ALL
fiji
ICH Elements 20
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Traditional Fish Net, Lawa ni Qoli - Buinigone, Fiji
An endangered ICH in need of urgent safeguarding (only the Tunidau knows the art of net weaving) A keen to the purse seine nets (modern forms have used nylon) of Guinea: sack-like feature According to the Tunidau (head fishermen), the Late Asaeli Tabuadrau, the net is over 100yrs old … it undergoes kuvui (smoking) to keep it durable! It encompasses the iTaukei concept of “solesolevaki” & “veivakaturagataki”
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The Sacred Kava Ritual
Throughout the Pacific, kava is synonymous as the elixir or drink of the gods. Known in various words ranging from kau, sakau, kava, ava and yaqona, the ritual commonality is similar. This video revisits the sacred kava ritual from a retelling of the indigenous spirituality and worldview as far as yaqona, chiefs, mana, power and the people are involved.
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Ibe Vakaurua
Vakaurua is a traditional iconic mat for the island of Nairai.
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TABEKASERE
Tabekasere is traditional basket made from a local species of bamboo. It is an iconic heritage craft in Navatusila, a highland tribe on mainland Vitilevu, located about 4 - 6 hours away from Suva.
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SAKOSAKO DRAUNA; traditional dessert by Nabuna village, Lomaiviti, Fiji.
The SAKOSAKO DRAUNA is a food tradition expression by the Naduruvesi sub-clan in Nabuna Village. It is a food dessert made from dalo (Colocasia esculenta), and coconut milk. The uniqueness of it is such that the dessert have a whole green dalo plant, severed in its raw state, as dessert.
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Traditional Food Preservation Methods - Toni Kora (Fermented Grated Coconut)
Kota is a Fijian delicacy that is commonly produced in the maritime islands as well as the coastal areas, and has been passed down the generations. This is simply a fermented product made from grated coconut soaked in seawater for several weeks or even months to get its unique taste. In the picture, women of Qoma island are wrapping grated coconut in banana leaves to be soaked in sea water during high tide.
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Bulu - The spirit World according to the iTaukei Culture of the Fijian People
It is important to define Bulu or the spirit world because it can be a foundation to which our beliefs are derived from. It is understood that our culture is ‘fixated on Bulu’ (Sekove Bigitibau). If this is so, then our culture, customs and ethos are focused towards the spirit world known as Bulu. Prior to Christianity, who’s to say that the beliefs of our ancestors were inaccurate? It is a common belief that Christianity was the best thing to happen to our vanua. On the contrary, Christianity brought about the demonization of iTaukei belief system. At the offset, the missionaries knew that there was an existing belief system unfortunately they chose to disregard this and not use it as a foundation for Christian faith. If they had contextualized the Christian faith, they would have also valued iTaukei culture. There would be minor alterations to the protocols but more focused to the God Almighty, Jehovah.
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Original settlers in Fiji - traced through pottery fragments
LAPITA In 1917, Maurice Piroutet a French geologist discovered pottery shards along the coast of Fouē in the province of Konē in New Caledonia. The design was similar to the tapa motifs in the Lau group today. The pottery fragments were named after the beach from it was found. The name then was extended to all places in the Pacific in which the shards were found. HOW OLD ARE THE RELICS. There is geological and archaeological evidence of a certain group of people who navigated the Pacific Ocean with distinctive pottery design known as Lapita. Science and carbon dating can determine the age of a relic and the year in which the owner inhabited an island. WHO WERE THE LAPITA PEOPLE? Researchers found that prior to the habitation of the Pacific, a group of people called the Austronesians existed. They are identified through their language family. During those days, the language was not so diverse as today. 3,500 years ago they navigated the Pacific Ocean with their double-hulled canoes called the Drua. Evidence stipulated that these people originated from South China. They brought with them a distinctive pottery design, domesticated animals such as pigs, chicken, dogs and geminated trees such as breadfruit. They are the inhabitants of today’s Madagascar, South East Asia, Bismarck Archipelago near Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, New Caledonia, Fiji, Samoa, Hawaii, Rapanui and New Zealand.
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TRADITIONAL KNOWLEDGE ON DISASTER RISK REDUCTION, \u000b\u000bFijian Traditional Knowledge & Pre Cyclone Indicators\u000b
Traditional Knowledge can also be referred to as indigenous or local knowledge, however for the sake of consistency, Traditional Knowledge will be used. Traditional Knowledge refers to the holistic total of an indigenous people’s understanding of the world. While the term is often used in relation to oral history, its bounds are much broader. ‘Traditional Knowledge can refer to knowledge of past events, but also encompasses peoples’ embodied practices, spirituality, morality, ideologies, modes of artistic (or abstract) expression, and the ways in which knowledge is acquired and passed on through generations. Traditional Knowledge systems extend into the present, and are alive and constantly adapted in order to remain relevant to contemporary indigenous life. The term is predominantly used to designate those knowledge systems that are markedly different from the dominant Western systems of knowledge. Traditional or Indigenous knowledge is a: body of information passed down through generations in a given locality and acquired through the accumulation of experiences, relationships with the surrounding environment, and traditional community rituals, practices and institutions. In light of that, the iTaukei people from Fiji, have traditional knowledge of identifying early signs of natural disasters.
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Ritual - Inculturation - The old and new spirituality of the Fijian people
This article examines the notion of inculturation especially where the Gospel of Christ resonates with the iTaukei culture. Christian Missionaries arrived on Fiji’s shores in 1830 but the actual works of the Wesleyan Missionaries in Lakeba started in 1835 (Bigitibau 2007:13). Apart from Evangelization, missionaries targeted cultural elements to influence the masses. They critiqued beliefs they considered were against Biblical teachings and encouraged the practice of elements that were compatible (Bigitibau 2007:13). The intergration is one reason Christianity is still popular today with the Fijian population. Cultural elements that were encouraged during church service included isevu or the First Fruit Harvest, vosa vakavanua ni somate or traditional eulogy, vosa ni veikidavaki or traditional welcome speech by the host, dolei ni vosa ni veikidavaki or verbal acknowledgement by visitors and luvanitai or a kava ceremony to welcome and show gratitude to the presider of the church service.
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Traditional Fishing Methods (Turtle Fishnet)\u000b
The people of Qoma Island (Fiji) for generations have been traditional fisherfolk for the Ratu mai Verata, the overlord of Verata, an ancient kingdom in today’s Tailevu province. They also serve the Ratu mai Dawasamu and are administratively under the Ratu of Namena with the present system of provincial administration. All come under today’s Tailevu province on eastern mainland Vitilevu. They are renown for their traditional knowledge of fishing in observing the ocean currents, wind direction, the sky, understanding their fishing zones, the seasonal and temporal nature of fishing activities. It is their traditional obligation to present turtle to the chiefs of Verata and Dawasamu. There are established traditional protocols; from catching turtle to its presentation process, its taboos and strict adherence to elders who will be leading the delegation.
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Ancient sounds in Fiji
Ancient sounds in Fiji is still echoed in traditional chant, traditional dances, polyphony, and sacred psalms. It is found to be unique from western sounds and sounds in many parts of the world. Most current Fijian music has adopted western sounds, this includes church hymns, folk songs, serenades, and also Tongan sounds which is practiced in serevakalau known as Polotu and also pesi (Lauan folksongs). Aporosa a traditional cartographer form Beqa stated that there was no Fijian alphabet, but instead was the practice of oral transmission through traditional dances. Lyrics, cartographer and sound were transmitted through vision (Bulivou, 1985). Once ancient sounds were not composed, it was inherently transmitted through the vanua as a gift, and intrinsically maintained its mana in the vanua livelihood.
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