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[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
Ell l l ll? all ill‘ ill
‘ ll ill i Hi l in hi ll ll 1 ll ; ,. i . / 290 MALEKULA Tr-us PERFORMERS !N A Nimangki When a man enters a Nimangki grade the festivities are attended not only by the men of the candidate's own village (and it seems by the women also), but also by people from neighbouring hamlets. Most of these are only visitors, but certain individuals have a special role to play, and it will, there- fore, be convenient to have distinctive terms for them. The two principal people concerned are the man who is making the rise in rank, whom we may call the " candidate ", and the man who helps him to make the necessary ritual objects and instructs him generally; this last we shall refer to as the " introducer â€ù. It is to this man that the candidate gives pigs, both in recompense for his services and in payment for the various insignia of rank which he acquires during the ceremonies. It seems that generally, if not invariably, the introducer is a man from a neighbouring village. In the ï¬Årst two or three grades he is always a relative oi the candidate on the distafi side—his mother's brother or mother's father—who, in this patrilineal, patrilocal community, necessarily belongs to a rliï¬Åerent hamlet. In the higher grades, although theoretically any member of the rank to which the candidate desires to attain may be his introducer, it appears that a maternal relative or other near kinsman from another village is often chosen. Thus, on entering Naamel Amanrantus of Looremew had Ainding Vaal, his sister's husband whom he called ale, to act as introducer, and the same man performed this part when Amanrantus entered Nahnimiial for the ï¬Årst time. On this occasion he was unable, it seems, to complete the necessary payments, so he entered the grade a second time, when his introducer was a man called Aiel Ainding Vere, whom he referred to by the term navuziungk in view of the fact that Aiel’s father was Amanrantus’ “ classiï¬Åcatory " mother's brother. Similarly when Tota of Ndawu became a member of Nimew, he asked a man, Ates Vinbarnp of Nemep, to be his introducer— a man who stood to him in the relationship of father’s mother's sister's son, and whom Tota therefore addressed as iatai. On the other hand there is certainly no rule in the matter, for when Amanrantus entered Nimew, the man who performed this function was not, it was said, related to him in any way.‘ I As has already been pointed out, owing to the wide range oi the kinship terms in Senlflllg, every individual is related in a olassiï¬Åcltory Sense to every . '4 .1
. ii J u .l 1 v , s r . z
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