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Living in Tune with the Ocean – Vaka Taumako Project Strengthens Solomon Islands Traditions

March 6, 2019 by April Ingham

By Alison Gardner, Editor, Pasifik Currents

All images © to Vaka Taumako Project

“In the far western Pacific Ocean on the eastern edge of the Solomon Islands, Polynesian Voyaging is alive,” opens the engaging six-minute trailer on the Vaka Taumako Project website. “These vaka or voyaging canoes are built by hand using sustainable local materials, ancient tools and design knowledge, and uncommon craftsmanship by young and old.”

Traditional Taumako voyaging canoe.  Credit: Wade Fairley

Therein lies the mission of the project to revive something nearly lost. The Vaka Valo Association is the name of the Taumako charitable organization that runs this project. “Very appropriately,” says Dr. Marianne (Mimi) George, a Hawaii-based anthropologist who studies Pacific wayfinding cultures and one of the guiding forces documenting this initiative, “Valo means something like healing or growing or improving through customary ways. Maybe ‘rising up of customary life-unity’ would be a good translation.”

Transporting people and goods, these vessels are distinctive, complex, and designed to travel over long distances on the open ocean. An entire remote community is “rising up” to take a hand in reclaiming expert knowledge of traditional seamanship and star navigation before it is lost. People who know these techniques can use them to find their way even if modern navigational equipment fails them.

As community elders pass away, they ask who will guide them? Today these last living navigators reject modern instruments. Instead they call for a revival of natural navigation, teaching a new generation to use the methods of their ancestors to follow ancient sea roads to a more culturally-rich and sustainable future.

Paramount Chief and Master Navigator Koloso Kavela started the Vaka Taumako Project with this vision. Having spent much of his life sailing around the Solomon Islands, he had seen the disruptive effects of town life on people from small communities like Taumako. However, as part of his vision, he insisted that some young men and women of the community learn modern methods of documentation to share the natural phenomena such as weather patterns that could aid scientists, sailors and others outside Taumako. A remarkable three-part film is unfolding that is both inspiring and informative.

Dr Simon Salopuka is the lead director on the Vaka Taumako Project, and his story is an extraordinary one in its own right. He grew up on the volcanic island of Taumako with no electricity, phone, airstrip or harbour. At age 14 he left to further his education and didn’t return for 20 years. In the interim, he earned his medical degree in Papua New Guinea and worked at a hospital in the Solomon Islands capital, Honiara. He recalls, “I felt something was missing, something deep from my culture.”

Simon Salopuka and Mimi George. Credit: Monte Costa

When Dr. Salopuka got a call from the Paramount Chief, Koloso Kavela, asking him for help with a project to revive his village’s distinctive voyaging traditions, he knew it was time to go home. His dedication to the project is strong as he himself learns all he can about the traditional culture and skills that are his heritage.

The Taumako-style canoe is one where most of the hull rides under the water. The visible platform where you sit or stand rests on the whole canoe which is submerged. Sails are woven from pandanus leaves that “catch the wind like a tropic bird.” There is no tacking, commonly associated with sailing. The crew lifts the slim mast and carries the entire sail from one end of the vaka to the other, a procedure known as shunting.

“It is an amazing design,” says Dr. George, who paid her first visit to Taumako in 1993. “These canoes are smooth, with quick acceleration and they’re easy to steer on many points of sail. And what’s so fascinating is that you’re basically riding on a submarine with an outrigger. They are fast and stable and can carry a lot of weight.”

In the early 1900s, as many as 200 voyaging canoes were reported to be sailing the waters around Taumako. Tragically, in 1918 the Spanish flu pandemic decimated the island population leaving only 37 survivors including a young Koloso Kavela. Today the population is about 450. Though he passed away in 2009, it is truly encouraging to traditional cultures around the world that this Paramount Chief is achieving his vision to revive natural navigation, restore his community’s pride in their skills, and celebrate what is being achieved on film.

Everyone in the community gets involved, even young girls expertly weaving sails for voyaging canoes.

Partly to raise money to fund Parts 2 and 3 of this documentary and partly to raise wider awareness of this unique initiative, Part 1 of We, the Voyagers has been globetrotting in 2018 and early 2019.

“We have done over 20 test screenings of Part 1 with very diverse audiences, and we have received very enthusiastic responses,” says Dr. George, “so we are confident that the film connects well with crossover audiences. We have screened it in the National Museum of Solomon Islands, Guam and Fiji Indigenous cultural gatherings, UNESCO meetings in Korea and Solomon Islands, the National Tropical Botanical Gardens Educational Series on Kaua’i, various sailing and paddling clubs, university classes, anthropology conferences and museums in California, Oregon and Washington State. And, of course, we were delighted to screen it at Pacific Peoples’ Partnership’s One Wave Festival in Victoria in early September 2018. During February and March 2019, we will screen at cultural gatherings, museums, and universities in Aotearoa, and in coming months, we will apply to film festivals happening later in 2019 and in 2020.”

Meanwhile, the documentary team is making a roughcut of Part 2 for test screenings in March 2019. The hope is that funding, including individual private donations, will permit completion of all three parts of the film. Part 2 is about selecting crew members, their jobs, how the vaka performs at sea and the ancient navigation system. “We are also excited to capture on film what happens when a crew arrives at a distant island and re-establishes long lost contacts,” adds Dr. George.

Donations to support the project and film production may be made by PayPal or cheque on the Vaka Taumako website.

At PPP’s One Wave Gathering in September 2018, Vaka Taumako guests screened Part I of their documentary at MediaNet’s Flux Gallery in Victoria.

The Vaka Taumako team is returning to Victoria on March 24 and 25, looking forward to showing Part 2 to anyone connected with PPP who wants to see it. Please contact the PPP director, director@pacificpeoplespartnership.com for more information about when and where.

 

Alison Gardner is a professional travel journalist and travel magazine editor living in Victoria, B.C. She has been part of Pacific Peoples Partnership for 28 years, serving on the Board twice and volunteering in writing, editing and communications roles throughout that time. She is currently editor of Pasifik Currents e-newsletter. www.travelwithachallenge.com.

 

Filed Under: Arts & Culture, Climate Change, Knowledge Exchange, South Pacific Tagged With: Resurgence, Vaka

HELP Resources and Pacific Peoples’ Partnership Collaborate to Strengthen Sepik Women Market and Street Vendors’ Collective Voice in Shaping Informal Economy Development

March 6, 2019 by April Ingham

By Elizabeth (Sabet) Cox

In Papua New Guinea (PNG), even when you live on customary land and subsist largely on the natural food resources available in your rural village, you will need cash. Outside informal trade, there are few alternatives to finding the money needed to meet the most basic needs and to pay for children’s education, family health and the community contributions that sustain informal social protection systems. With a population of about 25,000, Wewak town has at least fifteen ‘markets’ and many more informal, street trading hubs of various sizes, operating under different regimes. Only one is managed by local government.

Vendors Collective Voice – Local vendor, Lilian Wanaki, offers handicrafts and jewellery for sale.  Photo: Elizabeth Cox

Every day, an estimated three to five thousand women are trading under challenging conditions. While some women vendors can build viable, small enterprises, most live precariously from day to day, on small incomes derived from informal trade and many have done so for decades. Many women vendors have grown up alongside their grandmothers and mothers who were informal traders and now they follow in their footsteps. Returning home at the end of the day ‘empty handed’ increases the probability of children being deprived of adequate food or education and of family stress, conflict and domestic violence.

It is almost 45 years since PNG achieved independence. The PNG constitution aimed to guide equitable, inclusive and sustainable development, but a succession of male politicians has built an economy based on large scale extractive industries – mining, petroleum, gas, logging and fisheries.  Extractive industry projects have undermined the livelihood of a rural majority and failed to generate national revenues that translate into effective service delivery to meet the basic needs of the citizens. Promises of free education and health care are failing, the isolation and neglect of the rural majority persists, and poverty deepens. Markets are the workplace of so many women, and an important source of food security and good nutrition for the general population. Women trading in PNG’s massive informal economy are the lifeline for their families, but without visibility, voice and influence, street traders and women market traders are powerless and oppressed.

 

Vendors Collective Voice – A young mother cradles her month-old baby while she trades.  Photo: Elizabeth Cox

In the main Wewak market, with the largest congregation of vendors, the urban Local Level Government (LLG) collects daily taxes (gate fees) from women vendors. Local government has very few other regular sources of revenue as too many of the town’s wealthier residents and local businesses default on council rate payments. It’s far easier to collect taxes from poor women market and street vendors, who are punished heavily if they default. Wewak’s main market has 1000-1500 women vendors’ daily – 96% are female. The fees and taxes paid by market vendors provide substantial daily revenue for LLG operation – a fact that is invisible and ignored by both local government and the general public. No one is able to trace where these market revenues go and how they are spent. But very little of the revenues collected is reinvested into market management, maintenance, cleaning or improvement of the working conditions, facilities or services to tax-paying vendors.

Currently, Wewak town market, like so many other municipal markets throughout Melanesia, is a profitable operation but is oppressive, exploitative, and extractive of women vendors’ hard-earned, small incomes. The vendors endure daily ‘working conditions’ that are unsafe, unhygienic, and discriminatory on the basis of gender, class and rural commuters or urban residents.

Rural vendors fill the unsheltered spaces at the town market.  Photo: Elizabeth Cox

Wewak’s many other smaller and scattered street markets and trading hubs operate in ad hoc and gender discriminatory ways, usually personally benefitting an opportunistic local landowner, local politician or businessman who insist vendors pay ‘informal taxes’, often using extreme bullying tactics. Without information and organisation, vendors are unable to protest or voice their priorities, needs and concerns. They will remain vulnerable, invisible, marginalised and poor.

While the situation of markets and informal traders in Wewak is the similar across PNG and Melanesia, the country is unique in having legislation intended to promote and protect the Informal Economy (The Informal Economy Development and Control Act 2009). This IE Act provides an opportunity to return to the core principles of PNG’s Constitution, protecting the rights of the urban poor and the rural population alike. However, the PNG government has a poor track record in prioritizing, planning budgeting and delivering on social development, so implementation of the IE Act has been extremely slow. Most vendors know nothing about it.

Founded in 1999, HELP Resources (HELP-R) is currently led by a younger generation of development workers working in an extremely challenging development context. HELP’s mission is to work with local government and civil society to deliver more effectively on laws, policies and strategies for social protection and development. Focus areas are promotion and protection of women and children’s rights, community-based access to information and education, documentation and promotion of endangered material knowledge, and development and protection of the informal economy.

Jill Bosro, Manager of HELP Resources, checks in with a vendor at the town market.  Photo: HELP Resources.

Pacific Peoples’ Partnership and HELP Resources Team Up

In 2017 Pacific Peoples’ Partnership (PPP) and HELP-R planned a pilot project to demonstrate effective, district-level implementation of the IE Act, and associated government policy and strategy. The pilot project aims to facilitate education, information and training that will motivate and support emerging vendors organisations and their leaders to find their collective voice and influence planning, budgeting for effective Development.

Staff and associates of both PPP and HELP-R have previously worked together to facilitate PPP links with Sepik artists. HELP-R is based in Wewak, the provincial capital of the East Sepik Province, the gateway to the Sepik River, where PPP has well-established links with women and men carvers, weavers and painters. HELP-R has facilitated the communication and cooperation links between PPP and remote communities on the river and most recently has enabled one village to set up safe water supplies. However, the ‘Vendors Voice’ partnership is a new and exciting joint venture to realize a transformative process conceptualized and drafted by HELP-R.

The project is about making vendors aware of the PNG Constitution, the IE Act, and PNG’s commitments to global human rights and gender equality norms and standards and sustainable and inclusive development. It is about engaging vendors in participatory research to become more aware of the injustice of their ‘working conditions’ and the current governance of markets and street trade. The project aims to strengthen women vendors’ organisation, leadership, confidence and capacity to advocate for change and shape informal economy development as it was envisaged in the constitution and in the new IE law. On the supply side, the project will also contribute to the gender and rights awareness and sensitization of local government leaders and administrators, so that constructive engagement of vendors with local government is possible and effective.

The Commonwealth Foundation (CF) is the Commonwealth’s agency for civil society, supporting participation in democracy and development. It supports ‘civic voices’ to act together and influence the institutions that shape people’s lives. The Foundation works to promote peaceful and inclusive societies for sustainable development with effective, accountable and inclusive institutions at all levels of participatory governance, which implies creative and constructive engagement between civil society and other governance stakeholders. CF awards funding for sustainable development projects that contribute to effective, responsive and accountable governance with civil society participation.

In early 2017, HELP-R prepared a project proposal to submit to the Commonwealth Foundation and PPP agreed to act as the fiscal agent, assisting with the monitoring of project implementation, preparation of annual narrative and financial reports. HELP Resources is the lead NGO in frontline project implementation and is engaging and working alongside several other local NGOs.

In 2017 CF awarded a grant for the Vendors’ Voice 3-year project which aims to support women market vendors and street traders to negotiate for decent work conditions and fairer and transparent informal economy development and governance. The project supports women vendors and informal street traders to achieve this through effective organisation, mobilization and empowerment to raise their ‘Collective Voice’ and shape the application of the Informal Economy Act to market and street trade planning, budgeting, governance and development. Constructive Dialogue between vendors and local government and the development of participatory governance structures, mechanisms and processes for market and informal economy development, are at the heart of the project. Recognition of informal trading as legitimate ‘work’ that is the backbone of the local economy, ensuring a decent and safe workplace for women vendors – free from violence and exploitation – bring important anticipated results.

Sago and coconut sticks are favourite snacks in Sepik region.  Photo: Jill Bosro

Year 2 Builds on New Evidence and Opportunities

Year One of the project was completed in September 2018 laying the foundation for targeted training of women market and street vendors and local government leaders and administrators. From August to November 2018, HELP-R established a daily presence at the market, working through selected vendors to conduct daily tallies while also logging common daily problems. Hundreds of vendors were consulted and provided information at a booth operated daily at the market. Operated by HELP-R and other local civil society partners, the booth provided preliminary information about the project and its focus on good governance, rights and responsibilities in the working context of market and street trading. Information was offered, mainly through public talks at the main market, as well as through several local radio programs.

In October 2018 HELP-R with a team of vendors and local community development leaders, completed a baseline survey across Wewak’s only government-managed market and twelve more informal markets.

In a new development at the start of Year 2, PNG’s national government decided to include the East Sepik Province in a National Audit of the Informal Economy and UN Women announced that it will launch a market-based project in another rural district of East Sepik Province. In addition to the government statistical audits and the UN’s large-scale project scoping, HELP-R’s more in-depth qualitative baseline survey brings a strong gender analysis and rights framework that will inform and complement these new efforts to roll out government informal economy policy. In Year 2, HELP-R will focus more on women vendors ‘education and organisation for constructive engagement with local government, based on its comparative advantage in working with women vendors, informing and educating them through a range of popular education strategies and tools.

 Inside the craft hall of Wewak town market.  Photo: Jill Bosro

Once tested and refined in Wewak, it is likely that the knowledge, tools and trainers resulting from the project can be replicated to serve women vendors in other districts of the East Sepik Province and other provinces of PNG. This will be a significant contribution to translating PNG’s Informal Economy law, policy and strategy into reality, and to making the daily trading by women visible and valued.

You may also visit, ‘Like’ and ‘Follow’ the HELP Resources Facebook page, Sepik Market Vendors and Informal Traders.  Results of the baseline survey and project progress achievements will be uploaded on this site throughout 2019.

 

Elizabeth (Sabet) Cox  (email: sabetcox.png@gmail.com) has lived and worked in the East Sepik Province of PNG for 4 decades, in various sectors of social development. She founded HELP Resources with a group of Sepik activists in 1999, and later went on to work with the PNG Government and the United Nations. As Pacific Regional Director of UN Women, she designed projects to improve the status and conditions of women vendors and the governance of municipal markets across Melanesia. Elizabeth continues to provide technical support to HELP-R and several women’s rights and rural development organisations in the Highlands of PNG.

Filed Under: Arts & Culture, Gender and Women, Justice & Equality

PPP Featured Partner Victoria Foundation

March 6, 2019 by April Ingham

PPP Featured Partner Victoria Foundation

In 2012 with the support and assistance of the Victoria Foundation, PPP was able to finalize realize our long time goal of creating an endowment fund to contribute towards our future sustainability.  The fund was set up in honour of our first PPP Executive Director Phil Esmonde, who died in 2011, out of respect for his lifetime of contributions to peace and humanity.  Our Esmonde Legacy Endowment fund was made possible through the generosity of PPP donors, which was matched by an anonymous donor through the Victoria Foundation.  Recently PPP was able to grow our fund by another $9,000 thanks to the generosity of PPP Board Director Lorna Eastman, and another anonymous match made possible through the Victoria Foundation. Our fund currently sits at just under $40,000.  Earlier this year PPP was a proud recipient of a Victoria Foundation grant towards our One Wave Gathering 2019 program from the Foundation’s Community Grants program, and we have been pleased to work with them as they present community-based workshops around the Global Sustainable development Goals.

Learn more about this important organization HERE 

Filed Under: Partners & Sponsors

PPP Program Updates – December 2018

December 12, 2018 by Pacific Peoples' Partnership

Looking Forward to Hosting RedTide 2020

RedTide logo by Mark Gauti, T’Sou-ke Nation.

An essential part of PPP’s work is to provide spaces for peoples of the South Pacific and Indigenous peoples of Canada and their allies to convene, learn and exchange knowledge on matters of mutual concern. Over the years, we have hosted 23 Pacific Networking Conferences (PNC) on wide ranging themes of self-determination, reconciliation, and gender equality to name a few.

In May 2018 we helped coordinate the first ever PNC overseas in the beautiful territory of Te Whānau-A-Apanui, New Zealand alongside the host partner Toitoi Manawa Trust. Their vision was to hold an international summit for Indigenous peoples focusing on climate change. For two years prior to the event, a dedicated core committee and ever-expanding group of contributors and partners worked to realize this vision. Together we created RedTide: International Indigenous Climate Action Summit and Youth Conference. Check out the reflections from the coordinating partner Ora Barlow Tukaki of Toitoi Manawa Trust and this beautiful short film by Kl. Peruzzo and Erynne Gilpin that showcases the experience of participants.

Following on the success of RedTide 2018, PPP and our partners declared that we would host RedTide: International Indigenous Climate Action Summit and Youth Conference during the summer of 2020 here on Vancouver Island. We are thrilled to have the continued engagement of Pawa Haiyupis in this developing program. Pawa was an invaluable member of the original coordinating team that helped to design and develop RedTide 2018, and we are delighted that she will Chair the 2020 event which also marks PPP’s 45th Anniversary and our 25th PNC!

While it is still early in the planning for RedTide 2020, we will be seeking volunteers, partners, speakers, sponsors and contributors to help envision and realize this international gathering. Please send us your suggestions.

RedTide Youth Summit at Pahaoa Marae, Te Whānau-A-Apanui.

 

One Wave Gathering 2018 Continues!

Io’omalatai, a Jr. Champion Samoan fire knife Dancer, participated in the One Wave Gathering. Photo Heather Tufts

From September 1-15th 2018, Pacific Peoples’ Partnership (PPP) proudly presented the 11th annual One Wave Gathering, an international Pacific Indigenous arts cultural celebration. It was held with permission and engagement of Songhees and Esquimalt Nations on the traditional territory of the Lekwungen speaking peoples. Since 2008, One Wave has celebrated international Pacific community, arts and culture in Victoria, British Columbia. This gathering offers a unique opportunity for communities to meaningfully engage with local and international Indigenous artists, youth and culture, fostering an environment of solidarity and expression amongst Pacific peoples.

The 2018 One Wave Gathering spanned two weeks and was held in three venues, providing a host of free public programming that celebrated Pacific Indigenous arts and cultures through music, dance, film, digital art and community discourse.  See full details and acknowledgements here and the digital artwork tribute to the 2017 Longhouse project created by Austin Willis.

PPP was thrilled to have the Songhees Girls Youth Group volunteering at our One Wave Gathering in 2018.  The youth group ran our family fun activity centre, helped with set up and take down, and with a giveaway at the end of the day.  In return for their efforts, their group received a modest honorarium from PPP.  As an immediate legacy spinoff from their valuable participation, these amazing youth decided to use their funds to give back to those in need within the Victoria community during the winter season. Check out the story here.

In early 2019, we look forward to officially announcing two exciting legacy projects made possible through the 2018 One Wave Gathering. We also wish to invite potential volunteers and committee members interested in helping with One Wave Gathering 2019 to let us know at: director@archive.pacificpeoplespartnership.org.

 

The Songhees Girls Youth Group donated their One Wave $500 honorarium to helping Victoria’s people in need during the winter holiday season. Photo courtesy of CHEK TV News.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

West Papua News Update

December 12, 2018 by Pacific Peoples' Partnership

West Papua December 1, 2018 News Reports

Compiled by veteran PPP Volunteer, Andy Nystrom

 

In 2017, PPP representatives and New Zealand parliamentarians met Benny Wenda, a West Papua self-determination advocate and leader in exile.

 

On December 1, 1961, West Papuans first raised the Morning Star flag and received recognition of it as supplemental to the Netherlands flag from the Dutch authorities ruling that territory as Netherlands New Guinea at the time. Special ceremonies in many parts of the world take place on December 1 of each year to commemorate that first flag raising. However, the flying of the Morning Star is seen by authorities of Indonesia as advocating independence and challenging Indonesian sovereignty.

Here is a round-up of 2018 activities in Indonesia and elsewhere associated with the commemoration:

About 537 people were arrested across several cities in Indonesia before and after rallies due to violence and raising the Morning Star flag. At least seventeen people were injured including head wounds, largely from stones being thrown by counter-protestors. The arrests took place in Kupang in East Nusa Tenggara, Ternate in North Maluku, Manado in North Sulawesi, Makassar in South Sulawesi, Jayapura, Asmat and Waropen in Papua and Surabaya in East Java. In Papua there were ninety additional arrests, though all of those were released on Sunday; around eighty people were reportedly arrested in the Papuan provincial capitol of Jayapura.

There were about 300 demonstrators in Indonesia’s second largest city, Surabaya, on the island of Java, demanding a referendum for West Papua’s independence to mark December 1. Things were peaceful until protestors met resistance from around 200 counter-protestors, largely from the Communication Forum of Indonesian Veterans Children (FKPPI) and Pancasila Youth (PP). Some 233 Papuan students and one Australian woman were arrested in Surabaya (according to another source, 322 people were arrested in that city); the students were released without charges but the Australian woman has been handed over to immigration. She denies she was at the rally or in custody, claiming that the authorities are just keeping her safe.

The arrests have drawn criticism from human rights groups claiming that the arrests infringed on the West Papuans’ right to freedom of expression and assembly.

The Solomon Islands Prime Minister declared that his country will stay out of West Papua issues, considering the matter to be a domestic one. In contrast, West Papua’s Morning Star flag was raised in areas of New Zealand such as Canterbury and Takaparawha Bastion Point, an act that, in West Papua, could land someone in jail for up to 20 years. There were also demonstrations in Australia.

 

 

A West Papuan right to self-determination march carrying the illegal Morning Star Flag.

Sources:

Radio New Zealand: Hundreds arrested in Indonesia over West Papua demos.

Radio New Zealand: Solomons PM says his govt want nothing to do with West Papua.

Washington Post: West Papuans demand independence at Indonesia rally.

Stuff: Profile of West Papua gradually being raised.

Waatea News: Marae flies flag for West Papua independence.

The Jakarta Post: 537 Papuan arrested before and after Dec. 1 rallies in various cities.

Newsweek: Hundreds of People Have Been Arrested Just for Raising a Flag. Here’s Why.

Free Malaysia Today: Indonesia arrests pro-Papua activists.

Loop PNG: Mass arrests over West Papua demos in Indonesian cities.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized

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