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[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
272 MALEKULA - ‘- Seniang district, of N alauen of Lambumbu, and of the N imangki Tlel or " Sacred Nimangki â€ù of Lagalag, -The principal public ceremonial of the Nimangki is that which takes place when a man makes a rise in rank. Entrance to a grade necessitates payments, often on a large scale, by the aspirant to those who are already members of it. These pay- ments are made for certain rights and privileges, which are exercised by members of a grade and are “ sold " by them to the candidate at the ceremony oi his admission, and also for certain ornaments and structures which he assumes or uses during the ritual. The payments are made in pigs; thus one pig may be given for “making Nimangki â€ù, that is for the privilege of admission to the new grade ; and one pig each for such objects as the carved wooden images which are set up on the dancing ground; for the head-dress of these images; for the spear or hammer used in killing the pigs ; for certain trees planted during the ceremonial; for stone circles sometimes placed around the images or trees; and for paints used in decorating the candidate or the image. Of all these pigs, the most important is that paid for “ making Nimangki ". This is always the most valuable animal, and in general in Malekula, this is the only one of those paid which is killed during the rites. Seniang According to tradition, the N inumgki was instituted in Seniang by Nevinbumbaau, the ogress who is also associated with the Nsuinbur ceremony, with the Nalazewm and with the mythology of the culture heroes called the Ambai br0t.hers.1 This society is by no means conï¬Åned to this region of Malekula, but the bulk of information concerning it was acquired in Seniang. Here its religious aspect is much more evident than that of the Banks Islands’ Sukwe, but it is nevertheless primarily a secular organization. It is composed of some thirty-two different grades, which are entered successively by men desirous of prestige among their fellows and possessed of suï¬Åicient wealth to satisfy 1 Layard, however, records (pp. 175-6) a myth which attributes the intro- duction of the Nimangki to a. being called Atimis Malau, who is represented as coming out of the ground, peopling the village of Nemep, and introducing yams and pigs, This myth is curious, for Atimis Malau cannot be other than Texnes Malau, who, as we shall see, is connected with the Nalawan society rather than with the Niwuwgki.-—C. H. w. - % 1 4 < 1 »~''1’
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