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"The
Friendly Islands"
Tonga : 5 facts
Located in the Pacific Ocean, Tonga is a
cluster of about 180 small islands.
- Tongan
people trace their ancestry back for at
least 1, 000 years.
- Inhabitants
of Tonga are predominantly Polynesians
who continue to have a well-established
tribal culture. They still have a King
the only monarchy in the South
Pacific.
- The first
European contact with Tonga was by Dutch
explorers in the 17th
Century.
- Captain
James Cook visited the islands in 1773
and again in 1777. The local people were
so hospitable that he nicknamed the area
"The Friendly Islands"
Missionaries in
the Pacific
A Missionary is a person who is devoted
to the task of extending their religion
beyond their own land or culture.
Over the history of time there have been
countless different religions and faiths.
Some faiths are happy to practise within
a village or geographical area while others
wish to share the benefits with outsiders
and look to expand.
Christian missionaries fall into the latter
group. They work on the premise that the
word of their God was one who would benefit
all peoples. Christians see it as their
task to educate and indoctrinate other peoples
into their faith. In the 19th century, Christian
missionaries, such as Buchanan, would travel
for thousands of miles to the Pacific Ocean
and live in lands, which must have seemed
dangerous and foreboding in order to spread
the word.
A clash of cultures
When you get two peoples with vastly different
backgrounds and cultures meeting and having
to live with each other, problems are bound
to arise. Let us look at the situation from
both points of view.
From a Missionary point of view
It was a huge sacrifice that the missionaries
made. How would you feel if you were a missionary
setting off to live in a land on the other
side of the world?
Scared? Determined? They must have had great
faith and belief in what they were doing.
What dangers and challenges would have awaited
Missionaries on the way and when they got
there?
The challenges would be almost too numerous
to mention. Just imagine it!
A few examples could be - long journeys
by ship and foot, disease, hostile inhabitants
of new land, setting up villages, communicating
with inhabitants can you think of
any more?
The missionaries were in these lands because
they felt very strongly about their purpose.
They were prepared to act on what they believed
in and showed great courage.
What did the 18th and 19th Century missionaries
achieve?
Missionaries usually worked very hard within
their diocese, the work certainly stretching
well beyond the role of priest or vicar.
Some examples of their activities could
include building and setting up facilities,
establishing and then running schools and
hospitals.
Two views on missionaries
Some critics would dismiss missionaries
as nothing but yet another example of Christian
people believing themselves better to other
religions and groups. They would see missionaries
as going hand in hand with colonisation
and the Imperialism the spread of
the British Empire.
Others may take a different view and suggest
that missionaries were spreading the word
out of genuine compassion for their fellow
man. Perhaps the missionaries wished to
see all people receiving the benefits that
they felt they were receiving through their
faith and wanted to help in any way they
could.
Consider your views of missionaries
do agree with either of the above opinions?
From the point
of view of the Tongans
Can you imagine living in a culture with
a certain set of beliefs and then, almost
overnight, having your knowledge of the
world turned upside down?
This must have been how many inhabitants
of lands such as Tonga felt after their
first contact with Europeans.
It would have been a huge shock to suddenly
have foreign people imparting their views,
strange customs and, maybe even more frightening,
strange objects upon your established culture.
We know the confusion that Vaani felt when
she saw Jess, a boy with white skin. She
thought he was a form of sea life! Tuku
kept referring to the ship as a big canoe
as it was different from anything he had
seen before.
With the arrival of the missionaries and
settlers came both guns and new strands
of diseases. Both of these factors were
to have devastating affects on local populations.
While many European commodities such as
clothing, guns and tools must have seen
attractive to these peoples, there must
have been a good many who would have preferred
that settlers and missionaries had never
arrived and life could return to the way
it had always been.
While some locals were sceptical of the
visitors (e.g. Chief Finau), others became
enthusiastic Christians often blending
their own beliefs with those introduced
by missionaries.
The survival of
cultures The Pacific
Unfortunately the arrival of settlers and
missionaries in some lands too often heralded
the decline of traditional cultures. One
culture tended to dominate to the detriment
of the other. Examples could include countries
such as New Zealand, Australia, Fiji and
Samoa. In recent years, however, we have
seen a re-emergence and developing pride
in traditional cultures as countries work
towards a partnership in the true sense
of the word.
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