Less than a week ago was
the anniversary celebration of the Mwaneaba for the Disabled Peoples Organisation (DPO) where I am working and a performance dress rehearsal.
A Mwaneba
anniversary is a significant celebration for the I-Kiribati people, they are much more
likely to know the age and date of these grass roofed meeting places than their own date of birth, age or those of their parents or children.
Here the organisations sign is being reattached high up in the mwanabea
Some of the work I have been doing here has been
around project management of a couple of community awareness performances, the
Elimination of Violence against Women and the UN Convention on the Rights of
People with Disabilities. We, well I, am working on a tight timeframe with
other commitments including a delegation of 13 members heading off to Australia
in just a few weeks. Early on, my Western notion churned out a project work plan
and timeframe, an alien idea for the very present living I-Kiribati people, and
it seems there are no local words to try to get us anywhere near the same page.
I know these people get stuff done, our cultures just take us down different
pathways.
After some time looking and work- shopping the
projects topics I leave the knowledge with the group to shape it into a
drama/performance that will be taken to the villages of South Tarawa and two
outer islands.
As for making a drama I am well out of my depth.
But I have been here long enough to know not to worry “too” much about their
collective way of working, but I am scratching my head as to how the transformation
into a performance is actually going to take place and when. As for my reworked
and reworked timeframe and work plan I’m thinking I may as well start using
them to make paper planes and consider a career change, pilot maybe !
I am blessed, I am in the presence of an amazing
talented bunch of performers, composers and singers who come from a strong oral
culture. Story telling and the use of drama and skits are a popular method of
communication and awareness, it is the path we take for these projects too.
A script is written, music and songs are composed,
lines are learnt, backdrop and stage curtains are made, tee shirts are
purchased and bingo we have a production in less that 2 weeks ! Much
negotiation took place to select the 14 person cast of which only 8 will carry
onto the outer islands due to budget constraints. The performers are
all people with disabilities (blind, wheelchair users or those with physical
impairments) and are chosen in an
equitable manner to allow all TTM members to have opportunities in participation. (There is
a lot for me and all of us to learn from these people.)
Drama rehearsal in the mwaneaba which at the same time is being repaired after a big storm. This is the oraganisations meeting place but also where some of the people with disabilities & their families live.
I have learnt that as an I-matang here I am very
fortunate as my work is very much on the ground and with the people as opposed
to being at a ministry in a public service role. While most capacity building roles both paid and voluntary
are working alongside locals I am right amongst them everyday in daily
living; young, old, babies, male, female, single, married able bodied and disabled.
Back at my welcoming ceremony in January I said Te
Toa Matoa were going to be my Kiribati family, this was well before knowing
what this would actually mean.
It’s only about a month since I lay next to my co-workers body as she
was laid out in her wedding dress and flowers ready for burial. I may have only
know her 6 months but her extended family of Te Toa Matoa members and relatives
took me in as part of their community and helped me get through that long day. I had moments overcome with emotion,
pain and sorrow that spilled over into tears, no words were needed, they were my
Kiribati family and I felt held.
Back to last weeks celebration and performance. My
request to invite fellow volunteers to share the evening and these wonderful
people was well received. Guests in this culture are very welcomed and treated
accordingly. We sat on mats placed in prime position, were treated to a welcome
in speech, song and dance and presented with beautiful garlands. I love the
flowers in the hair thing, a scented and colourful crown to really give that
regal aura. The garland dance started and I counted five garlands, but wait
there’s six of us, what’s going on ?
My fellow friends looked wonderful in their headdress while I disguised my disappointment. A day later (still holding onto my dropped lip !) I got around to making a joke about being a garland short at the botaki (celebration/feast). These people are the kings and queens of protocol, this wasn’t an over sight, the garlands were only for guests not for everyone. My suggestion that they had forgottem me was met with laughter and the words
“but you are one of us”.
My fellow friends looked wonderful in their headdress while I disguised my disappointment. A day later (still holding onto my dropped lip !) I got around to making a joke about being a garland short at the botaki (celebration/feast). These people are the kings and queens of protocol, this wasn’t an over sight, the garlands were only for guests not for everyone. My suggestion that they had forgottem me was met with laughter and the words
“but you are one of us”.
Heading off in the back of truck for the first performance two nights ago.
Same night, same truck, driving down the airstrip, it's only road without pot holes ! Beautiful skies here at dusk.
As of yesterday I really am feeling like one of
them, maybe just not in the way I’d like. I am surprised it’s taken this long,
I have kids using me as a monkey bar and hanging off me almost every day. They may
or may not have their clothes on the right way or any at all, definitely no
shoes, have the biggest of smiles and cheekiness, they also scratch their
heads…………………..er yes I have got to middle age and managed to get head lice
!
Pass me the flowers, I'm not feeling so regal.
Pass me the flowers, I'm not feeling so regal.
1 comment:
OK, so lice treatment as well??
I am happy to receive an update on our journey.
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