Paul's PNG CollectionPapua New Guinea 2008 |
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VSO Placement With PNG Assembly of Disabled People 2008-10 |
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Chapter 1 - Two Letters
Beginnings - A Letter from PNG
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Letter Home 2 - Xmas 2008 - A Letter From PNGWritten Nov. 2008 but sent later to avoid spoiling your Christmas Like everywhere else in the world, our dull moments have been filled by endless coverage of the presidential campaign in the U.S. Armstrong, my young Ugandan live-in volunteer agreed with me that we could not make a decision based on policy issues alone so we decided to vote on who had the nicest smiles. There was no contest. Charming Mr Obama with his ‘every mother's son' smile and Uncle Joe's ‘here you are kids come and get a sweetie' smile won hands down . Mr McCain, on the other hand, looked like a computer-generated character. His smile suddenly flashed onto a stern, featureless face as though he was suffering from a muscle spasm and disappeared as quickly, whilst the fixed-jaw smugness of Sarah Palin's perfect-teeth smile held no appeal. Our chairperson, Mr Tole Wia, would also win any election on his smile. He is a diminutive figure who wheels himself smartly around with the assurance of a man who has spent more than twenty of his fifty or so years on wheels. He effortlessly leans back into wheelies to get up steps and spins the vehicle around in the tightest space. Tole is a softly spoken man with a slight gruffness in his voice. His educated, considerate manner and generous, slightly shy, ‘angel-child' smile would melt the polar ice-cap. This is a man for whom the word charming was coined. Tole, has been my main and almost only work colleague since I arrived. We are supposed to be the national organisation for people with disabilities run by them. However, rather than finding a finished piece of sculpture in need of a touch of burnishing I have a block of un-worked rock needing to be hit with a chisel. That is if the chisel hasn't been stolen. We work from a store-room office with no windows or fresh air and do not, as yet even have a phone. In six years, it appears that no disabled person has ever received any benefit from the organisation other than the few that have run it and stolen its resources. Tole will agree but will win you over with an ‘angel' smile even as he is picking your pocket. This has been the unpromising situation of my placement and much of my time thus far has been a struggle to find a compromise between colonial bossiness and development sensitivity. If it all sounds impossible and disheartening then I should also balance the picture with the fact that the Government here is very positive and supportive, even if it struggles to complete tasks. There is a world-wide push to support disability issues and Tole has worked tirelessly to the point that he has to rest to save his health. We have managed to set up the possibility that we can re-launch the organisation at a major organisational conference for disabled people from across the country. We just need the Government to deliver the promised funding. As I suspected, life is a little monochrome after the vivid colours of Africa. If an African is the big cat, resting in the heat of the day, but springing into vibrant life at the slightest scent of fun or advancement then a Papua New Guinean is the buffalo grazing peacefully and amiably, stern faced and solid on the earth, until spooked, when it turns into the most dangerous of animals with a herd instinct. Yesterday I saw for myself the buffalo roused in two separate moments. At three o'clock in the afternoon I returned on the mini bus from the main business district to my office. I walked from the bus station to my office about half a kilometre away. As I walked down the sleepy road to my office, I saw some young men close together in a somewhat conspiratorial huddle. As I passed, I saw that one had his arm round the shoulder of another and was whispering into his ear. The other two were standing so close that it was difficult to see the recipient of the advice. This did not feel right. I turned to look about 10 yards further on. The recipient was angrily trying to shrug off the attentions of the whisperer and the other two were also looking animated and agitated. A woman walking my way offered me advice “Keep going, they are rascol boys.” No-one was helping the man, who presumably had been warned not to move or shout as they relieved him of his possessions. It was the fortnightly Friday pay day. Next morning, I awoke and decided to go off to a festival at the town beach. I wanted to call in at the post office to make a phone call on the way. As I turned the corner by the police station there in the car park by a police pick-up vehicle was a man curled in a foetal position on the ground, naked to the waist. A few people were standing to the side of the police vehicle watching the blood run from several wounds on his head into the dirt of the car park. My first thought was that he was dead; my second was that the police had beaten him. I was confused. I had to do something. Again, a passing woman enlightened me. “There has just been a fight. Some highlanders hit him with a bush knife (machete)” “Is he dead?” “ No, he is still alive. The Police should do something to help him.” As she moved on a large policeman with an automatic rifle passed to join his colleagues. I quickly phoned someone I could trust for advice. I asked what I could do in the circumstances, fearful of making things worse. “It is alright to tell the police that you are concerned and ask what can be done.” As I walked back to the scene, I was relieved to see that the inaction of the police was due to lack of first aid skills rather than lack care. An ambulance had arrived, and the young man was to be taken to hospital. These two incidents happened close in time and within 100 metres of each other in our relatively peaceful area of the city. They were unpredictable, unusual and left me with the frustrated and impotent feeling that I should have done more to help – the dilemma of city violence anywhere for the fearful bystander. All of my experiences at work and outside have led me to feel that progress is very difficult and slow here because people are still so close to their tribal roots, grown over thousands of years of relatively undisturbed co-existence based upon protecting your clan and getting whatever you can from others by warfare. These roots have been disturbed by the unsubtle excavation of the modern world but are still the strength and sustenance of the culture. Our version of civilisation is no different to the efforts of the missionaries to cover naked bodies with western clothes – the bodies are still the same underneath and the clothes very thin. The tales I tell you in this letter are really examples of how, even highly educated people still quickly revert to their tribal instincts and patterns. Stealing does not have the same moral context as our puritan view dictates; violence is still the way that disputes are settled for many and governance is related to tribal rather than national authority. This is confusing for us do-gooders and places upon us a huge task of trying to understand how we can create a meaningful dialogue. When it goes wrong it can lead to terrible consequences. Recently, the Secretary of the Department was upset. He had just heard of the murder of an Australian consultant who he had brought over to help his finance section. The man had not understood the difference between his world and the world of his PNG companions. He picked two local young men and took them into his high-income flat for a drinking session. Perhaps sex was also involved. He ended up being raped and killed – the boys had no thought for the consequences. They probably did not see any real moral wrong in their actions. I watched a marvellous documentary on the TV entitled ‘Papa Bilong Simbu' about the life of a Lutheran German priest who came as a missionary to PNG in the mid 1930s. Prior to his arrival in the highlands a Catholic Priest had been murdered – that is in our terms. To Simbu people this had simply been a scientific experiment. They had never seen a white person and thought it must be the ghost of an ancestor. There was debate. If it was an ancestor, then it could not be killed by a spear. As the priest died there was incontrovertible proof that he was not ancestor but a man. At the end of a long life in PNG the German missionary was so much part of the life of the tribe that they named him after a revered dead chief. He said that after more than 40 years of sharing the life and language of Simbu people he still could not tell you how they thought, came to decisions or reasoned. As he became frail, he was whisked off to Germany, where he died. Older people in Simbu were angry and upset. “He should be buried here. This is his home. He has the name of our chief.” They had been robbed of their chief and, more importantly the link to their ancestors. This was not just a matter of a Christian burial in any piece of consecrated ground to them. I am conscious that everyone is drawn to the violence of PNG society. My stories add to the ‘give a dog a bad name' image of PNG. As you have heard from me before the other side of this culture is equally, if not more, true. There is unrivalled hospitality and care in this culture. We have a local bar/dancing spot close to us that we go to each Friday or Saturday. Its name, ‘Paddy's Bar ', would lead you believe it is an ex-pat haunt. This is far from the truth. I am usually the only westerner there and it is owned by an M.P. who has probably seen the name on trips abroad. Invariably the PNG people come over to talk over the noise of live PNG Eagles, rock and local music. The same themes invariably form the basis of the conversation – respect and hospitality. Last Friday, I was sitting on my own at a table waiting for my Ugandan housemate to join me. A large group was seated at the next table. They were mainly small highlanders from all over bush country. One tapped me on the shoulder and introduced himself. They were all from a World Vision course on Tourism and Culture. As he spat copiously onto the floor between his legs, he assured me that they had learnt how to welcome people like me and how to help me to enjoy their hospitality. This was immediately followed by an invitation to join their group. I thanked him but said that I was waiting for a friend to join me. “It is how we are in Papua New Guinea. In our culture we must offer hospitality to people who visit our country. We respect you.” Of course, as the evening wore on their group merged into ours and spit turned into vomit at the expense of the potted shrubs. It is the custom to come during happy hour and buy sufficient cheap beer for the evening. The tables are covered in beer cans and bottles. The result of this is that a beer is often placed in front you as a necessary token of hospitality. I have never been asked to buy one in return. Nobody asks you to buy them anything, although occasionally someone in the street will ask for a bus fare. That does not mean that your unopened beer bottle on the table will not tempt a drunk but craving wantok later in the evening. Here you must drink fast to get your share. And so let me leave you back at the election of Mr Obama. My Ugandan friend noticed that with the change of a single letter his name becomes Osama – I then realised that if you reverse the names, you have Osama's Baracks (scary eh Sarah?). Anyway, the euphoria even carried through to PNG. I asked a woman from the Women's Council if she had been following the US election. “Oh yes. We were so excited when the news came through. We were at a conference and us women cheered and danced around.” “Why was it so important for you?” “Because he is black like us ”, she ran her finger up and down her arm. Love to all and season's greetings. Lukim Yu Behain Paul P.S. As you will see from my accounts, life here is not all-action, so you see that much of my musing focuses upon people. The other stories worth noting inevitably tend to be about gruesome and frightening events or corruption, both of which feed the stereotypes of PNG. It is difficult to find a way of avoiding this bias if I am not to lose you to sleep at an early stage. Thus, I am not sure where the next set of stories will come from or when, but I am sure PNG will think of something . |
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