[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
WARFARE 213 any time be given by ï¬Åghting. This hostility is of a more or less permanent and traditional nature; it cannot be traced to any one cause, to any one act of provocation. Thus in olden days Seniang and Wilemp were constantly opposed to Wien, and similarly Seniang and Mewun were set against one another. Marriages between members of these districts could, and not infrequently did, take place, but when once ï¬Åghting liad been DECIDED upon a man's allegiance to his clan or district was expected to outweigh temporarily all obligations towards the kins'f0lk' of his wife or mother if they belonged to the enemy district; He was not able to remain “ friends " with them, and for this reason peace overtures were more difficult to set in motion ; they had to go on a roundabout way, through a chain of non-combatants or neutrals. Thus if Seniang wished to stop ï¬Åghting Wien, the proposal would have to pass through some six men, people of the district of Hurtes being the mediators, before it reached Wien. Whether there was any deï¬Ånite ï¬Åeld of battle where the forces of Seniang or Wilemp met those of Wien we do not know, but, as has already been mentioned, there lies between Seniang and Mewun, a strip of no-man’s land which in days gone by was the site for pitched battles between these two districts. In Lambumbu, as recounted in a previous chapter, the villages are divided into ï¬Åve mutually hostile groups. Fighting carried on between members of the same group is called nivaal lium (" village war ") and is considered to be a mere domestic quarrel: ' It is recognized as entirely distinct from warfare entered into between members of two traditionally hostile village groups. . 1 Of the war customs of other parts oi Malekula, nothing has been recorded. THE WEAPONS USED IN WARFARE The principal weapons used by the people of Malekula in pre-European days were the bow and arrow, the spear, the club, and the sling. In addition to these they used to make along the paths, hidden pits lined with pointed bamboo stakes (similar to the pits dug for catching wild pig), called in Larnbumbu ndwal mm nï¬Åmm, in which the unwary enemy might be trapped.