[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
CHAPTER II THE VILLAGE AND VILLAGE LIFE THE VILLAGES » Apart from those of the district of Seniang, Deacon left no record of the general plan of Malekulan villages, but what he noticed in the south-west is of considerable interest and importance, for here the arrangement of the houses reflects certain fundamental ideas of the people. According to them there are two hostile qualities or properties—igah and ileo—the former belonging especially to women, and by analogy to the female of all species, as, for instance, a sow; the latter belonging to men and all things male. Ileo has been translated “ sacred â€ù, but it would be a great misapprehension to translate igah as " profane â€ù. The true signiï¬Åcance of these words will be considered in a later chapter, suflice it to say here that they are believed to be strongly antipathetic and for this reason things igah must be kept separate from things ileo. For this reason the Seniang village is divided into two parts. At one end are the dwelling-houses, occupied for the most part by the women and children. The houses are not, it seems, arranged in any particular order, but according to the whim of the owner; there is no central street or square. At the other end of the village is the men's club-house or amel. Here numerous sacred objects are kept,‘ and here the men sit and yarn, engage in the making of tools andweapons, eat together, and discuss matters of state, safe -from interruption by their womenfolk. Between the amel and the ‘dwelling-houses is the dancing ground, in the centre of which stand and lie the carved wooden gongs which play so important ‘a part in the ceremonial and in the everyday life of the people. Separating the dancing ground from the dwelling- houses is a boundary called the naai save, “ the wooden barrier," which is made‘ of a bamboo fence or a line of trees and shrubs. On ordinary occasions, this barrier does not hide the dancing ground from view, but when the men are engaged in the celebra- tion of religious rites from which the women are wholly barred 23