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[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
I, ll Ii‘ 64 MALEKULA the mzhal temes are such as would naturally result from the tradition of common ancestry. ]ust as marriage is prohibited within the descent group in any one district, so is it forbidden between people whose “parentâ€ù villages are joined in this manner. The two clans, the one in Seniang, the other in Mewun, thus form a single exogamous unit. For instance, a man of Iumoran or its “ offspringâ€ù villages may not take as wife a woman of Melpmes or of its " offspring " village, Lokhtemismokh. Further, if a man of the village of, say, Ndavvu, goes on a visit into the district of Mewun, he is regarded, while there, as a member of the clan whose " parent" village is Timbriis, the village to which Ndawu is joined. Here he will probably reside during his stay, and he will extend to the people of Timbriis the kinship terms by which he addresses his own clansmen in Seniang. An actual example of such an extension of the kinship terms is the practice of Gastog of Melpmes who addresses Ambong Manggi of Dineur (a village belonging to the same clan as Iumoran) as “father â€ù. Should a man of Ndawu visit Mewun with the intention of seeking a wife thence,-he would generally act through the men of Timbriis; he would, so to speak, com- mission them to make inquiries, and one of the men of Timbriis would go with him, or with his father, to make arrangements with the girl's parents and settle the bride-price. The existence of the nahnl temes thus provides a mechanism by means of which an individual is given a deï¬Ånite status, as a member of a given clan and given generation, in the other district. Since the attitude of the two districts towards each other is one of unconcealed hostility, the only media of social intercourse are through these linked pairs of descent groups. Without the mlhal temes any contact would be risky; the system gives a man a kind of reasonably safe pied-d-tam: amid a hostile com- munity. It seems, however, that during any period of deï¬Ånite ï¬Åghting between Mewun and Seniang, the theoretical brother- hood between linked villages is in abeyance and revives only when hostilities have officially ceased. A "lasting peace â€ù must then immediately be made between them, while villages not thus associated with each other may carry on a guerrilla warfare indeï¬Ånitely. It is signiï¬Åcant that linked villages do not have a common gong-rhythm, which indicates that even in
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