In 1980 seven-year-old Sabine Kuegler and her family went to live in a
remote jungle area of West Papua among the recently discovered Fayu - a
tribe untouched by modern civilisation. Her childhood was spent hunting,
shooting poisonous spiders with arrows and chewing on pieces of bat-wing
in place of gum. She also learns how brutal nature can be - and sees the
effect of war and hatred on tribal peoples.
After the death of her Fayu-brother, Ohri, Sabine decides to leave the
jungle and, aged seventeen, she goes to a boarding school in
Switzerland - a traumatic change for a girl who acts and feels like one
of the Fayu. 'Fear is something I learnt here' she says. 'In the Lost
Valley, with a lost tribe, I was happy. In the rest of the world it was
I who was lost.'
Here is Sabine Kuegler's remarkable true story of a childhood lived out
in the Indonesian jungle, and the struggle to conform to European
society that followed.