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Prologue: Yumi lus pinis
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 October 2013
Summary
On Wednesday, 6 May 1998, a boat called ‘Maria’ belonging to the Tnialen clan of Mahur Island went missing. In it were two adult men, Nezik and Ngalbolbeh, and two boys, Gilas (sixteen years old) and Michael (Ngalbolbeh's son, eight years old). The boat had gone to the main island of the Lihir group, Niolam, but did not return late Wednesday afternoon as was expected. People on Mahur, including myself, became increasingly anxious about the welfare of those in the boat as the days passed. Stories were told of other lost boats, prayers were said in church, and dreams and other signs were interpreted for clues as to the fate of those in the boat. Eventually, the following Monday, the boat and all of its occupants returned safely.
This incident became a critical point of reflection and reflexivity for my view of the emotional lives of Mahurians. Some aspects of their reaction to this loss were so familiar, such as their fear and anxiety, while others were incomprehensible to me, for instance, the apparent lack of relief at the return of the boat. Additionally, the loss of this boat corresponded to the time of confirmation in the Catholic Church, which for Catholic Lihirians incorporates the local kastam (T.P.) of pindik. Confirmation/pindik became central in explanations about the loss of this boat, although later less esoteric explanations such as a lack of petrol prevailed.
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- Tracing the Melanesian PersonEmotions and Relationships in Lihir, pp. 1 - 20Publisher: The University of Adelaide PressPrint publication year: 2013