Tarcisius Kabutaulaka is an associate professor and former director of the Center for Pacific Islands Studies at the University of Hawaii Manoa. He is from Solomon Islands.
Tammy Tabe is a research fellow at the East-West Center in Honolului. Her work covers climate change adaptation, cultural anthropology, indigenous knowledge, ocean resources management and ecosystem-based adaptation, gender studies, identity and diaspora, and Pacific diplomacy. Tabe is from Solomon Islands.
It鈥檚 the first time the Festival of Pacific Arts and Culture, which starts Thursday, will be held in Hawaii.
The Festival of Pacific Arts and Culture is the world鈥檚 largest celebration of indigenous Pacific Islanders. It occurs every four years, bringing together artists, cultural practitioners, scholars and officials from 28 countries, territories and cultural groups from across the Pacific.
Hawaii is hosting the 13th FestPAC from June 6-16 with the theme The Aloha State鈥檚 organizing team has been working tirelessly with the Secretariat of the Pacific Community of performing and visual arts, tattooing, carvings, storytelling and other exchanges between Pacific Islanders.
This is the first time Hawaii will host a large gathering of people from across the Blue Pacific, from Rapanui in the east to New Guinea and Palau in the west, and Hawaii in the north to Aotearoa New Zealand and Australia in the south.
There will also be representatives from indigenous Taiwanese who first joined FestPAC in 2008 as a recognition of the Austronesian connection and Taiwan as the place where the ancestors of many Pacific Islanders set off from about 5,000 years ago.
The festival started in 1972 by what was then the South Pacific Commission, now the Pacific Community, to showcase the richness and diversity of Pacific Islands arts and cultures, halt the erosion of traditional practices and foster shared identities and unity across the Pacific.
More than 50 years on, FestPAC notes that it is 鈥渁n important venue for the perpetuation of Pacific arts and cultures” and has developed into “a strong entity in which cultural sharing and learning from differences has enhanced our appreciation and knowledge of the region.” It also showcases new cultural practices that highlight the dynamism and resilience of island societies.
There will be a notable absence at this FestPAC. New Caledonia, the host of the next Festival, will not be attending because of a blockade of the island territory following over the French parliament鈥檚 approval of that would allow French citizens who are recent residents in New Caledonia to vote in local elections. Pro-independence leaders fear this would dilute indigenous Kanak votes and further marginalize them in their own land.
This is a reminder that while Pacific peoples gather to celebrate their arts, cultures and identities, colonialism is still prevalent with deep and lasting impacts. The Kanaks鈥 long reflects France鈥檚 insistence on holding on to its territories, which also includes French Polynesia and Wallis and Futuna.
The U.S. has its unincorporated territories of Gu氓han/Guam and American Samoa. Gu氓han is one of the in the region with nearly 30% controlled by the U.S. military. Colonialism enabled the U.S., France and Great Britain to test in Oceania between 1946-1996, of which continue to have adverse impacts on Pacific peoples.
The violence and human rights abuses associated with West Papua鈥檚 struggles for independence from Indonesia has long been a concern to the region. Meanwhile Jakarta rolls out its to strengthen relations with Pacific Islands and for West Papuan independence.
It鈥檚 likely many of those attending this FestPACs are unaware of Hawaii鈥檚 history of colonialism and militarization; from the U.S. illegal overthrow of Hawaii鈥檚 monarchy in 1893, land alienations, the marginalization of Kanaka Maoli (indigenous Hawaiians) and the use of their islands to project .
Oahu, the island where FestPAC will be hosted, is home to the U.S. Indo-Pacific Command. Over 20% of the island is owned by the military. Hopefully, visitors from other Pacific islands will and explore beyond the glamor of Waikiki and learn about the ongoing struggles of Kanaka Maoli.
Arts is a powerful tool for creating awareness about the political, social and environmental predicaments of Pacific islands. Marshallese poet , for example, used spoken word poetry to highlight the devastating impacts of climate change.
FestPAC should also be a venue and forum to discuss the appropriation and commodification of Pacific Islands arts and cultures by non-Pacific Islanders. For example, kava/awa/sakau and the cultural practices and the artifacts associated with it have been appropriated by foreigners primarily as a commodity for income generation.
Groups such as the and in the U.S. intend to grow and sell kava/awa. While kava/awa/sakau is socially drunk in many Pacific islands and is an export commodity for some, it is also central to cultural ceremonies, especially in Vanuatu, Fiji, Samoa,Tonga and Pohnpei. There is a renaissance of awa culture in Hawaii.
Similarly, cultural artifacts such Papua New Guinea鈥檚 , tattoo and designs, have been copied and mass produced by foreigners. This is a discretion of Pacific islands arts and cultures that could potentially deprive Pacific peoples of sources of income. It highlights the importance of intellectual property rights and the protection of cultural creators and producers.
The Secretariat of the Pacific Community with stakeholders, recognizing that 鈥減iracy, unauthorized use of designs and other intellectual property infringements are significant threats to both the livelihood of individual artists and to the creative industries sector as a whole.鈥
The intersections between arts and livelihood opportunities are important. Most Pacific Islander artists struggle to make a living off their craft. This is because of low demand, not being privy to the global arts market, or because they can not compete with foreigners who mass produce copycat artifacts and sell them cheaper.
If the arts and cultures were to contribute to sustainable livelihoods for Islanders, then cultural creators and producers must be protected and given fair prices for their crafts. Perhaps this is something development partners could work with Pacific Islanders on as a means for sustainable livelihoods.
As Pacific Islanders gather, showcase, celebrate and share their arts and cultures at the 13th FestPAC in Honolulu, this is also an opportunity to highlight the ongoing impacts of issues such as colonialism and militarism, and for visitors to learn more about the struggles of their Kanaka Maoli hosts.
This is also an opportunity to discuss how cultural creators and producers should be protected, and the role of arts and culture in the sustainable livelihood of Pacific peoples. Let us use arts and culture to protect Oceania.鈥
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Tarcisius Kabutaulaka is an associate professor and former director of the Center for Pacific Islands Studies at the University of Hawaii Manoa. He is from Solomon Islands.
Tammy Tabe is a research fellow at the East-West Center in Honolului. Her work covers climate change adaptation, cultural anthropology, indigenous knowledge, ocean resources management and ecosystem-based adaptation, gender studies, identity and diaspora, and Pacific diplomacy. Tabe is from Solomon Islands.
Cultural appropriation by foreign capitalists of the Polynesian arts is the final insult in long history of colonial expropriation and desecration of in all of the Pacific islands. While celebrating FestPac and its importance in uniting the disparate Pacific island nations, we should honor and support their continuing struggles for recognition and justice long ignored and denied.
oldsurfa·
7 months ago
What Do Sea Turtles Mean To You? I am 81 years old and for most of my adult life I have studied sea turtles and promoted their conservation. Since I retired from NOAA in 2017, I have voiced my strong views that a provision under the USA law must be created for the sustainable use of turtles for cultural and traditional purposes by the indigenous people controlled (colonized) by the USA government. At this latter stage of life my energies (and perhaps my time) are limited. But I will continue to do what I feel is Right. And it is Wrong for the people in NOAA, as an arm of the USA government, to not speak out for what is Right. If they did speak out, their superiors in Washington DC would listen. If anyone working in NOAA or in the US Fish & Wildlife Service (both of these agencies control sea turtles) tells you that they are helpless, they cannot do anything to help you achieve a cultural harvest or other traditional use, they are not telling you the truth.
A_Honu_World·
7 months ago
I am excited to learn more during this celebration exhibition... it's time for nations and countries to restore honor and dignity to all races and peoples... we know so much more than we did 2-3 centuries ago... le's be willing to acknowledge, and be the instrument of change..
IDEAS is the place you'll find essays, analysis and opinion on public affairs in Hawaii. We want to showcase smart ideas about the future of Hawaii, from the state's sharpest thinkers, to stretch our collective thinking about a problem or an issue. Email news@civilbeat.org to submit an idea.