When John Frum Came
A Novel of South Pacific Cargo Cults
Bill Schroeder
Smashwords ebook edition published by Fideli Publishing Inc.
Copyright 2011, Bill Schroeder
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ISBN: 978-1-60414-495-6
Preface
The following “John Frum, he come,” The Novel is based on a subject few people have read much about – the effect of Cargo Cults in the South Pacific prior to World War II. European coconut plantation owners, primarily British, had held the natives in virtual slavery for at least 100 years. While this was a very serious situation, this story (which shares the same title as a 1974 non-fiction book by Edward Rice) takes a satirical and humorous approach, making it “a good read.”
Through extensive and detailed research, I have preserved the historical accuracy of the time. I was ably assisted in understanding the native point of view by an American friend, Donald Chas, who lived in the South Pacific islands for a prolonged period.
John Frum, he come! is about the friendship of two men from opposite sides of the globe who come together in a cultural clash that neither of them fully understands. Yani is a young shaman of a stone-age tribe and Moses McDuff is an inept and naïve Boston missionary who tries to bring the “benefits of civilization” to an island aptly named Christ’s Despair. Christian Missionaries were the unwitting tools of the European exploiters
According to local history and legend, in the 1930s an American named John Frum tried to get the natives to ignore the missionaries, and “go back to custom.” The British Government supposedly put a price on his head. To merely get caught saying the underground code words –“John Frum, he come!” – could earn a Pacific native two years in jail. Yani believes in a Cargo Cult that says John Frum will bring a shipload of food and tools for his people and they will never have to work again. This story is a snapshot of life on one of the Solomon Islands just before the U.S. Marines arrived for WWII’s famous Battle of Guadalcanal in 1942.
This story uses humor and irony to tell a tale of a growing crisis that was halted by World War II. It addresses the plight of Pacific Island natives tempted by dreams of wealth, and the white men who did not seem have the slightest notion a problem existed.
Yani and McDuff go through many adventures involving headhunters, self-serving white men, the Imperial Japanese Army, and the U.S. Navy. The surprising outcome will amuse you and cause you to think about the nature of synchronicity.
— Bill Schroeder, November 2011
When John Frum Came
Chapter 1
1934 — Chase Island, British Solomons
Twenty boys were herded into an enclosure. They were about to become men, and they knew some of them would die trying. Each was sponsored by a male relative other than his father. In Yani’s case, it was his mother’s brother who provided him with a bamboo pole. No one got a shield. Ooma, the shaman, who was also the chief village elder, addressed them: “If you want to be pooja, you will have to prove it by capturing the spirit house from the guardians who defend it.”
With these minimal instructions, the boys were led to clearing in front of the spirit house, or tambaran, as it was called. On their behalf, Ooma issued a long, loud and boastful challenge to the defenders of the building. The challenge was followed by ten seconds of complete silence. No one flicked an eyelash.
Then with a shriek, four men in six-foot body masks ran from the darkness of the doorway and waved broom-like wands in the faces of the fearful initiates. They made a symbolic mark in the sand and challenged the boys to cross it. Yani was among the few with the nerve to move.
However, as soon as they crossed the line no less than forty warriors appeared from out of the crowd in full battle costume; spears, shields, clubs and wearing penis gourds. Their bodies were covered with the most frightening and outrageous yellow and red body paint imaginable. They bellowed their war-cries, and descended upon the terrified boys. The initiates charged toward the tambaran, and a furious mock battle followed. The attackers were repeatedly driven off with ferocious howls and jabbing spears. There was no intention of doing the youngsters any serious bodily harm, but heads were rapped with hollow gourd clubs, and there were more than a few drops of blood drawn from minor flesh wounds caused by the spears and the general scuffling.
Yani’s nose was bloody from a number of blows from spear shafts and shields, but he managed to land a few solid smashes with his bamboo pole in retaliation.
Five minutes of this wild melee ensued, until the old man shouted as loud as he could. A rapid beating of a hollow log drum brought everyone to a standstill. The defending pooja turned, ran to the entrance of the spirit house and disappeared inside. Several women began to sob, and a small boy screamed hysterically. He thought his father was being gobbled up by the spirits inside.
Ooma gathered his charges together again in the center of the clearing. Those who still had their bamboo spears began to stamp them on the ground as they sang a victory chant. They had routed the enemy and were now men enough to enter the sacred structure. A doorway, looking much like an oversized grass skirt, was the entrance through which they followed Ooma.
Now the real initiation would begin.
***
Boston, Massachusetts
Moses McDuff was filled with self-doubt. He was not sure he had the qualifications implied by his about-to-be awarded Doctor of Divinity degree. He feared first that he was not worthy, and second that his attitude was too liberal to be an authentic Guardian of the Faith. Boston’s True Church of God Seminary was, indeed, a no-nonsense school for young men who wished to devote their lives to preaching the Full Gospel of Jesus Christ.
But what was the alternative? After Harvard, his father had arranged for him to work in a stockbroker’s office, but his aptitude for finance was lacking. A stint with the Headquarters of one of the major railroads demonstrated, as the Vice President of Personnel wrote the elder McDuff that, “young Mr. McDuff lacks his father’s leadership qualities. I suggest that he look into teaching at one of the better preparatory schools.” However, his scholastic record did not support a teaching career.
In desperation, his father had a talk with him. “The church would seem to be an honorable way out of this dilemma for you,” he said. “I think you will do the least harm to the family reputation in that role. I will not have you lying about the house, doing nothing. No McDuff has ever been a dilettante.”
As a teenager, Moses’ interest in religion centered about what was right or wrong on a personal level. More recently, at the seminary he found that at times he dare not ask the questions that bothered him most. He told himself that some of his thoughts were perverse, if not downright sinful.
***
Yani’s eyes did not adjust immediately to the dark room. The thick smoke from the smoldering fire in the center of the room did not help. All the boys were made to sit in a circle around the fire, with their individual sponsors standing behind them. Ooma spoke again: “You have taken the first step to manhood, and have captured the tambar
an. But you are not pooja. You have much to learn and must speak with the spirits.”
He called them to their feet to form a dance circle. At first the flutes, gourds and drums were played at the tempo of a man’s heartbeat. As the beat slowed down over the hours, one by one the boys became unconscious from exhaustion, intoxication, kava paralysis, pain or just plain fright.
Yani could make out huge figures of the spirits the shaman was gesturing toward. They were one and a half times the height of a man, each carved from a single tree trunk. They were painted with bizarre faces and adorned with decorations of all descriptions, often highlighting erect penises. These were the spirits who were to speak to the initiates. Each represented a spirit that lived inside it. Meeting these spirits and viewing the sacred musical instruments marked the high point of initiation rites.
“This is the trumpet of Baloo,” Ooma told them, holding a conch-like shell above his head. “It calls the fish from the sea. We sound it on the mornings the village goes fishing.” Yani had seen and heard it often and even knew its name, but now his knowledge was official.
The boys were shown an almost endless procession of sacred objects, and told their secret names. Women must never know these things, they were told, or the tribe would perish. The spirit voices Yani had often heard turned out to be bamboo flutes. After the introduction of each, men played a wide variety of gourds that had been turned into oddly shaped instruments. The wails and moans that issued from them were eerie enough to run a chill up Yani’s spine in spite of the 100-degree temperature of the room.
“When we play the sacred and secret notes during the full moon, Pakwa, the spirit of fertility makes the garden grow. If we do not play the right notes, the taro roots will be small and dry. If a woman hums the notes while she is working in the garden it will be overrun by pigs within a day.”
The old man had a small coconut in each hand and held them at arm’s length to his sides. With all the force he could muster, he brought them together, smashing them in front of him, shattering both. The sharp rap was the signal to begin the next phase of the initiation. Each sponsor gave his boy half of a coconut shell filled with kava, heavily laced with palm wine. The kava was made from the root of a local pepper plant, and was to be drunk down in one long draught. One half a shell of kava was generally enough to incapacitate a man for the night, but in this case the boys were given two coconut halves to drink. The net result for the boys, who had no experience or tolerance of the beverage, was almost total paralysis.
This was a great help during the circumcision rite, and blessed were those who had achieved total unconsciousness. The work was done with a knife made from a certain variety of razor- sharp bamboo. “This will rid you of your mother’s blood,” the sponsor chanted over and over until his work was done.
Wholly engulfed in the ceremony, Yani felt the effects of the kava and palm wine mixture. They brought on a kind of twilight sleep. He was in two places at once ... in the tambaran experiencing some pain, but at the same time having a vivid dream recalling the beginning of the day. He was there again.
The screeching birds in the jungle signaled the approaching sunrise. As he awoke, the first thing he noticed was that he had an erection of which he could be proud. It was the most favorable sign he could have had on kook’mba, the day of change, this day when his childhood ended. It was to be the first day of his manhood.
He got out of his hammock of closely woven vines where he slept. Covered with a layer of coconut oil mixed with the juice of flowers that killed insects, he looked like a sheet of human flypaper. He was dotted from his hair to his ankles with dozens of small bugs that had sought his blood, but found their own deaths.
In his dream, he broke into a run and plunged into the light surf at the edge of the beach. Bugs and oil washed away into the frothy waves. When he left the water, he was refreshed and ready to face the most important day of his life. He could hear some of the young boys crying about their nightmares foretelling the next day’s events. But Yani regarded it as a great adventure to be looked forward to. If a man were not initiated, he would go through life as a rubbish man, having no status in the community.
The dream gave way to a feeling of floating above the strand, higher than the treetops. He could see the back of the ceremonial house. It was breathtaking. A graceful triangular spire soared above the coconut palms, with a facade of painted bark panels. It had taken nearly a year to build, using the skills of virtually all the adult males of Chase Island. The outside was guarded by carved spirit figures, impassive as sphinxes and magnificently attired with headdresses, leaves, and shell ornaments.
Yani could see the entire village crowded into the clearing in front of the tambaran. The skulls of ten human heads were on display in the center of the village. They were relics of bygone days of glory, grisly trophies of some long-forgotten ambush. They stared with startled shell eyes. Clay, paint, cowry shells, and tufts of human hair created a semblance of the original features.
A chattering stream of women clustered in groups, balancing pots of food and net bags bulging with cooked yams and sleeping babies. Women had been barred from this area for months: now at last they crushed excitedly around the structure. They were there to allow the men to show off.
Everyone cowered as the voices of the spirits were heard coming from the spirit house. It sounded like the wailing of lost souls, accompanied by the pounding of drums. In the already sweltering midday heat, several men in long body masks roamed around the village frightening the women and children. Their job was to dispense terror, and the women played along with it. Many had helped their husbands make the masks and costumes of shredded sago and collars of fruit. These tribesmen dressed as spirits often broke into swaying dances, sending quivers of fear through the watching crowd.
Yani felt himself slip backward in time to the months before, during the construction of the spirit house. He and some of the other boys watched in secret from behind some large-leafed plants as the main supporting posts were installed amid sacred and solemn rituals. As always, the chants had to be said in a certain manner — voice inflections mattered. The boys watched in fascination as Ooma dropped a skull into a freshly dug hole. At the bottom of each posthole rested a skull of a tribal enemy — the braver that man had been, the more powerful was his spirit. The hand movements of the warriors reenacted the beheading of their victims. As with the hula in another part of the Pacific, hand movements were always vital. They needed to be done just so.
Valid trophy skulls were becoming scarce. The Australian patrol officers had imposed strange new laws over the old unwritten ones. But, the Chase Islanders still practiced headhunting when the opportunity arose.
***
For Moses McDuff, having his own pulpit was out of the question. He simply lacked any leadership skills. At this solemn ordination ceremony, he idly listened to the music, trying to recognize some identifiable melodies. When the organist reached the end of “A Mighty Fortress is Our God,” Dr. Macintosh, the President of the Seminary, mounted the lectern before the students, graduates, and families of the somber and grave young men being awarded their degrees. Without smiling he said, “This is a joyous day. We are very pleased this morning to have with us a world-renowned Christian leader who has been so gracious as to visit with us here in Boston. He awaits passage on a ship that will take him home once more to Glasgow, Scotland, after fifty years of missionary work in the South Seas.
“Half a century ago he and his comrades went to the Island of Tanna, southeast of New Guinea. They went as friends to dispel the black clouds that darkened the minds of the natives of that region ... They went to bring the word of our Savior, Jesus of Nazareth. They were met with bows and arrows, spears, stones, and curses. No matter how good an example they set, the natives reverted again and again to the black ignorance of their savagery.
“I have had the opportunity to listen to his first-hand accounts of the incredible hardships he and his people faced and the sacrifices
they made. They left behind families, loved ones, warm hearths, and the comforts of civilization to live and preach the Gospel of Jesus Christ on hostile, untamed shores.”
He wiped away an unseen tear, and with his voice full of emotion said, “Ladies and gentlemen, I give you Dr. John G. Paton.” Moses McDuff stifled an impulse to applaud. Such behavior was inappropriate in this particular house of God.
A gray-haired man, whose frame indicated that he had once been physically powerful and robust, took the pulpit. His face was very tired, and his skin was somewhat yellow from a bout with hepatitis, or worse. He looked around but was silent for a full half-minute while the audience waited on his utterances.
Finally, he broke the tension and spoke. “It was all for the love of God and Jesus!” His booming voice was still strong and resonant. “We put an end to their barbaric ways. We forbade circumcision, polygamy, sensuality, magic, cannibalism, and headhunting. There was no more feasting, dancing, kava drinking, singing, and drumming.”
McDuff leaned forward in his seat to be sure he did not miss a word. The words and the message were compelling.
“Their barbaric figures toppled to the ground. We burned every pagan idol we could find. We destroyed their savage artifacts and prohibited any further production. Thus stripped of their savage ways, they were naked before the Lord — they could be clothed with Western ideas and be led serenely into the True Light.
“We established laws, courts, stocks, prisons and fines to proclaim to these naked savages that the ways of Christianity are superior to the chaos under which they lived. We clothed their naked bodies ... We cut their hair ... We shaved their faces. We discouraged the use of ornaments and paint, feathers and jewelry. We overcame their resistance. Where their chiefs clung to the old ways, the authorities replaced them with men more congenial to the Christian way. These more enlightened natives had the power of the Australian Government behind them...”
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