Presenting my books to Founder and Principal of PNG Paradise High School during the National Book Week 2012. |
What you throw away can become someone else’s treasure. In
the year 1988 I was working as a trainee librarian at the then Goroka Campus of
UPNG. It was the first job I had had after graduating with a BA degree with
majors in Literature and Philosophy. I was a library fellow in the Michael
Somare Library of UPNG at that time.
During one of my trip every morning to the Goroka dumpsite
to discard all the rubbish I picked up a book that the library had thrown away.
It had no cover. The rest of the book remained intact. I took the book with me
with the intention to read and keep it.
It turned out years later that the book served the basis of one
of the chapters in my study of Papua New Guinea writing. The book, Three Short Novels of Papua New Guinea
(1974) was written by August Kituai, Jim Baital, and Benjamin Umba. The study
of this book was done during my Masters degree in English literature at the
University of Canterbury, New Zealand in 1991.
Part of this research is now published in my latest book Transitions and Transformations: Literature,
Culture, and Politics in Papua New Guinea (2013). The specific study of The Three Short Novels of Papua New Guinea is given in chapter 8 of
the book, which I am happy to introduce as part of the narratives that this
column concerns itself with.
The very act of writing
is a challenge many Papua New Guinean writers consider as a serious
preoccupation. This is exemplified in Kituai’s The Flight of a Villager,
where Iso shows the letter of reference to the young Australian to get a job as
a houseboy. This is a classic representation of writing as an important
instrument of negotiation between the colonizer and the colonized. In Kituai’s
story the signature of the referee and the written aspect of the reference are
more important than the person who uses the reference.
Benjamin Umba’s The
Fires of Dawn starts with the first contact in the Highlands of Papua New
Guinea. The period is one full of serious confrontations between the
Highlanders and the Europeans and their coastal policemen and carriers. This
led to a society disturbed and fragmented as in August Kituai’s The Flight
of a Villager, where the village youth attracted by the seductive city life
escapes from the rigid rules of the village. The Flight of a Villager is
a story about the first experiences of contact societies and the illusions that
follow such exposures to the outside world.
Tali, Jim
Baital’s story is about the great return to the village. The story is about
villagers alienated as a result of long years of service in the colonial work
force. The great return, however, is hardly an easy transition. It is the most
difficult thing for someone who has been alienated from the village. The
village becomes more negative to those who went away to work in outside in
coastal towns. The villagers disapprove new ideas and values. Baital goes
further to show how damaging this attitude is for future generations of Papua
New Guineans. Individuals become bearers of the residual guilt of their
colonial past. Baital embraces possibilities of a nationalist’s concern here.
He highlights some of the individual guilt and shame in a changing cultural
system.
The main characters in Three
Short Novels from Papua New Guinea are single characters. Each character
follows a line of experience, perhaps, parallel to the experience of the three
authors. The individual characters are often rebellious youths who are forced
to leave the village in search of other possibilities in towns. The qualities
of the characters are first judged against the society’s view of what are
considered good qualities against bad qualities. Good qualities involve respect
of customs, elders, observation of village rules, hard work, proper marriage,
courting, courage, and strength to fight for the society in times of invasion.
These qualities are absent.
All main characters in
these novellas, in many ways, accepted their condition as village outcasts and
rebels. For instance, Anglum’s son Tanawa, in The Fires of Dawn, is
murdered for betraying the village and tribe. He is portrayed as an element of
betrayal. His own society must eliminate him. The Fires of Dawn
highlights the contact with the first missionary at Denglagu, the traditional
land of the Kukane, which was resented by the Kukane tribe. As we discover
later in the story, Tanawa, Aglum’s son, accepts the mission’s word and works
on the mission station. The other Kukane tribesmen take this as a betrayal of
trust.
Iso in Kituai’s The
Flight of the Villager runs away from his village with a friend to Goroka.
Goroka with its hordes of problems, crimes, and seductiveness displeases Iso.
He lives a vagrant’s life with someone from his own village. They live on
leftovers brought by his friend. He eventually gets a job as a house servant (house
boy) with a young Australian officer in Goroka. The difficult,
often-irresistible, modern life always allures the rebellious youth into
voluntary isolation, alienation, and separation from the village. Iso achieves
personal freedom as well as personal liberation. He escapes from the village
punishment and the tax law of the council. This escape makes it possible for
Iso to reflect on the two different worlds in a conscious way.
The Three Short
Novels from Papua New Guinea were written based on the experiences of the
authors. These writers occupy themselves with conflict of cultures, escape from
these conflicts, and confrontations with more complicated problems in towns.
The village conflicts result from breaking of rules, disobeying elders’
commands, forced marriages, or sex related conflicts. External forces augment
internal conflicts and tensions of one particular society. Individuals caught
up in these tensions and conflicts reject such conditions. New laws, politics, religion,
administration, and education are the basis of a new social order and power.
These stories emphasize
the moments of transitions and transformations in Papua New Guinea.
Comments
Post a Comment