Traditional and Cultural Aspects
of
Trobriand Island Chiefs
By B. Baldwin, M.B.C.
I am going to speak of the chieftainship of the Trobriand Islands,
and to trace out some of its bearings on the native culture, particularly
the alignment of families, clan, and totemic divisions, and its place in
the social, economic, and political drive of the people. I hope that
its possible contribution to the political set up of the future, may suggest
itself without any underscoring from me. The question of the Kula I regard
as in too separate and distinct a context for me to deal with it adequately
here. The kinship terms are as given in Malinowski. His treatment is exact
and complete. There is nothing to add. These people do not have the
elaboration of terms that is found in the surrounding Melanesian area. I am not a trained anthropologist, so I cannot relate what I have
to say to the anthropological scheme of things known to you.
The name
of the clan from which the Trobriand chiefs are chosen, is known as Tabalu,
a kind of clan McGregor of cousins, all related in some degree on their
mother's side. I will try and build up from my recollections of my
contacts with these, some idea of the way they understand themselves;
and then, to avoid tedious retraversing of familiar ground, I will skirt
around the edge of the known, and what should be better known, in an
effort to give some idea, not of how a new or different picture may be
developed, but of the way present perceptions may be deepened.
I will frequently refer to Malinowski, whom I used as vade mecum books
of reference over a number of years. Any lack of coherence I hope to make
good by answering your questions at the end.
In my time Mosilibu was head of the Tabalu clan in Tukwaukwa, the
village next to the Catholic Mission Station. He took exact note of the
clan's fortunes in the various districts of the Trobriands. He told me
the Tabalu had died out on Kitava, an island of eight hundred souls; that
there was no one to succeed Wadisoni of Vakuta, an island of five hundred
souls; that in Kadawaga of Kaileula, an island of eight hundred the
Tabalu numbers were going down. The same was true of Gumilababa, and
even of the community of the paramount chief at Omarakana. He looked on
Mitakata's heirs as anything but characters of chiefly quality. Neither
Waibadi nor Vanoi held any promise in his eyes at that date.
This prompted him to study alternatives. He was passionately
jealous of Tabalu honour, and if he himself had been paramount chief, he
could not be more convinced of the importance of that office, or more
devoted to its maintenance. Talking to him one felt, that here was a little
kingdom, like one of those out of which the English nation grew.
According to Mosilibu the paramount chieftain did not have a
necessary connection with Omarakana. Historically as it were, it had been
at Labai, at Okaiboma, and at Tukwaukwa. He put forward the claim, that
the senior line was still in fact at Tukwaukwa. It had taken refuge there
originally, and had never gone back. A junior branch had taken over the
ancient glories of the Tabalu in Omarrutana.
About the year 1948 Mosilibu took advantage of every possible
occasion to impress these ideas upon me. He regarded Tabalu glory as a
thing of the past, except in his own community and that of Kavataria.
It was evident from the way he talked, that in his mind, it was the body
of the Tabalu women, that gave the clan its power. If these were young,
numerous, informed and sociably capab1e, the chief had backing and he
could be a real power. The Tabalu women of Tukwaukwa were the biggest
such body in Boyowa, and they were well backed by their cousins in
Kavataria, and many had gone as mission teacher's wives to the
D'Entreoasteaux. The chief of Tukwaukwa was in fact the real paramount
chief, and should indeed be honoured as such.
Mosilibu adduced as evidence of the seniority of the
Tukwaukwa line, the obviously more ancient quality of its magic spells.
I was prompted on the one hand to discount this; and on the other I found
it a very curious remark. On the side of discounting it, was the fact,
that a little previously, Dabugera, sister of Mitakata, had given me a
version of one of the Tudava myths. It was in the form, not of a myth,
but of a fantasy, and I was questioning her about its classification.
Was it not rather a Kukwanebu than a Liliu. Sha insisted that it was a
Liliu or myth. Also about this time her husband Monakewa, whom I have
often dubbed in my own mind at least, author of the Sexual Life of
Savages, had been keen to have me write down a couple of love charms.
To humour him I did this, and he swore me to secrecy with much palava
and ado. Later when I studied the spells, they struck me as being only
faintly in the medium of spells, and as having very slight content.
On
his next visit I asked him naivishly if they were his own composition.
He at once charged me with betraying confidence, and of having discussed
them with someone else, which I had not. I was quite used to discussions
of this kind becoming common knowledge very soon, so I took Mosilibu's
comparison of the Tukwaukwa and Omarakana spells, as a reflexion of this.
On the curious side is the fact that the only spells which I ever wrote
down of the Tukwaukwa systems, are the most indecipherable of all the
Boyowan texts, that I have ever studied.
Mosilibu must have been ninety years old by this time. He had
already stepped down from active exercise of his chieftaincy, having
handed over to Togewase his nephew. This made his observations more
interesting in that he was personally disinterested. I did not gather
any impression, that Mosilibu's recognition of the Tabalu women of the
Tukwaukwa and Kavataria communities and their number and importance,
included also an appreciation of the fact, that these were the only
Tabalu to have submitted to a mission education. It was at this time
that Mitakata came to me to ask if the Catholic Mission could do for
Waibadi, whom at the moment they favoured, what it had dona for Kalubaku.
He would allow us three months. As Kalubaku's education had taken seven
years, this was a bit silly and nothing came of it.
Mosilibu living less than two hundred yards away, was my most
frequent and valuable contact with the Tabalu. I am sorry now that I made
so little of the opportunity. But conversation with Mosilibu was very
trying, and to the Tabalu of Tukwaukwa an embarrassment. Even white
traders were aware of this, and commonly retailed the symptomatic reason,
supplied by the natives, that it was because he had been seduced as a
youth by one of the pariah women of Boitalu. But from knowing him, I
always felt it had far more to do with his bumbling talk. It was simply
laborious to talk with him. He had nothing of the glory of the Tabalu's
tomadagi biga, or clarity of expression. He was quite capable of
nattering away for fifteen or twenty minutes, without properly completing
a single sentence. In fact he cut such a poor figure, and was so lacking
in charm, that it was a matter of frequent surprise, that his view and
awareness of things was so broad, and his ideas so good, There was
always much more thought in his conversation than there was in
Mitakata's.
During the six or seven years I was in the Trobriands before the
war, the Tabalu of Omarakana had always avoided contact with the Tabalu of
Tukwaukwa. The reasons given for this had always seemed less than
satisfying. There was never a hint before the war, that anyone was
thinking about the future primacy among the Tabalu, certainly not as far
as Tukwaukwa was concerned. So when Mosilibu began his propaganda after
the war, I thought to myself, that here was something, that made sense.
This provided a quite adequate reason for the coolness of the Omarakana
Tabalu towards those of Tukwaukwa. One could also understand why their
disdain was shown in a sly way; why they were so cagey.
Togewase who exercised the office of chief for Mosilibu, was very
discreet, and had nothing to say on Tabalu affairs, I had little
opportunity to know the quality of his mind. Though once he was explicit.
I remarked to him, that in a village the size of Tukwaukwa, there was
always a proportion of converts to the Catholic Church. That since we
had had practically none, I suspeoted pressure somewhere. He said
impatiently, that there was pressure indeed, and indicated that he did
not like it either. His explanation was the insistence of the Tabalu
women, that their submission to mission teaching was responsible for their
prosperity, counterwise to that of the Tabalu in the other districts of
the Trobriands; that the Tukwaukwas had better remain good Methodists,
or evil might befall. Togewase was, I think, much more familiar with
Catholic than with Methodist Christianity.
Going around with Togewase's heir presumptive was a whole group of
young fellows, mostly junior to the heir, who were quite voluble on how
different things were going to be, when their turn came to run things.
That was something else again.
Togewase was certainly tomadagi biga, clear in speech. I only heard
him once, at a kayaku or speech night, when he laid down the garden
programme and policy for the new year. The subject matter was humdrum,
and since he spoke after the others, some of whom tried to be flamboyant,
he sounded deliberately flat; but for clear, ordered thinking, terseness,
and adequateness it was beautiful.
My daily contact with the Tabalu of Tukwaukwa left a deep impression
on me of their power as a political force. Their vigour was amazing.
Considering the relative smallness of their numbers, their dominance
was out of all proportion to their contribution to general affairs.
It struck me often as a great pity, that so much drive should have so
little to promote. Given home rule, this clan would provide a ready made
political party, with a well developed political sense, and flair for
political procedure, with an already established tradition, with an
aristocratic or noblesse oblige mentality, that the general population
could rely on, with a definite culture of self-control and patience,
without which the ordering of human affairs is impossible.
This political power was very real to me, and would be to anyone who
read Malinowski in the Trobriands. But it occurs to me that it might
not be so clear to those who depend more on Malinowski alone. So at the
risk of covering what is already well known, I would like to restate,
according to my own understanding, the relationship between totem and
clan, and between clan and branch.
The Kumila or totemic divisions do not have any political
significance. Though the Kumila is in every native's daily thinking,
every village being divided under four totems, and all social activity
being divided among these four divisions, the channelling of this
activity is not done on the basis of the Kumila, but on the basis of the
Bwala which belong to the Kumila. Bwala says house, and is the
Trobriand term for clan or historic family, with a known original seat,
or point of origin. These points of origin are dotted around the
Trobriands, being usually marked by Borne monument or other, such as a
megalith, or what passes for one, an old village site or grove, usually
sacred, sometimes just a point on the coast.
Members of the various Bwala, like Kweinama, originally a single
family, have migrated at various times, and like the Tabalu are found
scattered around the different islands and communities of Boyowa. In
this larger sphere they are spoken of as Dala. They are thought of as
Bwala only at, or in relation to their point of origin or Sunapula.
Their headmen in various districts being cadet branches. The various
Dala are all on the same pattern as the Tabalu.
Each Bwala or Dala has its secondary bird emblem. If you ask
Togewase what his bird was, he would say Bubuna, pigeon or dove, because
he belongs to the Malasi totemic branch, and this is a fundamental
division of humanity, like male and female, relative and stranger. A
Trobriand youth has this on his mind most, because it determines which
girls he makes a pass at, and which he shuns. At times when there is
a gathering of people in large numbers, they tend to cluster
instinctively, according to their Kumila.
But the particular bird emblem of Togewase is the Pulou, a bird
built like a currawong or jackdaw, but light coloured. This bird has a
lesser practical importance. It is used as an heraldic token, to
decorate a chief's house or store, or to use in poetry as a reference to
the clan.
Though I did not make a study of this, I always understood
that each Dala had its bird emblem proper to the Dala. I was quite well
aware that these sub-divisions as it were of the totemic branch had an
enhanced importance in other districts outside the Trobriands, especially
where people were decreasing in numbers. In Milne Bay a colony of Bohutu
people were dubbed Hulana, beoause they were all one Kumila, most
marriages being, to Trobriand sensibility, incestuous. About 1950 I had good
confirmation of this in processing some of the Catholic marriages,
getting the name, village, and totem of the four grandparents, I found,
more than once, say, a butcher bird, a kingfisher, a bird of paradise,
and a hornbill as the given totems of the four grandparents. When I
suggested that they were still all one Busu (Kumila) they ruefully
agreed. They were all Hulalla or Crows. If there was any upstepping of
the secondary (link?) totems in the Trobriands, I would have heard of it.
Any such community would be like the Bwoitalus notorious to a degree,
as in fact the Hulana were in Milne Bay.
Though it was made perfectly clear by Malinowiski, it is worth the
tedium to contrast and compare Kumila and Dala. Kumila is on the
metaphysical level as it were, and divides all humans, indeed all
creation, all fish and fowl, beast and beastie, plant and spirit. The
Trobriand natives have an explanation of it for humans, that sounds like
a reflexion of the medical doctrine of blood types. Kumila is antecedent
to any line of descent, or original ancestor. I never heard of an original
ancestor of a Kumila. The correct term of reference to the bird emblem
is Tuwada, Elder. Side-stepping any idea of direct descent, I found
among the Eagle totemic branch a real veneration for the Elder, as
though to a being of a higher order, benign, wise, provident.
Except for the tabu on marrying within the Kumila; the actual work
of the totemic principles is all on the basis of the Dala. The frequent
slogan at the Kayaku, keep the Kakalumwala (ridge), really means, keep
your alignment with the Dala, like saying, Stay in your own Union. Though
there may be in a given village, two or three or mora Dala in the one
Kumila, in the Kumila with the dominant Dala, it may seem that Kumila and
Dala are co-terminous, that they coalesce as one and the same thing.
The dominant Dala doubles its predominance by aligning most of the rest
of tho village on its side as in-laws by marriage. This makes the remnants
so eager to scramble on to the bandwagon that they out-Herod Herod, they
support the chief or headman loudest of all, they are the splice on the
tip of the whip, the crack comes from them.
It only seems that the chief or headman owns the village. The
expression toli-valu or tolela valu, merely says villager, and does not
indicate owmership unless the context does. Lacking a chief, the headman
is Tokaraiwaga, which says Decider. The flavour is quite democratic.
The intensity of the Trobriand communal living is quite at variance
with other parts of Papua, with which I became familiar. For a long time
I kept reminding myself of material factors, they were practically one
dormitory, lived in the open on the threshold or Kaukweda, so unless an
individual retired to the jungle, there was no individual private life,
and since the next house was not six feet away, there was scarcely any
private family life. The whole village was as much a single community
as a band of monks or nuns. They must be the most socialised people on
earth. An existence more compactedly social, seems scarcely possible.
It needs a discipline, and they have it, they are just like the members
of a feudal castle or stronghold. It is all quite contrary to one's
experience of other parts of Papua, and is much commented on by other
Papuans visiting the Trobriands.
I still doubt whether Malinowski appreciated this. If only he could
have gone back after twenty-five years or so, and forgetting his everlasting enquiry, his restless search for more and more data, had just
let himself absorb the feel, of how all the factors he had documented
actually worked out, he might have rewritten his works, and given us
something unique in anthropology. Malinowski and the Trobriands could
have provided that. I fancy there could have been a masterpiece, something
like Da Vinci's Mona Lisa in the realm of art.
Malinowski's research, I think, was as exhaustive as it could be, short
of completely absorbing the Trobriand language. I was continually surprised
on referring back to him, to find that his enquiry had already impinged
upon some discovery, that I had supposed was all my own. His analysis
too was masterly. He seems to have left nothing unexplained, and his
explanations are enlightening even to the people who live there.
It is curious then, that this exhaustive research and patient, wise,
and honest explanation should leave a sense of incompleteness. But it
does. I feel that his material is still not properly digested, that
Malinowski would be regarded as in some ways naive, by the people he was
studying. That the people he describes would still seem somewhat foreign
to the Trobrianders themselves. I was surprised at the number of times
informants helping me with checking Malinowski, would bridle. Usually when
a passage had been gone over more than once, they would say it was not
like that. They did not quarrel with facts or explanation, only with
the colouring as it were. The sense expressed was not the sense they had
of themselves, or of things Boyowan.
I am not surprised that students are finding that Malinowski, having
dug down through the strata as it were, and opened the way to so much
comparative study, can now be reinterpreted in the light of Malinowski.
This, I suppose is vindication enough of a 'documentation' so exact, so
exhaustive it bores. Living among these things I could have done with a
lot less proliferation of the obvious, and a lot less explanation which
only explained Anthropology, or the anthropologist, or got in the way of
my own thinking.
Anyway I longed for a positively expressed expose backed
by the authority of Malinowski, and running affirmatively somewhat thus.
The Trobrianders are a matrilineal people. They are uncompromisingly
logical. They exhibit a consistant work out of the matrilineal system
right down to its bitter conclusions. Their Urigubu is an example. If
you see a man grow two or three acres of crops, and then load most of it
into the store of his sister's family, don't be surprised. It is mad to us.
It makes sense in their set up. They are a primitive people. Among
primitive people the father is a more ambiguous and unreliable factor in
community affairs. Motherhood on the other hand cannot be ambiguous. Mother
love also is more reliable. So these primitives compromise. They build a
social system on what they know is sure. They reinforce the love for each
other of mother and children, and that of children reared together for one
another, with a system consecrated by lavish ceremonial, back stopped by
their most profound and religious cult - the brother-sister tabu.
It is a system that works. It has a intrinsic validity of its own.
It has been proved. It is exacting. Deviate and die is the lesson of their
folk history. But since it works it must be less strange than it seems.
This is a fact. It is.
When a man loads his sister's store with the produce of his own
garden and his own family, he does not deprive his own wife and children.
What is stored in the Bwaima, is only the more keepable portion of the
staple of the main crop. It is only a fraction of the product of the
garden. None of the fruits, greens, nuts, or soft and unseasonal vegetables
are put in the Bwaima. The Bwaima hoids only the strictly conservable
excess of the main crop. It is the show stuff. It is paid in as tax,
to the social and political economy of the whole community. In normal
years, these stores are still intact, after six, seven, even eight months
of storage.
Then when foraging begins to fail, it is paid out again in aquittal of
social and political obligations, in such a way that everyone gets back,
equivalently, what he produced. Sister's family paying back ceremonially,
what it ceremonially received.
It is a system at once of Taxation, Insurance, Capital Investment,
Social Welfare, and Political Sanction, reduced to its least common
denominator, a crate of food.
When a man loads his sister's store with his conservable surplus,
he is not passing it out of his control, he is putting it in safe keeping.
His own wife and children cannot touch it. It has been ceremonially
presented to his sister's family and 'Paid for'. His sister's family
cannot touch it, because it is earmarked for certain social and political
purposes and obligations, to which she is obliged equally with her brother,
and to which her busband is co-opted by his marriage to a member of the
dominant Dala, and who is mostly of the party of the beneficiary anyway.
Besides there has to be a refill. The Bwaima is the gauge of their social
consequence. They have to preserve their honour. This is the Trobriand
defense against their most haunting spectre, Tokomada, the Eat All.
There are days when half the women in the Trobriands, seem to be out
on the road in caravan. All are loaded with baskets of yams from the
Bwaima. They are going to Sagali, or ceremonial distributions. This
is the release mechanism of the stored surplus. It is at once the
promotion, preservation, and controlled functioning of the cast iron
social and political system which the Urigubu constitutes. For the
women it fills in nicely an otherwise drab and dreary period of the
year. For men it is a time to go on Kula, or in some way or other get
right away from the women. The whole of Boyowa becomes just one big
forum at these times. Many times I amused myself stirring in some topic
at one side of the island one day, and the next day cycling to the other
side of the island, to be told and asked about the same topic. With
a little patience it was possible to find where the balls were made that
would be fired later. I felt it was natural that women dominated this
society. They are as emancipated as in any civilised country. Politics
is mostly their making, as witness the story of the heart of Namwana Guyau,
'La mekita matouna, si mekita komwaidona la kwava.' If you want to
translate the phrase, 'It's all politics', for Trobriand understanding
just say 'Beisa Bwaima Wala', or 'Sagali Biga'!
All the natives of the Eastern end of Papua are aware of the social
and political set-up of the Trobriand Islands. It is at once their envy
and their despair. The rigidity of the discipline, and the frightful
sanctions that to them must underlie such a system, awes them. That
practically no one goes abroad to the world, that they do not even leave the
village for casual work for a month or two, means to outsiders, that
tribal sanctions are wielded without fail, and brook no exception.
Actually, having grown up knowing no other way of living, but the
common village life, having never known individual freedom, having
always been motivated by Si Vavagi Tomota, the common endeavour, having
been always informed by Ninasi Tomota, the common mind or idea of the
community, the Trobriander is very much at a loss on his own. So he
clings to his village life. His own life is identified with it, and
all his drive for self preservation fights for the integrity also of the
village life. So there is little occasion for use of the ultimate
sanctions, though they seem to be an ever present thought, and all the
Melanesian folk around speak in awe of them. The people want things the
way they are.
This is not to say that there are not fierce stresses. Malinowski
speaks of waves of suicides. This did not seem to happen during my time.
But tenseness was a matter of continual encounter, much more frequent than
a reading of Malinowski would prepare one for. The phenomenon of amok
needed no explanation. Though it was frequent enough, the wonder was,
it was not more frequent. There were a number of conventional
manifestations, advertisements as it were of tenseness, bundles of freshly
polished spears, a glowering figure honing axes and knives, outbursts of
torrential obscenity, love thwarted lasses chanting ditties, trying to
send half a village round the bend, night watches for possible workers of
black magic, the tense quiet of a village struck by sudden crisis, sometimes
night long speech making. All these and many more examples of tense
living tied in in some way or another with life on the community level.
I remember sometimes riding by bicycle through seven or eight villages
in an afternoon, and on asking what was the matter, being told more than
once, 'Giburua'. All this intensified the communal living, and were
intensified by it. Where the Trobriands were different to the
surrounding Melanesia, was in the village not flying apart. These things
gave proof also that the bonds, binding this society, were extraordinarily
strong. So in this tight little province, of about twelve thousand
people, in less than a hundred communities, there was enough ado for a
whole nation.
These spiritual conflicts seem to me to make the best and most
direct approach to the understanding of the Trobriand character, and to
forming some idea of the moral stature of some of its people, and I think
that Malinoswki did not follow up on this approach, even where he was
aware of it. He knew of the ousting of Namwana Guyau, and the
preparation for the succession of Nitakata, at the time it happened.
Namwana Guyau could talk of it to any length, to the end of his life. He
did in fact hold my attention completely absorbed, at a time when I
regarded my knowledge of the tongue, as very sketchy indeed. He gave
me an introduction to a culture more incisive, to a higher level of
thinking, than I had expected from reading Malinowski. It was quite an
experience. Malinowski himself made this contact with the people more
than once, as he tells us. But he only refers to it. He does not put
us in contact.
Later on my experience with Namwana Guyau paled before one that I
had with Mokasoka of Tukwaukwa. Mokasoka was a poor nerve crazed ruin
of a man, that I always felt sorry for, and knew no way of helping. Any
tolerance of him irritated the people of the village. They even resented
it. They told me bluntly, and with stern expression, that I should pack
him off, he was dangerous. They told me in his hearing that he would
end by committing suicide.
Mokasoka was another case of missed opportunity for me. I realised
too late the calibre of his mind. At the time I was still writing down
native stories by dictation. Mokasoka could not accomodate me in this
way, so in spite of his eagerness, I put him off. Only once did I do
what I should always have done, just sit back and listen. This once, when
I did that, I had an experience more profound, than I have had, reading
any book, seeing any cinema classic, opera, or what you will. I have
never been so absorbed, or carried away into the world of the story, as
I was by Mokasoka. In answer to some question or reference to Gumagabu,
he described Tomakam's last trip to the Koya, the trip on which he
finally carried his feud. It was a profound excursion into the realm of
mystery and horror.
I have always found myself rather opaque to civilised efforts of
this kind, but I got such a drenching from Mokasoka, that I could
shudder at the recollection for months afterwards, and I can still savour
it to this day. The horror was like a living thing in Mokasoka himself,
and was communicated by contagion.
In writing down stories at dictation, I had often been nudged, or
otherwise alerted, that the vinavina passage, contained a message for
my more mature understanding, that here was a more important point in the
story, than any that amused the children. It was Mokasoka who showed me,
how big this story could be.
I do not know where he figured among the Malasi of Tukwaukwa, but
he was openly, and to his face, referred to as Tobwagau, sorcerer, and I
always felt that he had been used by some of the Tabalu, to do their
dirty work. The contempt and hatred of the hirer for the hired, in the
matter of poisoning or black magic, is a prevalent and consistent
pattern in Trobriand affairs, and is the only explanation that is adequate
for such relationships as that of Omarakana and Bwoitalu.
I felt that Mokasoka, telling the story of Tomakam driven by
village politics, to carry his feud to the Koya, counter to his every
instinct, principle, and inclination, was really making his own confession
and apologia. If he had ever done dirty work for members of his own, or
any other community, be certainly raked them for it. His denunciation
was the most bitter and insufferable, that I have ever witnessed, and
its sting was matter of public acknowledgment. He was once taken into
custody for questioning by the District Officer, but was released
overnight, or there would have been no staff next day.
To come to some conclusion, let me say at once, that I regard the
social and political system of the Trobriands as ferocious. The chief is
Kadada, Uncle (maternal) to his closest supporters, and often the
dutchiest of uncles at that. I was often given the title myself on
working bees, when I disagreed with something or other, and the workers
in their hardy way, retaliated. I recognise, that it avails itself of
possibly the only solidarity that exists in a matrilineally minded
people. I recognise that the urigubu discipline gives a wonderful order
to the community living, that this ordered living develops intelligence
and character, that this puts the Trobrianders generally, as much ahead
of other Melanesian folk, as urban populations generally, are ahead of
rural populations. I recognise that this is a familiar discipline, that
it makes the whole village in effect one family, that it has a curiously
vital effectiveness, like the idea of the ancient Romans of extending
citizenship of their city to the wide world. I recognise that this is
largely responsible for a code of social behaviour, a Job-like cult of
patience, of accepting the joke, even when it is against oneself. In the
language of their philosophy, if you do not laugh you die. In their own
way they are a civilised people. I recognise too, that if this
discipline were to break down, a much more chaotic, and much more evil
state of affairs would exist.
But the system itself is in part intrinsically unnatural and
artificial, and is felt to be so by the natives themselves.
I adduced the case of Namwana Guyau, dispossessed with his mother
and brothers by the death of his father Toulawa. He put his finger
unerringly on the false principle, the matrilineal system, the upheaval
it caused on the succession of a new chief, and the beggaring of the
party that succeeded. But he knew no substitute for the urigubu, nor
perhaps would he have wanted to change it.
At the other end of the scale, I adduced the case of Mokasoka, a
member of a minor Dala, of a minority with no right to call their souls
their own. The lot of these minorities in the present set-up is cruel.
I could adduce many other cases. The most improvident women, belong
also in the prominent Dala. Some have large families, and because they
can and want to have a share in the brave show, they favour the wealthier
and better provided moiety, at the expense of the weaker. Only rankers
can have large stores. The rest can forgo ambition. Members of the
minor Dala, and weaker in-laws of the ruling Dala, accept as a matter of
course, to be publicly pilloried for shortcomings that are not real, and
which in any case they are powerless to prevent. I once saw Wailesi of
Okaikoda, married to the sister of Mokaipwesi the Tokaraiwaga, and
brother of Mokaipwesi's wife, so that he was Mokaipweai's brother-in-law
twice over, and father of six of Mokaipwesi's nephews and nieces,
publicly awarded a bedroom pot with no bottom, as 'payment' for his
urigubu.
When I suggested to him that this was a bit rough, he reminded me
that it was not only directed at himself, but at his wife, who was
Mokaipwesi's sister, that she was improvident. There were about two
thousand people present, and there was cheering and laughing, when
Mokaipwesi as master of ceremonies handed the useless pot to Wailesi.
The brother-in-law accepted with good humour, but his grin was rueful.
Home to the Trobrianders is O Valu, in the village, and each
village is a castle or stronghold. Only those who belong in the family Dala
or are in-laws are real citizens, the rest are poor relations or
slaves. They usually advertise the fact by their exaggerated behaviour.
It is wise for them to be fools to show themselves even more base than
they are. A lot of the much publicised wantonness of Trobriand girls
comes from this remainder element. Even lick-spittle sycophancy wears an
air of hardihood, and claims more than due attention.
In drawing
conclusions about Trobriand village life, it is important to know, who
does what, and why, otherwise one's views can be all coloured wrongly.
I would have found it refreshing if Malinowski had featured a little
the women, described as Nakitu, or reserved, the ones who only know one
lover, the man they marry. In departments of life where discretion is
natural you have to dig. These women are silently, but deeply, and at
times very noticeably, respected. Just to know these and who they are,
is enough to realise that the impression one gets from Malinowski of
Trobriand women, though so largely right, does not apply to all. I
expected to find this, and was not surprised when I did. But even a
missionary with much experience elsewhere, was skeptical, till he met
one of them. He told me incidentally, that in another place, when trying
to find a native expression for virginity, he had been careful to
establish the idea very clearly in his informant's mind, and then was
startled by the informant's reply, as to how he would describe such a
person, by being told (Direct quote) 'Bloody Fool'.
I have never felt any inclination to demolish Malinowski,
though I worked six months with a priest, Father Norin, who had spent
his life studying New Guinea peoples and languages, who continually
urged me to do that. To him Malinowski seemed like a heretic writing
against the faith, he had to be answered. Sieving through his books,
and checking with me all he suspected was erroneous, he repeatedly
declared that I was able to do that. But I could not share his
attitude at all, Malinowski could stand as far as I was concerned. I
was glad and grateful for the coherence. It seemed providential, it
seemed almost as though Malinowski had laboured just for me, I was
the principal beneficiary. In particular I sieved him for linguistic
clues. If he was only half right it was gain, he saved me time and
labour. It was his insight, perfect or less than that, but he was to
be honoured for it. It did not mean that there was not other insights,
and necessarily changing insights. With the continuance of culture
contact, a new generation, and a new people would grow up in the
Trobriands. The old construction could always be used for comparison,
and those who so used him, could assess his reliability best for
themselves.
This is not to say that I regard Malinowski as complete. He
himself admits that the Argonauts is sketchy, and he promises a better
study. In part this promise was kept in Coral Gardens, and Sexual Life.
Perhaps he was misled by his functionalism, but he should not have
stopped at functionalism, to my mind the best book remains unwritten.
Trobriand life by their own dichotomy, divides three ways, O Kaukweda, Wa Bwaima, and O Baku. Malinowski has 'documented' as far
as is needful, and sometimes more than is needful, the individual
personal life, and the individual family life O Kaukweda, also the
communal social life and political life Wa Bwaima. But the more
cultural and spiritual life O Baku, has not yet been written. It would
cover a great folk history, a vast development of story and song, of
myth, magic, and cosmogony. It would include a pilgrimage to the various
Sunapula or Bwala of the various clans or Dala, their megaliths or
monuments, groves, burial caves. There could be most interesting
gleanings from the context of proper names. A Trobriander can go among
people who are foreigners to him, who speak an unknown tongue, but the
names of persons and places are familiar Boyowan ones, and he can
construe them when their owners can not. Distant Trobriand historical
contacts O Busibusi, Lomyuwa, the various Koya, Kokopawa, Kaitalugi,
KwaibVlaga are vistas that have been no more than glimpsed. Possible
linguistic links with Bantu, with the New Hebrides or New Caledonia,
ethnographic links with Rossel Island and the hill folk of Taiwan,
and with the Solomon Islands.
The deposit of cuIture so to speak (by analogy with the deposit of
faith) has only been scratched. Myth and magic, story and song, are
still only half understood, we do not see these people as the entity which
they see themselves. We need more than functionalism, we need a synthesis
more humane if not more romantic than Malinowski gave us. But this perhaps
goes outside the scope of Anthropology.
Describing the Trobrianders only on the O Kauweda and Wa Bwaima
levels, leaves their marked veneration for chiefs for one thing, and
particularly the paramount chief, somewhat anomalous. It is the sense
of the Trobrianders, that they represent a much older, and a higher
civilisation than that of the surrounding Melanesians, that they have
survived long periods of conflict with the Dokinkani or Cannibals, and
that they did this by their superior organisation. Prior to the coming of
the white man, this was their only salvation. Their lands and waters are
rich, and a perpetual temptation to the surrounding hillbilly Melanesians.
They had to be united to survive. Half their 'literature' is concerned
with this struggle. The evolution of a kind of kingship was a necessity,
though it is not now. Yet it is my feeling, that if the Tabalu were to
die out, another Dala would evolve a paramount chieftaincy just to satisfy
the mystic, poetic and historic sense of the people.
I would like to say in passing that I regard this institution as
autochthonous, as the people claim, that it is equally, or more ancient
than any Polynesian chieftaincy, and does not need any theory of
Polynesian colonising to explain it, or the correspondence of its
features. I found the outline idea the same everywhere I went among the
Melanesians of Papua. They just explained that there were no chiefs
among them, or they had died out, as among the Suau.
Similarly with the megaliths, they were erected in the Trobriands by
Trobrianders, sharing in the spirit of the times, that was wide in the
Pacific at one time. Mitakata himself, tongue in cheek it seemed to me,
argued with me against this idea, insisting that Trobriand ways were
changeless, that it could not be the work of Trobrianders, that the bones
they dug up were bigger than Trobrianders, and not like them. He would
claim it was the work of intruding outsiders and on their initiative. He
scorned the idea that he was descended from such outsiders. The
megaliths are called Dikula Kwaiwaya, Kwaiwaya Stones, Kwaiwaya being a
man's name. They are referred to in spells, story, magic, and proper names
of places. Curiously the area of the megaliths or the bigger of them,
is also the area of the Traditional Cannibal headquarters, of the time
when the islands were overrun and occupied, it seems, much on the lines
of the Viet Cong in South Viet Nam.
The sense of struggle is pervasive of Trobriand culture, and also
helps to consecrate their traditional customs and institutions. The chief,
heir of the culture heroes to begin with, becomes standard bearer against
the invaders, and the chief emblem and caretaker of the abiding glory.
Add to this that his code is one of high personal integrity and nobleness,
that he is the high priest of magic, the one on whom general prosperity
and welfare depends, and it is easy to see, how it is an office
surrounded by veneration and affection.
Togewase was once telling me of a trip he made to the headquarters
of the Methodist Mission at Salamo, and talking to my understanding, a
word to the wise as it were, as one priest to another, complained that he
had stayed up all night, rather than sleep in a room where people had had
intercourse. Inferring, 'Wouldn't you think those Tabalu mission teachers'
would have better form'.
If we skip the tradition, and the saored character of their
institutions, we miss the glory, we do not know the native as he knows
himself. In down grading him, we down grade ourselves. If we only know
the chief on the O Kaukweda and Wa Bwaima levels, he is just a master of
ceremonies, chairman, or one to decorate a social occasion. If we do
not know the emotion, we do not know the thing. The ceremonial alone
is silly. But we cannot see others as silly, without, in their eyes,
seeming a little silly ourselves. It was a surprise to me to find, that
Malinowski was mostly remembered by the natives, as the champion ass at
asking dumbfool questions, 'Do you bury the seed tuber root end or
sprout end down'? Like asking, 'Do you stand the baby or the coffin on
its head or on its feet'? I preferred not to refer to him at all, with
the white people who had known him. He had made them uneasy, and they
got back at him by referring to him as the anthrofoologist, and his
subject anthrofoology. I felt too that this was partly a reflexion of
native unease, - they did not know what he was at. Partly again because
he made of his profession a sacred cow; you had to defer, though you
did not see why, and if you were a government official or a missionary,
you did not appreciate the big stick, from one whose infallibility was
no more guaranteed than your own.
Analysing, taking apart and explaining soon becomes a bore, quickly
becomes a case of more and more about less and less. Malinowski himself
pointed out, you quickly reach the point of diminishing returns.
Describing the natives O Kaukoweda and Wa Bwaima, is mostly emphasizing
differences or strangeness. It is when we feel oneness with the native,
that we oome closest to understanding, and it is then that he can trust
us.
Trying for myself, to put my finger on the key to the fascination of
the Trobriand story, I came to think of them, as an adumbration of that
religion-state, that made the entity of the ancient Jews. Only these
people have a ritual without a creed. No magic, myth, song, story or
explanation is complete or even understandable by itself. It needs (Ave
Functionalism) the living context of the people, even to make functional
sense. They can not really explain themselves, or their culture, or
give reasons. Their answer to what people think, what they do, how they
do, is that they just do. Ninasi Tomota, Si Vavagi Tomota, Bubunesi Tomota,
make a wall around their world that contains them, even imprisons them.
It is like the biologist tidying up the periphery of knowledge with a
wall called Evolution. But just to prove the coherence of the Boyowan
entity, with a question or two, or a mere suggestion, is electrifyingly
exciting to the Trobrianders. This coherence has yet to be worked out.
But the Trobrianders themselves would work at it hardest of all. They
would need help, and they would welcome it. They would be fanatically
critical of outside understanding, but that would make the story all the
better. The best book on the Trobriands has yet to be written, but I
am not quite sure that it would be pure anthropology.