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PALAU HOSTS 9TH FESTIVAL OF PACIFIC ARTS

By Ruci Farrell
  All eyes will be on Palau in July when the tiny island republic hosts more than 2000 artists and officials from around the Pacific for the 9th Festival of Pacific Arts.

Palau or Belau, home to 19,700 people and situated south east of the Phillipines and north of Papua New Guinea, has a colourful heritage with influences from its Spanish, English, Japanese and American captors.

Described in tourist brochures as the Lonely Planet, Palau will be jolted into prominence as artists from 27 different countries gather for one of the most important indigenous cultural events in the Pacific.

Held every four years, the Festival of Pacific Arts creates a sense of Pacificness among island communities and is described as the principal platform for the collective participation in expressions of traditional and contemporary cultures of the Pacific.

The traditional welcoming of the canoe flotilla will be at dawn on July 22. Weavers, storytellers, carvers, dancers, firewalkers, traditional healers, tattooists, jewellers, potters, singers, theatre groups, tapa makers and musicians will share and exchange the many treasures unique to their own countries.

This year's theme, Oltobed a Malt: Nurture, Regenerate and Celebrate promotes new growth through which the essence of a people is not lost, dependant on the wisdom and endurance of their ancestors.

The biggest drawcard will be the performing arts, the traditional and contemporary song and dance, storytelling and theatre. There will be demonstrations, a variety of visual arts and applied design and architecture, canoeing and navigation, and a taste of the culinary arts.

The symposiums will explore the legal protection of traditional knowledge and expressions of culture. They will discuss the roles of traditional and elected leadership, natural resources as wealth, social changes and their impact on culture and arts and finally education and the future of our nations.

Koror, the capital of Palau, will be festival venue with the opening in June of the new Ngara Amayong Cultural Centre and the Belau National Museum. Work on the Asahi national track and field stadium and the national baseball field is expected to be
   
'The Lonely Planet'; the tiny republic of Palau, soon to be jolted into prominence as host of the 9th Festival of Pacific Arts..
The Toluk and Bachel, sculptural centrepiece of the Ngara Amayong Cultural Centre in Koror, where the festival is to be held.
Tausili & Susana, cast member of the Wellington play Vula, going as part of the Aotearoa NZ delegation to the festival.
  completed by July. Of special significance is the centrepiece sculpture at the new Ngara Amayong Cultural Centre which is in the shape of the bachel while the auditorium in the east wing is designed like a toluk.

A spokesperson from the Palau Visitors Authority says the entire sculpture was made from three types of local rock and showcases two very important aspects of Palauan culture.

The bigger black piece, the shape of the toluk, is a dish made from turtle shell and is strictly regarded as woman’s money. It is exchanged between women of a family or clan for services rendered like food preparation or services at a baby’s first ceremony or after death rituals, the spokesperson said.

The lighter coloured piece, which sits inside the toluk, is called the bachel and is one of many different beads or ornaments that make up Palauan money. It is worn around a woman’s neck and is indicative of a woman’s worth.

In a society that has a strong matrilineal lean, the bachel is commonly passed on to women or daughters who marry into a family. Palauan customs say the bachel should be tied around the neck of a woman by the family matriarch and can only be removed by the person who tied it on.

Even today many a handsome suitor will stop to admire a woman adorned with a large money piece or necklace of high valued stones.

The Festival of Pacific Arts, hosted by different countries every four years, has grown in stature since the first one was held in 1972. It is governed by the Council of Pacific Arts which oversees the operations of the festival on behalf of the Conference of the Pacific Community.

Countries attending this year's festival are Samoa, American Samoa, Tonga, Niue, Cook Islands, Guam, Papua New Guinea, Australia, Northern Marianas, Federated States of Micronesia, Solomons, Nauru, Marshalls, Kiribati, Vanuatu, New Caledonia, Tuvalu, Wallis and Futuna, Fiji, Norfolk, New Zealand, Tokelau, Hawaii, East Polynesia, Pitcairn and Rapa Nui.

Aotearoa New Zealand will be led by a large contingent of Maori artists featuring Waihirere, the national kapa haka champions of the 2002 Aotearoa Traditional Maori Performing Arts Festival and the Aotearoa Traditional Maori Performing Arts Society.

The Council of Creative New Zealand through Waka Toi, the Maori Arts Board of Creative New Zealand is funding the NZ delegation whose primary role is to represent the indigenous culture and arts of Aotearoa. Accompanying the NZ delegation is a small contingent of NZ based Pacific artists among them Cook Island artist Mary Ama, Niuešs John Pule, Tongašs Filipe Tohi and Sophia Tekela Smith of Rotuma.

Wellington playwright Nina Nawalowalo and her cast will stage Vula, a stage play that explores the practical, sensual and spiritual relationship between Pacific Island women and the sea. Under the power of the ever present moon and swayed by the constant motion of the tide Vula follows a cyclic journey through a Pacific day and night. Bounded by coral walls, the lagoon is the place of women. Within it they fish, bathe and on its shores they dance. In this place blend the worlds of the natural, mythological and everyday.

The Festival of Pacific Arts opens on July 22 and finishes July 31.
 
 
 

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