My people gave me a lovely
farewell botaki and I have said goodbye to my Kiribati family, my home “Ocean
View” and the friends I made there.
The I-Kiribati people with
music and dance in their hearts and souls know how to show it and shared their
best with me in those last weeks on Tarawa.
Nei Leigh with her mother & brother
As part of my leaving my
island home I was taken to Buariki on North Tarawa for 3 nights to meet the
grand parents of Nei Leigh (a gorgeous 5 month old & my namesake !). We
travelled on a local outrigger canoe with a dozen other passengers, various
supplies and sheltering from rain under a well-used & leaky tarp.
The trip back was another
thing.
After an extended stay (no
canoes) it was an early morning truck ride to the village of Abaokoro before
becoming passenger number 50 something heading back to South Tarawa. Transportation across water is the only
option to move produce between atolls so bags of coconuts, crabs, bundles of
thatch, loose pumpkins and roosters were waded across the mid -tide to fill the
canoes hull and spill out on the out rigger.
Rooster awaiting rescuing !
A full canoe
For over a year I had seen
these over loaded canoes thinking you’d need to be nuts to get on board. I did
take a life vest (which seemed to get whisked into the hull before I even knew
it) and noted the rather jaded ones on board but I did keenly keep my eyes on
the distant land. We were all travelling fine until about 40 minutes out when the
engine cut, my OMG moment was soon abated and no great drama incurred, just a
roster that fell in and needed to be rescued !
Safely back on land the next
five days were goodbyes, packing and an ever change date and time for my
farewell work botaki. As I looked around my home I was starting to think why I
hadn’t learnt the skill of only having what you need, how had I managed to gather
so much stuff ? Each day and hour seemed to be filled with gatherings, meals, a
last game of tennis (which I won) and in real Kiribati style, no electricity
! This country really does
give it to you right to the end, another five days of candlelight and bucket
washes (big thanks to the rain gods).
My farewell botaki did
happen, the program was delightful, grand speeches in English and Kiribati
filled the ears, much food was consumed and my favourite, hours of twisting to
local music until sweat was dripping inside my new red and black tabuta. I was presented with a delightful small
decorative local canoe to place in my home to represent my steering of the organization in the
right direction and a miniature eel trap. I’m not so sure that too much steering
was done but I am pleased with the direction the “strong giants” of Te Toa
Matoa are heading, as for the eel trap I think it’ll gain wonderful “guess this
object” status.
My last two nights in
Kiribati were hectic, delightful and vastly different. One staying with friends
at a local “resort” in an enchanted grass roofed hut over the water with the
lights, sounds and mayhem of South Tarawa in the distant and the other doing
last minute packing to candle light, a dinner of brazil nuts and drinking luke
warm pimms and tonic with friends dropping in.
My home for second last night in Kiribati
Next it was the 5.30am
airport pick-up and my last moments with my Kiribati family.
Two trucks filled with 30 or
more children & adults, wheelchairs, mats, guitars, and a breakfast of
bread & tinned meat and toddy to drink filled half the departure area.
I had said many goodbyes to
“my people” in the days previous but I knew this was going to be the BIG one.
In my mind and heart I had played out this day and these moments, in my dress
rehearsal the tears would well. I was in unknown territory, what do you say to
people you are not likely to see ever again, people that you have seen almost
every day for 15 months, eaten with, danced with, slept alongside of, sat with
in their villages, been with as they buried their loved ones.
With some of the women & girls at the airport
In what I have gleaned from
Kiribati, it’s a place of contradictions, it’s polarising, it’s paradise and
misery, my airport
farewell was much the same. Explosions of joy and sadness
erupted as songs, hugs and tears added to the growing weight of gifts that
filled my bag and adorned my body.
I paid my departure tax, got
my red eyes through customs, walked to the plane and looked back to a sea of
waving hands. As the plane took off I had a view of the trucks waiting on the
side of the runway with everyone waving and smiling, my head rested against the
window and the tears rolled.
As the plane climbed higher
that slither of land, an atoll I have called home quickly evaporated into the
vast blue sea that surrounds it. The same sea that one-day may consume the
people, the history and the traditions and culture that I have been privileged
to part of.
Kiribati, it’s people, “my
people” have given me memories to recall and touched my heart.
UP NEXT : Back on Aussie soil
3 comments:
I can feel the emotion.. and you do seem to have a family there... must have been a big day..
Thanks grrl,yeah it's been an amazing experience. The weather here is more suitable to knitting so the knit one purl one recovery has started !
Can't wait to read your bak to Aussie blog, what u knitting? Andrea
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