This last week I have been thrown boots (well thongs) and all to collective living.
There are many times
when the gulf in our “western” thinking and living is far, wide and
poles apart from the collective way of being as lived here by the I- Kiribati
people.
I’m sure many others
join me in shaking our heads at the way people here share every thing, be it
food, clothes, kids, houses, smokes and money, virtually anything and
everything appears to be shared. The lack of sense of “I” or “me/mine” for the
most is very refreshing, especially from a distance but actually experiencing a
collective life was not so simple (for me).
So far much of my
experience has been on the edges, now I have slept, snored, ate and sung under
the same roof as the people I am here working with.
I have just come back
from a 6 day trip as part of a group of 11 people from my work taking a
community awareness drama and workshops to an outer island. I have travelled to
an outer island with these people before as part of an invitation to
a specific celebration. (as written about in an earlier post). This trip was different in that we were the
people running the “program” rather than being the invited, we were there for
specific tasks and activities.
Performing the drama at a school, curtians are strung up between the trees.
Good to know where your cup is. Both these wonderful performers are blind.
Most I-matang (foreigners)
who visit outer islands stay in local council guesthouses or hotels.
I was quite happy with little knowledge of what these places offered and my
expectations were not gleaned from "trip adviser" or worldly travellers. The
project budget allowed for each of our group members to stay in a guest
house/hotel. Arrangements and negotiations to book accommodation, tee up performances and
workshop arrangements were undertaken by my counterpart, sounds simple enough but I have learnt enough to kerb my questions preferring the KISS approach.
Many outer islands don’t
have Internet access and phone contact is via a pay phone (as in one physical phone) which is
contactable through the local phone provider here on the main land. As far as I
have gleaned the phone rep makes the call (to god knows whoever answers the
phone) and requests the person sought to be near the phone at a given time,
they then tell the caller when to call them. As in this case arranging phone call/s can take days if not
weeks to happen. If that takes a bit to fathom then welcome to my world, I just know it works but I am really
starting to befriend the notion of …
“….the
more one thinks they know the less one does know“ !
Part of the planning and
communication to the outer island was that the people I was travelling with
were happy to stay in a “local” house and on arrival we are shown what was to
be our home for 5 nights. A kia Kia (grass roofed raised hut without any sides)
for the performers and me in the little stick house right next door, sweet, I
lay around with everyone else and start eating fish and rice.
Meanwhile the community
is a buzz at the thought of an I-matang not staying at the hotel (which of
course I thought I was in). Without any flashing lights, daytime power, signs
or any idea how to differentiate between a hotel or any other building I stayed
oblivious to the commotion until it was suggested that we all move to the
hotel. With a guitar, keyboard, data projector and screen, stage (well coconut tree)
curtains and an assortment of bags we head to the hotel and I am directed to
one of a few rooms. The room was simple, louvre windows on three sides, a
locally made bed, mattress and a mozzie net and located right next to a
local bathroom. This was when I was to sleep and everyone else would fill the floor
space.
Floor space is floor
space, and that means sleeping space, it didn’t take long and I had 3 people
sleeping just outside the windows and door of my paper-thin walls.
For 6 days and nights of
singing, snoring, smoking and eating I shared the floor with blind people who
felt their way around, (one announcing he needed a torch to find the bathroom
!) a wheelchair user and others with physical disabilities.
Since a trip to
Australia several of the people are now wearing watches, it didn’t appear to
matter that the time was incorrect or be of any relevance when attending performance
bookings or local invitations. For many people not a lot happens in a day so
waiting isn’t a problem, everything that needs to get done will get done at some stage. As for
the never ending eating, it is a cultural ritual, what and when you eat doesn’t
seem to have much importance, grace may take 15 minutes to be preformed and it
is fish and rice whether it’s 6am or 10 pm.
Sometimes the singing
finished not long after the power went off (normally about 11pm) other times it
re-started in the wee hours and subsided as the sun peaked through. Given the
nocturnal activities sleeping was a popular day-time activity dispersed with
smoking and more eating. The Kiribati people are known to be able to sleep
anywhere and at any time, I just wish their snoring was a tuneful as their
singing !
As a rule I do OK with
the local food. I just can’t pile my plate quite as high as the locals do, I
like to call mine a taster plate with small selections each sitting alone. One
day I asked about papayas, next I’m handed 5 and was then presented with more
every meal, they were the only fruit available so I wasn’t complaining. Noodles come a close second to rice as
a daily offering, easy, open a packet, empty the sachets (of scary stuff), pour
in hot water, and present alongside the rice, tinned meat, papaya and what
appears to be meat from who knows where.
(only pigs live here and they are kept for botakis and special occasions).
Little pigs that will grow to be big "botaki" pigs
After days and nights of
being the roadie, curtain girl, tech geek with the data projector etc and
sleeping companion my desire to be part of this collective waned. I declined an
evening invitation (of which I learnt it to took a 20 minute speech to convey my
apologies and a whole story was given as to what had happened to the I-matang !
) but I hadn’t missed it all. My morning sense of enquiry as to what was
simmering on the kero cooker was taken back a bit when I came face to face with
a snarling roasted pigs head. The evenings occasion was a big one, 3 pigs had
been slaughtered and offered and they bought one home !
Another meal of papaya
was just fine.
I was happy to get back
to the main land, albeit more that half of our group stayed on as we couldn’t
all fit on the plane and I’m still trying to find the projector screen. It made
it to the aisle of the plane but didn’t get unloaded when we arrived back. Last
I heard it’s gone to another atoll in a totally different direction but have been
assured it will be back for the next trip (in 3 days time !).
Hope is a wonderful
thing, it certainly beats stress but maybe I’ll cross my fingers too.
Up
next : Time to talk about sex
1 comment:
That was your 5 star hotel experience?
Every time I visit here I wonder at the levels of patience and acceptance you have developed.
Cant wait for the next post.
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