My goal for my time here: earn a title. Actually it’s not a
goal, it’s just something I would be super happy about and honored if it
happens.
Almost every one in Pohnpei has a title, given to them by
the chief (either the first or second or third chief of either the village or
the municipality). And almost everyone calls each other by their title, not
their name, which very roughly is the equivalent of me being called Julius-san
instead of Julius in Japanese (but only very, very roughly). So now for every
name I learn, I have to figure out what their title is. My target for next
week: start calling people around me by their titles instead of names.
Fun facts about titles:
1) The highest traditional leaders are the chiefs of the 5 municipalities,
called Nahnmwarki (paramount-chief in English).
2) Titles are unique within a municipality (there is some
doubling across municipalities, which then requires clarification of who is
meant)
3) Every title has a strict hierarchy that everyone (in the
municipality) knows.
4) You don’t have the same title throughout your life. The
chief can bump you up to the next level if you have benefited your community,
and he can also demote you (oh shit).
5) once a woman marries, she adopts the female counterpart
of her husband’s title. If the husband dies, she loses it.
6) It’s rude to directly ask someone what their title is,
because it forces them to reveal their status.
7) Only Pohnpei has titles, the other islands on FSM don’t.
8) Foreigners rarely get a title, but it’s not unheard of. A
peace corps volunteer girl named Erin that I’ve met up with got a title, which
basically means “single lady” lol
9) When you receive your title or an upgrade to your title,
there is a ceremony so that everyone knows to call you by a new title. The rest
is word of mouth. Having lots of people call you by your title, even in other
municipalities, is a sign of great respect.
10) And this is just the beginning of honorific language in
Pohnpeian, so exciting!
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