II introduced them to dynamite fishing. Since its introduction, the
Bajau have had a destructive relationship with the habitat.
The
Bajau have also taken up fishing with potassium cyanide, a chemical
they shoot at target species. The chemical stuns the fish, which allows
them to be sold live. But it also severely damages coral reefs.
Hong
Kong fishing companies introduced the cyanide to the Bajau. According
to Morgan, it was a trap. "They give the Bajau the cyanide and the Bajau
have to pay back the fee in fish, but they can never fish enough to pay
it off," Morgan says. "It's a vicious cycle."
After
the Hong Kong companies receive the fish, they inject them with
steroids to keep them alive. Live fish are a major seller for Asian
restaurants.
The
Bajau are slowly losing their culture. Controversial government
programs have forced many Bajau to live on land. This puts them at odds
with many governments because Bajau are constantly crossing
international borders on their boats.
Morgan
says that when the current generation of Bajau die, there will be none
who live at sea. In recent years, Bajau youth leave the boats in search
of work in the cities as soon as they are old enough.
There
is some hope that the Bajau's living situation will improve. The World
Wide Fund For Nature and Conservation International has been teaching
sustainability practices to the Bajau in recent years.
For
his part, Morgan has tried hurting the live fish trade by focusing on
the consumers. After photographing the Bajau, Morgan published his story
in the South China Morning Post, as Hong Kong is the main terminus of
the Bajau's fish. He says that he received hundreds of emails in
response.
The Bajau are a nomadic Malay people who have lived at sea for centuries, primarily in a tract of ocean by the Philippines, Malaysia, and Indonesia.
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