Pacific Peoples' Partnership

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Impacts of COVID-19 on Women in the Pacific: Why gender inclusion is key to recovery

December 1, 2020 by Pacific Peoples' Partnership

By Agnieszka Zuchora, PPP Development and Partnerships Coordinator

As the world adjusts to the new normal of isolating, social distancing, and virus awareness to keep people safe, underlying issues of inequality have been brought to the surface. Gender disparity has been made glaringly evident during the current COVID-19 landscape as measures put in place to protect communities have disproportionately affected women during this time, especially in the South Pacific. Women and girls are at a higher risk of violence, they provide more unpaid labor, and are more likely to experience economic hardship.

Market vendors at the Wewak Market. Observing the new pandemic normal is a challenge by market management. Credit: HELP-Resource PNG

Typically, women are highly depended upon for their contributions to society and their families. Generally, they provide 80 per cent of unpaid work in the Asia Pacific region. This includes cooking, cleaning, washing, childcare, supporting children with homework, and tending to the sick. With COVID lockdowns, pressure on women has increased exponentially given that everyone is home: it is just expected that women will carry on with their daily tasks and do whatever is necessary to fill in the gaps during this time – both financially and domestically.

As tensions rise amidst stress, uncertainty, food security, and enforced restrictions, there has been a significant increase in calls related to gender-based violence across the Pacific. Women who were living with violent partners were forced into isolation with these partners, thereby putting them at greater risk of increased violence caused by stress and constant contact. Crisis centres have noted a rise in calls from existing clients as well as an increase in new clients who have said there is a correlation between the lockdown and increased violence.

Women’s and Children’s Crisis Centre in Tonga

PPP is proud to have partnered with Women’s and Children’s Crisis Centre (WCCC), in Tonga, which is offering mobile counselling for women to receive in-person support within their area. WCCC was founded in 2009 by the incredible ʻOfa Guttenbeil-Likiliki with the intention of advocating for women, human rights, and eliminating domestic violence through education, counselling, safe houses, and political advocacy. WCCC is the leading women’s human rights organisation in Tonga, providing response, support, and prevention initiatives.

Information session on Informal Economy with vendors at Kreer market is offered by a HELP Resources Community Advocator. Credit: HELP-Resource PNG

The most recent project addresses the need for support in remote island communities. It fills the gap by sending counsellors to the communities, making the extremely valuable centre services mobile and increasing their reach. This comes at an especially significant time given the constant need to adapt around the global pandemic.

Not only are women facing disproportionate workloads, and an increase in domestic violence, they are doing it without the proper resources to maintain their own health. Women have seen a decrease in access to essential products and services such as feminine hygiene products. Seeing as the Pacific imports feminine hygiene products, there has been a disruption in supply resulting in decreased access as well as a spike in prices making them unavailable to some. Some women and girls are “resorting to socks and old newspapers when getting their periods as menstrual products become more expensive or harder to obtain.”(1)  Along with inaccessible sanitation products, “Dr Gupte said underprivileged families were struggling to use common sanitation facilities, where physical distancing and hygienic conditions cannot be assured.” (1)

Some organisations are teaching sewing skills to encourage the making of reusable menstrual products to support women in their health, and also in developing a business through a sustainable product they can sell in the markets; however, local markets have been significantly reduced during the pandemic.

Local Government officials attend a Safe Market Management Practices Workshop. Credit: HELP-Resource PNG

HELP Resources (HELP-R) Supports PNG Women

In Papua New Guinea, our partner HELP Resources (HELP-R) has been supporting women through their Vendors Collective Voices project. After months of restrictions causing market closures and preventing travel, PNG has eased restrictions by allowing travel and reopening markets. In an update, project lead Penial Kabilo said, “Women from Kaminambit and Keram are bringing in their bilums (local string bags made from traditional fibre) to sell at the market, fish traders from the Sepik River have resumed their trading by travelling down to Wewak or further inland to Maprik and Yangoru to trade.”

HELP Resources has supported Water PNG in putting up sanitation stations with washing basins and handwashing gels and sanitizers donated by UN Women, allowing for safe trading. Although trading had considerably slowed during lockdown months, Penial Kabilo has noted a steady increase with consistent buyers. He stated that even “roadside markets along the town fringes and along the highways have all reopened now, however, street vending within the town vicinity is still banned by the Town Authority to promote social distancing. Generally, market trading activities have increased, this indicates a better understanding of COVID-19 and the vender’s resilience to trade.”

The work done by HELP Resources has proven effective and supportive during COVID-19 as information sessions by Community Advocators trained through the Vendors Voice Shaping Informal Economy Development project continued to run. Penial also stated, “Information supplied by the vendors’ association helped HELP Resources to liaise with other partners such as UN Women, Wewak Urban Local Government and the Town Market Supervisor to try and provide a safe and conducive working environment for vendors to conduct business under. We are very excited the Vendors Collective Voices has received a 6-month extension with PPP and Commonwealth Foundation as well as a UN Women partnership.”

Youths from a roadside market reading one of the translated COVID19 factsheet from Hesperian Health Guides, translated by HELP Resources. Credit: HELP-Resource PNG

Economically, the world has been greatly impacted by COVID-19, slowing some production lines temporarily, limiting shipments, and halting tourism globally. Women have been proven to be more vulnerable in this situation, as is often the case. In an article published by The Jakarta Post on September 22, 2020 (2), Oliver Tonby and Phillia Wibowo stated, “Globally women account for 54 percent of overall job losses despite comprising 39 percent of the global workforce. Put another way, a woman in work is nearly twice as likely to lose a job than a man.” This is predominantly because not only are women the main providers of unpaid care work, but are also in the industries most affected by the pandemic, such as retail, hospitality, and food services. Any gaps in financial security in the home are often filled by female vendors trading food, textiles, weaving, or other homemade goods.

Further research done by Tonby and Wibowo found that “if no action is taken to counter the gender-regressive effects of COVID-19, global gross domestic product (GDP) growth could be US$1 trillion lower in 2030. That would represent a significant hit to economies already struggling to recover from the pandemic.

“Conversely, (they) found that if policymakers make decisions now, in 2020 and beyond, that boost gender equality by 2030, it could add $13 trillion to global GDP. ….. A middle path — taking action on gender equality only after the crisis has subsided rather than now — reduces the potential opportunity by more than $5 trillion. The cost of that delay amounts to three-quarters of the total GDP we could potentially lose to COVID-19 this year.” (2)

Based on these findings, it is evident that including gender equality in the economic recovery response plans is crucial, not only for the support of women but also for success in economic recovery and progress in general.

Footnotes:

(1) Xiao Bang, and Darmadi Gemala. (2020, October 2). ‘Coronavirus is exacerbating menstruation health risks for those living in ‘period poverty’. ABC News Australia

(2) Tonby, Oliver and Wibowo, Phillia. (2020, September 22). “Maintaining progress on gender equality is key to Indonesia’s pandemic recovery”. The Jakarta Post

Agnieszka (Aggie) Zuchora holds a Master of Environment with a focus on Development and has experience in community engagement across the Pacific and in humanitarian aid.

Filed Under: Gender and Women, Solidarity, South Pacific

Pacific Pulse: South Pacific Pandemic Round-Up

December 1, 2020 by Pacific Peoples' Partnership

Researched by Andy E. Nystrom, PPP Archivist & Research Assistant

In terms of the impact of the coronavirus on the Pacific, as seen from a weekly check of Worldometer statistics, French Polynesia is probably the area to watch: total cases went up over 2,000 between October 21 and 28 and active cases nearly one thousand in the same timeframe, thus leaving behind Guam, whose cases it had been paralleling until recently. In the weeks ahead, French Polynesia might well pass Hawaii. While still the second-lowest country for total cases, Solomon Islands is showing some signs of concern, while its Ministry of Health and Medical Services is pushing for improved and extended nursing practices and roles in the country.

In terms of good news, after only a week’s absence, Fiji became clean (I.e. no cases), and Wallis and Futuna became clean after only joining the list last week. New Caledonia remains clean as of October 28. The Marshall Islands has expressed a desire to work with other Pacific countries on economic recovery if they are also coronavirus free.

One of the very few positive impacts of the coronavirus is the adoption of technology that can remotely monitor fishing vessels and identify different types of fish and other marine life. The Federated States of Micronesia had already committed to this technology in 2018, and in 2020 they’ve been joined by Australia, Chile, and New Zealand.

A benefit of COVID-19 has been the acceleration of Artificial Intelligence (AI) monitoring technology being placed aboard commercial fishing vessels to monitor catches. Credit: (SurfaceWarriors / Naval Surface Warriors).

The Asia & the Pacific Society provides weekly updates on the impact of the coronavirus on the Pacific Islands region. According to the October 28 update:

  • Cases are rising in the Pacific overall, particularly French Polynesia in the lead with 5,859 cases.
  • Pacific Island Forum leaders have drafted the ‘Protecting the Health and Wellbeing of the Blue Pacific’ statement which they intend to present at December’s United Nations General Assembly special session on COVID-19. It intends to look at the impact of the virus on vulnerable Pacific groups, such as people with disabilities, the elderly, women and girls.
  • Foreign Ministers at the Pacific Island Forum last week pushed for equitable access in the region to safe and reliable tests, treatments, and potentially later a vaccine for the virus. They cautioned that while the countries have been faring well in resisting the virus, they still face hardships related to border closures.
  • In the same forum, Papua New Guinea’s Labour Secretary noted a loss of 6,000 jobs due to the pandemic and the response to it.
  • To address rising case numbers in Tahiti and Morea, a nine-hour curfew between 9 pm and 6 pm has been declared, as well as the cancellation of cultural and sporting events.
  • Research from Dr. Api Monovo from Massey University has found that the virus (and resulting job loss) has resulted in Pacific islanders reconnecting with traditional cultures and lifestyles. He says this demonstrates the resilience and innovation of Pacific people and culture.
  • Hawaii’s governor is granting a quarantine exemption to American Samoans to enter the state as long as they’re on medical charter flights.
  • The latest cases of the coronavirus in New Zealand are a setback for a travel bubble with the COVID-19-free Cook Islands, which sees such a bubble as desirable due to the considerable loss of income to the latter’s tourism industry.
Cook Islands considers whether to “bubble up” as cases increase in New Zealand. Credit: (Sheba Also 18 Million Views / John).

Filed Under: South Pacific

Pacific Pulse: Pacific FutureWatch – What will 2021 Bring?

December 1, 2020 by Pacific Peoples' Partnership

Researched by Andy E. Nystrom, PPP Archivist & Research Assistant

South Pacific Islanders have been demonstrating against nuclear weapons for many decades. Photo from Tok Blong Pasifik, Issue #6

Pacific Island countries have been influential in the ratification of the Treaty on the Prohibition of the Nuclear Weapons, to go into effect January 22, 2021.

The National Cancer Institute (US) awarded the University of Guam and the University of Hawaii Cancer Center each five-year grants totaling $14 million to address and mitigate the impact of cancer on Pacific Islanders.

In 2021 Australia will set up the Pacific Fusion Centre in Port Vila, Vanuatu. This security centre will analyze and share information on a range of security issues including illegal fishing, drug smuggling, human trafficking and climate change.

In 2021 Port Vila, Vanuatu, will be the home of the new Pacific Fusion Centre. Credit: (In Memoriam: PhillipC / Phillip Capper)

The leaders of five Micronesian nations (Palau, the Marshall Islands, Kiribati, Nauru, and the Federated States of Micronesia) are threatening to exit the Pacific Islands Forum unless they are permitted to choose the head of the regional grouping. This could provide an opening for China to extend its influence with Pacific Island nations.

Filed Under: South Pacific

Pacific Pulse: World War II’s Ugly Legacy in the Solomon Islands

December 1, 2020 by Pacific Peoples' Partnership

Prepared by Arthur Holbrook, Member of PPP’s Board of Directors and Chair of the organization’s Communications Committee.

Guadalcanal in the Solomon Islands was the site of the first major success of the Allies against the Japanese in World War II.  American, ANZAC, Fijian, Tongan and Solomon Island soldiers pushed the Japanese off the island and successfully fought off several attempts to retake the island and its strategic airfield.  The fierce fighting, which lasted from August 1942 into 1943, left an ugly legacy: unexploded munitions. To learn more, click here. 

More than 45,000 of these munitions, ranging from hand grenades, mortar rounds, rifle bullets to aerial bombs, have been removed since 2011 when police in the Solomons started keeping records.  A much higher number are assumed to have been discovered prior to that date. It is estimated that as many as 50,000 unexploded munitions remain on Guadalcanal.  These munitions have remained hidden in the soil for over 75 years and are dug up regularly by the people of the island, 75% of whom are agricultural workers.  It is estimated that every year about 20 local people are killed by these devices.  As John Rodsted, the lead researcher with SafeGround, an advocacy group for the removal of explosives left behind by war, explained, the unexploded munitions can make farming a fatal occupation.  “They are scared of their land.” (1) 

From Journal of Conventional Weapons Disposal:

Livingston is a constable with the Royal Solomon Islands Police Force on New Georgia Island. When he receives a report of old ammunition and bombs, he investigates. “I find many old bombs. The farmers and fishermen report them to the police. They in turn report to Honiara (capital of the Solomon Island). The problem is distance, logistics, time and money. The distances are great in the Solomon Islands and it takes time and money for the EOD team to be able to respond to all reports…” Photo courtesy of John Rodsted

Meanwhile, local fishermen sometimes use explosives to fish.  This practice has depleted fish stocks and damaged coral reefs in some lagoons.  Because coral is reduced to rubble by this practice, it often will not regrow.  Dynamite fishing has left some areas in the Solomons with no reefs and no fish. (2)

A number of areas on Guadalcanal have not been used for generations because they are contaminated with the buried munitions.  Norwegian People’s Aid (NPA), working closely with local police, has been attempting to remedy the situation.  They are developing a database of the locations of the munitions.  These operations recently came to an abrupt halt when two ordnance removal technicians, one British, one Australian, were killed in an explosion.

International efforts have focused on anti-personnel mines and cluster munitions.  Since neither of these types of munitions is believed to have been used in the South Pacific, the region was not provided with international assistance for ordnance removal until recently.  Hence, organized efforts to deal with the unexploded munitions in the region only began in 2010 when Pacific Forum leaders called for assistance to address the problem.  The Forum’s Regional Security Committee’s strategy was put into place in 2012. Several countries have been selected as on-going priorities: Kiribati, Papua New Guinea, the Royal Marshall Islands, the Solomon Islands, and Vanuatu. (3)

Footnotes:

(1) New York Times, https://www.nytimes.com/2020/09/21/world/australia/solomon-slands-unexploded-ordnance.html

(2) Special Report: Solomon Islands’ Explosive Legacy, “Journal of Conventional Weapons Destruction, Vol. 20, Iss. 3 [2016], 5. https://commons.lib.jmu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2756&context=cisr-ournal&te=1&nl=at-war&emc=edit_war_20200925.

(3) Special Report, 3, 4.

Filed Under: Human Rights, Solidarity, South Pacific

People & Passages: Announcing Phase 2 of the Indigenous Climate Action Program

December 1, 2020 by Pacific Peoples' Partnership

Prepared by Peter Boldt and Monica Shore (Iisaak Olam Foundation)

Pacific Peoples’ Partnership (PPP) is proud to announce that we will be partnering once again with the IISAAK OLAM Foundation  https://www.iisaakolam.ca/ (IOF) for the second phase of their Indigenous Climate Action Preschool Program (ICAP). Phase 1 was entitled ‘Cultivating Connections: Building Relationships between Nature, Culture and Community through Early Childhood Education’.

Photo Credit: IISAAK OLAM Foundation

With the huge success of the pilot and the continuing support of the TD Friends of the Environment, we are pleased to support IOF as they offer a second phase of this inspiring educational program, with a pandemic-influenced twist: ‘Cultivating Connections between Children and Nature from the Safety of Home.’ This will include five nature-based educational modules that are delivered online and that young children, families, and educators can use and adapt. Indigenous and western knowledge systems and teaching styles/tools will be employed to provide a rich and unique experience.

“We hope that this program will inspire young children and their families to connect with and learn from the environmental and cultural diversity of the place they call home. By home, we mean not only the dwelling or house in which we sleep, but the broader environment and ecosystems that teach us about our place in the world and our responsibilities to care for it,” explains Monica Shore, Executive Director of the IISAAK OLAM Foundation.

Photo Credit: IISAAK OLAM Foundation

While COVID-19 has certainly challenged us and caused our organizations to make adjustments to our work, PPP is delighted to assist IOF with such important programs for children. This project will advance work that began with the launch of the pilot in January of 2020, where IOF facilitated early-childhood education experiences in Saanich Parks, weaving together Indigenous and western teachings about nature and diversity. The next phase of this program will provide virtual learning opportunities for connecting young children to their local environment, applying both Indigenous and western knowledge systems.

For more information, please visit https://www.iisaakolam.ca/cayac. More details to come in January 2021!

Filed Under: Climate Change, First Nations, Partners & Sponsors, South Pacific

People & Passages: New Zealand’s First Indigenous Female Foreign Minister

November 30, 2020 by Pacific Peoples' Partnership

Prepared by Art Holbrook, PPP Board member and Chair of PPP’s Communications Committee

After elections last month that returned Jacinda Ardern’s Labour Party to government with a landslide, Nanaia Mahuta has been appointed as the country’s first Indigenous Foreign Minister and the first Maori woman to hold such a senior cabinet position. (1). In 1996 Mahuta was the first Maori woman to be elected to New Zealand’s parliament and has held a number of cabinet posts over the years.

Foreign Minister Nanaia Mahuta. Credit: Office of Hon Nanaia Mahuta

Mahuta is the niece of the late queen Tuheitia Potatau Te Wherowhero VII and is related to the current monarch of the Maori, King Tuheitia.  He is now the 8th Maori monarch of the Kingitanga. The Kingitanga, or Maori King movement, was first established in the 1850s as white settlers sometimes used unscrupulous means to gain possession of Maori lands. By claiming kingship over a part of the North Island that was still under Maori control, the Kingitanga developed into a significant political presence that has survived wars, land confiscations and the displeasure of some white New Zealanders. While having no official status in the New Zealand government and not being recognized by all Maori tribes, the Kingitanga has its own parliament and has some influence at the local level.(2)

Recognizing this heritage, Mahuta decided in 2016 to take part in a moko kauae ceremony where she received the traditional woman’s tattoo on her chin. The design of her moko is unique to Mahuta as it symbolically traces her lineage. She was inspired to get the moko by her daughter who challenged her to do it.

Several other Maori women in the New Zealand parliament responded enthusiastically to Mahuta’s initiative. Green Party MP Marama Davidson said, “I couldn’t think of a better wahine [Polynesian woman] to be the first role model for us; it’s absolutely fantastic. What I’m really excited about is the statement that it makes – that we have the right to wear our moko everywhere…”(3)

 

(1) CNN World, 2 November 2020, New Zealand’s Jacinda Ardern appoints country’s first Indigenous female foreign minister”.

(2) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Māori_King_Movement.

(3) RNZ, 9 August 2016, “Mahuta in MP tattoo first”.

Filed Under: South Pacific

Consider Donating!

November 30, 2020 by Pacific Peoples' Partnership

Every dollar donated makes a huge difference to PPP.  We leverage your donation to secure resources critical to our Pacific partners, solidarity building initiatives and knowledge sharing programs. Our award-winning work is both local and global, proven effective and transformative.

We have just turned 45th this past April, and have so much work to do, please invest in our sustainability and the work of our many Pacific Islander and Indigenous partners, and make your secure online donation today via Canada Helps.

Here’s what you can help us accomplish in the coming year:

  • Empower women’s influence and economic independence through innovative market initiatives in Papua New Guinea with our partner HELP Resources, and remote counseling with the Women’s and Children Crisis Centre in Tonga.
  • Support our Pacific Resilience Fund initiatives that invest directly at the grassroots and community level.  We are soon to be announcing over $20,000 worth of grants for grassroots projects throughout the South Pacific!
  • Launch our Indigenous climate action programs, which include knowledge exchange initiatives, research partnerships, and educational programming.
  • Build solidarity and a global community through our One Wave Gathering.
  • Develop a Pacific Women in Leadership program (start-up funds needed: $25,000).

The only way we can do this is with the friendship and support of donors like you.

Please make a tax-deductible gift to Pacific Peoples’ Partnership so we can make these plans a reality in 2020-21. Your contribution of $250, $100 or $50 will make a difference!

In fact, the best way to give is to become a monthly sustainer. When you give $25, $10 or $8 a month, you help ensure we can make solid partnerships and plans over the long term.

As the only Canadian organization dedicated to the South Pacific, we are honoured to be your partner in ensuring Indigenous and South Pacific peoples are leading the way to a resilient future.

Thank you for your support and friendship!

 

Filed Under: South Pacific

December 2020 Featured Partner

December 1, 2020 by Pacific Peoples' Partnership

Pacific Peoples’ Partnership acknowledges Canadian Heritage and the BC Arts Council

For the last few years, PPP has been fortunate to have had the financial support of Canadian Heritage and the BC Arts Council  for our annual One Wave Gathering. We are incredibly grateful as this bolsters our work coordinating meaningful public programming and engaging communities. However, in the year of Covid-19 this work has become much more challenging and risky, despite being more important than ever to lift spirits, inspire and safeguard our creative community.

So PPP offers our deepest gratitude to both of these important organizations and their staff, for their programming support, compassion and friendship as we have navigated this new reality. Most especially, we also wish to thank them for investing in PPP’s own wellbeing and resilience through special COVID-19 funding to help sustain us and others in the sector through this crisis.

Filed Under: South Pacific

Executive Message: September 2020

September 9, 2020 by April Ingham

Pasifik Currents – Executive Message

September 2020 Edition

 Members of the 2020 One Wave Gathering team explore collaborations with the Legacy Gallery’s Reef Net Exhibition. L to R: Tana Thomas, April Ingham, Lisa Kenoras, Jeff Corntassel and Zachary Fenn.

Talofa Lava,

Pacific Peoples’ Partnership’s (PPP) annual One Wave Gathering was designed to engage and build community and inspire stewardship of our shared lands and waters, while upholding and celebrating Pacific and Indigenous elders, artists, cultural leaders and knowledge keepers. As detailed in this edition of Pasifik Currents, the theme of this year’s program is resilience and allyship, both essential building blocks for solidarity as we address COVID-19 here at home and across our shared Pacific Ocean. Throughout September, One Wave Gathering will offer attendees safe spaces to reflect on these themes through a diverse program of online and in-person Indigenous and Pacific film, music, dialogue, and workshops. We hope to see you there!

This is a moment where our collective innovation is required as we navigate these rough waters together and envision our route forward. Our goal is to ensure a future that is more just, sustainable, and equitable for all. One that does not endorse false or dangerous economies that pit people’s health, lands, and waters against dangerous extractive practices, such as land-based or deep-sea mining, or in hosting tourists amidst a pandemic.

This is a time where we must embrace our youth as agents of change and support grassroots community programs. In service to these goals, PPP is so excited to share that we are hosting a new Pacific Islander and Indigenous youth committee that is exploring Stories of Resilience with their communities. This project will serve as a pathway for personal learning and a means to share cultural teachings and inspirations. Watch for this developing program in the months to come. PPP is also thrilled to announce our new partnership with the Women and Children Crisis Centre (WCCC) of Tonga, funded by the Canada Fund for Local Initiatives. WCCC will provide essential remote island COVID-19 mobile counselling support and services to help eliminate violence against women and children.

Given these challenging times, PPP is proud to officially mark our 45th Anniversary with the installation and dedication of the Pacific Peace House Post. Two years in the making, this 10-foot yellow cedar post was carved by local Lekwungen carver Bradley Dick and Ake Lianga, a Solomon Island artist living in Victoria, Canada. This Post honours Hereditary and Elected Lekwungen Indigenous leaders and will be permanently perched above the Pacific Ocean near the entrance to Victoria’s inner harbour at Macaulay Point. This stunning carving also commemorates our historic relationships across the Pacific, and we look forward to sharing this with you once it is officially dedicated.

In the meantime, we invite you to join us at all our upcoming events and to help celebrate our 45th anniversary by donating or volunteering towards our partnered work and future sustainability. We are deeply grateful to all friends of PPP who have stood with us along the way.

Yours in peace and solidarity,

April Ingham

Filed Under: South Pacific

One Wave 2020

September 9, 2020 by Pacific Peoples' Partnership

One Wave is Back in September … with many Online and In-Person Events!

By Jaimie Sumner, PPP Operations Coordinator & One Wave Program Coordinator

It’s September, and our 13th annual One Wave Gathering is once again brightening the streets of Victoria, BC in beautiful Lekwungen territories!  One Wave is a free, family-friendly celebration of Pacific Island and Indigenous cultures organized by Pacific Peoples’ Partnership each year.  This year’s gathering is focused on the themes of resilience and allyship and will feature arts and culture events including Indigenous opera, digital media, theatre, film, workshops, and more.

Pearls of the South Pacific Dancers at One Wave 2018. Credit: Heather Tuft

In these challenging times, we feel it is more important than ever to make space for cultural connection and learning.  While we need to take precautions to keep each other safe, it is vital that we find ways to share special moments, listen to each other, and engage with the issues facing the Pacific.  From Samoa to T’Sou-ke, from Viti Levu to Lekwungen territory, Pacific communities are working to preserve and revitalize culture, pass on knowledge, and ensure a healthy future for all.  At One Wave, we invite people from all backgrounds into the circle to hear these stories, be inspired, and find ways to move forward together.

Our team has worked extra hard this year to create safe ways to come together.  This year, we are offering a robust online program as well as a few in-person events within the safe protocols of social distancing.

Read on for some highlights you can expect at One Wave this month.  Some of our events will not be announced in advance, so join us on Facebook and check out our website to avoid missing out!  

 A colorful theatrical performance accompanies Indigenous author, Roy Henry Vickers, as he reads from his children’s book Peace Dancer. Credit: Tony Sprackett

Together / As One – Sept. 3-18 at FLUX Gallery 821 Fort St.

Visit the gallery and witness powerful Indigenous and Pacific stories woven together in Together / As One, an exciting digital media and art exhibit.  Watch carvings and masi cloths take shape and collective stories come alive in this display of cultural objects and films by local and international artists. Featured works include Roy Henry Vickers’ Peace Dancer (Theatre Inconnu, Story Theatre, Puppets for Peace) and Michael Nicoll Yahgulanaas’ Flight of the Hummingbird (Pacific Opera/Opera Vancouver).   You are welcome to visit Tuesday – Friday between 12-5pm and walk through the exhibit in groups of 6 or less.  We will provide visitors with masks and social distancing instructions to ensure a safe space for all.

Flight of the Hummingbird performers with Pacific Opera Victoria and Opera Vancouver

KAIROS Blanket Exercise – 9:30am, Sat, Sept. 26 at Royal Athletic Park *Sign up on EventBrite to reserve your spot.

Deepen your understanding of allyship, reconciliation, and Indigenous history in Canada through an interactive history lesson called the Blanket Exercise.  During the exercise, participants will accompany facilitators on a journey through Indigenous history in Canada, spanning pre-contact, treaty-making, colonization, and resistance.  Blankets laid out on the ground will provide a visual guide to the history lesson as participants walk through a set of interactive exercises that bring history to life.  Attendance is limited, so reserve your space now on EventBrite and visit the KAIROS website to learn more.

During the Blanket Exercise, blankets laid out on the ground symbolize Indigenous territories

Rising Tides 

Tune in online for a new film on Indigenous food sovereignty and climate justice by the Centre for Indigenous Research and Community-Led Engagement (CIRCLE).  Rising Tides is locally produced and features knowledge-sharing and ideas for action shared by Erynne Gilpin, Jeff Corntassel, Peruzzo Andrade, Cheryl Bryce, Beangka Elliot, and April Ingham.

Pacific Peace House Post

A momentous event this year will be the installation of the Pacific Peace Post, a symbolic house post carved by local Lekwungen and Solomon Islands carvers Bradley Dick and Ake Lianga. The Pacific Peace Post will overlook the waters at Macaulay Point and stand as a symbol of peace and connection between Pacific peoples.  Watch for the unveiling in late September!

Carvers Bradley Dick and Ake Lianga working on the Pacific Peace House Post

Films, Pop-ups, Workshops & More!

Join our Facebook or visit our website for a full listing of events.  We have lots more exciting programming in the works this month, including online feature films, pop-up music and dance, workshops on topics from slam poetry to weaving, and maybe even a drive-in theatre.

We hope to see old friends and new as we gather once more – in person and online – for a powerful program of Pacific stories, songs, and speakers.

If you are interested in volunteering, there may still be an opportunity!  For more information, get in touch with us at: operations@archive.pacificpeoplespartnership.org.

One Wave Gathering is held on Lekwungen and W̱SÁNEĆ territory and made possible with the consent and consultations by hereditary and elected leaders, elders, youths, artists and community members.

Our amazing partners for One Wave 2020 include Songhees Nation, Esquimalt Nation, MediaNet FLUX Gallery, CIRCLE (Centre for Indigenous Research and Community Led Engagement at UVIC), Theatre Inconnu, Puppets for Peace, Story Theatre, Pacific Opera Victoria, Vancouver Opera,  City of Victoria, Township of Esquimalt, the Government of Canada, the Province of BC, Canadian Heritage, British Columbia Art Council, Capital Regional District, CTV / CFAX, and Rika Design.

Filed Under: Arts & Culture, First Nations, Knowledge Exchange, Partners & Sponsors, Solidarity, South Pacific

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About Us

For 45 years, Pacific Peoples’ Partnership has supported the aspirations of South Pacific Islanders and Indigenous peoples for peace, environmental sustainability, social justice and community development.

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Pasifik Currents: Latest Posts

  • Executive Message: March 2021
  • Celebrating Women Across the South Pacific
  • Stories of Resilience Update

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