Sunday, July 26, 2015

68: History Gossip

Last Night we went to the local sakau bar, because Nohno threw a “fundraiser” for her trip to Chuuk (she’s leaving tonight and coming back on the day of my departure, because her maternal uncle living in California passed away and his body will pass through Chuuk on the way to his home island Namoluk in the Mortlocks, where he will be buried. Long story).
The sakau was pretty strong, so I got a little beschnasselt.
Anyways, I ended up getting a really juicy history lesson about Pakin. Turns out the people of Pakin haven’t been living there as long as I thought they did. It all began with the casual piece of information that the Namwarki (translates to paramount chief / king. If the chief of Pakin is a dictator, the Namwarki is a sacred emperor. It’s crazy.) anyway, that the Namwarki lived on Pakin and gave very strict and effective conservation decrees. So I wondered: if the people of Pakin came from the Mortlocks in 1907, how could one of them as a non-Pohnpeian gain the highest traditional rank in Pohnpeian culture, given that this rank is usually passed down a bloodline? That’s where the juicy history unraveled:
  1. Turns out Namwarki Kalio was elected, and didn’t inherit the title.
  2. That’s because during the Sokehs rebellion, the German colonial government killed almost all Pohnpeians in Sokehs, including the Namwarki. That’s what “made room” for the immigrants from the Mortlocks. After that, there was no Namwarki in Sokehs for a long time.
  3. Until the Japanese decided to re-instate a Namwarki. And they chose a non-Pohnpeian from the Mortlocks: Kalio. Why? Apparently Kalio was a political genius – he was also chief magister (highest government official in Sokehs). No one challenged Kalio, because if you did, the Japanese would kill you.
  4. Of course, after the Japanese were defeated, Kalio’s reign was challenged during the early period of US occupation by the true heir to the Namwarki, a Pohnpeian. The US court decided to put it up to a vote, and because the Mortlockese immigrants outnumbered the Pohnpeians, Kalio won.
  5. Kalio decided Pakin would be a cute place to live, so he moved there, since it was empty.
  6. Why was Pakin empty? Because the Japanese kicked all the Pohnpeians off Pakin when they occupied it.
  7. Did the Pohnpeian people of Pakin try to return? Yup, but Kalio was very influential at that point and was like “nope, too late, bitches” and that’s the last anyone has heard of those Pohnpeians.
  8. Kalio eventually died, lost at sea between Pohnpei and Pakin. The US coast guard from Guam searched for 2 weeks, very dramatic, but without success.
  9. After Kalio, the original Pohnpeian lineage reclaimed the title of the Namwarki.
  10. Apparently, according to old-sakau-chugging-guy Paulino who told me all of this (he was a young boy when Kalio reigned), the current Namwarki sucks. O.O



There were also lots of other juicy details about older brothers, family and clan drama etc. that I left out. Point of the story: A) the current people of Pakin have plenty local knowledge. But they haven’t been the cliché “stewards of their land for generations upon generations” as one might imagine. B) when you ask the question “but who lived there before?” be prepared for a messy/juicy answer.

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