Pacific Peoples' Partnership

Connecting Indigenous and Pacific Peoples

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People & Passages:

May 30, 2019 by April Ingham

Ruby Kafalava joins the PPP Board of Directors.

Pacific Peoples’ Partnership is proud to announce that we have welcomed Ruby Kafalava onto our Board of Directors!  Ruby is originally from Tonga and is involved with keeping her culture, language and traditions alive in Canada through her participation as a dancer in Pearls of The South Pacific, an authentic cultural group based on Vancouver Island. She is also a mother of two young girls and works as a professional caregiver.  We are fortunate to have her join the PPP Team!

 

(L to R) Pia Ambiwa and Evangeline Kaima support Serah Maim, interim chair of the Wewak United Vendors’ Association in mobilisation, organisation of market and street vendors.

Our Papua New Guinea partner HELP Resources is pleased to announce the start up of the formative Wewak United Vendors Association (WUVA). The two women facilitators/educators are: Pia Ambiwa – an experienced community organiser, counsellor, educator with faith-based organisations and with the Ok Tedi community development initiatives, and Evangeline Kaima – secondary school teacher who taught for many years then joined the East Sepik Council of Women (ESCOW) as the head of a community-based literacy Tok Ples pre-school program. There she previously  built up a network for 300 enthusiastic community-run pre-schools and literacy programs for women and children. For the last two decades Evangeline has led the rollout of a Personal Viability program that supports local farmers, traders and small-scale entrepreneurs so that they may succeed through maximum use of local resources and belief in their own power to overcome poverty, debt and dependence.

PPP was saddened to learn of the recent death of Sir Hekenukumai Busby of New Zealand.  Sir Busby was recognized as a leading figure in the revival of traditional Polynesian navigation and ocean voyaging using wayfinding techniques.  He built 26 traditional waka, including the double-hulled Te Aurere which has sailed over 30,000 nautical miles in the Pacific.  Our deep condolences to his family and community.  

In March 2019, PPP Executive Director, April Ingham, was invited to attend a reception where she met Canada’s Governor General, Her Excellency, the Right Honourable Julie Payette, whose credentials include a career in engineering and serving as a Canadian astronaut. Taking place in Victoria, this reception kicked off a meeting of the heads of 17 United World Colleges (UWCs) across the globe. The Governor General is an alumna of the UWC in Wales and a strong supporter of the UWC Movement. Pearson College UWC  based in Victoria, hosted this year’s international meeting.

PPP Executive Director, April Ingham, with Canada’s Governor General, Julie Payette.

“We have to work globally – and that was a privilege given to me in my teen years when I attended a UWC school,” said Ms. Payette. “Speaking with and sharing ideas with people from all over the world who bring different ways of thinking made us progress better and faster – this is what Pearson College impresses upon us.”

PPP’s Executive Director added her own perspective to this opportunity to represent Pacific Peoples at this event: “It was my deep honour to meet our country’s inspiring Governor General and hear her stories of being on the space shuttle looking down at Earth, made all the more special given how hard she fought to realize her dreams.  Women like her are really out of this world – amazing!”

Bougainville Independence Referendum is a Milestone to Monitor:  Originally scheduled for 15 June 2019, the much-anticipated independence referendum will now be held in Bougainville, Papua New Guinea on 17 October 2019. The vote is the result of an agreement between the Government of Papua New Guinea and the Autonomous Bougainville Government.  This delay is due to a dispute over funding. In the next issue of Pasifik Currents, we will provide you with some background and links to this milestone event.

PPP is Hiring Summer Interns!  We will soon be hiring Communications, Programming and Development interns. Please watch our website for more information on how to apply or drop us a line at info@archive.pacificpeoplespartnership.org and we will forward details.

 

Filed Under: Arts & Culture, Gender and Women, Justice & Equality, Partners & Sponsors, Staff & Volunteers

Samoa takes on the world – Go Samoa!

May 30, 2019 by April Ingham

Samoa takes on the world – Go Samoa!

By Mua (Muavae) Va’a, President, Pacific Peoples’ Partnership

From the time I was a small boy growing up in Lotopu’e, a village in Samoa, I played rugby.  Everybody did. We played in school even when we didn’t have the equipment. Back then, Samoa was a powerhouse in the sport and we idolized our national sport.  I continued to play after I moved to Canada in 1991. I taught my sons the game and one of my greatest memories is playing on the same team as my older son. He was 16 at the time; I was 43 and about to hang up my cleats.   He went on to play on the Canadian Under-20’s team, and played for the BC Bear in the national championship in 2017 where they took gold and still plays at the premiere level locally. My younger son came thru the cross root level rugby and had a chance to represent BC in the national championship from U-14 all the way up to the U-18. It’s been a joy to pass on our national sport to them.

The Samoan Canadian community brings out their Samoa flags.

Even when I was playing, I became involved in coaching.  I have coached club Jr teams, high school, regional and some for the provincial junior teams. Few years ago I had the privilege to be liaison member of rugby Canada for the Samoan national 15 team; it was a great experience. So, of course, I was there for the 2019 International 7’s tournament at BC Place Stadium in Vancouver. It’s a special time.  The tournament takes place over two days, a Saturday and Sunday.  This year BC Place was full on Sunday. I was there along with 55,000 screaming fans cheering for their favourite teams.  It was an experience that was hard to forget especially with our home island team on the field playing their hearts out for our country.  

Our neighbour island team, Fiji, was also on the field; it was great to see so many of their fans joining the fun.  Samoa and Fiji, the two smallest countries in the tournament, represent the South Pacific very well.  And, of course, their die-hard fans weren’t hard to spot in the stadium as the teams battled with teams from Canada, France, England, the United States and other much larger countries. Despite the difference in size of our countries, we stand up very well with these larger teams.  Fiji came in 3rd and Samoa 5th in the annual 16-nation tournament.

Mua Va’a with famous Canadian Rugby 7s player, John Moonlight, at BC Place Stadium.

The pride we feel in our team is strong.  Seeing them in action tugs at our heartstrings and reminds us of home.  With that connection, it’s natural for the Samoan community to want to be involved when the Samoan Rugby 7’s come to Canada.  They’ve come every year for the past four years and join fifteen other teams in the tournament. And every year the Samoan community of British Columbia hosts a dinner for our national team.   

There aren’t very many of us in BC, only about fifteen families, but the tournament gives us an opportunity to renew friendships and learn about family members at home.  We feel it is important to extend a welcome to the players when they are so far from home.  This year’s event was held at the home of a member of the community in Vancouver. It was so nice to see our community come together for a time of fellowship, sharing our appreciation for the team that represents our homeland.  This year the evening was filled with celebration, a dinner – including Samoan traditional foods – and music. The community took up a collection and a financial gift was presented to the players along with t-shirts and chocolates to take home to their families.  All in all, it was a great evening of fellowship and the opportunity to honour our Samoan rugby athletes. 

I had a chance to sit down with two members of the team to ask them about their experience.  I can’t identify them because they are under contract and can’t speak for the team, but they could speak from their hearts about being on the Samoan national team and playing in the tournament.  One said, “It means the world to me. A chance to represent my family, my village and my country. I’ve always dreamed of one day representing my country in the world arena and now that dream has come true.”  The second player, echoing the first about representing family and country, added that it was a great chance to gain experience at the international level.

The Samoan community demonstrates plenty of enthusiasm when the home team comes to town.

Both players said they hoped that playing in the international tournament might lead to professional contracts.  A contract would help their families at home.

It was only a brief conversation, but I was able to tell them how proud I was of them and the rest of the team.  It was a joy to see them playing hard for our country. And I told them I look forward to seeing them again when the team comes back to Canada for the next tournament.

Filed Under: Arts & Culture, South Pacific Tagged With: Rugby, Samoa, Sport

Pasifik Current News – May 2019 Edition PPP Updates!

May 30, 2019 by April Ingham

Aloha, Friends!

Recently Mua (Muavae) Va’a President of PPP and I went to an inspiring talk organized by our partners at CIRCLE that featured Dr. Noenoe Silva & Dr. Noelani Goodyear-Ka’opua.  Both women are highly respected Hawaiian scholars and were presenting on the efforts of several Hawaiian women, all heroes who fought to keep their languages, cultures, teachings and lands intact for the generations to come.

PPP Board President Mua Va’a, April Ingham (ED – PPP), along with Lisa Kahaleole Hall (Program Director, Indigenous Studies at UVic), Dr. Noenoe Silva, CIRCLE Director & PPP Board Member Jeff Corntassel, and Dr. Noelani Goodyear-Ka’opua.

Noelani was reading from a book she edited entitled Nā Wāhine Koa: Hawaiian Women for Sovereignty and Demilitarization about four of these women.  Following the presentation, an audience member asked about the effects of tourism on the Polynesian peoples within Hawaii. This led to a spirited discussion around greed and globalization.  The question: well, what can we do about this… was beautifully addressed by a quote Noelani shared from this book:  

“We gotta fight.  Why do we have to fight every bloody day?  Every fricken day, we need to fight and fight and fight, just to keep our place in this world today.  I see this, and then I look at our children. They’re so far away from us. Their culture, their thinking, their attitudes. We got to fight.” — Maxine Kahaulelio.

This past few months have been ones of much reflection and celebration on the power of women and the importance of solidarity to hold up these courageous warriors, fierce mothers, peace makers, and all who strive to make a difference in their families and world.  Pacific Peoples Partnership (PPP) has been honoured to host several programs this spring featuring such women changemakers.   

Baby turtle works of art made from fishing net marine debris.

For International Women’s Day this past March, PPP hosted a luncheon, Artist talk and mini-workshop featuring visiting Australian Erub Arts Group Artist Florence Gutchen (Torres Strait) and Australian Arts Administrator Lynette Griffiths.  It was incredible to spend time with them both and learn about how this women’s collective transforms fishing net marine debris that litters their shorelines, into works of art that portray ocean creatures, while educating about the impacts of global consumerism, food security and our collective waste.  It was an immersive experience to learn from them as I created my very own sea turtle from fishing nets, some of which were collected off our northern Pacific coastlines.  Please visit a full background article on the art initiative of the Erub Arts Group from our March 2019 issue of Pasifik Currents.

PPP is truly fortunate to be working in support of women in Papua New Guinea who work in the informal markets within the project Vendors Collective Voice.  Our lead partner for the project implementation is HELP-Resources, they are now fully engaged in year two of the three-year Commonwealth Foundation funded program recently reported in our winter edition article titled: “HELP Resources and Pacific Peoples’ Partnership Collaborate to Strengthen Sepik Women Market and Street Vendors’ Collective Voice in Shaping Informal Economy Development.”  We are pleased that our long-time respected partner and project technical adviser Elizabeth (Sabet) Cox, has officially joined the team as an Australian-sponsored volunteer to provide capacity support for the HELP-Resources Team.  The growing team (as noted in the Peoples & Passages section) will develop training opportunities, tool kits, and resources to support the women market vendors as they advocate for more just market conditions.   In addition, we are preparing to expand the program vision as it is our hope to build upon this program to ensure its sustainability and success well into the future for the benefit of the Sepik women and their families.

Longhouse Dialogues pre-project site visit to Vancouver’s Harbour Green Park with Joleen Timko (Project Manager), April Ingham (PPP ED), Artist Hjalmer Wenstob, Squamish Nation Councillor Deborah Baker and Tsleil-Waututh Nation Chief Leah George-Wilson, Missing is Musqueam Councillor Wendy John-Grant.  Photo by Mana Saza

Last but certainly not least, within a week 7000+ women from around the world will be descending upon Vancouver for the Women Deliver international conference from June 3-6, 2019.  PPP is excited to announce that along with our key partner the BC Council for International Cooperation and Mobilization Canada, we have received the permission of the Squamish Nation, Musqueam Nation and Tsleil-Waututh Nation to install four temporary Longhouses from our 2017 award winning public program within their shared traditional territories.  

The Longhouses will be installed together once again as a village to honour women and provide community-accessible hospitality and dialogue space within Harbour Green Park, which is a short 5 minutes walk from Canada Place – the main event venue for the Conference.  Check out the Longhouse Dialogues if you are in Vancouver, as the Longhouses will be installed from May 31 – June 5.  Help us welcome the world’s women!

Hope to see you there!

April Ingham, Executive Director

Pacific Peoples’ Partnership

Longhouse facade by Hjalmer Wenstob (Nuu-chah-nulth) and graphic by Juliana Speier (Kwakwaka’wakw).

PPP needs your support!  During the month of June, we will be running a special fundraising campaign called the Great Canadian Giving Challenge.  Every single dollar donated through our Canada Helps donation portal, will qualify PPP for one entry into a draw for $10,000 towards our work.  Please consider donating this June in support of our work! 

Filed Under: Arts & Culture, First Nations, Justice & Equality, Knowledge Exchange, South Pacific Tagged With: Erub Arts, Longhouse Dialogues, Women Deliver

PPP Winter 2019 Updates

March 6, 2019 by April Ingham

April & Mua at South Pacific Christmas Celebration

Talofa Lava Respected Friends!

2019 is shaping up to be a year full of Pacific Promise. This past December our Board of Directors launched an annual appeal and were thrilled to see such a wonderful response. Thanks to the generosity of our community we raised over $13,000 and grew our PPP Esmonde Endowment Legacy Fund by an additional $9000!

As we grow closer to our 45th Anniversary in 2020, we have many exciting programs underway or in development and look forward to sharing updates with you. Within this edition of Pasifik Currents we share an inspiring summary report of Vendors’ Collective Voice from our partner HELP Resources in Papua New Guinea. This critically important program is designed to improve the lives of women market vendors and their families in PNG.

From March 8 to 10 PPP is thrilled to host Australian Aboriginal Artist Florence Gutchen, and Australian Arts Administrator Lynette Griffiths soon to be in residence at the Museum of Anthropology for their exhibition “Marking the Infinite” Contemporary Women Artists from Aboriginal Australia  as featured in the article from our Board member Dr. Carol Mayer, Curator of Oceania, at MOA. Be sure to follow our social media to get the latest details!

RedTide 2020: International Indigenous Youth Climate Action Summit organizing is under way with foundation work to ensure that Indigenous youth are centred fully within this important initiative. PPP Associate Pawa Haiyupis is facilitating the participatory engagement process and coordination of this environmental action program planned for the Summer of 2020. Dates and details for how you can get involved and support RedTide 2020 will soon be circulated. If you have an interest to engage within this powerful program, please email PPP at info@archive.pacificpeoplespartnership.org.

One Wave Gathering 2018 continues to reverberate! In Spring 2019, One Wave programming is part of several community-building arts projects soon to be announced. And as the province of British Columbia gets ready to host the International Women Deliver Conference, PPP is helping mobilize critically important Indigenous and Pacific-focused side events. If you or a colleague are attending this Conference or you want to get involved, please let us know!

Lastly, as storm season in the South Pacific is upon us, PPP urges you to remember our Pacific Resilience Fund . This flexible fund allows PPP to provide small grants in support of community initiatives that build resilience in South Pacific communities. Recently we were pleased to receive the phase 1 final report from the Loreto School in Fiji for their school rebuilding, and we hope to join them on their next project phase where they plan to finish a walkway that keeps students mud-free as they traverse the school grounds during severe rain events. And, we are working with Samoa Social Welfare Fesoasoani Trust as they design and deliver citizen defense programs for young offenders in Samoa, both building and protecting community. It’s much-needed work like this that keeps us inspired and Pacific peoples strong.

Thanks for joining us on this journey!

Muavae Va’a, President         April Ingham, Executive Director

 

Note: PPP Board Member Lorna Eastman generously transferred her personal Endowment Fund of $6500 into the PPP Esmonde Endowment Fund, which was then matched with $2500 from the Smart and Caring Fund (Anonymous Gift). All funds are held in trust within PPP’s Esmonde Legacy Endowment Fund held for perpetuity with the Victoria Foundation.

Filed Under: Climate Change, Gender and Women, Knowledge Exchange, Partners & Sponsors, South Pacific, Staff & Volunteers

Unravelling Ghost Nets, Making Torres Strait Connections

March 6, 2019 by April Ingham

By Carol E. Mayer, PPP Board Member

From February 24 to March 16, 2019, ghost nets are the centre of attention at the UBC Museum of Anthropology (MOA) in Vancouver, British Columbia. This is when MOA is hosting Lynnette Griffiths and Florence Gutchen, two artists from the Island of Erub (Darnley), located in the Torres Strait between the northmost tip of continental Australia and the island of New Guinea. The Ghost Net exhibition will become a permanent MOA exhibition.

Carol with ghost net artists at the Erub Arts Centre, May 2018. Credit: Lynnette Griffiths

I first met Lynnette and Florence in May 2018 when I visited Erub to document the creation of Eip Kor Korr, a sculpture made of synthetic fishing nets. They and the other artists asked me why I travelled so far to see what they were doing. I told them the reason really goes back 15 years earlier, when I came to Erub to attend what was meant to be the celebrations for a successful Native title claim—a legal milestone that would have seen Native title recognized over all the outer community islands in the Torres Strait. However, at the eleventh hour the Australian Federal Court withdrew consent, leaving the islanders with nothing to celebrate.

On Erub, disappointment was replaced with the decision to go ahead and celebrate their traditional ownership of the Island despite the court proceedings being abandoned. I was privileged to witness and film the day-long event. A commemorative t-shirt had been made for the occasion; it is now on display at MOA. I left with a lasting memory of the islanders’ determined effort to turn a negative situation into a positive one. Indeed, Native title was granted two years later.

Now I journeyed back to Erub to witness this same determination as the islanders once again came together to turn a challenge into a victory. This time the challenge came from the sea. North Australia is one of the last remaining safe havens for endangered marine species. Marine turtles are especially vulnerable to entanglement in “ghost nets”: fishing nets that have been lost at sea, abandoned, or discarded when they become damaged. When these nets float on ocean currents they invisibly and silently entangle marine wildlife—hence the name “ghost.” Between 2005 and 2015, up to 10,000 turtles became entangled in such nets.

Eip Kor Korr being constructed by Racy Oui-Pitt, Florence Gutchen, Ethel Charlie and Ellarose Savage. Credit: Lynnette Griffiths

For Erub islanders, turtles are a traditional source of food and an integral part of their belief system and culture. The islanders began to gather these nets from the reefs and beaches, often with dead animals still entangled in the webbing, and started to take them apart to see whether they could be used for crafts. They discovered the multi-coloured strands that run through the centre of the ropes and began using them to weave figures of small animals. They then simply decided to go big, creating full-scale figures of turtles and other large sea creatures. These sculptures soon caught the attention of the Australian Museum in Sydney, and one was commissioned for the collection. The rest is history. Today, these ghost-net sculptures are part of a worldwide movement, in which the artists of Erub work with local and international museums to create powerful installations that oscillate between art and the living environment.

I encountered ghost-net sculptures for the first time in 2017, where they were installed in the exhibition Ghost Nets of the Ocean at the Ethnography Museum in Geneva, Switzerland. I was struck by the similarity of these powerful sculptures and the Native title t-shirt collected so many years before: both reflected the tenaciousness of a community in deploying its collective creativity to bring attention to outside challenges, whether political or environmental. The relevance of the ghost-net sculptures to MOA was emphasized for me by our commitment to exhibit contemporary art that speaks to similar challenges here in British Columbia and elsewhere in the world. With monies from MOA’s O’Brian Strategic Acquisitions Fund, we were able to purchase a hammerhead shark sculpture and to commission a giant turtle. I journeyed to Erub in May 2018 to document the making of our turtle and to talk with the islanders about the impact of the ghost nets on cultural life.

Jimmy J. Thaiday and Jimmy K Thaiday carry hammer head ghost net shark along an Erub beach. It is now on display at MOA. Credit: Carol Mayer

I arrived at the Erub Arts Centre, where the artists work, to see hundreds of metres of fishing nets strewn everywhere, all waiting to be unravelled and transformed into works of art. On the table in the studio the metal framework for MOA’s turtle had been welded together by Jimmy K. Thaiday in readiness for the women to start their work. During my time I saw the shell, flippers, underbelly, and finally the head take shape. I also met Lorenzo Ketchell, the designer of the t-shirt.

About halfway through the process, the decision was made that MOA’s turtle would be a middle-sized female specimen—a teenager—and her Erub name would be Eip Kor Korr. There was no question of her travelling home with me, though, as she first had another journey to make. She was wrapped, crated, and shipped to Cairns where she was exhibited alongside other ghost-net sculptures at the Cairns Indigenous Art Fair. She was then re-crated and flown more than 7,000 miles/11,000 kilometers to Vancouver, where she was unpacked at MOA in readiness for her installation in the Multiversity Galleries opposite the Erub t-shirt I collected so long ago.

Today Eip Kor Korr swims above museum visitors’ heads alongside the hammerhead shark, where she is, as Florence says, “a beautiful piece of art declaring the message that we must keep the water clean: we look after the sea and the sea looks after us.”

Florence Gutchen creating Eip Kor Korr’s flipper. Credit: Carol Mayer

Lynnette’s and Florence’s MOA residency is funded by the Andrew Fellowship, which also funded the 2006 MOA residency of Teddy Balangu from Palembei, Sepik River, Papua New Guinea. Since then, MOA and the Pacific Peoples Partnership (PPP) have worked with Teddy and others to raise global awareness about impending mining activities at the headlands of the river, and in 2017 co-hosted the visit of three artists: Claytus Yambon, Nancy Wani, and Edward Dumoi. During this visit the artists, PPP, and Elaine Monds (Alcheringa Gallery) gave presentations at an international symposium being held at UBC. These events, and more, point to the depth of commitment PPP has shown to Indigenous rights, especially as they pertain to the cultural and environmental damage caused by resource extraction, overfishing and the abandonment of fishing gear that has trapped and killed innumerable marine species, bringing many to the brink of extinction.

During their time in British Columbia, Lynnette and Florence will be giving public workshops at MOA, Musqueam Reserve, and schools in the Vancouver area. They will also be meeting representatives from Global Ghost Gear Initiative Secretariat and the Vancouver Aquarium, and will then travel to Vancouver Island as guests of PPP. There, they will participate in a video about their experiences, plus visit Alcheringa Gallery and the Royal British Columbia Museum. They will also host a public program organised by PPP. For this, they are bringing the frame of a large barracuda so that workshop participants can “dress” it with scales they create from fishing nets.

Underscoring its global relevance, this project was started in Geneva; it will continue in British Columbia and then be taken to England, carrying with it the ethos of collaborating across continents and countries. At the same time, the project will deliver new skills and create an opportunity for people to talk, discuss, and share. Both MOA and PPP consider themselves fortunate to work alongside such powerful advocates. We welcome the prospect of creating relationships that will reach into the future.

Carol welcomes Eip Kor Korr tot MOA. Credit: Nancy Bruegmann

Carol E. Mayer is the head of the curatorial and interpretation department at the Museum of Anthropology and an associate to UBC’s Department of Anthropology. In 2006 she began a long association with Alcheringa Gallery when she travelled with Elaine Monds to the Sepik River. Soon after that she joined the Board of the Pacific Peoples Partnership. Her research interests include the history of Pacific Islands collections in Canada, the exploration of intellectual property rights, and the building of collaborative networks between the Pacific and the Pacific Northwest. In 2013 she organised the PAA International Symposium in Vancouver, Canada, and curated the exhibition and authored the publication Paradise Lost? Contemporary Arts of the Pacific. She also co-authored (with Anna Naupa and Vanessa Warri) the book No Longer Captives of the Past: The Story of a Reconciliation Ceremony on Erromango. Her recent exhibition and publication, In the Footprint of the Crocodile Man, opened in March 2016. She has been granted numerous awards, including from the Canadian Museums Association and the International Council of Museums. She has also received the President’s Medal of Excellence and the Independence Medal from the Republic of Vanuatu.

 

Filed Under: Arts & Culture, Climate Change, Gender and Women, Knowledge Exchange, South Pacific Tagged With: art, oceans, waste

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