Showing posts with label Western Highlands Province. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Western Highlands Province. Show all posts

Sunday, 12 May 2019

Mt. Hagen Cultural Festival offers spectacular feast of the PNG indigenous highlands culture

The Mount Hagen Show will be bigger & better this year

Icon of the show
Welda girl from Mt Hagen (Peter Kinjap)
By PETER S KINJAP (Extracted from PNG Attitude blog)
PORT MORESBY - 2019 has brought changes to the Mount Hagen Cultural Show committee in setting priorities designed to regain corporate sector confidence leading to the staging of another colourful cultural extravaganza in August.
A successful team lead by John Bonny has brought forward K30,000 from last year to enhance preparations for this year’s annual cultural festival.
Members representing various organisations have come together to form a strong team including Phil Kelly from Tinining Limited, Pim Mamandi from Paiya Tours, Pauline Grove from Trans Niugini Tours and James Wakapu from Western Highlands Provincial Tourism, Arts and Culture.
John Bonny said the K30,000.00 forms the basis for raising funds this year and he stressed the importance of business community involvement along with key government departments and schools to ensure that one of the world’s great shows will be maintained.
With a history that dates back almost 60 years, the Mount Hagen Cultural Show is one of Papua New Guinea’s finest and most popular cultural events.
The annual show draws tribes from all over the Western Highlands as well as neighbouring provinces for cultural performances, singing and ancient rituals.
Hagen
Moropangi Dakua men from Bonga, Lower Tambul
It’s a vibrant display of colour, culture and craft. The first event was hosted in 1961 long before Papua New Guinea’s independence in a bid to peacefully share and preserve the region’s traditions.
The rhythmic thumping of kundu drums is the first hint of the festival you will hear if you are around Mount Hagen’s vicinity.
With the last of the early morning fog yet to lift, the field behind Kagamuga showground is already a sea of towering headdresses, colourful flowers and plants, and paint-encrusted faces emitting venue with pulsating chants.
Preparation and dress rehearsals by each tribe take at least two hours. Across the field, hundreds of people are seen in various stages of readiness – tucking leaves, arranging feathers, painting bodies, examining mirrors.
For visitors, it's an opportunity to experience first-hand the customs of some of PNG’s 1,000 tribes in one of the most culturally intact places in the world. This is nothing but a showcase of ‘pride of a tribe.’
At Kagamuga showground on that day in August, you watch the sun's rays catch the morning dew as all the men honour their ancestors by dressing as old men with beards, black, red and yellow painted faces and legs mudded with white clay.
Hagen
Young Western Highlands girl (Peter Kinjap)
When they dance – holding hands and jogging on the spot in several lines – the rattling of shells, bones and seed necklaces form a mesmerizing percussion to their low chant.
War-like cries and whooping draws the attention of the crowd as the men march round the field forming a circle with spears and traditional axes.
Tourists duck and weave between performers, jostling for the best camera angle - snapping selfies and snapping at other tourists to get out of the way. Curious onlookers are chased and mock-threatened with spears and axes.
Performers are proud to be celebrities for a weekend, and admire and pose with endless patience.
In every corner of the field, performers continue to stamp their feet and shake their as gras (the leaves tucked into the back of their belts).
The closing dance for the day, known as waipa in the Mepla language of Western Highlands, is and usually performed by youngsters in courtship mood, giggling as they hold hands tightly and joggling in a clockwise direction chanting descants of love.
Boys start the circle and jump around with regular chants. Girls look to spot their boyfriends or someone whom they know who they can tap on their back to join them in the waipa ring. When they find their best man, they go round and round joggling through the afternoon until dark.
This year the Mount Hagen Cultural Show is scheduled for the weekend of 17-18 August.
Contact the local tour experts via the following email - pngattractions@gmail.com

Icon of the show, the welda girl from Mt. Hagen, pic by Peter Kinjap

moropangi dakua men in traditional attire from Bonga, Lower tambul (1)

moropangi dakua men in traditional attire from Bonga, Lower tambul (1)

moropangi dakua men in traditional attire from Bonga, Lower tambul (1)

moropangi dakua men in traditional attire from Bonga, Lower tambul (1)

Nebilyer men showcasing their colour at the Hagen show. pic by Peter Kinjap

Tambul traditional colour for Hagen. pic by Peter Kinjap

Western Highlanders passing on their tradition to the kids too. pic by Peter Kinjap

Western Highlanders in Australia celebrating PNG's independence with their colour. Picture supplied.
Contact the local tour experts for your next trip to exotic Mt. Hagen Cultural show via the following email - pngattractions@gmail.com

Wednesday, 31 August 2016

Western Highlanders are considered amongst world's first people to practice "rotational cropping" and lived an organized life

An Open letter by Peter Komon of Western Highlands to the Sports Minister Hon Justin Tkatchenko MP in response to the comments made on Facebook in relation to Hagen Eagles Official causing violence     

Dear Mr Sports Minister,

When the first European Explorers entered the Waghi valley in the 1920s, they encountered a people they described as more orderly, living in a more well-organised and structured society; a people who were more willing to foster relationships and trade with them, rather than attack. They were the friendliest they encountered in their Highland expeditions. They were my forefathers.

Successive European archaeologists went on to uncover drainage ditches and wooden utensils dating more than 7,000 years ago in the Valley's Kuk Swamp area.

My ancestors are considered to be among the world's first agriculturalists. They practiced the farming technique called 'rotational cropping', then peculiar to them and is now being used right around the world. This is one of my ancestors contributions to mankind. Or should I tell you also of their ability to cultivate and breed banana varieties or to manage the fertility of the soil using the casuarina tree? Now these are contributions I choose not to labour over for times sake.

My people have lived in a continuous, unbroken chain of human settlement for 10 millennia.

So you see my good Mr Sports Minister, your comments may be valid only to the extent of a reactionary and visceral outburst against actions deplorable and unbecoming of the management and supporters of a sporting team which I am not a supporter of, but I know who I am, my history and where I come from. My heritage is the source of my strength and identity.

Whatever you said, it doesn't offend me one iota. You don't need to apologize to me or my people because I know the truth of our history and essentially, we are more than that.

Some may have lost their way but I know for sure most have not.


Peter Komon,
Mt. Hagen, WHP

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Sports Minister Hon Justin Tkatchenko's Facebook Post
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A very very Sad day for Rugby League..The Primitive and the uneducated action of the Hagen Eagles officials and supporters must be condemned at the highest level.. We have all worked so hard to put Rugby League back on track to take our National Sport to the next level and as Minister I will not allow stupidity and the selfish actions of a few destroy this Sport...I will be directing in the strongest terms that the officials involved be banned for life from ever participating in Rugby League again and that a criminal investigation be carryout to arrest those that assaulted the umpires and players. Also the Hagen Eagles must be Deregistered and banned for life for not following and upholding the rules of ethics and laws of Rugby League. This is not the first time this Club and team have caused problems for the Code. We must never tolerate at all this sort of behavior. Finally I also would like to apologize to the People of East New Britain, the Gurias Management, Staff and players for having to go through such disgraceful behavior..I will do my best working with the PNGRFL to ensure new and tougher penalties are put in place so this disgusting behavior hopefully never happens again. We must all grow up and learn from our Past to make sure this never gets repeated again...

Sports Minister Hon Justin Tkatchenko MP,
Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea.
Sports Minister Hon Justin Tkatchenko MP

Western Highlands Provincial Flag 

VIDEOA look at how the people of the PNG highlands grow and prepare food.