Photo finish at the Digital Village
Singing, dancing, loss, and legends of a time before contact
TARI VALLEY - After several days of digitally reproducing their environment and family, of capturing things and scenes these Hulis deem beautiful, clan leader Paul Poki asks if we want to see the most beautiful spectacle they know. He wants to throw a sing-sing for us, and have his family photograph the event.
So, as the morning light clarifies the land we gather on a ridge overlooking a barrier of steep, green mountains, where members of Tigibi village prepare for a sing-sing.
It is a long process, about two hours worth of primping and preening. No man can dress himself… it’s a group affair, with each helping the others. First the men carefully fit their tight wire-like wigs, adjusting the opossum-fur rim. They rub ginger into the matted hair, lave it with water, tease it with sticks into its final shape. Each wig takes about 18 months to grow, or harvest, and is colored with pork fat, charcoal and red clay. I push my finger into one: it feels like coarse felt, and resembles a seafarer’s bicorn hat of 18th-century sea captains.
The what and why of wigs
The wigs exist primarily as pin cushions for the various fantastic feathers. They stick the wig with frilly plumes of sulfur crested cockatoos, yellow billed lorikeets, tiger parrots and several birds of paradise. An everlasting daisy fronts the wig like a knowing eye.
They then push quills and pencils of black palm through the septa of their noses. They circle their necks with colorful bead and cowrie necklaces that hold pigs’ tusks and kena shells, the prized half-moon cut from gold-lip mother-of-pearl that was once the trade currency of the land. They sport tight arm and leg bands of fresh pandanus leaves, and an apron made from tree bark. The serrated beak of a hornbill, traded from the lowlands, hangs from the back of the neck; on the rattan cane belt is the dagger fashioned from the thigh of a cassowary.
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Didrik Johnck A Huli man applies his colored clay make-up |
In the midst of this orgy of make-up a very old man scuffles by the players and sits down on a log. He has the weary look of a man who has kept company with ghosts. I sit next to him, and with Paul as a translator ask him some questions. He is Joloma Angape, the oldest living Huli, who estimates his age at 90.
The oldest Huli
He has come, he says, to judge the sing-sing dancers, as he has done for decades. He goes on to say that he was in the valley when the first white men emerged from over the mountains in 1935. “We never knew there were other people in other countries,” he relates. At first they thought the visitors were spirits, perhaps the souls of Hulis who had passed away and returned, and as the apparitions approached the Huli scrabbled away like wild pigs.
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Joloma recalls the time with attachment. He says the white men “tamed us,” and goes on to elaborate: Now I am free, and happy the white people have come.”
It sounds a bit too politic from a wizened New Guinean in the company of an Anglo stranger, and as I look about at the dancers slathering their dark bodies in tigaso tree oil I see a sea of scars, all from pay-back battles in what they call Highlands Football. Some traditions die hard.
End of the dance
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The rich blue sky bends towards the sultry green infinity of the surrounding hills, a place where time has stood still. For us it is time now to go. I will head back and sift through the piles of photographs I am so glad my mother took over the years, a whole lifetime of memories. And I’m glad Paul and his family now have photos, too, so they can remember.
As we’re heading out Paul takes a photograph of Joloma, the old man. He then turns and says, “All the Hulis who first met the Europeans are gone now. They are underground, and their bones have turned to soil. Joloma is our last connection to the past. If we had cameras like these then we would have a better way to know what the time before was like.”
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Norm Singer Hands of the ages |
Great Escapes is exploring Papua New Guinea in search of the Digital Village, filing daily dispatches along the way. If you have a question or comment, mail us at .
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