|
[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
,. at it? g g THE NIMANGKI AND NELEMEW 373 with the ï¬Årst three grades, but a very interesting part of the ritual of Miliun is recorded. A man who aspires to the highest ehieftainship by entrance into this grade invites a party from two villages which are both distant from his own and from each other, and which may even belong to different districts. The dancing ground is then swept, cleaned, and decorated, and divided into two parts by a broad track (described by the informant as “ all same gov'ment road") edged with small stakes. In each division a club-house is built for the housing of the guests. Each party of visitors, accompanied by its chief, takes up its position in one of these divisions of the dancing ground. Their faces are painted, and fowls’ feathers adom their hair. When everything is ready, one party advances to the edge of the dividing track; thereupon the other rushes forward also, armed with human bones, with which they attempt to beat their 1)is1i—v'is. After a time the contest stops, and the erstwhile attacking party becomes the attacked. Thus changing their roles altemately, the two groups continue to strive, until the chief, Whose guests they are, orders them to cease. Through- out, no man oi either side may cross the boundary which divides the two forces. When all is over the chief who is celebrating the festival, kills the pigs which are tied to the line of mon0liths,' and distributes them to the chiefs of the two companies of guests. A feature of peculiar interest in connection with the Nimangki of the Big Nambas is the use of kava. Kava-drinking is unknown elsewhere in Malekula, but it is said that the kava plant is used in the ritual of some of the high N imangki grades of Seniang, and also in connection with the ceremony of Making Man (Nogha Tilabwe) in Mewun. Among the Big Nambas the drink, called by them malokh, is prepared in a trough made from the dried spathe of a coco-nut (see Plate XXIVA). Such a trough is always found inside the men's club-house, near the entrance. Five or six men take pieces of kava root, chew them vigorously, and then in tum spit the chewed mass into the trough which has been filled with water. Another man sits beside this trough and stirs the water and its contents until they form a thick, yellowish .liquid. This is then consumed in a ceremonial manner. just 1 The pl§S are not killed on stone tables as is the practice in Espiritu s-aw. (A. E. Deacon, me, Pr 49l.)—A. B. D.
|