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Tefolaha was involved
in some battle between Tongan and Samoan warriors. After one of these wars
Tefolaha decided to settle in Samoa. He was given some land by the Samoans
for helping them fight the Tongans. But Tefolaha soon became tired of
fighting so he decided to leave Samoa, hoping to meet with new adventures
somewhere else. He travelled for many days, meeting with strong winds and
currents until he finally arrived on the beach of Nanumea.
When Tefolaha arrived
at Nanumea he thought that the island was uninhabited but he soon found some
footprints in the sand which he followed until he came upon two women, Pai
and Vau. They were weaving baskets and garlands when Tefolaha suddenly
appeared. He ordered the women to leave the island at once on the grounds
that he was the owner. The women however, insisted that Tefolaha should
leave, unless he could tell them their names. In doing so they were adopting
a defence that is frequently used in the mythology of the Pacific Islands.
This mythology reflects the belief that to know someone's name is in some
way to have power over that person. On Funafuti for instance, in a story
collected by Mrs. David, four brothers named Nautiki, Nautaka,
Valivalimatanaka and Naka attempted to save their house from a dwarf named
Nariao by telling him that he could have it only if he guessed their names.
Craftily, Nariao climbed up onto the roof of the house and lowered a large
spider onto the forehead of each brother. As he expected, each one was
called by name by the other brothers to warn him of the spider. Nariao heard
all this, and quickly went to the brothers and told them their names. They
then departed, leaving the house to him. It was much the same on Nanumea
with Tefolaha and Pai and Vau.
Tefolaha was known in
Samoa as "Folasa-Aitu" because he was able to turn himself into a spirit.
As he was keen to know the names of the women he turned himself into a
spirit so that he could easily get up into the rafters of the hut to observe
them. Then he took a piece of string, tied a wooden hook to the end of it
and, having climbed onto the roof of the house, lowered the hook down close
to one of the women. When the other woman saw it she called out "Pai look
out. There is a hook above your head." Tefolaha then knew the name of that
woman was Pai. He now wished to know the name of the other woman so he
pulled up the hook and then lowered the hook close to the other woman's
head. Pai called out "Vau, look out the hook is over your head." Now
Tefolaha knew for certain the names of both women. Using his magic powers
he turned himself into a man again and walked towards the two women.
"Why have you come to
my island without my permission?" he asked. One of the women said "It is
our island. We were the first to live here." To this Tefolaha said,
"There is, as we have already discussed, only one way to sort out who owns
this island. If you can tell me my name you can have the land. If I can
tell you what your names are, I can have the land." The two women agreed.
They asked Tefolaha to tell them their names. Tefolaha paused for a little
while and then pointing to one of them, he said, "You are Pai." He then
pointed to the other and said "You are Vau." The two women were very
surprised because the man knew their names.
Tefolaha then said,
"Now, it is your turn to tell my name." They thought and thought. They gave
him this name and that but none was correct. Tefolaha had now the right to
be the owner of Nanumea. He asked the two women to leave the island and
they picked up their baskets of sand and left spilling sand as they went.
From the sand they spilled the islets of Lefogaki, Te Afua-a-Taepoa and
Lakena were formed. The two women then landed in Kiribati where they stayed.
Having won the
island, Tefolaha then married a woman named Loukite. They had five
daughters. Four of the daughters were fierce cannibals with beaked fish
mouths, so Tefolaha had to kill them. The fifth, named Koli, did not eat
people and so was allowed to live. Some time later Tefolaha returned to
Samoa for a visit. On this trip he also visited Tonga, where he acquired a
new wife named Puleala. The children he had by her were all fully human and
it is from their three sons, Tuutaki, Fiaola and Lavega that most Nanumeans
traced their descent.
There are other things too, which swerve to remind Nanumeans of the heroic
Founder of their community. One is the belief, still strong among them, that
they are the rightful owners of Tefolaha's land in Samoa, although that is
now claimed by the Samoan Government. Another is, or what is at least
thought to be, Tefolaha's grave. In 1978 this was dug up near the residence
of Tepou, one of his descendants. A huge flat stone was found in the grave,
together with pieces of decayed bone believed by the people to be the
founder's remains.
According to tradition, soon after the first settlers were established on
Nanumea their peace was disturbed by visitors from Tonga. The first of these
is said to have been a lone voyager, a prince named Lupo, who came from
Nukualofa. He was first seen by Kaimoko, as inhabitant of Nanumea, who was
fishing on the reef. Observing Lupo trying to come up on the reef, Kaimoko
broke the long handle off his tae fagota (a round fishing net with a
very long handle used for catching reef-fish during low tide) and threw it
at Lupo. The prince was struck in the eye. It is said that Lupo immediately
turned back for his homeland with the handle still stuck in his eye. He
completed his journey, only to be found lying dead on the beach with the
handle of the tae fagota still there in his eye. His countrymen tried
to pull it out while uttering the names of different countries but they
could not do so until the name Nanumea was mentioned. The Tongans then
learnt that that was where the prince was killed. Because of the death of
Lupo, successive raiding parties from Tonga visited Nanumea to exact revenge
for their dead prince. One of the parties was led by a giant called
Tuulaapoupou. It is said that Lapi, a Nanumean warrior fought the giant on
the southern reef of the main island and killed him with the Kaumaile,
the powerful spear which belonged to their warrior ancestor Tefolaha.
Tradition tells us that Lapi was aided in the fight by Tefolaha from the
spiritual world.
In
yet another attempt to subdue Nanumea, a raiding party from Tonga was
destroyed by the combined magic of the powerful spirits of Nanumea - Tagaloa
(the chief spirit), and Maumau and Na Kaa, (the eel and the octopus). The
occupants of only one of the eleven war canoes were allowed to live. It is
said that the crew of this particular canoe were all octopus worshippers and
that, consequently, the octopus who was responsible for cutting the anchors
off the war canoes left their canoe alone. Noko and Ila, the Tongan women
who were with the survivors of the spared canoe, warned the Nanumeans to
avoid eating the leve, a poisonous fruit which they would be given to
eat by the Tongan warriors. The two women also informed the Nanumea warriors
where to find the weapons of the Tongans.
Another raid was notable for the presence of Laukava, a son of a Nanumea
woman who had been kidnapped by the first raiders, a generation before.
Despite fighting bravely, this party of Tongans, too, was defeated, but when
the battle was over Laukava's Nanumea ancestry was discovered by the
victors. He was spared, and allowed to live on the island. It was a wise
decision, for when the nest generation of Tongan warriors returned, Laukava
defeated them single handed. Moreover, he then persuaded the survivors that
a Tongan victory was no longer possible, and so they agreed never to return.
This ended the intermittent fighting and the raids that had regularly killed
many Nanumeans and disturbed island peace.
Meanwhile, despite the raids, Nanumea society continued to function along
the lines laid down by Tefolaha. He gave to his sons by Puleala various
responsibilities and privileges which they in turn passed on to their
children. Tuutoki was given the task of cutting up fish offered to the chief
by his people. His descendants are called Kau a te Nifo (the 'fividers').
Fiaola was given the task of passing food to the chief. His descendants are
called Kau o te Tufa (the 'distributors'). The youngest
son, Lavega was given a much greater task. He was to guard and protect his
father, the chief, on his journeys at sea and on land and to carry out his
orders. It is said that he was also given power to alter the directions of
the wind so that the chief's journey could be safely completed.
So
well did Lavega perform his duties that eventually he was appointed aliki by
his father. Mopreover all subsequent alike claimed descent from him. Thus
the Te Aliki a Mua, one of the two aliki clans (aliki maga)
which traditionally ruled (hopo) the island, traces its descent back
tohim through a notable ancestor named Teilo. Loeadership by a member of
this clan is supposed to be marked by successful ocean fishing and abundant
coconut production. The name of the branch means 'the front chief' and
refers to the fact the Teilo was older than his half-brother, Tepaa. They
were sons of the same mother. The other leading clan, Te Aliki a Muli,
meaning 'back chief', claims descent from Tepaa. The rule of this line is
characterised by an abundance of easily caught reef fish.
In
addition to the two leading maga there are five other chiefly
branches which developed later. Normally the ruling chief was selected from
the main branches alternately but occasionally he might be chosen from one
of the other. These others are as follows:
Te Tuinanumea. An offshoot of Aliki a Mua,
this branch, which is said to have provided carpenters for the aliki.
Te
Aliki o Tai
or Tuumau. The function of this branch, which was supposed to care
for the welfare of the aliki, has been well described by Anne
Chambers. Its members would organize and form the crew for canoe voyages of
the aliki (hence the word ocean, tai, in the name Tuumau ('stand
fast') marks this maga as having been descended from the aliki
Logotau, who stayed to fight the I-Kiribati invaders when when all the other
aliki fled. The role of this maga as leoleo (guardian)
of the aliki stems from Logotau's assumption of that role, and
members of the branch lecture men who have been chosen to hopo
(reign) on their duties and appropriate behaviour before they take office.
Traditionally the group is not supposed to rule but one of its members did
so in 1960 when he was told to do so by Government officials from Tarawa.
Te
Paa Heiloa.
The name means having no paa, or defects. Paa is normally
applied to mis-shaped wood, which the members of the maga are skilled
at carving into beautiful canoes. They also have a reputation for being
physically beautiful and for being skilled in the use of magic, which
enables them to catch very large numbers of fish. Sometimes they are called
Kau o te toki or adze holders.
Taualepuke
and Pologa. Both these maga are said to have done 'the work of
the aliki' but their specific functions have been forgotten.
Before the arrival of the Europeans the ruling chief was chosen from the two
chiefly branches. In later years some from other lines were chosen. When a
ruling chief was appointed he had to be well behaved. Traditional belief
tells that misfortune would befall the island if the chief's behaviour was
not appropriate to his position. The ceremony of appointment would occur the
day after the meeting of the chiefly members to decide who was suitable to
be chosen. The festivities of the day included the ceremonial fighting
called tualapalapa, in which the appointed chief's guardians
symbolically protected, and also hand fed (fakapuku), the new chief
in deference to his high status.
The ruling chief used to get a share of food prepared by the chiefly
members. This share, called faagaiga, has long since been passed over
to the pastor by the consent of chiefly clans.
At
one time the various aliki controlled all the land on Nanumea, but
this changed as they gradually handed over much of it to the tuaatina
(their mothers' brothers) who cared for them, to the toa (warriors)
who defended the island and to the fakaalofa (new comers) who were
adopted into the kopiti or land-holding extended family groups. By
1900 there were about seven or eight such groups although by that time they
were already dying out. Their decline followed from the destruction of the
old religion, since people approached many of the aitu as members of
a particular kopiti. The death-blow came with the registering of
lands in the names of individual owners by D. G. Kennedy in the 1930's.
Meanwhile the aliki families, as a result of their ancestors'
generosity, were relatively impoverished, although they still owned most of
the matafenua (that is, the ends of the islets). Thus it is that some
of the descendants of Taitai, a later migrant from Kiribati, have more land
than some members of old chiefly families.
The colonial government aimed to reduce the powers of the aliki. The
Native Laws of the Ellice Islands in 1894 recognised the High Chief as the
main member of the island government. Then in 1916 he was the main member of
the island government. Then in 1916 he was replaced by a magistrate and a
lesser ranking Chief Kaupule, while in 1968 the establishment of a
system of elected Island Councils means that the aliki of Nanumea
would no longer participate officially in government. Chief Kaupule
were supposed to be elected by the island people from among the aliki
but in practice they were often appointed, and summarily dismissed, by
touring colonial officials.
The last ulu aliki ('head aliki') to serve on Nanumea, held
his position for about five years, until 1968. Most Nanumea people believe
that this malo fou ('new government') put an end to their traditional
aliki leader, as well as to the Famasino and Chief Kaupule
combination that had ruled them since 1894. Nevertheless in 1970 they
reorganized the aliki system to the concerns to form a group of
twelve men called the kau aliki. This was to attend to the concerns
of the island in a non-governmental way. It would, for instance, organise
island events, set rules for wedding feasts, and care for the ahiga
or meeting house. Despite the important of such functions in the life of the
community the kau aliki did not last long. It was disbanded in July
1973 because its members felt that their duties were below their dignity,
and so degraded further their traditional status. The functions of the
kau aliki were then taken over by the Island Council. The final blow to
the old chiefly order came in 1974 when the leader of the former kau
aliki attempted to register the group as a club with the Island
Executive Officer (IEO) and was refused. The IEO said that the aliki
had no place in modern life, and therefore should not be recognized.
However, much had happened on Nanumea that must be recorded before that
point was reached.
After the Tongans, people from Kiribati (or Tungaru) started invading the
Tuvalu Islands. Thus Uakeia and Kaitu, two warriors well known throughout
the Tungaru group, conquered Nui but are said to have passed by Nanumea due
to the powerful magic of the Nanumea priests in making currents too strong
for them to land.
Nanumea traditional history tells that about 1700-1750 Taitai, Uakeia's son,
was more successful and landed on the island together with his sister Teputi
and a fellow warrior from Onotoa named Temotu. Tradition says that Teputi
warned her brother not to land on Nanumea as she had seen, through her
magic, the danger they would face if they tried to land. But Taitai was a
great warrior. He despised the warning, and his confidence was rewarded. The
three were accepted and apparently adopted into island families since both
Taitai and his sister were both married on Nanumea. Still, Taitai planned to
dominate the island. Gradually, he killed Nanumea warriors secretly as they
worked alone in the bush. Taitai even terrorised the island's chiefs into
fleeing to neighbouring islands of the group until he virtually ruled the
island himself. Logotau was the only young chief remaining on Nanumea. He
hid himself in the bush with Matio's assistance. Matio was one of the
island's warriors. He, with the young chief, plotted to kill the usurpers.
The plan was successful. They killed Taitai by luring him to dig a post-hole
for a new ahiga and stabbed him fatally. Temotu, who was with a party
of dancing girls, was killed when he tried to escape. Teputi, with all the
descendants of the Tungaru immigrants, was allowed to live. The exiled
chiefs, meanwhile, used magic visions to keep abreast of developments at
home and decided to return. They agreed that the first of them to return
would rule. Logotau, who had never left, was there to greet them as they
arrived and mocked them for their cowardice. Ashamed, they all agreed
Logotau should rule, but he refused, preferring to uphold whoever was made
chief and to use his strength to provide continuity as the chief changed
from time to time.
Though Taitai was killed by the people of Nanumea his struggle to settle
there was at least partly a success. Today his exploits are recalled by his
descendants who still live on the island. One of them is named after
Taitai's father - Uakeia. Remembered, also, is a grandson of Taitai named
Poepoe, who planned to avenge the killing of his grandfather. When he was
forbidden by his father to fulfil his intention Poepoe sent out in a canoe
with his uncle Pikia to folau, or commit suicide at sea. No one heard
about what happened to them until nearly 200 years later, in the 1960's,
when some Tuvaluans living in the Solomon Islands heard a local tradition of
Poepoe's canoe arriving safely at tiny Anuta Island. An account of this
voyage was also collected by the anthropologist Raymond Firth in 1929.
Not all fighting on Nanumea was against attackers from outside. Occasionally
our people fought among themselves. The most famous such conflict was the
'taro pit war' which occurred about 250-300 years ago. Probably because of a
prolonged drought, the inhabitants of the island had split into two groups,
one living on Lakena and the other on the main island of Nanumea. They were
forbidden to travel to each other's residence. Then, as today, there were no
taro pits on the main island of Nanumea. The people living there resented
their lack of taro to eat and decided to plant some on Nanumea, even though
that would attract mosquitoes to the island. Accordingly, they secretly
raided Lakena to get taro shoots to plant, and then returned to Nanumea and
started digging a pit. The Lakena people ambushed the Nanumeans while they
were at work. Each side then took up positions at rock outcrops (pae)
along the lagoon shore, the Lakena people at Pae and Kamu and the Nanumeans
at Pae Hoopuu. Rocks, and spears carved out of coconut wood, were the main
weapons used by each side. The leader's names of this war are forgotten but
evidently the Lakena people were victorious. If the Nanumeans had defeated
the people of Lakena, it is likely that Nanumea would today suffer from the
stings of the mosquitoes, as Lakena still does. As it is, the inhabitants of
Nanumea, where the whole population again lives, are proud of their
mosquito-free island and prefer the long trip to Lakena to obtain pulaka
to being pestered by mosquitoes.
This was strikingly shown in the 1950's when they forbade the Samoan teacher
of the new village school to dig taro pits at Matagi, just across the lagoon
from the main village.
The last fighting between large groups of Nanumeans occurred about 1840,
before the missionaries put an end to such activities. It involved the
members of two extended families, one led by a man called Keli and the other
by Laukava, who was seeking to avenge the attempted abduction of his wife.
About half of the ten men who fought on each side were killed.
Violence, exercised by one or two of the leading warriors, was also used as
a means of ridding the community of undesirables. The last time this
happened was about 1874, when a man called Kalihi was killed. He was
supposed to be killed by a toa named Moulogo. Instead Moulogo's
younger brother Tepou, hearing of the plan, decided to do the job himself.
So he met Kalihi one night and stabbed him fatally in the stomach with a
sharp-pointed club. Kalihi took the club and broke it but before he could do
anything more Tepou and men of Nanumea grabbed him and tied him up. They
then put him in a leaking canoe without a paddle and pushed him away from
land, which was another way of disposing of trouble-makers.
The next morning Moulogo arrived from Lakena ready to fight Kalihi, only to
learn that he was already dead. Tradition tells us that Moulogo was furious
at the news. He then threatened to kill Tepou, but was persuaded by some of
his relatives to leave brother alone and to join them in accepting the new
religion - Christianity. Moulogo agreed, and not only urged others on the
island to become Christians but announced his own wish to be a deacon.
Christianity had a difficult beginning on Nanumea. It was introduced by a
man named Tumumuni, who converted his brother Teuhie, a powerful toa.
Eventually they managed to persuade the aliki, Lie, to accept a
teacher, but only after Captain Moresby of the Basilisk in 1872 had
demonstrated the frightening power of a naval bombardment. A few months
later Tuilouaa, the first teacher, arrived. In 1874 the Nanumea people
showed that they had accepted Christianity by ceasing to practise the
traditional purification ceremonies for strangers. These ceremonies, which
could last all day, were a religious activity, intended to counter any
hostile aitu, or tapu. Yet they were also useful in a
practical way in that the ritual washings reduced the risk of strangers
bringing harmful infections to the island.
In
1922 (on the last day of the New Year celebrations) the people decided to
commemorate the golden jubilee of the introduction of Christianity by
Temumuni. They had no time to prepare a great feast. Instead they decided to
complete the conversation those families who had retained their old beliefs,
and named the day Po'o Tefolaha, 'the day of Tefolaha'. Some years later a
Samoan pastor changed the name to Pati, a word formed from the first letters
of Po Alo Tefolaha Iesu, 'the day of Tefolaha and Jesus'. This is now the
day on which new members are admitted in the Church of Tuvalu. The church
bell is rung as each member is accepted.
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