Friday, November 17, 2023

 

FEATURE STORY:

On the occasion of commemorating the 150th anniversary of the arrival of the London Missionary Society at Poreporena

By: Ev. RDk Mavara Ao Sere, November, 2023

Edited by: Lahui Ako, Udu Vai, John S. Goava, Daroa T. Toua, and Arua Taravatu

The London Missionary Society (or LMS, as it is popularly known in PNG) arrived on the shores of the Poreporena village in November 1873, and a year later, established itself atop its Metoreia hill forever.  A little less than a hundred years later, it would evolved into the United Church of Papua New Guinea.

But who were these brave men and women who endured the harsh weather, the hostile inhabitants of New Guinea, and the savagery of the journey from the Southseas, to bring the Gospel of Jesus Christ to what would become Papua a decade later?  Further, who were the local people who embraced and welcomed them to enable them to commence their ministry, and thereby, lay the foundation of Christianity in Poreporena and along the length and breath of the Papuan coastal line?  Most significant of all, who or what was the LMS, that made these men forgo their comfort zone and move into the unknown to spread the Word of God through its auspices?

The names of Ruatoka Koro, together with his missionary brethrens in Rau, Anderea, Heneri, Adamu, and Piri, and their wives, are all revered and remembered in Poreporena today.  Many songs have been made in their memory expounding their strength, resilience and endurance, in what was a land deemed forsaken by God until their arrival on its shores.  Then you have the names of the revered Motuans of old, who embraced them wholeheartedly and became their protectors.  Names such as Lakani Toi, who shield them from the warlike attitude of a Motuan tribe viewing them as intruders, and Raga Tola, who in accepting them, also sheltered them forever; and their first Motuan convert, Arua Daera, who would spread the Word of God along the west of the Papuan coastline to the Gulf.

Ruatoka and his brother missionaries were trained by the LMS in Rarotonga, in the Cook islands, as teachers, before crossing the vast Pacific Ocean on the Loelia from the main mission encampment at Cape York, Australia, under the leadership of Rev. Archibald Wright Murray.  The original party of 6, with their wives landed at Manumanu sometimes in November, 1872[1].  There, they would all survive until their fateful encounter with Lakani Toi a year later.

Historically, the LMS developed out of the Congregationalism movements of the late 16th and 17th century England which emphasized the right and duty of its congregations of people, to make their own decision on their affairs, independent of any human authority. Congregationalism therefore, developed as one wing of the broader puritan movement in Western Christianity whose general goal was to carry on and complete the work of the Protestant Reformation in England.[2]

Although they were active before the English civil wars, Congregationalists (or Independents, as they were more commonly known then) gained prestige when Oliver Cromwell aligned himself with their cause.  Their political influence peaked in the 1650s and declined precipitously after Cromwell’s death in 1658 and finally abolished altogether with the restoration of the crown in 1660.  But the accession of William and Mary in 1689 signalled a change of mood, and the Toleration Act, which was passed in the same year, marked the beginning of a process that would finally grant full religious toleration to the Congregationalists along with all the other religious dissenters. Through their association with the Evangelical Revival (1750-1815) their work continued to progress until the formation in 1983 of the Congregational Union of England and Wales.

It was from these movements that the LMS was founded in 1795 as a non-denominational organization, dedicated to spreading the Christian faith in the non-European world.  Its primary support was always from the Congregationalists.  The LMS sent out missionaries to the South Pacific Islands, to Africa, China, India, and Southeast Asia. It was its famous explorer/missionary, Dr David Livingston who proved to the world that Central Africa was accessible and who would exposed the slave trade.  In 1873, the LMS arrived on the shores of Poreporena, and in 1874, it established its first mission station under the watchful eyes if Dr William Lawes.

Poreporena oral history, handed down by word of mouth and retold through the generations tells of a visit by a group of Hanuabada traders to the Motuan village of Manumanu, about 30 miles west of Hanuabada.  It further tells of this particular group’s encounter with this strange people, the unlikely bond that was created, and their invitation and eventual arrival on the shores of Poreporena on 26 November, 1873.

During that period, the village of Manumanu was known to be the source of strong housing materials which the Hanuabadans required to build their houses with.  As such, men from Poreporena would frequent this village mostly by small lagatois, or puapua, and sought permission from its elders to source wood for their posts, and biri (from the pandanus family), which was dried and woven together to be used as walls or roofing for the houses then.  The men from Poreporena brought with them some of the sago and foodstuff from the Hiri trade, to exchange with the Manumanu people for this important materials.

One such trading expedition was led by a venerable man from Poreporena by the name of Lakani Toi.  Lakani, was an elder and renown warrior of the Tubumaga clan of Hanuabada.  That day, as his puapua neared the village of Manumanu, he noticed a schooner moored in the small inlet leading to the village.  The puapua cautiously passed the schooner and made its way ashore.  After alighting on firm ground, Lakani and his people were met by his trading partner and people from the village.  When he enquired as to the strange lagatoi out in the harbour, he was told that “these are strange men who came from the land of the gods.  They have been calling to us to go to them but we are scared.  Even when they come down to the shores to explore, we keep away from them.  We think they are gods who have come down from the spirit world of Tauru to visit us.”

Lakani, being the warrior he was, was intrigued.  “But if they come from Tauru, why haven’t they come to attack you, eh?  It would seem to me that they are scared of us here.  I think we should go closer and investigate.” Lakani’s trading party included his brothers and their wives, and a few other warriors, including the capitain of his puapua, by the name of Vagi Tau.  They all nodded confidently, agreeing with Lakani’s summation of the situation.

However, in respecting the Motuan traditional etiquette, and to avoid making the men of Manumanu lose face, he awaited for them to give him their assurance that it was okay for him and his party to investigate further.

“Lets investigate together.”  He invited them back, assurance given.

Taking the queue from the Manumanu men, Lakatani nodded to his brothers, beckoning them towards the puapua.  For safety purposes, he left his womenfolk on the beach.  They paddled towards the schooner.

The men on the schooner had noticed the arrival of a new trading canoe from the east and were intrigued by it.  They noted that the new arrivals were not from Manumanu.  As such, it peaked their interest to see these men paddling towards them.  They seemed different from the Manumanu men. However, seeing this opportunity to meet the inhabitants of this land again, they prepared to welcome them. 

A few metres from the schooner, Lakani stopped his puapua. Looking up to the men that now lined the sides of the schooner, he held up his hand, as if in greeting, but also to ward off the evil spirits that were purportedly on this boat, as per advise from the Manumanu men.  A medium-built man, who had trimmed his beard into a goatie, waved back.

“He seems to be the leader,” Lakani said loudly to himself, for the benefit of his brothers, and also to reassure himself.  The man waved back at him and beckoned him aboard, holding both his hands as if in welcome, and supplication.  “Now these are not evil spirits if their body positions are held in supplication,” Lakani thought to himself as he heaved himself aboard this strange looking boat.  The others followed closely behind him, eyes alert to treachery.

Looking around him quickly, he noticed that there were a mixture of people on board.  Some looked like him, while others had white skin.  Among the ones who looked like him, the person, who had invited and welcomed him aboard spoke something in his tongue which Lakani and his people couldn’t understand.  In front of him, his womenfolk started laying out things, which looked like gifts, he thought to himself.  There were pieces of cloth, axe heads, knives, beads, and other trade goods which the missionaries had brought with them on this trip.

While they viewed these strange things with suspicion, one of the women from the boat  started walking towards them with a tray full of red looking thing.  She started offering the tray to them with a smile; her men also beckoned to Lakani and his men, inviting them to take it, and eat it.  One of Lakani’s brothers whispered from behind him, “Don’t take it. It looks poisonous and looks like blood oozing from it.”  As they looked on, the crew and the others took the stuff and started eating it with delight and much gusto.  “Water Melon,” the crew mimed to him. “Water melon.” But to no avail.  Lakani and his men wouldn’t budge.  After observing that nothing had happened to those who had eaten the red stuff, Lakani beckoned to his brothers, and took one on offer.  “Mereni?” He asked the crew.  They all nodded happily.

So, was established an unlikely friendship, forged in a truly unlikely way and place.  Ordained by God almighty, the friendship between Ruatoka Koro and Lakani Toi would take another turn for the better as the two groups of men started the process of getting to know each other over the next few days.

In sign language, Ruatoka asked Lakani where he was from.  Lakani, again in sign language, responded as best as he could.  He would later invite Ruatoka ashore and sketch out an actual map for him to use to get to Hanuabada which laid to the east of Manumanu.[3]  Some of the landmarks Lakani described to Ruatoka included the Lagava (Redscar Point), a small uninhabited off-shore island called Varivara, and a rocky landmark called Iduata at Boera village.  An island off the sandy shores of Porebada village, called Haidana, he was to bypass on his eastward journey before passing a beautiful lagoon called Roku. Lakani advised Ruatoka that once he passed this lagoon, he would sight two small islands straight ahead.  “You will see the smaller of the two.  That is the Gemo, he signed to him.  “From afar you may be fooled to think that Gemo is joined to the mainland.  No.  Once you near it you will realise that it is an island not more that some distance from the mainland.  The larger of these two islands is called the Lolorua.  Once you arrive at Gemo, you will see a small passage. Turn left and follow it.  You will enter a huge bay, right ahead will be Poreporena”.

So, Lakani and his trading party return home after a truly successful and enriching mission.  Upon arriving, he gathered all the members of his Tubumaga and the neighbouring Kwaradubuna clan members, to brief them on the trading expedition and its success.  He also told them of the new friends he had made, especially the friendship he had established with a man of God, by the name of Ruatoka Koro, who had come to their land from far across the sea.  He informed them that he had invited this man and his fellow missionaries to Hanuabada, and that, they were all to expect his arrival soon.  Owing to the politics of the day, he instructed, in a more sombre manner, that he was to be told immediately once Ruatoka and his party were sighted.  “They will be coming by sea”, he added.  The clan settled down to await the arrival of their guests.

The people of Manumanu were not new to the crew and people on the schooner.  A year earlier, the teachers, their wives and families had arrived in the vicinity of this village on the Loelia.  The six teachers, Piri, Rau, Anederea, Ruatoka and Adamu, and their wives, had gone ashore with Mr Murray at their head, in search of the village of which they had heard.  They arrived into the village, with the banana plantations on its outskirts, and the 94 houses ranged in two rows, the broad street between, and the river bank, to which they had come, at the end of the street.[4]

The teachers had arrived with the intention of dropping themselves off at separate and different locations.  However, it was later considered wiser to remain together and occupy Manumanu as a base, from which they could spread out when the opportunity arose.  In doing so, their most difficult task, on this malarial coast, was selecting healthy sites, and Manumanu greatly disappointed them.  So, they settled in Manumanu.  The Loelia had returned back to Cape York.  The fact that the mission had no vessel of its own made it impossible to visit the teachers regularly, and new government regulations in respect to the licensing of shelling boats for the Straits made it more difficult to secure the aid of trading schooners.

During the early months of 1873, the teachers were faced with serious difficulties, chiefly among these were their worrying health conditions.  Adamu had met with an accident and had passed on; so too did one of the teacher’s wives.  The health of the whole party was a cause to worry.[5]  Fortunately, HMS Basilisk, under Captain Moresby, who had called in at Cape York on her way to the New Guinea coast, had enabled Mr Murray to secure the sympathetic interest of her commander.  The ship had called in at Manumanu and aided the teachers.  In fact, two of the badly ill teachers were taken on board and brough to Cape York for medical treatment. 

A few months later, the Loelia, which had been purchased by a Mr Orkney of St Kilda, Melbourne, and turned into a private yacht, was cruising along the Papuan coast and had heard of the sick teachers.  He had called into Manumanu.  Satisfied that they were all ill and needed treatment, he had brought them all to Cape York.  (Mr Orkney continued to support the later to be New Guinea Mission, and also became a close friend of Mr and Mrs Lawes).

While these events were happening with the teachers in Manumanu, good progress was also being made in England in developing plans for future extension.  Mr Samuel Macfarlane was not only enlisting the sympathy of the churches, but was also briefing the LMS Board of Directors on the importance of spreading the mission to New Guinea.  On 23 December, 1972, a special conference of the LMS Board was held, and it was agreed for, among other resolutions, that Cape York be made the headquarters of the New Guinea mission, and that support for the mission at Manumanu be intensified, including the purchase of the Ellangowan.[6]  Also present at this Board meeting was the Reverend W.G Lawes.

Official historical records mention that the commodious Moresby and Fairfax harbours, named so by Captain John Moresby after his father, the Admiral Fairfax Moresby, and the land immediately surrounding it, had been investigated by the Roal Navy and found to be a potentially good spot to relocate the mission.  This being so, Motuan oral history also tells of the extending of an invitation by the venerable Lakani Toi to Ruatoka Koro and the teachers to relocate to Hanuabada.  Both records are aligned by the grace of our God almighty.  Because it was through His divine intervention, that these events came to pass.  Today, the United Church of PNG, stands as evidence of this divine intervention.

On 18 November, 1873, Reverend Murray left Cape York on the Retrieve with Ruatoka, Rau, Anedera, and Eneri, who, now refreshed, were eager to get back into action.  The Retrieve called into Manumanu only to find that their houses had been destroyed by an inland raiding party, while the men of Manumanu were away on the hiri.  But their main intention to calling into Manumanu was not only to check up on their houses. No.  It was also to commence plotting the chart to Hanuabada, based on the 14 knots on the rope tied for him by his friend Lakani Toi.

On the afternoon of 23 November, 1873, with the last knot untied, the Retrieve, complemented by its additional navigational guide, anchored in the Moresby harbour, with the Poreporena villages of Hanuabada and Elevala lying yonder.  Built on stilts over the shallow waters, the village looked like a cluster of spiders, waiting to pounce on any intruder that invaded its space.  They awaited the right moment to make their way into Hanuabada to honour the invitation extended to them by Lakani Toi.  They appointed the morning of Wednesday, 26 November, 1873 as the day to make their way into Hanuabada.  Ruatoka believed that his good friend Lakani Toi awaited him.  Unbeknown to him, Lakani had left for his gardens that very day.  His gardens lay not more than an hour’s walk inland on the foothills.

After loading their cargo into the Retrieve’s long boat, the teachers and their wives, were rowed towards the village by the two naval sailors.  Ruatoka looked on with anticipation written all over his face.  As he looked on, he saw two canoes, filled with warriors, racing up to meet them.  The long boat had been sighted! Being aware of the arrival of Lakani’s guests, the village sentry, had been on the lookout ever since the Retrieve had anchored off shore, for any movement from the ship that would signal the arrival of Lakani’s friend.  On seeing the departure of the long boat from the ship, he had sounded the conch shell.  As was pre-planned, the Tubumaga warriors had piled into two of their war canoes, the Rikugai and the Manugai, and had sped forth to meet the approaching long boat purposely to escort it safely into the Tubumaga clan before the other clans became aware of the “intruders”. 

The two parties greeted each other out in the harbour, and Ruatoka’s enquiries of “Lakani?” “Lakani?” were met with a nod by the warrior Tau Vagi.  Lakani had entrusted Tau Vagi with the responsibility of making sure of Ruatoka’s safety in the event he was away when his friend arrived.  Tau was honouring this duty.  The long boat was then escorted into the Tubumaga clan mooring station.  Oral history tells that the Rikugai and Manugai were accosted in the harbour, on their way in, by the war canoes of the other clans, wanting to know who these people were and why they were being brought into the village by them.  Tau Vagi and his warriors, ignoring them, continued relentlessly on their course, to bring the guests safely into their clan, while he strained his neck, searching out Lakani from among the crowd now building up on the shore.

Meanwhile, Lakani’s sister, Kori Toi, having by now, being alerted to the arrival of his brother’s guests, and knowing that he had gone to tend his garden, quickly ran in search of him.  Upon nearing the garden, she started yelling, “Lakaaaaani!” “Lakaaaaani!”  “Lakaaaaani!” Lakani, hearing the distress in his sister’s voice, quickly ran out of the garden in search of her.  The people you have invited to the clan have arrived.  You must come quickly to receive them”.  The excited Kori told him.  After delivering the message, she turned and started running back to the village.  Lakani followed closely behind.

By then, Tau Vagi and his warriors had escorted the visitors into the Tubumaga clan square and stood protectively over them, awaiting the arrival of Lakani, while the crowd, mostly warriors from the other clans of the village, all shouting at the top of their voices, for the immediate release of the intruders so that they could be killed, continued to build up.  Kori and her sister in-law, Lakani’s wife, Geua Gurita, in anticipating this demand, quickly ran in front of the menacing warriors, shouting and, holding up their skirts to scare them away, and most of all, to buy time, while Lakani made his way to the village centre.  In the Motuan traditional culture, it is considered taboo for women to “throw their scent” in the direction of any warrior or men in general who are in very close proximity to them.  It is believed that it will render these warriors - who have purified themselves by staying away from their wives for weeks in preparation for an official clan engagement, such as going on a raiding party to an enemy village, or on a fishing or hunting expedition – weak and useless.  Lakani’s wife and Kori were doing this on purpose, to protect their guests from these blood thirsty warriors.

“Asio aladia!”  “Asio Aladia!” (Don’t kill them!) (Don’t kill them!).  Lakani shouted into the crowd, at the top of his voice, as he finally arrived on the scene.  Quickly rushing up to where his guests were sitting in a huddle, he stood protectively over them, brandishing his spear menacingly at the crowd.  The Tubumaga warriors, taking this as their cue, also formed up immediately behind him in support.  Still they were outnumbered, as the other clans, from Elevala started arriving to “drive off these intruders”.  The threat, not only to the lives of his guests, but to them as well, mounted.

Lakani shouted into the crowd again, repeating himself.  The crowd refused to relent.  Then he did the unthinkable.  “Lau bavalagu guna, gabe amo, idia bavala dia!”  (“You will need to kill me first, before you can kill them!”), he shouted at the top of his voice.  This immediately caught the attention of the crowd of warriors and they all quietened down. Some continued to glare at him, waiting for him to say something that would ignite the spark again, so that they could use the excuse of the situation to settle some old family feuds against the Tubumaga clan.  Others waited for Lakani to explain why he was willing to put his life down for these strangers, whom they purported, he didn’t know.

While everyone stood contemplating the situation, which was now very tense, the sudden arrival of a group of warriors from Elevala threatened to escalate and worsen the already edgy situation.  This new group was led a warrior chief called Igo Erue.  Igo, nicknamed Boroma (wild boar) because of his blood lust, quickly showed up in front of Lakani, and in a threatening manner, demanded the release of the intruders to him for slaughter.  His warriors stood close by his side, aggressive and intimidating, daring Lakani to go up against their chief.  Lakani’s Tubumaga warriors, now joined by warriors from the neighboring Kwaradubuna clan, closed up behind Lakani. 

Lakani, very much aware of the very dangerous situation he and his clan were now in, and after weighing out the pros and cons of a confrontation with the boroma, opted against this decision.  Very slowly and carefully, but deliberately, he moved up to the boroma.  Facing him, without so much as flinching and batting an eyelid, he told him to his face, “These are my guests.  I invited them to come and stay with me and my clan here at Tubumaga because of the conditions in Manumanu.  They are not your problem. Back-off and leave my clan with your warriors now.”

There was now an impasse.  While the boroma demanded blood, he also knew deep down, that if he struck Lakani, all hell would break loose, as old family feuds between the clans would be revisited and their would be chaos and mayhem in the villages.  What Lakani was offering him was a way out without the both of them losing face in front of the village.  So, sizing up the offered opportunity and then taking it, he backed off.

Following this, the Tubumaga village square was quickly converted from a would-be battlefield into a feast, as the clan prepared to formally welcome their guests.  Guards were posted all around the clan to discourage any repeat of hostility by the Elevala warrior.  Being also a truly benevolent man, Lakani also invited the other Hanuabada clan leaders to join him and his clan in welcoming their guests.  This included men from the predominantly Koitabu clan of Hohodae, and the Motuan clans of Mavara Kahanamona, the Gunina clan, and the Apau, Vahoi and Botai clans.  The same invitation was also extended to the Elevala clans.  The clan’s security system was maintained for the next couple of days until temporary billeting was organized for the guests in the gabi ruma offered by the clans.

Lakani then approached Dagu Lohia of the Vahoi clan to ask for, and request his endorsement for a piece of land he owned in the Taora area of the village.  When asked why, he told Dagu that this would be for Ruatoka and the other teachers to use as garden plots to support their sustenance.  After bartering for a short while, Dagu agreed to release his land to the teachers for the price of a couple of axe heads, a piece of red calico cloth, and some handkerchiefs.  When Dr W.A Murray arrived a few weeks later, he allocated Anaderea and Rau to minister to the people at Hanuabada, and Ruatoka and Heneri were to minister to the people of Elevala. 

So arrived the first LMS missionaries into Poreporena.  The next step now was to establish a permanent mission station for them to operate their ministry from.

The following year, on 21 November, 1874, Dr W.G Lawes, in adhering to the resolutions of the LMS Board meeting in London, the previous year, arrived to take charge of all LMS operations in Central Papua.  That same day, Dr Lawes, accompanied by Captains Turpie and Thurstons of the John William and the Ellangowan (both ships had made the expedition to Poreporena from Cape York) and Reverend Murray went ashore to meet with the village chiefs purposely to arrange for a site for the proposed mission station.  They had their minds fixed on a beautiful spot which laid between the villages of Hanuabada and Elevala.  It was near the sea, on a ridge of land which rose to an elevation of 110 to 130 feet.  At each end of this spot, there were hills, and behind it and all around, there were hills and valleys of various shapes and sizes, and away in the distance stood the dark shapes of mountains.[7]

This assessment being so, Ruatoka had earlier on, discussed this site with Lakani.  Lakani had then made discreet enquiries and discovered that this particular piece of land was owned by the elder, Raga Tola Rahobada and his family.  Lakani had also previously taken the initiative to meet with Raga to inform him of the interest of the teachers on his land.  He had informed him that there would be taubadas arriving shortly to formally negotiate with him for this land.  Raga Tola and his family were therefore prepared when Lakani and Ruatoka again approached them to organize this historically significant meeting.  It was historical in the sense that the establishment of the LMS on these shores hinged very much on its outcome.

So, the meeting took place that day between Dr Lawes and his party, and Raga Tola and his family of the Botai-Laurina clan of Elevala village.  This also included the six elders who had a stake on this land.  By the end of that fateful meeting, Raga Tola and the six elders had gifted their land to the missionaries to commence God’s work in Poreporena.  (Since that momentous day, word has been passed down through the generations that “No one, (meaning within the family) has any right to repossess this land (Metoreia Hill) back from the missionaries; that this land was given freely so that God’s work can be carried out from there; and that it would remain so, forever).[8]  So, land was given to the LMS to set up their mission station forever in what would later become Papua New Guinea.  Its significance today is portrayed in the United Church of Papua New Guinea.

Later that same day, Mr Lawes set up his tent close to the nominated site.  The following day, 24 November, 1874, work commenced to build the mission station.  Parts of the crews of the Ellengowan, and the John William were in the building party, and they went about their work with much vigour and heart.  The mission house was a long weatherboard building of one story and a wide veranda, the principle proportion of which faced the harbour, with the eastern end towards the hill and the palm trees.  When the mission house was completed, other smaller buildings were put up to complete the Metoreia mission station[9].  All the missionaries and teachers in Hanuabada and Elevala left their billets and moved onto Metoreia Hill. 

Ten years later, on 6 November, 1884, British Commodore Erskine would stand and proclaim the establishment of the British Protectorate of Papua.  In doing so, it would commence the mammoth political process, which, after two world wars, would culminate 91 years later, on 16 September, 1975, with the proclamation of the Independent State of Papua New Guinea.

So, it came to pass.  The first house, of foreign design was built by foreign sailors atop Metoreia Hill and would become the mission headquarters for the region for the next century.  Built in the midst of a heathen community, it was the home of the first Christian teacher and translator, and the first-ever Englishman’s home which was soon to come under British rule[10].

Without realising its significance then, Poreporena had suddenly become the centre of light in this dark land.  It would be from here that Lawes, and later Chalmers, and the Southseas teachers, led by Ruatoka would make their forages into the interior and up and down the coast.  They would be assisted by the venerable Arua Daera, Poreporena’s first official Papuan Christian.  He was baptised on 15 January, 1881 and would became an evangelist.  He took advantage of the hiri expeditions to the gulf of Papua and spent most of his ministry life in the Vailala area of the Gulf.

It would not be until 21 November, 1962, 90 years after the LMS arrival into Papua that a truly Papuan Church, called the Papua Ekalesia would be formed; and then on Sunday, 19 January, 1968, the LMS (New Guinea mission), and the Methodist Mission would finally join together  through a handshake, and gifts of tabu and pig tusks to form the United Church in PNG and the Solomon Islands.  Motuan Reverend Reatau Mea, representing the Papua Ekalesia, and Reverend Saimon Gaius, representing the Methodist Church officiated in this ceremony through the signing of the Deed of Union.  In November, 1996, the Church in PNG and Solomon Islands separated, and the United Church of Papua New Guinea came into its own.[11]

Today, on the eve of commemorating the arrival of the Southseas missionaries on their land 150 years ago, the Poreporena Circuit, a cornerstone of the Urban Region of the United Church of Papua New Guinea, now consists of the Laurabada congregation (which includes Lakani Toi’s Tubumaga clan, Kahanamona, Mavara and Hohodae clans), and the Lahara congregation (which consists of the Gunina, Apau-Vahoi, and Botai clans).  The Elevala congregation, has remained an integral member of the West Port Moresby Circuit, of the United Church Urban region.

The people of Poreporena, and members of the United Church Poreporena Circuit therefore, pay homage to these great men and women of God, who braved sickness, weather, and all forms and sorts of atrocious conditions, if only to bring the Word of God to our land.  We remain, custodians of the faith under God’s everlasting blessings. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

References:

 

1.       Ako, Lahui (2007), “Upstream, through endless sands of blessings”, CBS Publishing, New Delhi

2.       King, Joseph (1909), “W.G Lawes of Savage island and New Guinea”, London

3.       Eagle Omnibus Number 9, London Edinburgh House Press, 2 Eaton Gate, S.W 1950, “Take my life: Ruatoka of Papua” 1846-1903, by Joyce Reason

4.       Polynesian Missions in Melanesia – From Samoa, Cook Islands, and Tonga to Papua New Guinea and New Caledonia, 1982”, Page 59

5.       A.W Murray, Capek York, 17 December 1873, “Voyage to Redscar Bay and Port Moresby in the Retrieve”, Nov18-Dec8, 1873, Council for World Mission, Papua Journals”

6.       Crocombe, MT (1982), “Ruatoka, a Cook Islander in Papua History, in Polynesian missions in Melanesia, ed. Marjorie Crocombe et al, Suva institute of Pacific Studies

7.       Pacific Island Monthly, Volume 40, No.2 (February, 11969)

8.       Murray, J.H.P (Sir Hubert), 1904 Diary, ML

9.       Oral history from the elders and old persons, some have passed on:

(a)    LDk Sisia Nou (deceased) Rahobada of Tubumaga clan, Poreporena;

(b)    LDk Kora Lohia rahobada (deceased) of Tubumaga clan, Poreporena;

(c)     LDk Rei Vagi Rahobada of Kwaradubuna clan, Poreporena;

(d)    Ek Dika Guba Taumaku Madai Rahobada of Kahanamona clan, Poreporena;

(e)    RDk Edea Sisia Nou of Tubumaga clan, Poreporena;

(f)      Rtd Rev. Morea Pipi Rahobada of Hoboimo clan, Elevala, Poreporena; and,

(g)    RDk Lohia Kohu of Elevala Botai clan, Poreporena.

10.   Tubumaga idibana and laurina Genealogy Books, 1957, copy from Dept of Lands.

 

 

 

 

 



[2] Ako, Lahui (2007), “Upstream, through endless sands of blessings”, CBS Publishers, New Delhi, pp. 81

[3] Oral history says that Lakani tied 14 knots on a span of rope, each knot representing a significant landmarks which he described to Ruatoka during their conversations; and that he was to pass this bays, inlets, hills, for 14 times and he would arrive into Hanuabada and Poreporena.

[4] King, Joseph (1909), “W.G. Lawes, of Savage Island and New Guinea”. London, pp.57

[5] King, (1909), pp.58

[6] King, (1909), pp.60

[7] King (1909), pp.68

[8] The Reverend (retired) Morea Pipi and his brother Raho Pipi, descendants of Raga Tola, clearly remember their uncle telling them this.

[9] King (1909)

[10] King (1909), pp.69

[11] Ako, (2007), pp. 239-240

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