Taim bilong mani - Pacific Institute
Transcription
Taim bilong mani - Pacific Institute
The Australian National University Development Studies Centre Monograph no.12 Taim bilong mani The evolution of agriculture in a Solomon Island society John Connell ������� d< f'J Q O f'J Q f'J O � °' � (ff &�er; &�er; &�er; lJ� °' OIL� Taim bilong mani The Development Studies Centre has been set up within the Australian National University to help foster and co-ordinate development studies within the University and with other Institutions. The work of the Centre is guided by an Executive Committee under the chairmanship of the Vice Chancellor. The Deputy Chairman is the Director of the Research School of Pacific Studies. The other members of the Committee are: Professor H.W. Arndt Dr W. Kasper Dr C. Barlow Professor D.A. Low Professor J.C. Caldwell Mr E.C. Chapman (Chairman) Dr T.G. McGee Dr R.K. Darroch Dr R.C. Manning Dr C.T. Edwards Dr R.J. May Mr E.K. Fisk Mr I.S. Mitchell Professor J. Fox Dr S.S. Richardson Mr J. L. Goldring Dr L. T. Ruzicka Professor D.M. Griffin Dr R. T. Shand Mr D.0. Hay Professor T.H. Silcock Mr J. Ingram Dr R.M. Sundrum Professor B. L.C. Johnson Professor Wang Gungwu Dr G.W. Jones (Dep. Chairman) Professor R. G. Ward Development Studies Centre Monograph no.12 Taim bilong mani The evolution of agriculture in a Solomon Island society Series editor R TShond The Australian National University Canberra 1978 © John Connell 1978 This work is copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purposes of private study, research, criticism, or review, as permitted under the Copyright Act, no part may be reproduced by any process without written permission. Inquiries may be made to the publisher. National Library of Australia Cataloguing-in-publication entry Connell, John Taim bilong mani (Australian National University, Canberra. Development Studies Centre. Monograph; no. 12) ISBN 0 909150 66 4 1. Siuai (Papuan people). 2. Agriculture Bougainville Island. I. Title. (Series). 630'.91935 Printed and manufactured in Australia by The Australian National University Summary This is a detailed analysis of the transition from a subsistence agricultural system to a quite affluent semi commercial agriculture amongst the Siwai of south Bougainville ( the North Solomons Province of Papua New Guinea) . The pre-war agricultural economy, based on swidden cultivation of taro has, along with other facets of Siwai e conomic life, previously been described in detail (Oliver, 1 9 55 ) ; part of this is reconsidered here. The pre-contact agricultural economy was effectively one of 'subsistence affluence'; contact enabled further divers ification and later some attempts at copra production and sale. During the second world war taro blight precipitated a dramatic change to sweet potato and, following experience in observing and working on European plantations and Japanese wartime gardens, Siwais, with the encouragement of traditional leaders, attempted to grow rice for commercial sale. For two decades cash crop cultivation was largely tmsuccessful tmtil cocoa became established; this effectively superseded other cash crops although cattle provided a measure of diversification. The money generated from cash cropping enabled business development, especially trade stores, to attain a measure of success . Cargo beliefs were rarely important . Agriculture in Siwai had become a source of affluence. v Contents Foreword Chapter 1 Siwai: Chapter 2 The people of Siwai Chapter 3 Traditional agriculture: and destruction Chapter 4 Agricultural recovery: Chapter 5 Siwai Rural Progress Society: the organization of diversification 111 Chapter 6 Coffee and cocoa: economy 1 30 Chapter 7 Pigs and cows: animals in the agricultural economy 1 79 Chapter 8 Business and cargo 198 Chapter 9 Taim biiong rrrzni: incorporation the environmental stage 1 23 development 42 the rise of rice 77 towards the cash the process of 231 Appendices No . I Ten year agricultural development plan Buin sub-district Bougainville, 1956-66 (K . I . Tomlin ) 254 No . II Siwai Rural Progress Society - trading acco\lllts 258 No . III Copra and cocoa prices 1 9 4 7 -7 4 259 No . · IV A note on documentary sources 260 Diagrams ( see p.viii ) Tables ( see p.viii) 265 Bibliography vii viii Page Diagrams F ig u re 1 Bougainville 2 Figure 2 Siwai 3 Figure 3 S iwai p opulat ion growth 26 Figure 4 Age components of S iwai populat i on 30 Figure 5 Pre-war garden s equences 63 F igure 6 Rice gardens 1949 95 Figure 7 Rice producers 1 9 6 9 -71 133 Figure 8 Co ffee p roducin g villages 1 9 6 0 137 Figure 9 Co ffee product ion 1 9 6 5 139 Figure 10 Coffee producers 19 71-72 141 Figure 1 1 Cocoa produc in g villages 19 6 1 143 Figure 12 Cocoa producing villages 19 62 144 Figure 1 3 Cocoa production 19 6 2 -6 3 148 Figure 14 Cocoa growers 19 6 3 152 Figure 1 5 Village companies 1 9 6 8 157 Figure 16 Cocoa plant ings 1959-72 166 Figure 1 7 Cocoa price 1 9 5 6-72 167 Figure 1 8 Copra driers 19 72 1 74 Figure 1 9 P i g s 19 5 1 181 Figure 2 0 Cat t le projects 19 70 192 Tables Table 1 S iwai rain fall 12 Table 2 S iwai mean age at marriage 32 Table 3 Bougainville b irth intervals 33 Tab le 4 Births and age-specific fertility rates 36 Table 5 Death rat es in S iwai 40 Table 6 One copra price 191 3-1940 53 Foreword My primary debt is to the p eople of Siwai and especially those in S iroi and Maisua villages with whom I lived for some seventeen months between November 1974 and April 1 9 7 6 . It was without doub t one o f the most enjoyable periods o f my life although, in a difficult political climate where the b enefits of expatriate research were o ften no t apparent, i t was n o t always without problems . I t is naturally impossible to name all of those who taught me s omething o f their life but at the risk of ignoring the many who as s isted, s ome of who se names appear elsewher e in this b ook, it is essential to mention a few . It was Anthony Anugu, now Member o f Parliamen t for South Bougainville and then Pres ident o f S iwa1 Local Government Council, who f irs t welcomed and ass isted a naive res earcher with only a smattering o f even Melanesian Pidgin, guided me into my firs t village and subsequently provided regular intellectual and nutritional sus t enance . In the villages where I l ived John Stme, Kamuai and S t ephen Sukina were foremo s t among those who were wil iing to put up with my s ocial blunders, my inability to even unders tand more than a little of their own language and the occasional tedium of sys tematic enquiry . Without the women, above all Aie the wife of Sune, who provided me with food, and the men and children who were always willing to share coconuts, betel nuts and galips with me, life would have been iunne asurably poo rer . It is unfortunately true that many of those who were the kindes t and mos t helpful to me will never be able to read this b oo k. It is, n evertheless, for all o f them . With in S iwai I received generous assistan ce from all the ins titut ions then in existence there: the Siwai Co-operat ive Society (and especially John P inoko S ipisong) , the Siwai Local Government Council and all the subsequent village governments . Both the Catholic and United Church miss ions gave me valuable data from their files, and at the Tonu United Church mis s ion Sister P amela Beaumont was a constant Elsewhere on the island, and valuable s ource of in format ion . the executive o f what was initially the Bougainville Dis trict Government , and above all Mos e s Havini and Leo Bannett, were always willing to discuss local polit ical events . Finally, ix x at Bougainville Copper Limited , Cli f f Newman especially was most help ful in providing ac cess to records , individuals, t ransport , and cups of coffee . All of them eased the irregular problems of research work . The original impetus for this study came from Mr E . K . Fisk through his associat ion with the Cotmcil for Pacific Development S tudies at The Australian Nat ional Univers i ty . He has been my guide , mentor and critic throughout the planning , implementation and writing of this research project; without him it would s imply not have been poss ible . A d i fferent kind o f debt is due to the Council for Pacific Development Studies who provided and extended the financial support for this work , made poss ible by a large and generous grant from Bougainville Copper Limited , and , through the Department of Economics , provided a congenial home for me in the Res earch S choo l o f Pacific S tud ies. Out s ide the Aus tralian Nat ional University I owe an enormous debt to Pro fessor Douglas L. Oliver o f the University o f Hawaii , who not only encouraged me to re-study S iwai but vis ited me there, bringing useful ideas and criticism , and who has:; read and given valuable comment s on almost the whole of the pre:sent manuscript . Finally I am grate ful to Michael and Judy Hanmett , also o f the University of Hawaii , who throughout my stay in S iwai were themselves carrying out research in the Eivo-Simeku village of Atamo in central Bougainville . Their constant enthusiasm advice , and encouragement were tmfailing supports . The p resent volume is only one part o f a larger study of the evolution of contemporary economy and society in S iwai . In its turn this forms a p art o f a wider-ranging series o f enquiries int o the p attern o f change through much o f the island of Bougainville , a large amount of which is now available and has contributed enormously to knowledge of one of the mo st interes t ing islands in Melanes i a . The pres ent research p roject was des igned primarily to examine the contemporary operat ion of village e conomies in S iwai , and particularly the relat ionships between food crop and cash crop production , labour migration and the emergen ce of bisnis. The S iwai area was chosen because it had already been stud ied in considerable detail in 1 9 38-39 by Douglas Oliver in his book A Solomon Island Society which would enable the p resent study to be both comparative and comp lementary . This orient at ion was chosen partly because o f a p art icular belief in the necessi ty o f long-term comparisons in rural areas as a basis for development studies and p artly becaus e of the almost complete absence o f such long-term s tudies in a Melanes ian xi Inevitably this emphasis resulted in the research context. having a more sub st an t ial social component than was originally This book is, in a sense, no more than an intro intended. duct ion and prologue to contemporary S iwai life; it t races the his toric changes in the agricultural system, in so far as this is possib le, and attempts to chart the important trans ition from a purely subsistence s ituat ion, without even peripheral participation in the cash economy, to one where the production o f cash crops is almost universal. It ends around 1972 when the trans-is land road finally linked the eas t and wes t co asts of Bougainville. More detailed data on the organ ization of the contemporary S iwai economy are in the process o f being analysed to form the logical sequel to the present account. The derivat ion of the title reflects the nature of some o f these changes; in the course o f f ield work I asked an elderly man what was the dif ference between living in S iwai now and living in Siwai nearly four decades earlier, when Douglas Oliver had b een there. His reply was short and succinct: Nau em Taim biZong bipo em taim biZong pasin. i taim biZong mani. (In those days it was a time of customs . Now i t's the time o f money . ) S iwai words, especially place-names, are spelt in a manner derived from a combination o f the S iwai pronunciations that I was familiar with, the orthography devised for use in Bible translat ion and vernacular literacy and the pre-war usage of Douglas Oliver . Inevitably they will satisfy none of thes e. Oliver originally used the spelling Siuai, after the pronunciation of people in the Rataiku area of northeast Siwai . Few people have s ubsequently used this spelling and Oliver himself no longer uses it . I have therefore used Siwai throughout . Words in the Siwai language, Motuna, are iden t ified by a capital S and words in Melanes ian Pidgin are identi f ied by NM. Almo st all of this manus cript was written in Canberra and various drafts were carefully scrutinized by E. K . Fisk and Douglas Oliver; I am indeb t ed to them for rescuing me from numerous fantasies and fallacies. I am also indebted to G. E. Harrison and Dr G.W. Jones who commented on parts of Chapters 2 and 3 . Neither they nor any of those acknowledged here w ill agree with everything I have written ; I hope all will at l east enjoy a part of it. xii Currency Up to 1 9 7 5 , Papua New Guinea used the Aus tralian currency . Until February 1 9 6 6 , this was the A£ , divided into 20 shillings . From that date onwards , Aus tralia converted into dollars ·and cents , at the rate of A£1 . 0 A$ 2 . 0 (A$ 1 . 0 10 shil lings ) . = = In April 19 75 , Papua New Guinea s tarted to issue its own currency , than at par with the Aus tralian dollar , renaming the unit the kina , divided into 100 toea . Chapter 1 S iwai: the environmental stage Our own S iuai forests are good - the source o f all desirable things: o f food and game and building materials . Only madmen would choos e to live elsewhere! (Siwai man , cited by Oliver, 1955:104) Bougainville is the easternmost island in Papua New Guinea but geographically and, in many respects, culturally it is the northernmos t part of the Solomon Islands, a distinction reco gnized in it s status from late 19 76 as the North Solomons P�ovince o f Papua New Guinea . The island is t rop ical, hot and humid and dominated by a cent ral spine of mollll t ains, the Emperor and Crown Prince ranges, that has The largest lon g hindered commlllli cat ion across the island . mollll t ains, Balbi (which rises to 2835 metre s ) , Bagana and Takuan, are all volcanoes ; the first two steadily pour out smoke and ashes over the adjoinin g mo\lll t ain flanks whilst all three have pro vided extens ive areas of volcanic s oil, ideal for agriculture o f almos t any kind . Despite the earthquakes that are locally associated with the volcanoes and the floods that s ometimes follow heavy rainfall it is usually a pleasant en vironment that provides a diversity o f natural resources for the s teadily growing population . Before the war it was more difficult to be precise about a S iwai area ; Oliver (1955:8) notes how ' Siwai ' was initially a s ingle point on the s outh coas t between Ait ara and Mamagota villages, but eventually the name was applied to a longer stre t ch of the coas t and then the hinterland beyond . Oliver states that s in ce the word ' S iwai ' had wide acceptance among Europeans he would retain it t o ref er t o those people who spoke Motllll a, their culture and the area in which they lived . He did not record the people ' s own identif icat ion o f them selves and I have no evidence that the people who now call themselves S iwai have no t always thought o f themselves as such . Nevertheless the def in ition o f a S iwai area clearly 1 2 6 --- Subdtstncts --- Census Districts 0 10 20 30 40 50 km Figure 1 . Bougainville 3 MolO! roads !Januaiy 1976) Contour; m metres 6 mites Figure 2 . S iwai 4 presented some problems . Oliver speaks o f the S iwai occupyin g the centre o f the Buin plain : ' The territory iden t ified with them is roughly demarcated by the Mivo River on the eas t , the Torovera River on the wes t , the moun tains on the north , and the swamps and sea at the s outh ' ( Oliver , 1955 : 9 ) , but he later cal l s this area ' the main part of the trib al area ' { Oliver , 1 9 5 5 : 15 ) . The p re-war administ rat ion seems t o have recognized the S iwai area as it is now { Chinnery , 1924 : 88 ) . All S iwai s never co-operated or acted t o gether in any way , nor was there a dis t inct and separate political hierarchy (Oliver , 1 9 5 5 : 10 3 ) yet l in guis tic and cul tural homo geneity certainly then emphas ized the unity of a S iwai area even if there was a fuzz iness about the actual b oundaries . There were also dis t ricts within S iwai ( c f . Oliver , 1 9 5 5 : 32 0 and Figure 2 ) - Rataiku , Mokakuru , Ruhuaku , Korikunu and Tonu - and people for mos t purp oses felt a social un i ty within these rather than in the more general S iwai area . How thes e dis trict s emerged is unknown but their boundaries were much the same b o th in 19 3 8 and in 19 7 5 and were more eas ily defined than the distant and les s certain S iwai boundaries . There is a clo s e relat ionship be tween these districts and those somet imes called tuhia, that is the area usually ass o ciated with an important feast -giver . I t is in thi s s ense that a mi ss ion manual translates tuhia as ' kingdom ' ( Ol iver , 1949a (3) : 2 3 ) whilst the earliest European miss ionary in S iwai translated it as ' homeland ' (A. H . Voyce , pers . coDBil . 19 75 ) . In the pre-war years they were used by the adminis trat ion as the b as is for local admini s t rat ive areas ; in the 1970s they b ecame the areas of the village government s that replaced the local government counci l . These districts have been the mos t s ignificant and long-s tanding regional groupings within S iwai . S iwai s recognized micro-cultural variat ions within S iwai ; for example , in central S iwai cultural variat ions were considered to be greater to the wes t than with the villages of the east and northeas t . Moreover , the villages in the wes t had incorpo rated Nagovis i phonemes int o the language to a much greater ext en t than the incorporat ion of Buin phonemes in northeastern S iwai . Throughout the fringe areas , villages shared many cultural charac teri s t ics with areas on all side s o f them t o the exten t that in a few places it was claimed that the s imilarities acros s language groups were much less than thos e with o ther more remot e S iwais . Despite the cultural variat ions that mark districts within S iwai , the s ocial divis ions that have followed f rom the rel igious dif ferences 5 o f the mis sions are rather more important in contemporary S iwai social organization . The Siwai census divis ion is presently def ined by a couple o f fairly arbit rary l ines drawn f rom Mount Taroka acro ss the centre o f the Buin plain o f south Bougainville . The lines are arbitrary t o the extent that they are geomet ric divis ions, of a kind beloved of colonial administrators, which include all S iwai villages and also one village, Tarowa, which was originally an ent i rely Buin (Telei ) speaking village but is now more or less bilingual, with social t ies increas ingly dire ctly towards S iwai . They als o approximate to the courses of the Puriata and Mivo rivers which are more or less tradit ional b oundaries o f the S iwai linguistic area . Although S iwais have right s to land out s ide t hese rivers and o thers use land within them, it is a division whi ch e f fect ively demarcates a cult ure region . As communications have improved and administ rat ion has cons idered S iwai a s ingle area, the f ragile and t enuous links that shaped the region have been s trengthened, especially through administration devices such as the S iwai Local Government Council. Indeed Oliver foresaw this when he commented ' there may s ome day develop a t ribal polit ical o rganizat ion accompanied by explicitly expre ssed identification b etween t ribe and t erritory ' (1955:104 ) . Other modern institutions have also generally ass isted in shaping and f ormali z in g the present S iwai area but the local government council was the mos t s ignificant of these because o f it s formal organiz at ion, regular meet in gs, and ab ility t o In influence developmental changes throughout the are a . 1975 all villages in the S iwai census division were repre s ented in the counci l although Haisi and Hiru-Hiru villages had been in the Bana Council until the p revious y ear . In mid-1975, the Buin Council ward that consisted o f Tarowa, S iuru and Tupopisau requested that they be allowed to join the S iwai Council . (The Tarowa councillo r then claimed that their cus toms were exactly the same as those o f S iwai, even though their language was mixed . S iwai councillors expressed general enthusiasm for this, most expres s in g the belief that it was only to suit administrative convenience that they had been put int o the Buin Council area . ) The S iwai Society (see Chap t er 5) has als o emphasized the S iwai Council area, although there have in the past b een att empt s from the Hais i and S ininai areas to set up a new s ociety more respons ive t o their o wn interests ; the three n eighbouring Buin villages all have many memb ers in the S iwai S o ciety whereas, in the west, Horino villagers are divided between the Bana and S iwai S ociet ies . The DASF have t ended to administer villages in 6 the S ininai-Haisi area from their Boku o f f ice rather than from Konga . Both missions have emphas iz ed the pres ent S iwai area whils t it is generally believed that the Mono itu Catholic mis s ion was a s ignificant in fluence on the Haisi area, strengthening the S iwai language and cult ure there in the period before Haisi had it s own mis s ion . A loo sely-def ined region has become increasingly real ; within S iwai there is a con s i derable cult ural homogeneity that e ffect ively demarcates it from neighbours on either s ide but S iwais do not worry about these divis ions ; there is, after all, an extensive area between the Puriata and Mivo rivers which cont inues to provide game, ·timber and land, and their immediate neighbours are l ittle dif ferent from themselves . S iwais are not therefore dis s imilar from other convent ionally conceived tribal groups ; they are not clo sely bounded populat ions in either t erritorial or demo graphic s enses . They are no t economi cally and po lit ically integrated and disp lay po lit ical organizat ion under hierarchial leaders only as a re sult of contact with already exist ing states, although s uch cont act may be quite indirect . They are not either war or p eace groups and rarely if ever show congruence with language communit ies or with religious co mmunit ies (Fried, 1975:Pref ace) . ,The 'prist ine t ribe' is indeed_a creat ion o f myth a�d legend (Fried, 1975:114), yet changes in S iwai and elsewhere in Melanes ia, especially tho s e fostered by councils (cf . Langnes s, 1963:168-9), have induced and s trengthened beliefs in cult ural l.nlity and even homogeneity whilst, s imultaneous ly, the more rapid emergence of ext ernal economic l inks and o f t en subs t ant ial economic different iat ion within small areas has minimized the conceptual value o f the concept o f 'tribe' (cf. Good, 1975) . Nevertheless it is us e ful to .cons ider the S iwai reg ion as a s ocio-geographical area of relat ive cult ural uniformit y as recognized by the lo cal people . S iwai, th erefore, is the central p art o f the south Bougainville plain, now s ome 100 kilometres from the l argest town on the is land, Arawa, and about 30 kilometres from the t iny town of Buin . In fine weather a S iwai truck may reach Arawa in three hours and Buin in les s than an hour, but condit ions are rarely s o ideal ; bridges an d caus eways may s omet imes be ruptured and floods in the rivers that are not bridged can o f t en clo s e each o f thes e roads for more than 7 ten hours and somet imes longer . In 1975 there were three unbridged rivers between Arawa and S iwai and three more towards Buin . At Tonu , in cen t ral S iwai there is a small airfield s uit able fo r twin-engined aircraf t ; this too is o ccas ionally flooded and heavy rain and thick cloud in the mountains may also di srupt air travel . Rapid t ravelling demands some met eorological expert ise and o ccas ional luck but S iwai is no longer a rural area remote from the res t of the wo rld ; increasingly it is part of an island and a nat ion . From ab ove , the S iwai lands cape appears a monot onous vis t a o f dark green bush , fadin g int o the grey mount ain chains to the north and exten ding t o the shores of the Solomon sea . Neither mountains nor s ea have much relevance to S iwai l i fe . Pat ches o f . garden cult ivat ion and their o ccas ional sp irals of smoke are relat ively rare b reaks in the s cene whilst the rivers are overhung by trees . A few dusty roads form modern int rus ions in the greenery and the village l ines also conspire to dest roy the apparent homo geneity . It is an area where secondary bush veget at ion is dominant in creatin g the visib le s cene an d it takes t ime for th� unpractised eye to different iate between fores t , s econdary regrowth , plantat ions and garden s ; t rees are everywhere s o that the imp act o f centuries o f human res idence res t s light ly on the l ands cape . The l ine villages/ which have,. s in ce the early periods o f Aust ralian administration, charact eriz e d formal S iwai settlement p at t ern s , are with only two except ions more than S iwais are emphatically f ive kilometres from the coast . ' bush ' people rather than ' sea ' people , although this was Indeed one o f the p rob ab ly less t rue in the remo te past . ceremonies that t radit i onally , and o ccasion ally s t ill , marks the introduction o f a leade r ' s son into the men ' s house is when the boy is t aken on the long j ourney t o the coast to see the s ea for the f irst t ime ( cf . Oliver , 1955:189) . For mos t S iwais any vis it to the coas t is ext remely rare . The t idy line villages themselves are in s t ark con t ras t to the varied green of the surrounding gardens and bush ; women are seemingly always at work removing the o ccas ional intrus ive weed from the village areas . It is indeed as Tuz in has des cribed fo r Arapesh villages of the eas t S ep ik : Living s ites are tradit ionally b ared o f ground cove r People say this i s t o p romote sanitat ion and protect again s t snakes and cent ipedes , which may b e true ; but there also • • • 8 seems to be an ingrained notion that human habitat ion requires, among other things, a flat area cleared of natural obst ruct ion s . A bit of gras s, pleasing to the European eye, is an unwelcome intrus ion to be s tudiously removed the village has a swept t idines s verging on bleaknes s , reflecting an anxious concern for orderliness that extends to squared corners , s t raight lines, symmetrical piles and neatly bound bundles (Tuzin, 1976:8-9) . Even so, Arape sh villages are not arranged in the s traight lines on flat sites that characterize S iwai villages ; here aus terity is relieved only by occas ional t rees plant ed within the village. The con trast between the s evere order of the village and the lush abundance of the surrounding vegetat ion is quit e remarkable . Land and s o il About half o f Bougainville Is land cons i s t s o f mount ains and foothills with s teep and o f ten precipitous s lope s . The copper mine at Panguna is in the centre o f s uch a region but the plains of s outh Bougainville are lowlying and the only steep s lo pe s are the s ides of dissected s tream valleys, sometimes several hundred feet below the general land s urface . Away from the mountains, the s t reams and rivers are not s o entrenched an d communicat ions are s omewhat eas ier . The S iwai coas t however is partly bordered by a beach ridge which has hampered drainage and produced cons ide rable areas of swampy ground ext ending, in a few places, fo r s everal kilometres from th e coas t . Mos t of S iwai i s a plain, highly dis s ected by rivers rising in the mountain s and flowing s outhwes t into the Solomon S ea . The larges t of these rive rs, the Puriata, Mobiai and Mivo, flow in deep valleys and are o ften difficult to cross ; heavy rainfall raises their level by a few feet an d unle s s they are bridged they are then impos s ible to cro s s . Each of these rivers is now bridged on the main trans-is land road but cro s s ing at other points i s s t ill dif f icult; heavy rains o f t en isolate upland Rataiku at least for a few hours and, as in 1976, even the largest bridges can be broken in the worst f loods . Smaller s t reams are usually unbridged and, as in Nagovisi (Mitchell, 1976:17) , S iwai paths wind their way around thes e s o that casual travellers, and researchers, are o ft en unaware o f the mult iplicity o f s t reams flowing 9 through the plains. The s o f t alluvial surface o f the plain has enabled these fast-flowing s t reams to deepen their beds resulting in many flat-topped alluvial ridges, narrow in the upland areas but wide in the s outhern plains, that are the main areas for extens ive agricult ural act ivity. . Villages and hamlets are mainly clustered in cent ral S iwai, between an alt it ude of 30 and 100 metres above sea level. Two remote villages are at the coast and there are several upland villages that o ccupy the wide s t o f the upland ridges. Iru is about 360 met re s above s ea level but few other villages are even 2 00 metres above s ea level. In these higher areas communicat ions are rather more difficult and highly concentrated in a mountain�coast direct ion. In no rtheas t S iwai, the Ratai ku, the locat ion o f settlements, roads an d gardens is in fluenced by the environment to a much greater exten t than anywhere else in S iwai. Siwais dist in guish Rataiku as ecolo gically di fferen t from other parts of S iwai ; the people o f Rataiku are ' mountain people ' or the ' people f rom on top ' although they do not necessarily believe that thi s cause s behavioural differences. Conversely, for S iwais, mountains are the uplands o f Rataiku (and Iru for the people of wes t ern S iwai) and not the central dividing range o f Bougainville, which is the area where rain clouds build up This is a but is otherwis e unimportant in S iwai geography. useful divis ion which was employed by Oliver and is retained here. Vill ages in the mountains are usually located on the high ridges, well away from the rivers which flow in s teep s ided vall eys that would be quite impo ss ible for settlement. In central S iwai the ridges.are much less sharply defined, hence villages are usually much closer and more accessible to water although, very o ccas ionally, they may be more S iwais thems elves , because sus ceptible to extensive floods. o f the lo cat ion o f the mountains and the alignment s o f the rivers radiat ing from them, use the words rano and ronno to mean respe ct ively either ' ups tream ' and ' downstre am ' or ' north ' and ' south ' (Oliver, 1955:100) . This dif ferent iati on is one that is much more useful than formal geographical direct ions . Bougainville is lo cated in a part icularly act ive part of the t e ctonically unstable margin o f the Pacific Ocean and, in s outhern Bougainville espe cially, earthquakes (S-i.pi) o c cur almos t every week, an average as high as any in the world, and are a dramat ic influence on the S iwai environment. ' • • . s ome o f them are violent enough t o topple houses and cause dangero us landslides ' (Oliver, 1955:9), 10 even though most do no more than shake house p o s t s and awake sleeping S iwais . Damage to hous es or gardens is exceptional . By any st andards, however, the earthquake o f 2 1 July 1 9 7 5 was except ional ; s i x months had pas s ed without even a minor tremor when the earthquake, measured at 7 . 2 on the Richter s cale, with its epicentre about 100 kms southwest o f the S iwai coast, shook the is land. The init ial tremor last ed for two minut es ; further substant ial tremors lasted for two days and daily earthquakes followed for twenty days . Damage occurred throughout Bougainville, especially to the more permanent const ructions of the towns, and in S iwai there was cons iderable destruct ion ; some 400 houses collap sed complet ely and others took on eccentric alignment s . S ince most houses have sago leaf roofs fastened t o thin girders, inj uries, result ing from fire as much as from falling houses, were Bridges were fractured and some roads cut by rarely s evere . landslips but most garden s were tm.harmed though in some of the more st eeply slo ping gardens o f Rataiku, landslip s did Despite the t ime lost in destroy s ome newly plant ed areas . rebuilding hous es, and a couple o f days in which few people did more than s it near their houses speculat ing on the likelihood o f another enormous earthquake, it did not have the dramat ic e f fect s of s imilar earthquakes in an urban, Rural economy and s ociety are more industrial environment . re s ilient to this kind o f disruption . S iwais believe that earthquakes are a result o f vol canic activity although it seems that this is not actually s o ; rather earthquakes trigger o f f volcanic erupt ion s (Blake and Miezit is , 19 6 7 : 4 7 ) as occurred in 1 9 7 5 . Few S iwais themselves can remember an earthquake as destruct ive as that but some stories recall a previous one, po s s ibly arotm.d German t ime, when there were t idal waves in the rivers , taro gardens were destroyed and there was a short p eriod of htm.ger . Most o f south Bougainville is covered with layers o f vol canic ash which les s ens in depth away from the motmtains but is only absent ent irely within five kilometres of the co ast . This volcanic ash provides the base for the development o f most s o ils o f th e area and almost all the populat ed area o f S iwai i s situat ed on s oils derived from it . These s oils are e s s ent ially a combinat ion of s ands and loams ; one of their outstanding features is that they are surprisingly res i s t ant to ero s ion (S cott, 1 96 7 : 112 ) � Ln condition s of considerable earthquake act ivity and high rainfall this is an important characterist ic enabling gardens to be constructed and maintained even without terracin g on s t eeply s lopin g 11 gro und . The s canty evidence availab le s uggest s that the s oil s o f S iwai are generally o f average fertility and all are subj ect to hi gh leachin g . Apparent ly the only soil analysis ever made in S iwai, n ear Kut in village, recorded that 'the result s show the s o il s to be acid in react ion, free of t oxic levels o f soluble salt s and are marginal to deficient in phosphorus . Pot ash levels are low while nitrogen is sat is factory in t h e t o p s ix inches but decreases rapidly with depth' (Shaw, 1969). Based on the distribut ion of soils in Bougainville the s outh Bougainville plains were early consid ered to have the b est potential for agricultural development (van Wij k, 1962 :132.), and even the poor growth of co conut s could not be att ribut ed to soil deficiencies (Sumb ak, 1970). S iwais themselves reco' gnize variat ions in the quality of s o ils, and, l ike the agricultural ext ens ion of ficers (NM - didimen) of S iwai, they believe that co coa grows best on the loamy s oils o f the upland ridges rather than on the more sandy low-lying plains . In a few isolated p at ches , there are goo d clay dep o s it s which, unt il recently, were used for manufacturin g pot t ery which was t raded within and some t imes beyond Siwai . However, S iwai soils, apart from the swamplands that back the coast , have had a very limited influence on either s ettlement or land use ; the cult ivation p ract ices that have always been us ed are not demanding o f the cap acity o f the s o i l s to s upply plant food which has led most observers to comment on their richness ; only the s ingle soil s urvey s uggest s otherwis e . Climate Often overwhelmingly, the mos t imp re s s ive features o f the climate o f s outh Bougainville are heat, humidity an d an ext remely h eavy·rainfal l . There is no apparent s easonal ity . Years are marked by the fruit ing o f the canarium almond tree (S-moi) an d not by any climatic changes . S iwais themselves dist inguish no seasonal variat ion s . As elsewhere in Bougainville (Blackwoo d, 1935:30) they speak o f a 't ime o f rain ' but this applies whenever the weather is wet; rain is Central the most dramat ic climat ic influence on S iwai life . Siwai has about SOO centimetres (2 00 inches) of rain a year (see Table 1) which is quite typical o f s outh Bougainville (Ward, 1975:13) ; coas t al villages have much less and up land villages rather more . There are however cons iderable variat ion s ; in 1969 there were 32 0 inches of rain at Konga b ut in 1975, which was an except ional y ear, no more than 132 in ches fell at S iroi . These are both exceptional 12 Table 1 S iwai rainfal l Sept ember 195 8 February 1969 Months S iroi Konga Tonu Inches 1957-61 , 1969, 1972-73 Months In che s February 1975 March 1976 Months Inches J (9) 17 . 23 (5 ) 19. 05 (1) 16. 39 F (10) 14 . 45 (5) 21 . 07 (2) 13 . 08 M (10) 17. 39 (4) 16. 46 (2) 13 . 93 A (9) 12.76 (4) 11 . 46 (1) 14 . 67 M (10) 11 . 67 (4) 19. 88 (1) 15 . 18 J (10) 11 . 14 (6) 16 . 96 (1) 13 . 19 J (9) 25 . 5 0 (7) 24 . 5 6 (1) 5 . 16 A (6) 16 . 39 (7) 26 . 4 0 (1) 8 . 14 s (9) 17 . 37 (7) 24 . 55 (1) 4 . 47 0 (10) 16 . 07 (4) 12 . 87 (1) 10. 66 N (8) 15 . 42 (4) 12 . 41 (1) 14 . 78 D (7) 12. 82 (3) 14. 77 (1) 17.05 188 . 21 Sources: 220 . 34 146 . 70 Tonu (United Church Mis s ion: S r P. Beaumont ) ; Konga (DASF Konga, File 37-1) ; S iroi (John Connell and Joseph Uamo ) . Each stat ion is between 5 0 and 60 met res above s ea l evel . The figures in bracket s repres ent the number o f months f o r which a complet e reco rd was available. None o f the se data were collected with the f ine s s e that would sat i s fy a met eorologis t ; in the two years o f overlap between the Konga and Tonu records the rain falls are suffi cient ly s imilar (although naturally different) to suggest that most o f the dat a are reasonable. The var iat ion from the 't rue' rain fall is p robably very sl ight and does not affect the argument s pre sent ed here. These data are much more useful than int erpolations f rom more distant observat ions . 13 ext remes ; even so the variat ion about the mean is still quit e l ar ge. l A day without rain is quit e rare in S iwai ; almost as connnon is the sort of period that Oliver reco rded in 1939 when ' there was a downpour which lasted for thirteen days except fo r a few hal f-hour letups ' (Oliver, 1955:492) . There are no good data on dry p eriods ; in a four-year period between 1959 and 1962 every month had at l east 50 per cent (and usually over 75 per cent ) rain days although in the ' drought ' of 1975 three suc ce s s ive months, from S eptember to November , had l e s s than 50 per cent rain days . In November 1 965 nine succes s ive rainle s s days were recorded at Tonu ; this was not exceeded in 1 975 although in one 39-day period there were only 6. 6 cent imet res (2 . 61 inches ) o f rain . Under a t ropical stm this was effect ively a drought ; small rivers dried up so that Kapana villagers, amongst others, had to t ravel as far as the Mobiai for water, and s ome crops withered in the garden s . Drought s of thi s kind are very rare but have o ccurred before ; in 1967 one councillor remembered what was an improbably s evere drought : WanpeZa taim i bin gat bikpeZa san; olgeta wara i bin d:rai. Mobiai tasoi i bin stap. Gras i bin kamap long hap we wara i save ran Zongen. oi bikpela man oi i traim long wokim tru tasoi sampeZa oi i no inap; sampela oi i bin wokim gut na ren i bin kamap. (Once there was continuous stmshin e ; all the rivers dried up tmti l only the Mobiai remained. Gras s grew where the rivers had rtlll . All the prominent men t ried to make rain but s ome were tmab le t o ; some did it p roperly and rain returned. ) (S iwai Local Government Cotmcil Minut es, March 1967. ) S iwais now o f fer no exp lanat ions for these drought s although in the p as t they were blamed on the act ivit ies o f ill-mean ing magicians and the 1975 drought was blamed on the enormous earthquake that had preceded it . All villages obt ain their drinking water primarily from the many s prin gs that are of ten the s ources of small S iwai st reams ; even during the worst drought thes e are rarely dry 1 The mean rainfall in S iwai (averaged between Tonu and Konga over a twelve-year p erio d: 10 y ears at Tonu and 2 addit ional years at Konga) is 198 inches (503 ems ) with a standard devi at ion of 41. 75. 14 s o that dr inking water, of excellent quality, is always available close to any village. Although s ome villages, and some households, have const ructed iron water t anks , f illed from regular downpours, these are nowhere es s ent ial to adequate water s upply. Rather more dramat ic than the rare rainless days are the days of torrent ial downpour and the periods when these torrent ial downpours extend over days, washing away roads and bridges, flooding gardens and o ccas ionally leading t o s erious food shortages. Almost all showers o f rain are heavy but s hort-lived ; thunderstorms are common, often result ing in heavy afternoon downpours followed by lightning flickering A Tonu miss ion cow was once over the s ea into the night . killed by light ning but thunderstorms are rarely fatal. Most days are characterized by s unny mornings, a gradual build-up of cloud around mid-day, start ing over the dist ant central mountains and moving t owards the coast followed by afternoon rain. At Panguna, where condit ions are not so very different from upland S iwai, 62 per cent o f all rain (in a two-year period) fell between 12 . 00 and 17. 00 (BCL, 1 969) . Thi s concentrat ion o f heavy rain in a short afternoon period o ften has serious consequen ces: Once in a while rain c louds co llect in the mountain s and precipit at e enormous quantit ies o f wat er which then rush down the st ream beds, increas in g the normal water depths t enfold. These st ream floods rush down with a roar, and somet imes drown nat ives who are unable to reach higher ground (Oliver, 1955:9) . . Voyce (pers . comm. 1975) once reco rded a s ix foot high wall o f water rushing through Tonu. On several o ccasions I recorded two inches o f rain in less than an hour. This kind of spectacul ar flood is a greater problem now that S iwai has come to depend on the out s ide world ; roads and bridges are washed away, s tores cannot obtain supplies and cocoa and veget ables fail to reach their market s. Rather more regular are thos e o ccas ions when S iwais are forced to remain over night in other villages; 'high t ides' block the paths which become deep in mud. In the comparative arid ity o f 1975 , heavy rainfall was rare ; I recorded 2 2 . 3 cent imet res (8 . 78 inches) on one day in November but thi s was an except ional day . Between 1959 and 1968 at Tonu there were only about eight days, no more 15 than one day p er year , when there was more than 12 . 7 centi met res (5 in ches) o f rain . The s ingle wettest day was near the start of the wet test recorded month , July 1965, when 31 . 5 cent imetres (12 . 42 inches) fell . It is the int ens ity o f rain in an o ft en brief p erio d o f the afternoon , rather than its durat ion even over a day, that effect ively di srupts most afternoon agriculture and characterizes the cl imate o f S iwai . A much more serious dis ruption to S iwai gardening is the occas ional waterlogging that follows a lon g period of except ionally heavy rain . 'More generally coconut growth is hamp ered by inadequate soil drainage , and there fore water logging ' (Tomlin , pers . comm . , 1977) . Many S iwais believe that these cat astrophic floods o c cur at seven year int ervals and , indeed , the lit t le climat ic dat a available t end t o support t h i s kind o f general izat ion . The worst floods were in 1957, 1965 and 1972 . The mo st drQ..nat ic of these was in the s ingle month of July 1965 when 164. 2 cent imetres (64 . 65 inches) fell ; even so there was st ill one rainless day . Continued heavy rain in the n ext two months , when 103 . 0 more cent imetres (40 . 6 inches) fell , never enabled gardens t o S iwais regenerat e and there was a substantial food shortage . have never satis factorily accounted for these floods ; durin g h eavy rain s in 1967 i t was remarked by the Council Vice Pres ident t hat s ince Publ i c Works Department (PWD) employees do not work in heavy rain but s t ill get paid , 'Plenti man ol i bilip o Zsem: i gat wanpe Za man i save wok long PWD husat i save me:kim dispela ren, bikos em i laik bai em i sindaun nating na kis im pe (Plenty o f people believe that one of the PWD workers has made this rain s ince he pre fers to do no work , rest and get paid)' . Other councillors were not convinced that a PWD worker would have this skill nor that past floods could be explained in the s ame way . One o f the worst o f these floods may have been that of 1972 following the brief vis it o f Cyclone Ida . At Konga there were 2 84 centimet res (112 inches) of rain in the four months from May to Augus t , and over the whole o f southwest Bougainville the p at t ern was much the s ame . As early as May emergency rat ion s had been sent to flood vict ims at Moratona in Nagovisi and Torokina in Banoni but there was no general concern unt il Sept ember when very h eavy rainfall (including 117 . 4 cent imet res (46 . 2 4 inches) in one week at Boku) washed away low-lying sweet pot ato gardens . Generally upland areas survived bet t er than the lowlands . Much sweet pot at o rotted in the ground and o ther unaf fected roo t s became inedible because of their poor flavour . Didimen found that the bes t 16 sweet pot at oes, including the only one that weighed more than hal f a pound, came from mounds . Banana clumps rotted and the surviving st ems failed t o form bunches ; leafy veget ables were in short supply from the gardens but could s t il l be collected from the bush. Very few pawpaw t rees produced fruit and peanuts al so rotted. Chinese taro (Xanthosoma sagi ttifo liwn) was only slightly affected by the rains. The root crop by far the best able to withstand floods is taro (Co locasia spp.); thus pre-war S iwai, before the death of taro (pp. 73-5), was well able to withs tand floods . S iwais swit ched to purchas ing rice and other food from t rade stores, but s ince road transport was impossible for three or four months, supplies did not last beyond August . The adminis trat ion then ass isted by distribut ing supplementary food, inc luding rice, wheatmeal and peanut oil, by aeroplane and helicopter. Siwais al so reverted to more ext ens ive sago product ion, and isolated villages like Aitara remained almost ent irely dependent upon sago for a long t ime . Although the Buin marke t seems to have remained well st ocked, sago was one of the s ix most important foods there (Arndt, 1972 ) . The Konga market s urvived le s s well ; by June goods there cons isted predominantly of pumpkin leaves, other wild leaves, wild yams and Chinese taro. At the s tart of Sept embe r the t ot al amount of produce was no more than one man could carry (French, 1972a) . Mais ua village rs remembered cutt ing twelve sago t rees for food during this f ive month period, a mas s ive increase on contemporary cutt ing rates (Connell, 1977a:l7), whil s t one villager bought nine sacks of rice at $4 each and complained that the main result of this was that his children then became almos t addicted t o it. There was als o more hunt ing than usual. Cocoa too was affected by de foliation, wilt and blackpod, and unripe pods fell from the branche s ; product ion declined and because of the destruction of several roads S iwai s reverted to bush driers wh ich then apparently resul t ed in a loss of quality (Arndt, 1972 ) . Apart from this kind of dramat ic destruct ion cocoa can eas ily tolerate high rainfall. There is rather less informat ion about earlier floods ; the 1957 rainfall seems to have been rather less severe than the 1972 one. Nevertheless one patrol officer noted that ' in the mount ain area the people have been spending much of their t ime huddling over fires, and no out s ide work can be done for days at a time' . There was a food shortage and an increased con sumpt ion of sago but he obs erved wryly that local con ce rn was over the los s of tobacco crops rather than 17 tubers (PR Buin 3/1957-58) . The 1965 flood seems to have been much the same whilst report s o f the 1976 floods indicate that the main p roblem had become the dis ruption o f comnnm i cat ions rather than of gardens . Increas ingly , as S iwai becomes inco rpo rat ed into the outs ide world and time becomes money , floods have a great er impact on local life . Temperat ures are much the s ame throughout the year but The the daily variat ions are o ft en quit e cons iderable . highest t emp erat ures are on rainles s afternoons when the th ermometer o ccas ionally reaches 35°C ; the highest temperature eve r recorded was 36°C (97°F) on several o c cas ions at Tonu but it is rare for there to be a cool day . In eight months in 1975 the lowest maximum temperature that I recorded was 2 5°C (77°F) but this was ext reme ; in four years at Tonu the mean maximum temp erat ure was 32 °C (89°F) a figure which is reached around midday be fo re heavy afternoon rains which can reduce the temp erat ure by as much as 6°C in hal f an hour . In the same four-year period at Tonu the mean minimum t emperature was 2 1 . 5°C (71°F) but o ccas ionally , j ust before dawn , the thermometer slumps even below that . These diurnal cont rast s can be quite s triking so that p eople typically keep a fire smouldering all night for warmth and o ld people e sp ec ially prefer s leep ing in their kit chen house rather than At Tonu , in t en year s , in the cooler , draughty st ilt houses . the t emp erature only once fell as low as 17 . 2 °C (63°F) . On the o ne o ccas ion during my stay when the temp erat ure fell as low as that I , l ike mos t S iwais , awoke shivering and more than will ing t o complain about the weather . All-night ceremonies too can be chilly event s , especially in upland villages where there are always cool night breeze s . In these upland villages the temp erat ures are generally coo ler than at Tonu , in central S iwai , yet there is l it t l e evidence that , with the e xception o f taro , this has a s ignificant influence o n any local crop s , although the temp erat ure variat ions were cons ide red by the didimen to neces s itat e co ffee planting in a zone above cocoa {p . 135) . Dramatic downpours an d exceptionally cold night s mark the pervas ive effect s o f the high relat ive humidity charact eris t i c of s o many t ropical lowlands . As in neighbouring Nagovis i (Mit chell , 1976:19) , the relat ive humidity falls as the s un rises and reaches around 75 per cent at midday ; in the afternoon it rises again , usually reaching 100 per cent in late afterno o n , and remains close t o that level throughout the night so that l eaves drip with dew in the mornings . Arduous phys ical act ivity i s unpleasant and in these humid 18 condit ions fungi abound, on clothes as well as on t rees; it is al so very close to the ideal environment for taro blight (Packard, 1975:57-8) and some cocoa diseases . S ince relat ive humidity is invers ely correlated with t emperature, respite from th e humidity and heat is rare ; sweat, mildew and rust are familiar consequen ces . The only note on ins ol at ion in S iwai i s contained in a 1969 DASF (Department o f Agricult ure, Stock and Fisheries) Proj ect Programme where is was e s t imat ed that there were on ave rage 3 hours 25 minut es o f sunshine a day at Konga . Records from Buin town, over a one-year period, show an average o f 3 hours 35 minut es with no significant seasonal variations (Sumb ak, 1970:4) and from Pomalate� Nagovisi, ove r a one-y ear period, the average was 5 hours 3 minut es (Mit chell, 1976:19) . Supe rficial impres s ions of this kind o f dat a are o f li tt le value, yet it may well be that the Konga figure is generally true of cent ral S iwai ; there is, of course, a considerable difference between the cloudy mountains and the co ast . Coconut palms grow rather better nearer the coast where s unshine is great e r ; elsewhere they grow badly . By cont ras t , co coa, a shade-loving plant, gro ws except iqnally well in S iwai (Sumbak, 1970) . The earl iest cocoa driers that were intro duced int o S iwai involved a comb inat ion o f s un and f ire fo r drying beans but insuff icient s un an d its irregular appearance result ed in their declining use ; only the largest modern ferment aries, such as that o f the S iwai So ciety at Konga, bother to inco rpo rate Sllll- drying (s ince labour is always available to move the roo f ) . Although garden shelters are e s s ent ial, and umbrellas useful in heat as in rain, prolonged s unshine is rarely a det errent to any kind of physical act ivity . High winds are unusual s in ce Bougainville is out s ide Cyclone Ida caused some damage the usual path o f cyclones ; to houses in 1972 but it is unusual fo r there to be more serious problems than the occas ional st rip of roo f in g t hat ch blown away . Falling coconut s are pot ent ially much more lethal ; earthquakes too are a great er hazard than winds . Heavy rains an d hot sun make expat riate researchers rather more grat e ful fo r shade and shelter than Siwais , yet overall there are no real cl imat ic hazards in S iwai ; the environment is one in which most t ropical crops flourish extremely success fully . Rainfall and s tmshine are sufficient and there are no ext remes of t emperature . Apart f rom a few irregular floods , the climate is predictable and regular ; 19 S iwais are not subj e ct to the climat ic irregular it ies that t rouble agricult uralists in less favoured areas . Vegetat ion and animal l ife Much of the plain remains covered with rain forest ; s outh o f the old Buin road (through Ruisei and Haisi) and no rth o f the upland villages some of this luxuriant and varied vegetat ion is almo st unt ouched . It is s t ill an impre s s ive s i ght . Each enormous but t ressed tree-giant is a whole community of veget at ion: numerous woo dy vines twine around the tree's aerial roots, and every l imb is covered with luxurious paras it ic growt h . So thick are the branches that very few shafts of sunlight p enetrat e, and ground- clutterin g s crub growth is s eldom encot.mtered in the forest s' (Oliver, 1 95 5 : 8) . In cent ral S iwai t o o · a l it tle o f this s t ill remain s and even around new garden s it es there is always enough t ree cover t o p revent views o f more than a couple of hundred met res, except along the roads . The lands cape of S iwai is e s s ent ially introspect ive . Apart from swampy areas clos e to the coast and the high t.mpopulated mot.mtains inland the nat ural vegetat ion o f S iwai is remarkably homogeneous through the area ; the t ropical rain fore s t is dominat ed by Vi tex ( S-moikui ) and Pome tia species . Although its comp o s it ion is much the same throughout S iwai it is t yp ically het ero geneous rain forest , cont ainin g about s ixty common species o f big t rees with average girths o f over s ix feet (1 . 8 met res) and s ome 250 sp ecies with girths of over one foot (Whitmore, 1 966: 1 ) . Most of the main fore s t t rees are over 30 met re s high with s catt ered emergent species, such as canarium almonds (galips ) , reaching over 4 0 met res . S econdary forest regrown in old garden areas rarely has time to produce a clos ed vegetat ion canopy ; where a canopy does exi s t it is no more than about 15 to 18 metres hi gh . The most conspicuous o f the larger species in this woody regrowth are Kle inhovia hospita and Albizia and Althoffia species ; beneath these t rees there is quite a den s e shrubby layer dominated by gingers and a few s catt ered palms and wild bananas . Increas ingly bamboo is becoming a part o f this unde rgrowth, much o f which is a valuable source o f building material s and, p art icularly in the past , was the 20 s ource of t imber for fen ce mat e rial (Oliver, 195 5 c : 2 3-4) . The s econdary re growth enables regenerat ion o f the s o ils and the perman ent ve get at ion cover ass i s t s in binding the s o il surface to prevent s o il ero s ion ; both forest and regenerated bush remain a valuable reserve of t imber, plant foods and, ult imat ely, garden lan d . S iwai homes are made almost ent irely from plant products although the use o f nails is univers al ; a few ridge crest s , which are di f ficult to weat herproo f, are covered with iron strips . Roofing thatch is made f rom the s ago palm, which is somet ime s cult ivat ed partly for this ; s ago palm or split bamboo forms internal and external walls . Floors are made from limbum (Kentiopsis s pp) ; rafters , beams and als o cord come from various fo rest s pecies . S ince the fore st also provides food and medicine, woo d for s pears, s lit gongs, cocoa ferment aries and s o on, the con sequences t o the vegetat ion are quit e cons iderable so that for a mile or more arotlll d any village there is what can be des cribed as a ' deplet ed forest' (Whitmore, 1969:2 66) . In these areas small trees, climbers and even fungi have been select ively removed and the f ores t t akes on a more o pen appearance, with big t rees standing over the herb layer and the lower part of the canopy havin g almost disapp eared . The divers ity of fauna in S iwai is a trtmcat ed version o f that on t he islands west o f Bougainville and on the New Guinea mainland . As hunt ing cont inues, the variety is decreas in g . For example, there are no venomous snakes in Bougainville ; nor are there leeches , cas s owaries or birds of paradise. Even so there are s t ill some species con fined ent irely to Bougainville, s uch as the g iant t ree rat ( Unicorrry s ponce le ti ) , named after one o f the earliest Catholic miss ion aries in Buin . The largest mammals are wild p igs , now in reduced numbers, possums (fhaZanger orientalis breviceps ), t ree rat s , which have now almost disappeared, o ther kinds of rat and many variet ies o f flyin g fox (P teropus spp . ) , flying mice and bat s (Trought on, 1935) . There are also various kinds o f fro gs and land rept iles such as lizards and snake s . Toads are a recent po st -war arrival into south Bougainville and are of uncert ain origin . Snails are not common and the giant snail, probably introduced by the Japanese during the war, has not yet reached S iwai and is, at present, only a menace in east co ast gardens . 21 Birds o f many variet ies occur in pro fus ion ; the largest o f th es e, hornbills and eagles , are declining in number s , but there are many kinds o f pigeons, parrots, cockatoos and owls . Ins ect s such as mos quitoes and especially the persistent sandflies, are a part i cular nuis ance on the coast but apart from swampy areas they are rarely a problem inland . Cock roaches are an ubiquitous pes t and the cent ipede, which occas ionally grows to a length o f over 50 cent imetres, has a s t in g suf ficient to cause severe pain for a couple o f days. Lice t o o are a p es t in fes t ing the heads o f mos t small children. On the other hand there are some of the largest and s ome of the mos t rare and beaut iful but terflies in the world. Black beetles, and also baby flying foxes, can be att ached to pieces o f s t ring t o become divert ing children's toys unt il they are worn out. Almos t every living s pecies had some role, pos it ive or negat ive, in S iwai life. Ecolo gical divers ity within S iwai is slight , apart from minor variat ions betwe·en high mount ains and swampy coas t s . The rivers· and their immediate surrounds represent one area o f ecolo gical uniquene s s but then no S iwai would live far f rom a river or s t ream, a sour ce of wat er for dr inking and for washing people and clothes . Here the fauna is more varied and the flora divers i f ied ; s ago palms overhang the s t reams but rarely so densely as in mainland New Guinea and the pat tern o f river ine exploit at ion is rather dif ferent The st reams from that employed on the int ervening ridges. cont ain f ish and eels, although it is only in large rivers like the Hongorai o r Mivo, that they are large enough to j us t ify f ishing trips (Connell, 1977a:l0) . Prawns abound in mos t s t reams and rivers except for the small s t reams of Rataiku (Oliver, 1955:9). The mos s fore s t s of the mount ains do not concern Siwais but the coas t al environment s omet imes does ; here there is a slightly different vegetat io n (although the exploit able species s eem l i t t le changed) and a much great er fauna! variety, including crocodiles and, in the sea, a variety o f fish and t urtles. The environment al s t age Be fore the war Oliver found S iwai 'a remote and harsh environment ' (1955:ix) . It remains remote yet small aero planes fly to the centre o f S iwai and remo teness is not a problem that S iwais o ften t rouble themselves with. Oliver als o s t ated (1955:453) that the phy s i cal environment o f S iwai was 'deficient i n certain respect s' an d that s ome S iwai illne s s e s , primarily colds , 'may be laid at the door 22 o f their physical environment ' (Oliver , 1955 : 11 ) . In what ways it was a harsh environment and the ext ent to which dis ease was a direct result o f environment rather than a p roduct o f cul t ural p ract ices are left unexplained ; i f it was so then it did not seem that way in 19 7 5 . Nor does it seem tha t way to the S iwai themselves ; Oliver reco rds the nearest approach to a sent iment about S iwai , made by a man who had re turned from work in the New Guinea mainland : ' Our own S iuai fore s t s are good - the source o f all des irab le things : of food and game and building mat erials . Only madmen woul d choo se to live elsewhere ! ' ( Oliver , 1955 : 104 ) . Nearly forty years lat er sent iment remained the s ame ; l ike people eve rywhere the S iwai claim. · that their land is the best . S iwai is a highly des irab le place in whi ch to l ive : a pleasant environment for agriculture and life . Chapter 2 The p eople of Siwai 1 Every s o ciety tends to keep its vital processes in a stat e o f bal ance such that populat ion will replenish los se s from death and grow t o an ext ent deemed des irable by collect ive norms . These norms are flexible and readj ust rather p romptly to changes in the ab ility of the economy to support populat ion (Bo gue, 1969 : 5 1 ) . The mo st distin ct ive characteristic o f Bougainvilleans is their b lackness, unlike Melanesians t o the west and east . but to gether with the neares t Solomon Islands (including Choiseul and New Georgia) to the east . The physical anthropologist Friedlaender dist in guished Bougainvilleans by 'their very dark complexion, frizzy hair, and generally . Afr ican appearance' ( 19 75 : 2 8 ) . Yet there are also regional differen ces within the island; Friedlaender ( 1 9 7 5 : 2 9 ) confirmed that the three divis ions recognized in the early twent ieth century by the f irst European observers as between the coastal peoples and the peop le o f the northern and s outhern interiors � we re recognized by s ome o f his Bougainvillean informants , who t alked about the long-headed beach people , the big, broad and heavy northern mountaineers and the s mall and sho rt-headed s outherners, and als o eventually emerged f rom h i s own multivariate analysis o f phys ical charact eris tics . In this context however S iwais tend to f it b etween the first and third group s . Indeed there are considerable variat ions in all phy s ical characteri stics within S iwai . S ome S iwais have much light er skin, a t rait which Siwais believe to be mo re common in the Haisi area ; some individuals have redder hair whil st there are even a few S iwais with almos t straight hair . Bougainville is unique (amongst areas tested in this way) in its 'ext remely fragment ed' population st ructure (Friedlaender, 1 9 7 1 : 2 4 ) , a 1 A more detailed vers ion of this chapter, especially in it s treatment o f s ome o f the more t echnical aspects of demo graphic change (and some o f the correlat e s o f the 1 9 7 5 s ituat ion) is provided in a separat e p aper (Connell, 19 7 7b ) . 23 24 social phenomenon which has tended t o preserve or induce marked local differen ces in phys ique (and also blood types ) . Unl ike Friedlaender ' s informan t s ( from an unspecif ied part o f Bougainville) , Siwais did not conceive o f their own phy.s ical uniqueness ; they believed that it was generally impossib le to dis t inguish S iwais from o ther Bougainvillean s in this way . Their uniqueness was a product o f language and cul t ure . Historic separat ion and uniqueness were never abs olut e ; genealo gies from villages on the fringes o f S iwai record marriages with nei ghb ouring language groups at all per iods of recent his to ry , and there was t rade rather than enmity In the b etween the language groups of south Bougainville . ninet een th century marriages were con t racted at leas t as far as Nas ioi in eas t Bougainville and with the islands o f the Bougainville s t rait , and this was a pattern that has been maint ained to some extent unt il the p resent day . But in the mid -twent ieth century marriage links b egan to ext en d ; i f S iwais had cont racted marriages with the ' redskins ' o f New Guinea o r the cen t ral Solomon s be fore the war Oliver does no t record that fact and genealo gies do not demon s t rate it . S uch marriages b ecame a little more connnon as mob ility increas ed and there are now a small n umb er of permanen t res iden t s in S iwai born b eyond the island o f Bougainville and the Bougainville S t raits . Even so mos t households with one partner from S iwai and one f rom out s ide Bougainville do not live in S iwai ; none of the five S iwais who have married Europeans lives there . Marriages b eyond the bounds o f S iwai remain excep t i onal and are act ively dis couraged . Consequent ly fear and distrus t o f ' redskins ' remains and the cultural Indeed , as Chagnon s igni f icance of these marriages is slight . argues , ' in t ribal cul tures the world over , there is a general att itude held by lo cal group memb ers that their neighbours , being remote spat ially and genealo gically , are there fo re less moral o r less human than themselves ' ( 1 9 7 4 : 7 7 ) . Permanent mi gration into or out o f S iwai has been almost non-exi s t ent and recent cul t ural changes in S iwai are primarily a response to un iversal wes t ern developmental changes rather than an inco rpo rat ion o f o ther Melanesian t radit ions . S iwai has never been an ent irely clo sed populat ion yet S iwais regard themselves as a dis t inct ethnic connnun ity , although with recogniz able s imilarit ies to n eighb ouring Bougainville populat ion s . However this s imilarity is reco gnized primarily at the fringes o f S iwai rather than at 25 the cent re . Moreover a t an y given t ime al l persons c an be cl as s i fied as either nat ives o r aliens and, although an alien might be des crib ed as ' l ike a S iwai ' the divis ion is innnut able . One is a S iwai only if at leas t one paren t is a S iwai ; S ince this one do es n o t become a S iwai through marriage . cat e gory covers almost all the populat ion res iden t in S iwai , the re bein g no adop tion o f al ien s , the populat ion is essent ially homogeneous . Populat ion his tory The early history o f S iwai population change is almost llllknown . Oliver reco rds t hat Siwai went through the crit ical init ial cont act per iod without suffering the ' customary decline ' ( Oliver , 1 9 5 5 : 10 ) · that was typ ical of so many o ther parts of the S olomon I s lands and Melanesia . There is no sub s equent eviden ce to sugges t that this was no t t rue and certainly S iwai had very s light con t act with the t rading and plantat ion world be fore the twen t ieth century . Nor are there o ral account s of epidemics or o ther dramat ic influen ces on the S iwai populat ion . Even so it would b e imp robab le that the historic populat ion o f S iwai remained ent irely s t at ionary s in ce populat ions do not remain \lll c hanging in every respect for lon g p eriods o f t ime ; whatever · fluctuat ions there were seem to have more or less balanced at least for ab out fifty y ears before the las t world war . The earlies t government estimate o f the populat ion o f Bougainville Island alone was made retrospect ively b y the Aust ralian adminis t ration for 1 9 14 , when the is land had an enumerated popul at ion o f 9160 and an estimated populat ion o f 2 3 , 5 00 ( P CA , 1 92 3 : 134 ) . The first estimat e of the S iwai populat ion was made fo r 1922 when a total of 32 72 persons were enumerat ed (PCA , 1924 : 93 ) . A year lat er the total was raised t o 3 7 1 3 and in 1924 it reached 4115 ( Figure 3 ) . By the late 1920s few new S iwai villages were enumerated and the rapid increase in reco rded number s began to level o f f ; in S iwai the period o f contact was over . The actual patt ern of populat ion change in this p eriod is impo s s ib le t o assess ; there is no means o f recording either natural increase or the number o f ab sentee cont ract labourers on p lant at ions ( a figure whi ch p robab ly changed little durin g the post-war period) who were excluded from the census total s . The only complete p re-war administ rat ion censuses of S iwai that remain in exist en ce are those for 1936 and 1 9 38 (Olive r , pers . comm. 19 7 7 ) . These s uggest that there was a s lowly growing populat ion at this t ime although the records thems elves seem 26 9000 8000 7000 6000 5000 o O 0 0 0 0 4000 0 0 3000 1 9 20 Figure 3 . 1 9 30 1 9 40 1 950 S iwai population growth Sources: 1921-40 P CA Annual Reports 1948-on Irregular Patrol Reports 1 9 60 1 9 70 27 unlikely t o b e ac curat e . Oliver re corded the S iwai populat ion in October 1 9 3 8 as 4 6 5 8 ( Oliver , 1 9 5 5 : 9 ) ; however this included the principally Buin-speaking villages of Tarowa and Tupopisau and excluded all the villages b etween Muwoku and Mis iminoi (both o f which seem to have b een ent irely excluded from the census ) , S ininai , Horino and the Haisi area . By s ub s t it ut ing all o f thes e villages for the two Buin villages t he 1 9 3 8 populat ion o f the area that corresponds with the p resent S iwai area was s light ly over 5 000 . This est inia.te is the on.ly one that can b e comp ared with post-war administ rat ion censuses . Oliver reported o f the 1 9 38 population o f S iwai (and also Nagovis i and Buin ) that ' we believe that the average size of those populat ions were not markedly different in the period 1 8 8 8-19 3 8 ' ( 1954 : 1 7 ) . There was good reason why this should have b een so . Unt il the war the administ rat ion had had very s light impact in the area ; med ical services were available only from the mi ssions but may have lowered the infant and child mortality rate t o s ome ext ent (but the impact of this was reduced by the main t enance of infant icide . and abort ion ) whilst the adminis t rat ion ' s movement o f S iwais int o l ine villages may have raised rather than lowered the death rat e as it did in part s of the S olomon Is lands . There had been no nut ritional changes although there is no reason to s uppos e that the hist oric S iwai d iet was in any way serious ly de ficient ( Oliver , 1954 : 41 ) . Nevertheless there are the s light indicat ions from populat ion totals and compo s it i ons that the S iwai populat ion was already b eginning to change in size and compositi on at the end of the 1 9 3 0s . • . • The war had a devast at in g impact on the populat ion o f south Bougainville ; the crude figures suggest t hat between 1940 and 1948 the S iwai p opulat ion fel l by arollll d 1000 people . Censuses were carried out throughout Bougainville early in 1948 and Cole recorded that the S iwai populat ion had fallen from 4 6 1 3 to 36 6 3 , a drop o f 2 0 . 6 per cent (PR Bougainvi lle , 10 / 4 7-48) . This was exactly the s ame rate o f decrease a s in Nagovis i ; in Bai t s i there was a fall o f 2 2 . 7 p er cent and in Buin an alarming 30 . 3 per cent . The populat ion pyramids of S iwai indicat e very clearly the resultant ' wais t ' in the wartime-born age groups , and although it is improb ab le that as much as a quarter of the S iwai populat ion died durin g or soon after the war the ac t 11al proport ion was probab ly not much less . Many S iwais , especially yollll g children , died and there were few b irths to rep len ish the populat ion . However , people suf f ered more 28 from malnutrition , lack o f medi cal care an d exposure than from dire c t milit ary act ion . Moreover , t owards the end o f the war t h e s t aple food , t aro (Colocasia esculenta ) was virtually wiped out by t aro b light ( see pp . 73-5) , and during the year fo llowing the war, there were probably as many deaths as in the war years . Durin_g this t ime infant icide and probably al so abortion were con s cious and f requent choices o f many S iwais . Fecundity may also have declin ed . The only presently available comparable dat a are from the Tolai of eas t New Britain ; th ere the war his to ry was no t dis similar to that of Bouga inville and there too there is a clear ' wais t ' in the age-sex s t ruc tures both in specific villages (Ep s t e in and Epstein , 1962 : 7 7-8) and mo re generally throughout the whole region ( Granger , 1 9 71 : 1 10-1) . In Bougainville Nash ( 1 9 7 4 : 12 ) has ob served a similar situat ion reflected in Nagovis i genealo gies . S in ce Long ( 1 9 6 3 : 9 0) est imated that some 16 , 000 Japanese died in Bougainville as a result o f s i cknes s , it would be surprising if many o f the local populat ion were not simil arly affected . S iwais themselves think of the war years as b ein g a time of excep t ional hardship al though they do not usually characterize the p eriod as one in whi ch many people died . Constraints on fer t il ity were more important than deaths in causin g the populat ion decline . The decline was so severe that it took more than a decade for the population to reach its pre-war level . After the war the S iwai populat ion began to grow and the re was a st eadily increasing populat ion ; indeed the rate of populat ion change has accelerated and there is no indicat ion that this is changin g . Pre sent t rends suggest t hat the populat ion may double in less than twenty y ears , an ext remely rapid rate of increase . Even so , Mit chell ( 1 9 7 6 : 14 8 ) est imates that the populat ion of n eighbouring N agovis i will doub le in less than fifteen years . The 1 9 7 5 admin i st rat ion census , carried out in difficult polit ical condit ion s , was incomplete and exists only for two-thirds of S iwai villages ; however , in seven o f these the cen sus dat a were collected more carefully and in mo re de tail than ever before . An accurate acco un t o f the S iwai populat ion is made even more dif ficul t b ecause the 1 9 7 2 census , which was quite inaccurate , recorded a total o f 85 5 9 thus givin g an inc r e ase o f 2 1 per cent in two years , a demograph i c impos sib ility ( in the absence o f migrat ion ) . My own est imate o f a to tal Siwai populat ion o f about 9 000 in 1 9 75 is b ased in part on the 1 9 72 and 1 9 75 cens uses and in part on my own censuses o f eight villages and hence on compari sons be tween these . The populat ion t rend l ine in Figure 3 is there fore highly generalized . Of this populat ion 29 some 5 5 per cent are Catholics , 4 4 per cen t United Church ( including a · small p roportion of Evangelist s ) and less than 1 per cen t Bap t ists or Seventh-Day Adven t is t s . Cont empo rary populat ion data are inadequate for sophisticated demographic analysis , yet man ipulat ing s tat ist ics comp iled by mi ss ions , admin i strat ion and mys el f enables s ome s imple s tatement s to b e made . The composite age-st ructure of the S iwai populat ion ( Figure 4 ) , which includes all migrant s who have maint ained village homes , reveals the s t ill growing populat ion o f S iwai , which is not dis s imilar t o the res t of the southern half of Bougainville island ( Fr iedlaen der , 19 75 : 54-8) . The pro file is typ ical o f populat ions that have experien ced a de cl ine in th e death rat e whilst maint aining a high b irth rate . Relat ively few people are in the older age gro ups ; b o th the 1 9 7 1 and 1 9 7 5 data suggest that only 15 per cent o f the S iwai populat ion were aged ove·r 4 5 , although this is actually a greater proport ion than in eastern Bougainville , wh ere there were only 11 per cent ( Friedlaender , 19 75 : 5 5 ) , o r in s ome o ther lowland areas o f Melanes ia , such a s Karkar Is land (Hornab rook , 1 9 7 4 : 2 31 ) where this figure was 12 per cent . By con t rast the 1 9 7 1 and 19 7 5 f i gures for the S iwai populat ion less than ten years of age are 33 p er cent and 31 per cen t respect ively . Although the S iwai populat ion seems to be no t quite so b ro adly based as these o ther two Melanesian populat ions it is s t ill a .b ro adly b ased pyramid and one that is s teadily b ecoming even more so . The rap id expansion of the S iwai p opulat ion has been a l i tt le delayed by war t ime deaths . The post-war growth in pop ul at ion is reflected in , amongst o ther things , changin g household sizes ; on average , households are consisten t ly larger than in p re-war years despite the reduct ion in the p roport ion of polygynous households . Households in Melanes ia are always difficult t o define adequat ely . Oliver refers t o t he S iwai household as ' the principal res i dent ial and sub s is t en ce unit . Memb ers s leep to gether in thei r own house and p reserve a high degree of privacy . Most households als o act s ep arat ely t o produce and consume their own food and many o ther basic economic essen t ials ' ( Ol iver , 1955 : 104 ) . In recent y ears households have b ecome rather mo re fragmented bu� by defining contemporary S iwai households as all thos e who customar ily eat in one place , s imple comparisons may be made b etween the size o f households now an d before the war . Before the war adult males with four or mor e dependent children were excused t ax payment s ; thus when the 1936 census was carried out only 30 A. Cath o l i c s,� 40-44 1 13 87 35-39 30-34 25-29 20-24 1 5-19 164 10-14 5-9 0-4 316 264 70+ 6 65-69 5 60-64 B. E ight Vi l l ages 1975 (Abse ntees shaded} 55-59 50-54 40-44 35-39 30-34 25-29 20-24 57 15-19 10-14 S-9 0-4 Figure 4 . Age component s o f S iwai population 31 71 out o f 1 500 adult males were excused . Four decades lat er more than half the households ( 6 6 out of 122 ) in four random vill ages have six or more members although because of the absences of school children and migrant workers rather less than half ( 5 6 ) are likely t o regularly eat t o gethe r . Reapplying the 1936 t ax demands in 19 75 would have resulted in as many as 52 out of 163 adult males being excused t axes . By whatever s t andards households are de fined their s ize has increased eno rmously s ince the war ·. Marriage and fertility The chan ging relat ionship b etween factors encouraging or dis couragin g population growth can b e b r ie fly examined , especially as they af fect chan ges in S iwai fert ility and mortality . The most b as ic o f these in fluences is marriage . Marriage itself is almo s t tm iversal in S iwai although it is p o ssible that this may not have b een so in the distant past ( part ly b ec ause o f the greater p roport ion of polygynous marriages ) ; Oliver ' s invest igat ions s ug gest that b efore the war marriage was as un ivers al as it is now . There are a few tmmarried males in their thirt ies in S iwai and a few more out s ide , o ften workin g in urban emp loyment , b ut apparen t ly no t one tmmarried healthy female . Males have a greater lat itude for choice but there is no cult ural provis ion for permanent celib acy . All S iwais are expected to marry and there are no rest rict ions on the remarria ge o f widows and widowers . Those who do not remarry are usually those b eyon d child-b ear in g a g e o r , in some cases , those who have out lived several wives or husb ands and are con sequently feared by po ssib le spouses . Before the war ' by the t ime S iuai men and women reach sen ility mos t of them will have been married more than on ce ' ( Oliver , 1 9 5 5 : 2 2 0 ) ; the s ame is less t rue now as many couples survive to old age . Thus almost all S iwais marry and most remain married throughout their period o f fert ility . The mean age o f marriage has changed very l it tle s ince the war (Tab le 2 ) . In the last decade r i s in g affluence has allowed b rideprices to be fotmd mo re quickly and men no longer migrat e to con tract lab our ; even so the age at which men marry h as declined only sl ightly whilst for women it has not decl in ed at all . Educat ion has no t delayed the age o f marriage ; rather a comb in at ion o f af fluence an d the end o f p lan t at ion mi grat ion have t ended t o b r in g the age o f male marriage forward . 32 Tab le 2 S iwai mean age at marriage Year pre-1944 1945-1954 1 9 55 - 19 6 4 1965-19 7 5 Males 23. 6 n= 5 3 24 . 1 n=l 02 24 . 6 n=l 4 0 22 . 0 n=l64 Females 17. 9 n=52 19 . 0 n=l03 18 . 6 n=l 38 18 . 5 n=l 6 7 Source : F ield data B ecaus e of all the chan ges that have followed contact , especially the arrival o f two Chris t ian mi ss ions in S iwai , recon s t ruct ion o f t radit ional beliefs and p ract ices relat ing to sexual act ivity is almost impo ss ib le . However , l ike many o ther s oc iet ies in Melanesia (Bulmer , 19 71 : 1 4 5 ) , it seems cert ain that the s ingle mos t important cultural fact o r affect ing fert ility was a postpartum taboo o n sexual int er course . In these , and in other att itudes to fert i lit y , S iwai was certainly very similar to other Bougainvillean societ ies such as Nas ioi and Nagovisi (Ogan , Nash and Mit chell , 19 7 6 ) . S iwais have always app reciated the p ract ical p roblems o f providin g adequate care for children born too close together , hen ce twins were a sp ecial problem. This was usually phrased in terms of this level of care bein g too demandin g on the mother ' s health and preven t in g h er gardening act ivit ies ; it was less usually phras ed as concern for the health of the child . In the p as t the postpartum t aboo on int ercourse was p robably extremely lon g ; thus in p re-cont act Nagovis i and Nasioi it is p os s ib l e that b irths were spaced aronnd four years apart (Ogan et al . , 19 7 6 : 5 35 , 5 4 1 ) . Blackwood ( 1 9 35 : 15 6 ) cons idered that in north Bougainville there was then an almost nn iversally observed postpartum taboo period o f two to three years . This s ort o f p eriod was prob ab ly al so true of S iwai and there as elsewhere b irth intervals have subs equen t ly become rather shorter . S iwais generally claim that a pos tpartum t aboo on sexual int er co urse should be maint ained nn t il the nur s in g child is old enough t o walk p roperly , exactly the s ame claim made in o ther parts o f Bougainville (Ogan et al . , 1 9 76 : 5 36 ; Ring and S c ragg , 1 9 7 3 : 109 ) . 33 suggest , much as they do in Nasio i , a t aboo period o f arollll d f ifteen months , somewhat shorte r than in o ther Melanesian s ociet ies . I f s t rict ly ob served such a t aboo would res ult in b ir ths bein g spaced at intervals o f at least two y ears . In o rder to test the degree to which S iwais actually observed their s t at e d pos tpartum t aboo on int er course , dat a was collected on b irth intervals in contemporary S iwai ( Connell , 197 7b : l8-21) . The data show that there has b een a decreas e in birth intervals s ince the war (although the change is only j us t s t at is t ically s i gnificant ) and is not apparen t ly as rap id as elsewhere in Bougainville (Tab le 3 ) . Comparison o f the b irth interval data also indicates that the areas of his torically greater change and contact with western ideas ( in terms of educat ion , health centres , plant at ion establishment and so on) on the east coas t exp erienced a rather earl ier decrease in b irth intervals . S iwais are st i�l more or less observing the po stpartum t aboo , s in ce there is no s i gn i fi cant usage o f non-t radit ional methods of b irth con t ro l . Shame is s t ill att ached to those who depart s ub s tant ially from this part i cular norm ; S iwai at t it udes are f irmly opposed t o family restrict ions and generally con s i der a large numb er o f children t o be the i deal situation . Tab le 3 Bougainville b irth intervals S iwai Nas ioi 1945-4 9 1950-54 2 . 94 1955-59 2 . 87 19 60-64 Nagovis i Buka 4 . 30 2 . 71 ( 1 9 4 7 -4 9 ) 3 . 71 2 . 73 2 . 98 3 . 68 2 . 46 2 . 76 2 . 71 3 . 16 2 . 17 1965-69 2 . 90 2 . 75 19 7 0- 7 4 2 . 46 Source : 2 . 68 ( 1 9 6 5 -7 2 ) Ogan , Nash and Mit chell ( 19 7 6 : 5 3 7 , 5 4 3 ) ; Ring an d S cragg ( 19 7 3 : 100 ) ; Connell , f ield data . 34 By compar ison with the Tolai of east New Britain , where women as early as the lat e 1950s were able to ' affirm that breach of the inj unct ion no longer carries the so cial st igma that at t ached to it in former t imes , and is in fact frequen t ' (Epstein and Epstein , 1962 : 74 ) , S iwai birth intervals are very lon g indeed and populat ion growth is correspondin gly rather slower . Nevertheles s all the availab le evidence s uggests that S iwai is moving slowly but inexo rab ly towards the Tolai s ituat ion ; b irth intervals may be expected to decline furthe r . Th e s ignificance o f other t radit ional kinds o f family limitat ion , con t racept ion , ab ort ion and in fant icide , is les s easy t o interpret a s eviden ce i s somewhat amb i guous ( Connell , 1 9 7 7b : 2 2 - 3 ) . Tradit ional forms o f cont racept ion were certainly pract ised in the past and are st ill used by some ; the eff icacy o f the plant s that are eaten is unknown . Abo rt ion may have been p ract ised in the p as t and is cert ainly not in compat ib le with infant icide , which certainly existed befo re the war and was resorted to by some in the early p o st-war years . A nun , s t ationed at Monoitu in 1 9 30 , ob served the cremation alive o f a child with its mother who had died in childb irth and recorded that ' the people did not want this infant who had killed it s mo ther ' (Catho lia Aation, 1 9 6 ? ) . This was no t an isolated o c currence yet more usually in fant icide could be con sidered as select ive neglect . There is t here fore an unresolved confl ict b etween the exist en ce of abort ion and infant icide in the p as t with , at the same t ime , culturally s an ct ioned specific lactat ion and ab s t inence periods , intended primarily to ensure a minimum period between pregnancies which would imp rove the l ikel ihood o f the child surviving . However , very lit t le is known ab o ut the cultural context o f either ab ortion or infant icide and it is probable that b oth existed on ly in ext reme situat ion s , for example , in the case o f ab ort ion , where a con cep t ion had o c curred which violat ed s o cial norms o r , in the case o f in fanticide , where i t was considered that the child would die in any case because o f the unavailab ility o f adequate maternal care . How often these condit ions might have o ccurred is impo ssible to s ay . S in ce abort ion an d in fant icide have now d isappeared from S iwai , amongst a very few other cul tural p ract i ces whi ch have suf fered a s imilar demise , it is p o s s ib le that they were never particularly imp ort ant ( although , equally , mis s ions would have reacted very unfavourab ly to them) . 35 Moreover S iwai explanat ions for infant i cide especially are so varied that it is difficult to bel ieve t hat there was a st raightforward explanat ion for the pract ice . Tentat ive explan at ions o f in fant icide were primarily economi c ; it was hard work to look after children and expensive in terms o f fl.lll e rary ritual were they to die . However , S iwais d o no t now believe that infant icide was prac t ised at t imes o f general e conomic h ardship when adequat e food was unavailable ; they do not believe that there have even b een such p er iods . Thi s does not conflict with the view that pre-cont act S iwai was a worl d o f subsistence affluence' b ut it is possible that there was somet imes individual e conomic hardship , perhaps primarily a result o f disease , that could only be reduced by resort ing t o the direct and dramat ic ext reme o f infant icide . Altern at ively infant icide may have been an example o f what Douglas ( 19 6 6 : 2 7 1 ) has called ' the oysters and champagne fact or in populat ion con t ro l ' wh ere populat ion control o c curs when a smaller family appears to have a relat ive social advantage . ' A small p rimit ive populat ion which is homo geneously commit ted to the same pat t ern o f values , and t o whi ch the lad�ers o f social s tatus of fer a s eries of worthwhile goals which do not require large families for their at tainment , is likely to apply rest rict ive demo graphic policies ' ( Douglas , 1966 : 2 72) . It would be dangerous t o argue that S iwai leaders pre ferred rearing p igs to people yet it would not be go ing too far to argue that a climate o f opin ion was engendered in which some ind ividuals would be willing to make that de c is ion . It is p robab le that the decline in in fant icide is partly a fun ct ion o f a change in att itudes to s t atus and prest ige . Other measures t hat would have slowed long-t erm populat ion growth , such as the direct encouragement o f emigrat ion , monogamy or late age o f marriage s eem never to have existed in S iwai . Ult imately too l it t le is known about hist oric S iwai soc iety to evaluate the extent o f any o f thes e cultural pract ices , the ir relative importance at different periods o f t ime an d in different households and therefore the balance between e conomic and cultural cont rols over fert ility . It is eviden t only that every con s traint to increas ed fert ility has de cl in ed during the present century . Fertility rates calculat ed from the data for eight villages (Tab le 4 ) from two separate years give result s that (even from a small sample) are not great ly dif ferent from those cal culated els ewhere in o ther s imilar coast al Melane s ian environment s , in cluding Buka . The t ab le covers all women ; hence the proportion s actually married are small in the w O'I Tab le 4 Births and age-sEecif ic fert ilit� rates S iwai Buka New Ireland Karkar (Eight villages ; 19 70-7 5 ) ( 1962-6 7 ) ( 1 9 62-6 7 ) (1968) rat e/ 1000 rate/ 1000 rate/ 1000 rate / 1000 b irths /women 15-19 17 2 88 59 135 170 56 2 0-24 68 206 330 348 279 307 2 5-2 9 43 12 8 3 36 383 258 3 35 30-34 37 114 325 255 1 74 3 15 35-39 32 139 2 30 32 0 121 248 4 0-44 16 125 12 8 188 55 1 35 4 5 -4 9 3 98 31 7 14 71 7.4 8. 5 5.4 6.8 To tal fertil ity rate Source : S iwai - Connell , f ield dat a ; Buka and New Ireland - Rin g and Scragg , 19 7 3 : 92 , 94 ; Karkar - Hornabrook , 1974 : 2 32 . 37 youngest age group . S iwai women are as fert ile as Buka women only in the age- group 45-4 9 . S ince Buka has had a much great er exposure t o western educat ion and medicine whilst b irth intervals are much smaller there , it seems prob able that S iwai fert ility will eventually rise t o at least the s ame leve l as that o f Buka . As others have ob served elsewhere in Bougainville i t i s n o t easy t o as sess changes in cultural p ract i ces af fect in g fert ility . Mis sion s have e f fect ively eliminated in fant icide and the Catholic mis s ion has opposed b o th t radit ional and European methods o f b irth con t rol ; both Catho lic and Methodist miss io�s emphas iz ed ' the j oys of parenthood ' ( Ogan e t al . , 1 9 7 6 : 5 38 ) , and t o s t re s s thes e att itudes the mi ss ion s them selves fre quent ly raised orphaned or s ick children . This era has not complet ely ended and , as Ring and S c ragg exp ressed it for Buka , ' the Christian church and government have b een s ilen t on the so c ial pattern that should be adopt ed while they wel come the munificent increas e in children ' ( Ring and S cragg , 19 7 3 : 11 8 ) . There may be differences be tween the at t �tudes o f the two mis sions in S iwai but the result s remain the s ame . Modern family planning is almost unknown in S iwai and there is no l ikel ihood that it s adopt ion will b e more rap i d in the next decade or so . In a climate o f economic affluen ce ( see p . 4 6 ) S iwai at t it udes have b ecome more st rongly in favour of larger families , an att itude fost ered in part by mi ss ions and polit icians . Only a t iny proport ion o f younger men , primarily in l ineages with relat ively poor access to land, have begun to query some o f thes e at t it udes . This has not yet had any effec t on p ractice . Changes in S iwai have b een towards a declin e in cust oms and belie fs that main tained the b irth interval ; moreover the more recent exposure of women to the wes t ern influen ces that allowed these chan ges is resul t in g in further decline . Lab our migrat ion , rather than changes in at t itudes , has in pract ice b een a more sub s tan t ial in fluence on fert ility and the process of populat ion growth . P lantat ion lab our dis rupt ed family life for p eriods of at least two years ; indeed one S iwai mi ssionary has gone so far as t o claim (Beaumont , p ers . comm. 19 7 5 ) that men designed their p eriods o f ab sence on plant at ions t o coincide with the difficult p er iods of b irth and the following few months , but it may have b een no more than an in c iden t al resul t of con cept ion following a man ' s return home at intervals between work per iods which , for many men , were quite regular o c curren ces 38 fo llowing two-year work p eriods on plantat ions . During the 1960s the succes s ful adopt ion o f cashcropping and the cons truct ion o f a copper mine at Pan gllll a result ed in there being ·v ery few worke rs ab sent fo r mo re than a few weeks at a t ime hen ce the potent ial for sexual int ercourse is now great er than before . The current permanence of families is much the best explanat ion fo r higher fert ilit y . Ogan et al . ( 1 9 7 6 ) have separately come t o the s ame conclus ion f o r Nagovis i . Mortal ity Dat a for est imat ing mo rtal ity are more inaccurate than those for fert il ity . There are no est imates availab le for pre-war mortal ity rat es b ut they mus t have b een high in S iwai ; in 1938 after a b rie f period o f exposure to western medical practices there were st ill a number of potentially fat al diseases in peacet ime S iwai . ' Malaria , pneumon ia and pulmonary t ub erculo s is are prevalent and seem to be the principal kill ing diseases , b ut dysentery and filarias is are als o common ' ( Ol iver , 19 55 : 10 ) . Hookwo rm , yaws and leprosy existed then but s in ce the war have largely b een eradicated by west ern techniques . Nor are the o ther killin g diseases apparent ly so prevalent now . Very few epidemics have ravaeed S iwai s ince the war ; that of January 19 4 7, when there were thirty-five deaths f rom a men ingit is-pneumonia epidemic , was prob ab ly the mos t lethal . Indeed S iwai generally has es caped serious epidemics and by 1 9 4 8 it already had a reput at ion for bein g free o f s icknes s and disease compared with other parts o f south Bougainvi lle , whils t in 19 60 one kiap recorded that ' the general health of the S iwai people is I think the best I have s een anywhere in the Territory to dat e ' (PR Boku 2 / 60-61 ) . Ot her patro l o f f icers too have obvious ly found S iwai health t o be at least adequat e . In 19 5 6 one kiap claimed to have seen child malnut rit ion in S iwai but when this was invest igated further from the Tonu Health Cent re there was no eviden ce for the as sert ion . There has b een n o other reference t o malnut rit ion within S iwai ; even a t t imes of h eavy rain S iwais have always managed to find adequat e food . By 1956 there were s ix aid posts throughout S iwai cap able o f t reat ing primar ily minor illnes ses . The main diseases ob served on one patrol in 1 9 5 1 were yaws ( 10) , t ropical ul cers ( 79 ) and t inea ( grille) ( 4 4 ) , although conj unct ivit is and dysentery have sub sequently b een mo re common in the sporadic re feren ces to health made by the pat rol o f fi cers . 39 Between 1960 and 1 9 72 causes o f death were recorded with varying degrees o f enthus iasm in S iwai Lo cal Government Coun cil records but no mo re than 130 deaths were actually reco rded there . It is impossible to derive useful con clus ions from the s e dat� other than to note the con s is ten t and general prevalence of such diseases as dysen tery , t uberculosis , influen z a an d , in the earlier years , malaria . Ep idemics o f influen z a and whoop in g cough have reached S iwai in the 19 7 0 s but west ern medicines have been able t o prevent a s igni f icant increase in mortality . Although all the maj o r dis eases seem to have decreased in inciden ce in the post-war years , it is only for malaria that the decline has b een sub stantial followin g a sprayin g campaign which b e gan in 19 60 ( c f . S cragg , 1969 : 7 7 ) ; the main causes o f the decline in mortality have b een the greater availab ility o f penicill in and ant i-malar ials , increased numbers o f clini cs and DDT sprayin g against malar i a . Improved hous in g has reduced resp irato ry diseases whilst the disposal of garb age in holes an d the almost universal adopt ion of p it latrines have each reduced illnes s . Throughout the post-war y ears health measures have gradually reduced the mor .t ality and morb idity of diseases such as malaria , yaws and gas t roen t erit is and so far the more obvious western diseases , such as cardio-vas cular degenerat ion , have had only the mo st l imited impact in S iwai . Overall S iwais are now almos t certainly healthier and have a lower mo rtality rat e than at any t ime in the pas t . This improved health is refl ected in the stature o f the present populat ion ; Friedlaender and Ol iver ( 1 9 7 6 : 15 7 ) found that S iwai males were b igger than their fathers by at least a cent imet re . Moreover b e fore t he war in the whole o f no rtheast S iwai there were no cases o f a - child l ivin g at the same t ime as it s great-grand-paren t (Oliver , 195 5 : 2 74 ) . Now there is one in almo st every vil lage . The admin is t ration censuses enab le est imates to be made o f the crude death rate at dif ferent p eriods in S iwai . With the except ion o f the last census in 19 7 0- 7 1 all these s ub s t an t ially underestimat e the death rate be cause of their exclusion of infant mortality ; even so they do indicat e the S ince fairly c on t inuous de cl in e in death rat e s ince t he war . 1 9 7 1 the mor t al ity rate has probab ly cont inued t o fall . Even so it remain s a high death rate comp ared , for example , wit h p ar t s o f eas t ern Bougainville ( cf . Friedlaen der , 19 75 : 60-1) b ut one that is likely t o cont inue to fall , especially becaus e o f the developin g youthfulness of the S iwai populat ion . 40 Table 5 Death rates in S iwai Year All deaths Populat ion Death rate ( D e aths / 1000 ) 19 5 0-51 132 3919 34 195 4-55 225 422 8 53 1 9 5 5 -56 86 42 9 1 20 19 60-61 101 4 9 94 20 1 9 70-71 99 85 5 9 12 S ource : Patrol Repor t s It is even possible to cal culat e crude infant mortal it y rat es from the p re-war administ rat ion censuses , but given that S iwais did not repo rt b irths and in fant deaths the rates have no real validit y . Indeed inspect ion of the administ rat ion censuses would sugges t a gradual in crease in inf an t mortal ity s ince before the war : the exact reverse of the act ual s it uation . It is impossible t o det ermine what the t rue mortality rate is and it is primarily the consist ent oral evid_en ce of S iwais an � lo cal ob servers such as mi ss ionaries and heal th workers that permits the oppo s it e con clus ion t o b e drawn . The infant mortality rate is certainly fallin g b ut there are no measures o f the rate o f de cline . The people o f S iwai The S iwai populat ion is s t ill growing fas t and many o f the in fluences on this growth are tho s e ass o ciated e ither with the development of better health services , enab lin g people t o live much longer , o r with t he decl ine o f various kinds of s o cial con trol applied to populat ion growth , enablin g the level o f fe rtility to have risen rapidly . There is no evidence that rapid populat ion increase it sel f has directly alt ered t radit ional p ract i ces , n o r can it b e correlate d with the af fluence that followed co coa farmin g . Analysis o f fert ility sugges t s that the S iwai populat ion growth rate is not yet at its peak whilst there appear t o b e no s ignificant influen ces that will p revent a cont inuing 41 rise in fer t il ity . Fert ility decl ine would require community part icipat ion in child spacing t o re-estab lish pre-war family s iz e levels ; this would ent ail the estab l ishment o f modern techniques of family plann ing t o f ill the role previously t aken by postpartum abs t inence from interco urse and high in fant mortality . There are now almo s t no so cially imposed impediment s t o realiz at ion o f maximum potent ial fert ilit y ; moreover at the moment there is almo s t no economic cos t t o high fer t i l ity . The pat tern o f mortal it y decl ine , followed at an early date by fert ility decl ine , has not yet o ccurred in Bougainville ; fert ility is s t ill increasing . The relat ive inf luen ce of cultural chan ge , imp roved infant s urvival rates and imp roved marital health are impo ssib le t o dist inguish . The 1 9 7 1 census indicated that the annual growth rate of the Bougainvillean populat ion (within Bougainville ) was 3 . 4 per cent ; only three other provin ces in the count ry exceeded this growth rat e . The eviden ce from S iwai , and from Nagovis i an d Nas ioi (Ogan e t a i . , 1 9 7 6 ) , suggest s t hat in these p art s o f Bougainville at least the populat ion growth rate is s t ill not as fast as it might be , especially when compared with areas such as Tolai in east New Brit ain where populat ion and land p rob lems are now crit ical ( Gran ger , 19 7 1 ) . All available evidence sugge s t s that the S iwai populat ion , and that o f the rest o f Bouga inville , will cont inue t o grow at an increas ing rate so that there , as in eas t New Britain , populat ion den s it y will b ecome crit ical in some areas . Mit chell concludes fo r the neighbouring Nagovisi that there is an ' absence o f realist i c efforts t o reduce the rate of populat ion growth . The rate of growth is much too h igh . How can rural peopl e plan their future when their populat ion will doub le in less than fifteen years ? ' ( 19 7 6 : 148) . It is much the s ame in S iwai . Chap ter 3 Traditional agriculture : development an d destruc tion Taro o ccupies so prominent a place in S iuai l i fe that one might appropriat ely go on for pages des cr ib ing the numerous variet ies grown ; . . . the high value placed upon it as the vege tab le food ; the feelings of deprivat ion nat ives express when they must go without it ; the frequency with which it enters into conversat ion ; the numerous metaphors for it and it s use in ritual . . . S iuai nat ives spend more hours growing taro than in any o the r en terprise , the plant comprises 80 per cent of the ir diet , an d it is the b as i s of thei r sub s isten ce e conomy generally . I f that is f orgo t t en durin g cons iderat ion of mo re dramat i c act ivit ies , then t rue persp e c t ive o n S iuai life will have been lo s t ( Ol iver , 1 9 5 5 : 2 6 ) . . • . • . • The p r ehistory o f south Bougainville is as lit t le known as any part of Melanes ia . In 19 7 3 it was only po s s ible to suggest that ' on the basis of evidence from Aus t ralia and f rom othe r Pacific islands . . . it would be reasonab le t o suppose that Bougainville-Buka b egan to b e populat ed , init ially by people speaking non-Aust rones ian l an guages [ of which Siwai is one ] , several millennia ago ' (Oliver , 19 7 3 : 40 ) . More recently Howells ( 19 7 6 : 6 4 6 ) has sugge sted that man may have b een on Bougainville as early as 30 , 000 years ago . The Aus t rones ian language speakers were more recen t arrivals in Bouga inville , but could have been there as long as 5000 years ago . Much of even this limited account o f Bougainvillean p rehis tory is based on no more than speculat ive interpretat ion s o f linguistic , phys ical anthropolo gical and a thin s catter of archaeolo gical dat a . All that i s clear is that Bougain villeans have been there a very long t ime and that the con s i derable genetic an d also lin guis t i c d ivers ity on the island are a resul t of the long separat ion o f quite small populat ion groups whi ch may have been as s is ted by the early adopt ion of horticultural techniques . 42 43 S iwai stories des cribe a mythical t ime in the remot e p a s t when there was n o agriculture and no hunt ing in S iwai . The only food eaten was wild food plan t s gathered in the fore st and cooked ; Maker (Tantanu) , fleein g along the coast , came upon these early gatherers and showed them how to cook t aro , yams , mami yams (Diascorea escu lenta) , bananas an d o ther kinds o f food that they had not known before . Other t ree crop s such as sago , almonds and co conuts grew as a shelter to Tantanu as he trudged along the b each ; they too became part o f the S iwai diet and pigs were incorporated about the same t ime . There are , of course , some inconsistencies in these stories ( O l iver , 1 9 5 5 : 41-4) but overall it is clear that S iwais believe they have a lon g-estab lished agricult ural t radit ion , which may indeed have been b rought by the earliest human arrivals into Bougainville . Pe rmanent agricult ure tmdoub t edly has a long hist ory on the island . Between the t ime o f the first agriculturalist s and the immediat e post-war period , des cribed in s ome detail by Oliver ( 19 55 ) , there were naturally a numb er o f changes in the agricultural sys t em o f S iwai, o f which t he mos t important was probab ly the int ro duct ion o f sweet potat o ( S-pe teitas ; NM-kaukau ; Ipomoea batatas ) which subsequently b ecame the mo s t important sub s is t ence crop throughout Bougainville . S ince there are no mythical s to ries explaining the later arrival s of minor crops and there are many different vers ions o f the myth o f Tantanu, each o f which credit him with a slightly d i f ferent range o f food crop introduct ions , it is impo ssib le t o do more than make cert ain assumpt ions about new crops b as ed on what is known of the hist ory of the l imited contact between S iwai and the out s ide world . New plan t s could have been deliberately b rought to southern Bougainville before the nineteenth cen tury although the direct his t oric trade l inks that are known were o f l imited ext ent (Oliver , 1 9 7 3 ; Connell , 1 9 7 7 c ) and apparently between areas with a similar e co lo gy although this need not have precluded new int ro duct ions . Contacts with Europeans were non-exis t ent . The sweet potat o , possib ly s t ill t ravelling westwards through the Pacific (Yen , 1 9 7 4 : 2 5 9 ) , might have reached Bougainville before then but S iwai oral t radit ion at leas t maintain s a more re cen t origin . A few crops have no recent origin in S iwai tradit ion yet they are not usually associated with the mythical t imes of Tantanu and hen ce with great ant iquity ; these include edib le p it p it ( S-suri ; Saccharurn edule ) , aip ika (Hibiscus manihot) and tree crops such as b readf ruit . 44 S iwai tradit ions at t r ib ut e the earlies t ' modern ' crop int roduct ion t o migran t workers returning from various Pacific plantations , mainly in S amo a . l S ince there were very few worke rs there , plan t s would almo s t certainly have travelled badly and mi gran t s were quit e likely to have b een more interes t ed in mat erial goods , it seems mos t l ikely that some of these plan t s were in troduced f irst to o ther Solomon islands , which provided many more migran t s , and l ater to Bougainville , p o ss ib ly picked up by return in g migran t s a t some point in thei:r j ourney . The number o f plan t int roduct ions, if any, that came directly from Samoa i s prob ab ly very few whils t there are others which must have originally come from there (or Fij i and Ro tuma) . S ome o f these are innne diately identifiab le from their names ; one kind o f b anana is called samoa and another fiji . ( A third S amoan kind is reported t o be kihiri , the name of a coas t al mis s ion s t at ion in Buin ) . An early variety o f Chines e t aro was al so called samoa . It was said that this was t raded for maruko , a kind o f banana that grew especial ly well in S iwai , suggest in g that t raders may have played s ome part in food crop diffus ion s . Later trader s carried plant s around Richard Parkinson , who could have for their own b enefit . had S iwai servan t s , 2 int roduced some o f these food plan t s t o New Britain . In 1884 h e found plant s , including cot ton , that he had int roduced a year earlier being grown in Tolai gardens ( Salisb ury , 19 70 : 111) . Other introduct ions from around S amoa may have been ent irely new crops on Bougainville , such as sugar ( S-tongo ) , p ineapples and pumpkin s , al though even the las t two of these may no t have f inally arrived in south B ougainville until the period o f German admin ist rat ion . Sugar can e , whi ch was an indigenous P apuan cult igen , may have come from the wes t but the reported S amoan origin o f 1 Experience working on plantat ions may have had some influence on migrants return ing with new plant types yet it is probab le that missionary influence was even greater . 2 Durin g the las t century the London Mis s ionary Society in Samoa was an act ive centre of distri but ion of economic plants . As an indirect resul t o f its act ion , t oday it is po ssib le to find in the maj ority o f South Pacific is lands banana variet ies called ' S amoa ' or ' Hamoa ' as well as b readfruit and taro variet ies (Massa! and Barrau , 1956 : 16 ) . Parkinson ' s grandson , pers . connn . 19 7 5 . 45 a t least s ome types may reflect the lack o f contact to the wes t durin g this period . S ome S iwais also claim that the first short-no sed p igs came from Samo a . One o f the more recent int roduct ions that def in itely did not come directly from S amoa was the sweet potat o . The first kin d known in S iwai is generally con s idered to be konua which came to S iwai from Konua , on the northwes t coast o f Bougainville , and probab ly arrived there around the middle of the ninet eenth century . 3 S ome S iwais believe that it first reached there from S amoa and , since there were marry more migran t s from there than from south Bougainville , this seems possib le . Another story , t old in different part s o f S iwai , relat es how Tuhori , a Kaparo man who died about the t ime that Aus t ralian administrat ion began , b rought back sweet pot atoes from Fais i in the Shortland islands . He did not really underst an d what they were so that the f irst S iwai leader who t ried them , planted them bes ide st icks so that they might climb up them like b eans . Only lat er did he dis cover that the food was un derground ( c f . Ogan , 19 72 : 2 5 ) . Many other kinds o f sweet pot at o , includin g those int roduced by ·the Japanese in the war (pp . 71 ) , are named after their s uppo sed p lace o f origin or the place they had recently come from. In S iwai , there are amon gs t o thers mabiri ( east coast of B ougainville) , honiara , bomboi (a S eventh Day Adven t is t mis s ion in the Solomon Islands ) , tomeka ( or tonga) , buin , sinakot (Tenakaut , north Bougainville) ; paka was reported to have come f rom Rotuma , but there are many more kinds of unknown der ivat ion . Chinese t aro or Kongkong taro ( S-karahai ; Xanthosoma) may also have reached S iwai at much the same t ime as sweet potat o ; in the 1880s Guppy ( 18 8 7 : 84 ) not iced one kind called kalafai grown in the Bouga inville S t rait s . Like sweet potato i t s int roduct ion int o S iwai is recen t enough an d import ant enough f o r th ere t o b e disagreements over its origin 3 There is l it tle doub t that sweet potato is . . a very recent arrival in most p art s of Bougainville , compared with mos t other p art s o f Melanesia . lri Nas ioi · ( Ogan , 19 7 2 : 2 5 ) the account of it s arrival is much as in S iwai b ut in Teop it appears t o b e even more recent ; the Teop s ay that although they knew about t aro in German t imes they did not p lant it themselves un t il the 19 30s . S ome variet ies were introduced from nearby plantat ions and o thers came from the Buin area . ( Shoffner , 1 9 7 6 : 2 7 1-2 ) . The availab le eviden ce on the origin and spread o f sweet potato in Bougainville is con s idered in a separate p aper ( Connell , 1 9 7 8a) . 46 and it may have reached the Pacific only in the ninet eenth cent ury (Keleny , 1962 : 12 ) . There is no s ingle S iwai t radit ion o f it s arrival ; fo r example in Morokaimo ro it seems to have come first from Tupop isau , the nearest Buin village , rather than from elsewhere in S iwai . This part i cular kind ( S -makona) was at first feared , s ince it seemed l ike wild taro , hence it was f irst fed t o p igs . (The same kind is known in part s o f Buka as S amoan or mi ss ion taro . ) Other areas o f S iwai and Bougainvi lle have different vers ions of i t s o rigin . Crops that Guppy ob served around the Bougainville s t raits in 1884 p robab ly exis t ed in S iwai too . These included cucumb ers , l imes , man goes and pawpaws , al though the particular kind of pawpaw grown then may have been sub sequen t ly d isplaced by a later int ro duct ion . Tobacco was al so growing , although it had only re cently been int roduced (Guppy , 1887 : 9 4 ) , pos sib ly f rom S amoa . Gorai , the Alu ( Shortland Island) chie f , was trying maize , apparently a recent gift from a European trader . 4 Between then and the arrival of the German admin is t rat ion in 1905 , runner b eans , water me lons and t omat oes may al so have reached S iwai . Crop in troduct ion was a cont inuous pro cess of experimentat ion . The history o f early plant int ro duct ion is necessarily vague and un sat isfying ; the tentat ive outl ine above is from consisten t account s from at least two widely separated villages , but even so it is much t oo late to be conf ident about accuracy . Nevertheless , in an is land chain where the fauna and f lo ra are depleted eas twards , it is s i gnificant that most his t oric plant in troduct ions seem to have come t o south Bougainville from the eas t . Trade , espe cially the lab our trade , direct ly or ind irectly , was the mean s by which Why they were int roduced is less clear . they came . Everything that is known ab out ninet eenth century Bougainville , and indeed it s historical antecedent s , suggest s that Bougainville lived in a world o f ' primit ive ' or ' sub sisten ce df fluence ' which can b e iden t i f ied as condit ions where they are ab le to produce , from their own resources , as much as they can consume o f the normal s t aple foods that they are us ed to , t ogether with a 4 At much t he same t ime , around the was int ro ducing c it rus f ruit s and no rthern Bougainville ( Blackwood , p rob ab ly very lit tle contact then of the is land . 1890s , the t rader Parkinson other ' use ful t rees ' int o 1 9 35 : 11 ) but there was between the s outh and north 47 reasonable surplus for entertainment , display and emergen cy , and a st andard o f hous ing , clo thing , and entertainment , requisites ( e . g . kava) that is tradit ionally accept ab le , with the employment of a relat ively small part o f the total potent ial resources of labour and land availab le to them. This means that within their self-sub s istent , nonmonet ary product ion sys t em the product ivity o f their l ab o r is very high , and i t is s t ill quite common in these region s [ the larger Pacific territories ] t o f ind sub s tan t ial groups o f peasants able t o sus t ain this level of consump t ion from their own resources at the cost of an average labor input o f about three hours per man-day or less ( Fisk , 19 7 5 : 5 9 ) . In such condit ions S iwais did n o t n eed new sub s istence crops : t hey were not hun gry and their diet was var ied and easy t o ob t ain even with stone t ools . We can suggest that what they did re ceive from the t iny number of migran t s , however , were rumours and s tories that o ther people enj oyed dif ferent foods and that the migrant s thems elves had t ried them and fo\lll d them ·satis fyin g . New plant s there fore were almo st certainly not attempt s to improve the diet or make life eas ier but int erest in g experimen t s that could eas ily be incorp orated int o the exist ing agricult ural sys tem . Several o f th ese crops were s imply different species o f exis t in g plan t s b ut o thers , such a s sugar and t obacco , were of an ent irely different kin d . S ome , l ike sweet potatoes , were planted with no knowledge o f what to expect . One o f these was a kind of grass ( S , NM-purpur) b rought from Alu because it made a n ice decorat ion for the hair . The f irst pat ches were z ealous ly guarded b ut s oon af terwards it p roved to be a p art icularly int ract ab le weed which even smothered b ananas . ( It is s t ill common in S iwai . ) There is no o ther informat ion on o ther pos s ib ly \lll s uccess ful innovations . S iwai t radit ions record, again with \lll known accuracy , that in these historical t imes leaders were more power ful an d more aggre s s ive ; the leaders must have legi t imized these chan ges and they may indeed have felt that s uccess ful int roduct ions would give them ext ra prest ige , or even as sist them in produc ing the ne cess ary wealth to ensure their eminence in compet it ion with o ther leaders . At s ome point , probab ly well before the end o f the nineteent h cent ury and possib ly aro\lll d the t ime of several new plant int roduct ions , the maj ority of the S iwai population 48 b egan to make the t ransit ion from stone t o s teel tools . This was the maj o r con tribut ion o f the workers return ing from S amo a , although even s o the vast maj or ity of steel t ools prob ab ly came from traders and espec ially the whalers who by the mid-nineteenth century were using Mono (Treasury) Island as a regular b ase ( Corris , 1 9 7 3 : 7-8) . No S iwai can now remember stone tools b e ing used although in 1 9 39 ' many nat ives ' claimed to have remembered using them ( Ol iver , 1 9 5 5 : 11 ) . Mit chell ( 1 9 7 6 : 11 ) places the int roduct ion o f s teel tools int o Nagovis i around the 1880s whilst the E ivo , who seem t o have received most o f the ir st eel tools from the Nagovis i , probab ly had them in common use by 1900 (M. P . Hamnet t , pers . comm. ) . S teel tools probab ly reached S iwai a de cade or two before they reached Nagovis i and were accepted ext remely qui ckly by S iwais ; for a t aro growing populat ion , oc cas ionally ext ending garden s into dense trop ical rain fores t , this is not surpris in g . Bush kn ives however were at leas t as important as axes . Around the upper Sep ik river , an area probab ly not dis s imilar t o s outh Bougainville in th e ninet eenth cent ury , Townsen d ( 1 9 6 9 : 2 04 ) est imated that steel tools had a 4 . 4 t o 1 t ime advantage over ston e tools in clearing an area of mat ure fores t . The quantitat ive data that exis t s on the implicat ions o f s t one t o steel transformat ion for the use o f labour in agriculture is also s omewhat arb it rary yet much the same was probab ly t rue in S iwai ; 5 for labour saving and prest ige , steel tools The t ime s aving could have encouraged were essen t ial . exper imen t s in crop innovat ion b ut these were probab ly independent and there is no reason t o correlate the arrival of new too ls with new crops or even necessarily with new techniques . Their impact is impossib le to assess . In the Bougainville S t rait s is lands in 1 884 , ' yams , sweet pot atoes , two kinds of t aro , cocoa-nut s , plantains , and sugar-cane form the s t aple sub s t an ces of the diet ' ( Guppy , 1 88 7 : 84 ) . In S iwai it seems t hat sweet potat oes 5 Lea ( 19 7 2 : 2 54-5 ) argues that estimates o f t ime s avings such as this , although probab ly accurate for cut t ing act ivit ies , may overemphas iz e the t ime gained s ince cut t ing was only one of o ther act ivit ies where the t ime saving may not have In Bougainville cut t in g was probab ly more been so great . important than in the other act ivit ies ment ioned by Lea ; mo reover t hese latt er act ivit ies were o f t en predominantly carr ied o ut by women . S ince fallowing did not t ake place unt il un dergrowth had died the mos t sub s t an t ial t ime s avings were those in cut t in g . Other agricultural act ivit ies may have gained very l i ttle from t he t ran s it ion . 49 were less important an d t aro much more dominant , but this was the comb inat ion of crops that became important . Sugar and sweet potat oes were new in troduct ions and although they could not rival t aro they were s i gnificant int roduct ion s , a clear indicat ion that even in a remote area in condit ions o f sub s istence affluen ce agricult ure was quite capable o f change . The era o f administ rat ion The in fluen ce o f the Germans in south Bougainville was , at most , minimal . Their p lantat ions on the eas t coast int roduced new crops int o Bougainville ( in clud ing cot t on and rubber) an d although they may have b rought new food crops there is no evidence for it . Although some informan t s claimed that Germans encouraged S i�ais t o plant co conut s as adminis trat ion policy in Bougainville , this was almost cert ainly not t rue . 6 It would have assisted German t raders who were vis it in g most p arts of the islan d ' s coas t l ine b ut conver sely it would have s lowed lab our migrat ion to the n ew plantat ion s in Bougainville an d New Britain . Indepen dent ly t rade probab ly encouraged increased co conut p lant ing in this period b ut it can have b een very sli ght . 7 I f there were agri cultural changes in the German era they have gone l.llln ot iced . The Aust ral ian administ rat ion e f fect ively reached s outh Bougainville in 19 19 when a police post was set up on the Buin coas t at Kan gu . Improvement o f agriculture was necessarily not the primary interest of the new administ rat ion although , as the f irst Report to the League of Nat ion s , whi ch covered the seven-year period f rom 19 14-192 1 , recorded : 6 ogan ( 1 9 7 2 : 7 9 ) was equally l.lll c ertain about ef fect ive German pol icy even in the areas closest to Kiet a where their only s t at ion was established . Rowley ( 19 5 8 : 2 41-3) maintains that , unl ike B r it ish policy in Papua , the Germans did not force villages t o plant co conut s and Salisbury ( 1 9 7 0 : 113-8) implies that there were no forced p lant in gs . In S amoa the Germans certain ly forced village chie fs at least t o plant coconut s (Pitt , 1 9 70 : 24 ) . 7Thurnwald ( 19 36 : 34 8 , 35 1 ) imp lies that even in Buin there was no copra trade at leas t un t il 1909 although returned labour migrant s h ad carried out more extens ive co conut planting . On the o ther hand Ribbe describ ed a quite ext ens ive copra trade on the Buin coast by 1894-5 with some of the t rade goods b e in g b ar t ered from t r ibe to trihe and ending up in distant mol.lll t ain villages ( Ribbe , 1903 : 9 0-6 , c ited by Oliver , 19 7 3 : 2 1- 3 ) . 50 The e f forts of some Di st rict Off icers t o p romote nat ive plant at ions , thus en couragin g nat ives , lat e ly taken from a life o f t r ibal war fare and s t renuous hunt ing and agricult ure carried on with p r imit ive implements , t o occupy themselves in indust ry use ful t o thems elves and help ful t o the mat erial development o f the coun try , deserves spec ial men t ion (PCA , 1922 : 14 ) . None o f this was apparent in south Bougainville . Even s o , as early as 192 3 it was repo rted for Bougainville that ' Except in areas where the al t it ude prohib it s bearing , the nat ives have their own co conut groves and have b een regularly ins t ructed as to the measures necessary to comb at diseases and pest s ' ( P CA , 1 9 2 4 : 62 ) , but this almo st cert ainly meant only the area immediately around the Kiet a s tat ion . Two years lat er , ' Many of the nat ive co co -nut groves are now coming in to b earing, and the pol i cy o f regular annual plant ing of addit ional co conut s has been cont inued (PCA 1 9 2 6 : 39 ) . Lit tle of this influence had reached south Bougainville wh ere the Adminis trator commen t ed on his return f rom Buin in 19 2 8 that ' more work of a penetrat ive nature [ is ] to be carried out in th is port ion of Bougainville ' ( P CA , 1 9 2 9 : 83 ) . The next report pointed o ut that ' even in the " un cont rolled area" of Nagovis i the nat ives have b een induced t o plant , and 2 9 00 new palms are being cult ivated there ' ( P CA , 1 9 3 0 : 4 8 ) . Elsewhere , presumab ly around Kiet a , ' many o f the plantat ions will soon be in full bearin g , and will be a source o f wealth t o the owners ' (PCA, 19 30 : 4 8 ) . It is un iversally believed by S iwais that early in the period of Aust ralian adminis t rat ion a law was pas sed that ten coconut s should be planted for each child born ( Oliver , 1 9 5 5 : 2 8 ) . Although there seems no trace o f such an ordinance , it probab ly exis t ed . a The 19 3 3 Repo r t did note that ' as in other dis t ricts the village groves are communal though lines of palms are allot ted to fami l ies to maintain and to harvest nut s ' (PCA, 19 34 : 71 ) . Whi ch p ar t s of Bougainville this was t rue for is unspecified . The Aus t r a l ian adminis t rat ion were unden iably int erested in 8 J . P . ' Fred ' Archer has s t ated that Captain Henry Clair Cardew , the Dis t ri ct Of ficer , ordered the plan t ing of ten co conut s per h ead soon after the st art of the Aust ralian administ rat ion ( pers . comm . 1 9 7 6 ) . Blackwood recorded that the administ rat ion was encouraging co conut plan t in g by ' requiring t rees to b e s t arted f o r every child born ' ( 19 35 : 31 0 ) . Ol iver also call s this an ' admin is t rat ion pres cript ' ( 19 5 5 : 52 7 ) . 51 encouraging copra product ion , thereby cont inuing the general German policies for New Guinea . Indeed throughout the two inter-war decades they took lit t le int erest in o ther kinds of agricultural act ivity . Although there were o c cas ional int er-war agricultural pat rol s there are no records o f their act ivit ies other than Chinnery ' s ob s ervation s in 19 2 8 that · • almost any of the known t ropical economic crops should do well - a fact to which the att ent ion of the nat ives is b eing constantly drawn by travelling ins tructors o f the Department of Agriculture ' ( Ch innery , 192 4 : 8 7 ) . The int er-war S iwai leader , Kope , who became a paramotmt luluai , organized the people of Unanai to p lant t en coconut t rees each . S in ce he had , at one t ime , ten wives and he planted more than ten co conut s himself , he must have had s omethin g approaching a t iny plantat ion . The Annual Report for 1922 has a mys terious reference to two S iwai ' p lantat ion s ' , owned by kukerais Kob i ( clearly Kope) and Angus , who was presumably Ain kes , the lu luai o f the coastal Buin village of Riorio ( c f . Oliver , 1 9 5 5 : 319 ) . The mys t ery is the ext ent o f t hese plantat ions ; that o f Kope , the l argest o f the two , was recorded as having 2 5 00 co conut trees bearin g , 2 5 30 t rees not yet b earing , 2 4 6 9 acres of ' nat ive foods planted ' , 454 p igs and labour res erves o f 72 4 males and 714 females (PCA , 192 3 : 112 ) . How these enormous developmen t s escaped earl ier not ice may have puz z led crit i cal readers of the Annual Report s . Assumin g , perhaps llll.j us t i f i ab ly , that the numb er o f t rees , p igs and gardens was the t o t al s t o ck o f some 300 hous eholds that might have b een dominated by Kope , this would give a plaus ible level o f pig and coconut (if not garden ) ownership for 192 1 . It probab ly represented the s ituat ion over the whole area of S iwai , excludin g the eastern part un der Ainkes , that was then I f these ' p lantat ion s ' inf luenced by the admin i s t rat ion . were ready b earin g then there had indeed been s ome early influence of either t raders or German administ rat ion . Certainly by 192 9 copra was availab le for s ale from S iwai . ' One firm which had a pedler ' s [ s i c ] l icence in the Buin sub dist r i ct reported t hat durin g the year it had purchased 2 7 7 5 bags of copra f rom the natives in that area ' (PCA , 1930 : 4 8) , an d there were t h e f i r s t repo rted indicat ions t hat prices were affect ing product ion ; the ' low market price o f copra has adversely affected nat ive t rading ' (PCA, 1930 : 4 8 ) . Even in that y ear of poor prices 5 9 copra-trading l i cences were is sued on the island , p robab ly mainly to east coast One o f the areas most suited to plantat ion owners . indigenous co conut product ion mus t have b een north east 52 Bougainville where t raders found ready an chorages and European plant at ions were nearby . 9 However , in 1930 copra product ion had become almost non-exist ent there : . . . now that the copra market has fallen upon evil days , it is be coming increas ingly difficult for the nat ives t o get a price for it in any way commen s urate with the lab our involved , and there seems but lit t le fut ure for the indus t ry , as far as they are concerned Once in a while , espec ially after a reprimand from t he Dist rict Officer , there i s a s udden b urst of act ivity , in which everyb ody sets t o work c lean in g away the undergrowth which cover s the root s , and tearing down the paras it i c and o ther creepers whi ch festoon the b ranches . The casual way in which the nat ive t reat s his coconut palms is all the more no t i ceab le in cont rast to the met iculous care whi ch is lavished on the t aro garden ( Blackwood , 19 35 : 310-1) . • • . S in ce the p eople o f Kurt atchi village , describ ed here , had no sour ces o f cash o ther than those available to S iwais it seems highly probab le that co conut plantings in S iwai were in even worse condit ion than tho s e in the north of the island . In the 1 9 30s the price of copra fell dras t ically (Tab le 6 ) so that for at leas t two y ears after 1 9 3 0 there was only a small trade in copra over the whole of the is land whilst in 1 9 31 ' there was a revival in the collect ion o f ivory nut s ' ( P CA, 1 9 32 : 5 6 ) , the seeds o f t h e s ago palm that were sold for but t on manufacture . However annual admin is t rat ion reports covered the whole island and rarely d ist in g uished dif ferent condit ions in d i fferent areas . Thus in 1 9 31 , when the price o f copra was already less than half what it h ad b een a decade earlier , only a small p art of Buin was under ' complet e government cont rol ' . Almost all o f (Nagov i s i S iwai was merely under ' government influen ce ' . was a t b es t under ' part ial government in fluence ' and the mountains inland were only ' penet rated by pat rols ' . ) Most 9 What l i ttle evidence there is suggest s that the east coast was t he main area of p re-war co conut growing in B ougainville . Ext racts from apparent ly t he only s urviving repor t o f a pre-war agricultural p at rol to northwest Bougainville show that there were very few coconut s in e ither Konua or Hahon (Gilb ert , 1 9 39 ) . 53 Tab l e 6 Copr4 price 1913-19 40 Mean price per ton ( Rab aul ) 1 9 13 £21 . 12 . 9 1 9 2 9 - 30 £ 13 . 10 . 0 191 7-18 £1 8 . 15 . 4 1 9 30-31 £11 . 10 . 0 1 91 8-19 £16 . 8 . 3 1931-32 £10 . 8 . 0 19 19 -2 0 £ 32 . 16 . 3 19 32-33 £ 9 . 4. 3 1 92 0-2 1 £2 7 . 0 . 2 1 9 33-34 £ 4 . 11 . 0 1921-22 £18 . 6 . 2 19 34-35 £ 6. 8. 6 1922-2 3 £18 . 19 . 8 1935-36 £11 . 4 . 6 192 3-2 4 £19 . 12 . 7 1936-37 £16 . 2 . 4 1924-2 5 £20 . 19 . 10 1 9 3 7-38 £11 . 1 0 . 0 192 5-2 6 £22 . 3 . 6 19 38-39 £ 9 . 18 . 6 19 39-40 £ 8 . 10 . 0 192 7-2 9 S ource : n.d. P CA Annual Reports 19 22-19 41 . of what trade there was in the south , and hen ce mos t o f the co conut product ion , probab ly came from Buin l O with the S iwai villages that were closest t o the coast contribut ing a p art of the total . Almos t certainly the l ocal p rice was much less than the o f ficial figures suggest ( c f . S alisbury , 19 7 0 : 5 0 ) . Voyce (per s . connn . , 1 9 7 5 ) bel ieves that_ in the 19 30s co conut s were sold at 100 for a shill ing mainly from the coast al areas , although Ebery , the owner of Toiumonapu plantat ion s outh of Kieta had set up a trade s tore at Tonu aroun d 19 31 which survived for perhap s hal f a decade or more . He may h ave t raded goods for copra as was certainly the case in early s t o res in northeas t Bougainville (Blackwood , 19 35 : 44-6 ) . There may have been s t o res or trading posts o f some lO S ince Thurnwald ( 19 36 : 35 1 ) notes only that ' some of the natives were selling coconut s or copra to traders ' in Buin it seems that many of the Annual Reports may have been exaggerat ion s b ased on the enthus iasm rather than ob serv at ion of district o f f icers . 54 kind on the S iwai coast during the period o f German admin is trat ion ; the oral eviden ce of coastal S iwais suggest s that st o res were there but avail ab le contemporary do cument ary evidence provides no corroborat ion . Certainly traders occas ionally p i cked up labour and copra on the coast and may well have t raded intermittently in o ther conunodit i es but it seems prob able that the first store buildin gs did not exis t llll t il the period o f Aus t ral ian admin i st rat ion . During this later period there is ampl e evidence for the exis t en ce o f s tores a t Mamagota on the coast an d others built b y European and Ch inese t raders in asso ciat ion with the two mis s ions . Pur chases could be made with either cash or shell money ( S-mauai) and the conten t s o f the stores were reported to be quit e s imilar to those o f present-day stores . I f co conut s , which were the main source o f cash income , were s old at around 100 for one shilling it is unl ikely that there was ever much cash availab le for purchases from trade stores . They must have operated at best sporadically and although one or two S iwais were taught to l ook after the s tores and cotmt mon ey they were in no way respon s ible for their management . The stores were , in a sense , s imply the first tentat ive phys ical penet rat ion b y the commercial world . Writ ing some three decades lat e r , Father Lebel recall ed how the p rice of copra in Bougainville f rom 19 30 t o 1935 was around £15 to £2 0 per t on , but how it had fal l en to £3 by 1940 , whilst at the same t ime the price of a bag of rice had risen from 10 shil l in gs to £1 (Catho lic Aation , 1 9 6 0a) . This comment , al though almo s t cert ainly in erro r over the prevail in g cop ra p rices , ind icat es the way in which the t erms o f what l ittle trade exist ed and moved rap i dly again s t local copra pro ducers . In S iwai there had prob ab ly been no mo re than min imal in corpo rat ion in this cash economy , especially s in ce the high es t copra prices more o r less co in c ided with their own in it ial plant ings , s o that by the en d o f the 1 9 3 0 s there was e f fect ively no cop ra being t raded . B y 19 39 ' the s ale o f co conut s and copra to out s i ders had ceased ' ( Ol iver , 1 9 5 5 : 34 7 ) . Even so , in the period unt il the war , coconut s were the only crop that S iwais had planted for sale and , even in uplan d Rataiku , where Oliver est imat ed that each family had twenty-two palms , this number was increas in g so much that ' co conut plan t at ion s will probab ly become important fact o rs in land use ' ( 19 5 5 : 4 79-80 ) . Ho t air driers that could have produced more valuable copra never reached south Bougainville , hen ce the bulk o f copra product ion in Bougain ville was from the east coas t . Plant at ion lab our was the usual source of cash in come and in the 1 9 3 0 s the f irst , and 55 las t , European plan tat ion in s outh Bougainville , began at Tobo ruai , j us t inland from Kihili and the port of Buin . The 1924 Annual Report on the Territory o f New Guinea recorded that in Bougainville ( and apparently only in Bougainville) : ' Fruit and nut t rees have been planted along the p atrol routes , in accordan ce with a general s cheme whereby i t is p roposed that every patrol route will be l ined by trees of s ome economic value ' (PCA , 192 5 : 51 ) . Co conuts , and in a few cas es betel nut p alms , (which the admin i st rat ion certainly did no t encourage ) are the only planted trees that presently line the roads of Bougainville but there is a hin t that the adminis t rat ion were b eginning to look beyond co conuts . The 1924 Report expressed concern ; ' in some p arts of the Terr itory the nat ives neglect t o make gardens o f sufficient area to s upply the needs of themselves and their families an d p re fer to sell their copra , which , in many in st an ces , is made by their women folk , for rice and t inned meat ' (PCA, 1 9 2 5 : 19 ) . This was mo s t unlikely to have b een t rue o f s outh Bougainville but i t is an indicat ion o f the chan ge in administ rat ion att itudes so that they were con side ring ' propo sals for the s t imulat ion of nat ive agricul tural p roduct ion ' (PCA , 1 9 2 5 : 1 9 ) which would as s is t them ' in the growin g o f economic crops f o r their own b enefit ' (PCA , 1 9 2 5 : 19 ) through consump t ion rather than through sale . The adminis trat ion intended to s t art by encouraging corn produc t ion and by 192 6 had published leaflets on ' The Grot.md Nut ' and ' Addit ional Crops for the Territory ( Cas tor , Grotmd Nut s , Mai z e , Sesame and Tob acco ) ' but emphas is remained f irmly on the plantin g o f co conut s for copra product ion even though it was becoming apparent that coconuts were not everywhere being rap idly a s s imilated int o the agricultural system . This was blamed on the ' sys t em of agr iculture , known as s hi f t ing cult ivat ion ' which was only p ractised by ' t.mcivilized races ' (PCA , 1 9 2 9 : 22 ) , but the Director of Agri culture , G . H . Murray , was caut iously op t imistic : • • • Mo s t nat ives are , to a l imited exten t , agricul turalist s , and our aim s ho ul d be no t to destroy but t o modify and improve their sys t em of cul t i vat ion in such a way that will be understandable to them. In future , therefore , nat ives will not only b e trained t o space their coco-nuts more widely , but will b e taught the nece s s ity of usin g cover pl an t s ( leguminous weeds) or the cult ivat ion o f food plan t s like t apioca , taro , maize , between the coco-nut l ines s o that the land may b e fully 56 occup ied , which is but a modificat ion o f the ir own methods (PCA, 192 9 : 2 3 ) . Consequen tly an agr icultural s chool was set up at Keravat in New Brit a in , but throughout the int er-war y ears there seem to have been no more than a dozen New Guinean s tudent s each y ear , mo st o f whom probably came from New Brit ain . A ro tat ion cycle o f rice , maize and peanut s was taught there and also in the villages o f New Britain where there were limited successes ( Salisbury , 1 9 7 0 : 4 9 -5 0 ) . In 1936 Bougainville too had some sort o f school ; ' a nat ive foods experimental garden has b een s t arted at the Government stat ion at Buka Pass age by the Agricult ural Inspec t o r and Inst ructor an d has acted as a cen t re for dis t r ibut ion o f seeds and for demon s t rat ion o f me thods o f cul t ivat ion to natives in the district ' (PCA , 1 9 3 8 : 84 ) . There are no o ther accollll t s of this garden ; it is n o t known what seeds were dist ributed and what me thods were shown to which Bougainvilleans . It can not have b een important . The admin is t rat ion had de f in itely b ecome int erested in food crop product ion , especial ly in their o f f icial publicat ions , but there is no evi dence that south Bougainville was even in fluenced by this chan ge ; there , as elsewhere , copra product ion remained the main concern of the administrat ion . 1 1 The mo st important source o f new plants in the pre-war years were the two S iwai mission s . The Cathol ic miss ion had 11 In south Bougainvil le the mis s ion teacher J . H . L . Waterhouse (who was also a spare-t ime plant collector for Kew Garden s ) made his own asses sment o f the situat ion following a year ' s s tay at Tonu miss ion in 1 9 30 . It was reported that ' he c ame acro ss a very primit ive race at S iwai ' but neverthele s s h e ' was impres sed b y the excellent roads which are main tained by nat ives throughout the coast al areas . He cons iders that sugar-cane , kapok , pineapple s , l imes and peanut s would grow success fully for the so il is wonderfully r ich and deep . The collll. t ry is well-watered , which would make it ideal for cat t le-farming and p ig-rais ing ' (Anon , 1 9 3la : 7 ) . Waterhouse was als o o p t imist i c about the commerc ial p o s s ib ilit ies o f the mass ive wild bananas that were s imilar t o Manila hemp and , on his re turn to S iwai , he in tended to carry out experimen ts on ' ma ize and various t ropical p roduct ' . Implicit in th is proposal was that the o r gan i z at ion would necessar ily be by Europeans , hence the chief drawb ack was con side red to be the lack o f shipp ing facilit ies ; S iwais never learnt about these p art icular development s t rat egies . 57 no mor e than s light in fluence . Fr S chl ieker is reported to have int ro duced one kind of Xanthosoma taro to the Laku area o f eas tern S iwai in the 1920s and he was also known t o have distributed seeds and to be keen on growin g various kinds o f plant s , y e t there is no evidence t hat these demon s t rat ions encouraged Cathol ic S iwais t o accept new crops . Nor is there any evidence that most o f the Catholic mi ss ionaries were part icularly int eres ted in en couraging agricul tural change . The Methodist Mis s ion however had a much greater influence , part ly through the in fluence o f the first Methodist miss ion ar ies , who b rought at least one species of taro from Roviana (New Geor gia) in the 1920s , b ut mainly because of the presen ce at Tonu f rom 1 9 2 6 to 1 9 36 o f Mr A. H . Voyce (who subsequently worked at Kihil i in Buin and , after the war , returned to Tonu) . He grew a range o f n ew crops in his own garden , which he int ended to expand for agricultural t rain in g, but was unab le to obt ain land in S iwai so moved to Kihili on the Buin coas t . Despite this init ial rej ect ion many o f the crops that he first plan ted in that decade event ually be came regular componen t s of S iwai garden s . Voyce b rought in anything that t ook h is f an cy rather than anythin g that might become a cash crop or have a p ar t icular nutrit ional value , and he reached an agreement with the Bot an i cal Gardens at Rabaul to t rade Bouga invillean o rchids for anything they thought he might l ike . Consequently almo st all his introduct ions came direct ly from New Brit ain , although the p lant s might not have been nat ive to there . In no more than a decade he introduced over fifty new plants t o S iwai . Coco a , b rought from Vunakamb i , Rabaul , was planted by him in 192 8 and a few t ree s , s t ill b ear in g , remain at Tonu . (Lat er he planted it for connne rcial purposes at Kihili , Buin and it was j us t beginning to b ear when the war s t ar ted and des t royed the experimen t . ) The o riginal cocoa became no mor e than an unusual decorat ive plan t . Some o f these food plant int roduct ions were new species o f already exis t in g crops : King co conut s , Queen pineapples , . kuma sweet potato ( from New Zealand) , Tongan yams , sword beans , wing b eans , mamioko p awpaws and new k in ds o f aip ika and t omatoes . Others were apparen t ly ent irely new : guavas , peppers , swee tsops , soursops , European potatoes , lemons , oranges , l imes , pomolo es {pink and whit e ) , man gosteen s , Madagas car plums , avo cado pears and pos s ib ly mangoes , ginger , nutmegs , cust ard apples , the tul ip tree and okra. His o ther plant in troduct ions included a variety of flowerin g plan t s and shrub s , including Bougainvillea, whi ch is not a nat ive o f Bougainville , a mis cellany o f poten t i al cash crops such as co f fee , oil palms , 58 rubber and cot ton (both o f whi ch lat ter two had been grown on the earlies t Ge rman plantat ions in Bougainville ) , and mi scellaneous t rees such as Kapok , Indian teak and Klinki i p ine . 12 Later , a t Kihili , h e began rice growin g ; some Methodis t S iwais t ook rice back to S iwai and before the war a very small amount was bein g grown there and milled at Kihili . 1 3 The maj o rity o f the food plan t s were even tually incor porated into man y S iwai gardens although few ever became valuab le food crops . Never theles s all could be grown with apparent ease , especially rice and the several c ash crops . Almost al l , except English potatoes , can st ill b e found and several are now regular components of S iwai market s . No del iberat e attempt was made to en courage S iwais to grow these food plan ts but Methodis t s tried them and l iked mos t o f them enough to adopt them in a small way ; the decade that Voyce stayed in S iwai was a minor perio d o f local agricultural experimen tation . He is rememb ered fo r several s uccess ful introduct ion s and individual S iwais o ften at t ribute recent plant in t roduct ions to his e fforts . Peanuts and on ion s are somet imes claimed to have been introduced by him but corn , also some t imes att rib · uted to him, had certainly arrived 12 A. H . Voyce (pers . comm. 1 9 7 5 ) . He l i st ed a t o t al of fif tys ix species, plus o ther unnamed shrub s and f lowers , that he claimed to have in troduced int o south Bougainville . 13 The benefits that might have then accrued to S iwai and the po tent ial of south Bougainville for agricul ture are more than re flected in Luxton ' s account of Voyce ' s work or Kihili befo re 1 9 36 : agr iculture and animal husbandry were now int ro duced on a s cale not pos s ible hitherto . In a very short t ime the j un gle area was t ransformed int o a f ine mi ss ion s tat ion with th e appearance of a well-tended park . In less than three years the re were n early three huridred acres under cul t ivat ion , and over three hundred var iet ies of plant s were growin g on the s t at ion co conut palms , various nuts and fruit t rees , root and grain crops , ve getables , shrub s , flowers and grasses . Hill ri ce was in tro duced and grown succes s fully , and a rice mill was in stalled to husk the rice . Cas sava flour and corn meal were made experimentally . Peanut s , a wide range o f variet ies o f bananas , and o ther foods were int ro duced . In the livestock area there were fowls , ducks , geese , p igs , and a few goat s (Luxt on , 1 9 5 5 : 1 3 7- 8 ) . The n eares t turkeys were on the Shortland Islands . . • . • • . 59 be forehan d . Others learnt f rom him d i fferen t ways o f cooking cas sava (which already existed in S iwai) and also ways o f milling it ; today a line o f kapok t rees i s a definit ive marker o f a United Church village where kapok seeds s t ill provide pillow fillin g . In S iwai , a s amon gst the Tolai o f east New Brit ain , there exi s t s an ext remely large numb er o f plant s that have b ecome indigenously cult ivated after bein g introduced in European gardens Only a few have become e conomic crops , either for consumpt ion o r f o r s ale , b ut they are familiar an d have been tested by nat ive plant in gs . Among them are the various anona fruits - soursops , cust ard-apples and sweetsops - teak and f icus rubber t rees , garlic and cap s icum, kapok t rees , dry r i ce , giant var ie t ies of co conut , tobacco , cit rus and guava Those that have been accept ed as important in nat ive product ion are few - peanut s , man io c , p ineapples , rubber b ean s , t omat o es , cacao ( Salisbury , 19 7 0 : 111 ) . • • • • • . • . . It is not surpris ing that b o th Tolais and S iwais should follow the same p attern of innovat ion ; nor is it surprising that it was also a famous Methodist miss ionary , Geo rge Brown , who int ro duced many o f these crops t o the Tolai . The numb e r o f crops that b ecame widely plant ed may have been few ; they were certainly important . Cro p s that are o f uncertain o rigin but p robably arrived dur in g the t ime of the pre-war Aust ralian admin ist rat ion ( and po ss ib ly through their ef fort s ) in clude peanut s . Cas sava , def initely in Bougainville in 1 9 2 1 , may have b een a rather earl i er int ro duct ion . The admin ist rat ion made few introduct ion s , and the b ann in g o f t rade with the Shortlands and cen tral S olomon Islands meant that mos t o f the new int roduct ions were tho s e o f the mi ss ions . Nevertheles s new kinds o f plants were always being b rought int o S iwai ; migrant workers would o ften t ry something new , find that they liked it and b r in g it back . In this way a s catter of new crops emerged in s in gle villages whilst some o f the very early int roduced species were edged out by sub sequen t compet ito rs ; konua , the f irst kind o f sweet potat o , is n o lon ger grown n o r are the earliest p in eapples : and pawpaws . One chan ge in this early era o f admin i st rat ion was that , perhaps f o r the first t ime for centuries , the n ew plant s that reached S iwai were coming from the west and not the east . 60 S ome new animals had also b een int roduced into S iwai b ut their hi sto ry is even mo re uncertain ; the mos t important o f these were differen t variet ies o f p igs , s ome of which came in the n ineteen th century , which were twice or even four t imes as large as the exis t in g p i gs (Oliver , pers . comm . 19 7 7 ) . Chickens ( S-kukulaku ; NM kakaruk) had also prob ab ly appeared wel l be fore the end o f the nineteenth century and , despite the ir lo cal name , may have b een cont emp oraneous with pigs . There were also d ifferen t kinds of dogs ; S ome new one kind at leas t came indirectly f rom Samoa . species reached Bougainville in the twen t ieth century but mos t never left the mi ssions ; Voyce int roduced cows , goats and ducks t o Tonu and the Catholic mi ss ion also had cows (which were eat en by the Japanese during the war) . Overall the r emoteness o f Bougainville, and especially of south Bougainville from the cent res of Aus t ralian admin istration meant that in ter-war agricultural plann ing was almo st t o t ally ab sent . The adminis t rat ion were able to do no more than encourage the plan t ing o f a min imum o f t en co conut s , which meant that there was lit t le copra for remo t e t raders . The exi s t ing horticultural sys tem was more than adequate fo r S iwai food requirement s and market s for potent ial foo d surpluses were quit e inaccessible . The po licy in the Madan g are a of the no rth coas t of New Guinea of develop in g ' large co mmun al vegetab le o r r i ce garden s usually involving more than one village ' (Moraut a , 1 9 7 4 : 31 ) would have b een pointless in s outh Bougainville . 14 There was nowhere t o sell an y s urplus product ion . Nor were there t h e compuls ory village group plantings of coconut s , rubbe r and citrus t rees that t ook place in the Northern Dis t rict of Pap ua ( C ro comb e , 1964 : 4-5 ) . The little commercial agricul ture that had succeeded in Bougainville was mainly very clo s e to government s t at ions and required con s t an t supervis ion ; it had l it tle t o do with lo cal condit ions and demands and nothing t o do with south Bougainville . The S iwai con t r ib ut ion t o the economy was in the pass ive role of providing labour rather than in act ive product ion for the t rading world . 14 Evidence from around Madang indicates that p re-war agr icult ural pol icy there was lit t le different from that around Rabaul , and p o ss ib ly o ther towns in New Guin ea . Rice was bein g plan ted in indigenous garden s there in the 1 9 30s and b etween 19 36 and 1 9 3 8 didimen had int roduced cof fee , cher ries , rambutans , avocadoes , soursops , mandarin s , man goes , let tuces , cabbages and t omatoes (Marr , 1 9 38 : 30-6 ) . 61 Before the war the b ulk o f what lit tle ev iden ce is availab le suggest s that cash c ame int o S iwai either from return in g wage lab ourers ( almost all o f whom had b een on plantat ions ) or from a small number o f sales , mainly of copra , but o ccas ionally of ivory nut s and o ther commodit ies . However o ther goo ds were bought and sold essen t ial ly within S iwai ; Oliver ob served that cash was used ' by some individuals to purchas e pot t ery , l ime , and even foodstuf fs . In such cases , the ven do r usually accept s it , ins t ead o f shell money , in order t o raise money to purchase western goods or to pay his head-t ax ' ( Oliver , 1955 : 51 5 ) . The shill in g was the main \lll i t , rarely divis ible , in such purchases and Voyce {pers . comm. 1 9 75 ) ob s erved how b efore the war one span o f ma:uai shell money , or a shilling , could be used to p ur chase a plot o f taro , al though sales o f t aro were only made on ' rare o c cas ion s ' (Olive r , 1955 : 2 5 ) . Although cash sales were relat ively rare there were cons iderab ly more exchanges us in g tradit ional shell money whi ch , a s has b een argued el sewhere ( Connell , 19 7 7 c ) , then p erformed a fun ct ion that was almost identical t o that o f cash . A sub s tan t ial numb er o f trans act ion s , especially fo r the p ro ducts o f special is t s ( su ch as po tt ery and bows ) , were carr ied out through one or o ther of these two fo rms of monet iz at ion . Cash exchanges with the worl d b eyon d S iwai may have been rare but they were not something that was novel an d unusual ; they could b e incor porat ed relat ively eas ily int o the t radit ional soc ial and economi c o rganizat ion of S iwai society . Before 19 39 there are only the b riefest overall accounts o f S iwai agricul ture ; Chinnery observed in 1924 that ' the S iwai people plant taro , yams , sweet po tatoes , sugar cane , b an anas , and o ther nat ive foods , and have domest icat ed p igs and do gs certain European veget ables have b een int roduced and these are planted in many of the villages . The gro\lll d is fert il e , and there always appears t o be plenty o f food ' ( Chinnery , 1 9 2 4 : 9 9 ) . A plant coll e ctor who had spent s ome months in south Bougainville in 1 9 30 commented : • • • A s t rong t ropical sun , a genial climat e with no great ext remes , bount eous rainfall , and rich soil enab le them to produce all the food they require with lit t le e f fort . Th e garden s are primit ive affairs , with no at t empt at serious cult ivat ion . The only great e f fort is to erect pig-proo f fen ces , for all the p igs , although n at ive-owned , run wild and dep en d for their l ivel ihood upon their foragin g propensit i es . 62 The s t aple o f the nat ive diet is t aro , and as the nat ive eat s but one regular large meal a day he has to plant ab out 500 t aro s f or a food-supply of s ix months to one year (Kaj ewski , 1946 : 30 3 ) . Ten years later the bas ic sys t em was exactly the s ame and few o f the new plants had b een successfully estab l ished ; Oliver ob served that ' few S iwai have yet acquired tastes f o r the recen t ly int ro duced maize and t omato ' ( 19 5 5 : 2 6 ) . Of the newer int roduct ions only rice had fared much better . Despite several kinds o f en couragement and demonst rat ion , cash crop s had not b e come a part o f S iwai life , whilst the bas ic hort icultural sys t em s t ill remained much as it had b een at the end of the nineteenth cent ury . Taro cult ure Unt i l the war the S iwai horticult ural economy was dominat ed in every way by the product ion o f taro ( S-hame ; Colocasia esculenta ) ; S iwais reco gnized more than f ifty dif feren t kinds different iated by s iz e , colour , flavour , texture an d so on ( Ol iver , 1 9 5 5 : 49 2 ) whils t Waterhouse found considerab ly more than 2 0 0 named var iet ies o f t aro (Anon , 1 9 3lb : 5 ) . Sweet potat o took it s p lace soon after the war and now dominates the present s ub s is t ence e conomy . The sys t em o f growing Colocasia taro that exi s ted then has disappeared ; the l it t l e t aro that is s t ill grown is n o t grown in the same way and the organizat ion of t aro growing is no t now paralleled in the cult ivat ion of sweet po tat o . The s ub s isten ce economy o f S iwai llll d erwent an except ion al t rans format ion . Befo re the war t aro garden s were l aid o ut on well-drained t errain wh ere the soil is deep and f ree of sand . Another t e chni cal requirement is that gardens be locat ed in areas o f s econdary growth Taro gardens are laid out in patches fenced in to keep out pigs Very rarely does one see isol ated pat ches ; they are generally arran ged in s equence . . . The gardener ' s ideal is to have several con t iguous pat ches in various s t ages o f growth (Olive r , 1 9 5 5 : 2 2 - 3 ) . . . • • . . Such a l inear system might con s ist at one t ime o f f ive or s ix garden pat ches , each contain ing t aro at different s t ages , with the sequence ideally con t inuing in a more o r less s t raight line as lon g a s there was land available 63 ( Figure 5 ) . In Rataiku such l inear systems were unl ikely to progres s far becaus e of the shortage o f suitable flat land , hen ce a s ingle household might have a couple o f systems , whereas in cent ral and southern S iwai there was normally no need for more than one . Finally , after the f i rst pat ch has lain fallow for s ome s ix or s even years the sys t em begin s again ; however , ' such an ideal is seldom real iz ed ' (Oliver , 1955 : 24 ) and the situat ion was much more comp lex with each household own ing up to three o r four garden s . The lin ear sequence appears t o have b een imposed on Rat aiku gardeners by the t opo graphy o f lon g and narrow r idges ; it would have been impossib le t o cut acro s s these rid ges whilst the s t reams in the val ley bot toms were often l ineage land b oundaries . The system that existed in cent ral S iwai ( Ol iver , 1955 : 24 ) , where the ground was level , was much less regular and the direct ion o f garden ing was probab ly much more random than is impl ied by Oliver ' s model , which is not a S iwai model . B A Figure 5 . Source : Pre-war garden sequences . Oliver , 1 9 5 5 : 24 . 64 Garden fences varied in height and s t ren gth according t o th e locat ion of the garden . Tho se near busy paths were high enough ' to blo ck out the s t ares of st rangers ' (Oliver , 1 9 5 5 : 2 5 ) ; near houses the fences had to be s t rong enough t o withs tand hun gry dome s t i c p igs . (Wild p igs were smaller an d weaker . ) The taro garden was divided int o plo ts ( S-nopu) , 1 0 feet by 45 feet , marked by logs and with pathways left cl ear alongs ide the fen ces and between every two or three plot s . Each plot cont ained about a hundred t aro plan t s ; although the un it o f s ale for t aro was a plot-full and the plot was also a bas is for compen sat ion in the event of p ig damage , it is not ab so lut ely clear why S iwais p lan ted in plot s . Ol iver ( 1 9 5 5 : 2 5- 6 ) sugges t s that delineat ing plots with logs saved the ef fort required t o drag the logs clear ; al though this is t rue it does no t explain the app arent ly regular l ayout o f the plo t s . There are two other possib le part-expl anat ions . Firs t ly in the Rataiku area , where this practice seems to have b een mo s t coIIDiton , lo gs would have als o Secondly , min imized s o il eros ion in the slopin g gardens . this kind o f organizat ion enab led the plann ing o f a sub s is t ence enterp rise . A regular layout o f squares enabled an exact ac count t o be t aken o f the amotmt o f food bein g p ro duced at any one t ime ; moreover this was a sys tem that could eas ily be ext ended for ext ra feast requiremen t s . This kind o f s t rat e gy existed el sewhere in the Pacif i c and is s t ill maintained in s ome areas , includin g the To ' amb ait a coast o f north Malaita . The apparent s impl i city and regularity o f the t aro gardening sys t em was disturbed b y a certain divers it y . In mos t t.aro pat ches nat ives al so grow some t ob acco , a doz en o r so plantain and banana plant s , and several yam and gourd vines t rained up along the fences . Now and then one comes acros s a pat ch contain ing a few s talks o f maiz e , some t omato es , and a bush o f t iny red [ chill i ] peppers which are used as condimen t s . Few S iuais have yet acquired tas t es fo r the recently introduced maize and t omat oes . Yams s omet imes reach len gths of three and four feet and are pointed out as curios ities , but no spec ial effort is made to p roduce o r display them ; because o f their coarse , fibrous t exture they are not rated highly as a food ( Oliver , 19 5 5 : 26) . 65 The garden ing sys t em therefore was st ill a con servat ive one ; taro provided 80 per cent o f the S iwai diet and other planted species merely gave a little variety . Although Oliver apparen tly did not see rice bein g grown in northeast S iwai in 19 38-39 , some small-s cale plant in g may have b e gun around the Tonu area at about this t ime , following the return o f S iwais educated at Kihil i . Much later Halin g reported that ' s in ce 19 38 the rice crop has b een p laying an increas ing role in th e sub s istence pat tern ' of the Rataiku area (Agric ult ural Patro l Report [APR] Eastern Divis ion , S iwai , 1960) . Even so few new crops had f oun d a n i che in the garden syst em ; ne ither Chinese taro (Xanthosoma) nor cassava , each of whi ch give a greater yield per un it o f t ime than Co locasia taro , had found a significant pl�ce . The innovat ions o f the previous century had divers i f ied b ut not sub s t ant ially chan ged the agricultural system of S iwai . However , the introduct ion o f sweet potatoes had resulted in chan ges . Although the ir use was then expanding , and potato acreages increased in the eighteen-month period o f Oliver ' s s t ay , o lder people were cont emptuous o f them ( ' children ' s food ; not solid , st rength-giving food like taro ' ) and they were import ant only in the d iet s o f households with mis s ion-trained members ( Oliver , 1 9 5 5 : 2 7 ) . They had however some advant ages over t aro s in ce they grow in poore r , sandier s o il , requ ire little care after plan t in g an d p rodu ce a higher yield per acre and per un it o f t ime . A d isadvantage was that sweet potatoes were mor e t emp t in g to pigs , hence sweet potato garden s were made in the valleys of s t reams , some dis t an ce from sett lement s and hence f rom domest ic p igs ( Oliver , 1 9 5 5 : 2 7) . The only o ther regular component o f S iwai diet s was co conut s which although planted , and o ccas ionally cared for , were not p art o f the gardening sys t em . Breadfruit s too were planted , but there were few of them and , like coconut s , the lon g period before maturity meant that they were dis t inct from the gardens . Indeed b readfruit t rees belonging to one individual S iwai owner o ften o ccurred in the garden o f another . T e chnology was uncomplicated ; there were only four implement s : axe , b ushknife , wooden rake and diggin g s t ick . Ol iver suggested that ' it would b e di fficult t o devise a more e f f i c ient pro cedure ' although a st eel-bladed hoe would probab ly have reduced the t ime spen t weed ing ( Oliver , 1955 : 2 5 . The f irst s t ages of garden preparat ion were men ' s work : 66 cut t ing down small t rees , s t rip-b arking large ones and buildin g the garden fence . Meanwhile women carried t aro plan t ings there and made sago-palm that ch sheet s for the garden hut . After fen cing and burn ing were over men arranged lo gs t o demar cat e the plots and the maj o r part of their cont rib ut ion t o garden work was completed . In sweet potato gardens men worked even less s ince the ideal s ites were sandy flood plains and shorter fences were used there . Women worked in the gardens four t imes as lon g as men ; nearly every mo rning women went with their children to the gardens and remained unt il mid-afternoon , plant ing with a digging s t ick , weeding by hand or harvest in g . Ol iver suggest s that ' mo s t women regard garden ing as a f ixed part o f every day ' s life rout ine , an end in itsel f ; whereas for many men it is a rather onerous but necessary j ob t o be complet ed as quickly as pos s ible in order to move on t o o ther act ivit ies o r lack o f act ivit ies ' (Oliver , 1 9 5 5 : 1 3 1 ) . There was the re fore a dis t in ct divis ion of lab our in garden work , wh ere women , with their S iwai t ools and large amoun t o f t ime consuming hand act ivit ies , work for longer hours than men and be come much more exper ienced in growing food plant s . Nevertheless some men did spend n early as much t ime as women in the gardens and were noted for their f ine t aro , their s t raight s t urdy fences and their carefully aligned pat ches . It would have b een unusual for even the mo st industrious woman to spend mo re than about s even hours a day at garden work , includin g the time spent goin g to an d from the garden (Oliver , 1 9 5 5 : 1 32 - 3 ) . The f inal input into t aro cult ivation was garden medi c ine , o r magic ( S-maki ) ; each household made their own arrangemen t s fo r magic although some did nothin g , relyin g o n their own skills t o p rodu ce good t aro . The same principle s were used , but les s f requen t ly , for th e protection an d growth o f sweet potat oes , co conut s , s ago , almonds and b readfruit ( Ol iver , 1 9 5 5 : 1 35 , 4 9 8) . Magic was men ' s work . At the s t art o f the 1940s , before the Pacific war extended out towards· Melanesia , S iwai agr iculture was almost ent i rely o rien t ed towards the s ub s istence production of t aro ; the new in t roduct ion s o f the previous century , especially sweet potat o , had taken a small place in the system b ut it was t aro that dominated in diet and ceremonial . Although small quan t it ies of food were o c cas ionally s old within S iwai ; this was invariab ly the result o f except ional circumstan ces ; there were no households that were not depen dent upon their 67 gardens . The only crop that had been planted for money was co conut s which were st ill far from ext ens ive ; although the earl iest return ed wage labourers were enthus ias t ic enough t o plant them on their return , their o wn enthus iasm was not then shared by other S iwais . Desp ite the need for money for t axes an d despite the encouragement and ins i st ence of admin ist rat ion o fficials , o ther factors such as the unpredictab le fluctuat ions o f copra prices , the distance o f Kangu on the Buin coast , the irregular vis its to it o f European t raders an d the relat ive ease of obt aining wages in plantat ion empl oyment were more than sufficien t to check the need for money and hen ce co conut s . The S iwai agri cultural economy. , as it had been half a century earl ier , remained a world o f ' sub s istence af fluence ' . There was n o indicat ion that there had ever been a period o f shortage ; there were apparent ly always food surpluses , beyond dome s t ic requiremen t s , even with relat ively small input s o f labour . Nevertheless fundamental changes were in store ; the taro gardening economy des crib ed here survived as . such for no more than five more years un t il around the end of the second world war . The war economy The war had an eno rmous impact on the l ives an d economy o f S iwai ; ' the shock waves convulsed Bougainvilleans at the t ime , and con t inue to do so today ' (Oliver , 19 7 3 : 12 4 ) . In March 1 9 42 Japanese t roops moved int o south Bougainville and remained there for over three years unt il after they s urrendered in August 1945 ; the long Japanese presence in the area resul ted in s everal chan ges , the mos t important of which , in t erms of last ing influence on the S iwai economy , were agricultural . For the first year the Jap anes e seem t o have and only a limited influence in S iwai , concent rat in g their forces in Buin , but , followin g their evacuat ion o f the S olomon islands of Munda , Kolomb an gara and finally Vella Lavella in October 1 9 4 3 , there were over 6 0 , 000 Japanese t roops in Bougainville ( C ampbell , 1946 : 2 - 3 ) . At the s ame t ime communicat ions b eyon d the island were almost cut o f f an d the Japanese were more o r l e s s forced to spread westwards into S iwai . At this t ime • • • certain fresh veget ab les were already being grown but now a s cheme was des igned whereby it was cons idered that a s t at e of full self-sufficiency for a rmy t roops would be reached as quickly as 68 possib le . Great er areas were placed under cul t i vat ion and approximately 40 per cen t o f all t roops were detailed fo r gardenin g dut ies ( Campb ell , 1946 : 3) . Light vehicle t ransport was pos s ible as far wes t as the Puriat a where a group of t roops were s t at ioned s in ce the Japanese feared an American invas ion in Gaz elle Harbour , near Mot upena Point . In S iwai t roops were s t at ioned close t o the Mivo (at a camp called S is ikatokoli) , near Mus imino i , at Hari , Mono itu , Miheru , Ru ' nai , near Tokonoitu and in smaller detachment s el sewhere as far north as Mos iget a (Bait s i ) . No merchant ship s we re ab le to supply the Japanese army after January 1944 although submarines delivered small amounts of food f o r about ano ther s ix mon ths . By then the Japanese program of self-suf fi ciency was well under way and from about March 1944 they were ab le to l ive almo s t ent i rely on their garden p roduce ( Campbell , 1946 : 10 ) . Even s o th ere was a certain amount of malnut rit ion whi ch , together with dysen t ery and malaria , produced a high death rat e . Durin g the lat t er half of 1 9 4 4 35 p e r cent o f the t roops were engaged in gardenin g dut ies ; although this was still no t enough for total self-sufficien cy food reserves could b e conserved , new gardening areas were opened u p and there was even enough fishing (presumab ly in rivers ) to enab le o f ficers ' messes to have several fish meals per week ( Campbell , 1946 : 11 ) . Campbell ' s int erviews with Japanese survivors from the S iwai area provides a us eful account of Japanese agricult ure . The garden s were well-tended and producin g large crop s o f sweet potatoes , corn , eggfruit , b eans , peanuts and green ve getables . Tropical f ruit s such as pawpaw , p ineapple and bananas were also plen t iful . Very little rice was cul t ivated owing to the very arduous work that is necessary . Chickens and eggs were in every un it ' s lines but the fowls were o f poor quality and e ggs small No fresh meat was t asted after March 1944 (Campbell , 1946 : 13 ) . There were also melons , pumpkins and marrows in garden s In a s lar ge a s 6 0 0 yards b y 4 0 0 y ards (Lon g , 1 9 6 3 : 151 ) . nor thern Bougainville co conut s formed a con s iderab le port ion of the army diet . At this t ime it seems that the Japane se had relat ively litt le contact with S iwais ; there was no 69 warfare in Bougainville and the S iwais themselves cont inued to main tain their own garden s . There was , of course , no ext ernal t rade but some produce was t raded with the Japane s e ; Japanese obtain ed tobacco leaves , co conut s , pawpaws and sweet po tatoes from S iwais and in exchan ge gave l ime (which they had made thems elves on the coas t ) and espe cially salt , yet at the end of t he war many S iwais were complaining that the ir ' payment s ' were quite inadequate (Anon , 1945) . Probab ly towards the end o f 1944 S iwais were increas ingly drawn , or rather dragged , into the agricultural lab our force . S iwais from the Toit o i area stated that they were cal led upon t o supply lab our f o r the gardens for two days each week , but generally the enemy t roops worked their own gardens and l ived in ' gras s hut s ' on the edges of them (Anon , 1945 ) . For the Japanes e ' the s ituat ion in Bougainville was no t unpl easant , morale was high and a s tate o f resigned con tentment existed towards the end o f 1944 ' ( Campbell , 1946 : 13 ) . The mount in g o f the Aus t ral ian of fen s ive in December 1944 , that followed the American occupation of Torokina, des t royed any t race of normal it y . The neces s ity to defen d their p o s it ions and prevent the Aus tralian advance meant that the Japanese had t o withdraw many t roops from gardening dut ies with the result that although the remain ing gardeners were never allowed to relax , S iwais were incre as in gly forced into garden ing act ivit ies and also had to ins t ruct the Japanese in the preparat ion and cooking of lo cal ' vegetat ion ' . Even s o food p ro duct ion decl ined through 1 9 45 . Consequen t ly the Japanese were forced to demand food and t o steal it from S iwai garden s ; meanwhi le most o f the S iwais themselves had withdrawn int o the mountains to avo id Aust ralian bomb in g raids plus Japanese aggress ion and the phys ical labour o f maint ainin g their garden s . The Aus t ralian air force were sys t emat ically b omb ing Japanese camps and gardens and in the con fusion many S iwai gardens were also destroyed . Although under cover of darkness S iwais occas ionally returned to harvest their garden s , cult ivat ion was impo ssib le except in the mos t remote upland villages . For more than hal f a y ear S iwais were forced int o at least part ial dep enden ce on a hunt ing and gather ing economy ; there was some malnut rit ion and a very high rate of infant an d child mortal ity (pp . 2 7 -8) . The Japanese too were starving and many were dying from malnut rit ion ; there were not even any fish s ince all the grenades were being used in military operat ions . Con sequent ly the Japanese were desperat e ; near Kumuki a Japanese of f icer supervis in g sago manufacture , presumab ly with S iwai as sist ance , told the iuiuai o f Ru ' nai 70 that h e was endeavouring to s upp ly sago to 5 00 men (Anon . , 1945 ) . Dep let ion o f garden resources meant that the Japanese also ate what lo cal animals s t ill remained , in cludin g the do gs , to the ext ent that in some part s of B ougainville (PR Buka Pas sage 1 / 45-6) , probab ly including S iwai , there were not even enough do gs after the war to allow wild pig Mo reover reports from the S ininai and Monoitu hunt in g . areas seem t o confirm that in s ome except ional circums t ances some Japanese were reduced to eat ing S iwais ( c f . p . 7 7 ) . Finally during th e las t ret reat , even in the Buin area wh ich the Aus t ralian forces never reached , the Japanese made sys t ema t i c efforts to des t roy their own gardens and therefore any plant ing mate rial that might have been salvaged f rom them. (This was not ent ir�ly success ful s ince Aust ral ian troops later harvested some Japanese garden s in S iwai . ) Mo reover Japanese cult ivat ion had become b oth so int ens ive and ext ens ive that European agr icult ural o ff icers , after the war , were des crib ing the Buin coas tal plains as ' over cult ivated ' (Anon . , 1 9 4 7 a) . At the end o f the war S iwai was largely devas t ated ; between April an d June 1945 , at the height o f the Aust ralian o f fens ive , 769 ton s o f bomb s had b een dropped on 140 tar ge t s between the Hon gorai and Mivo rivers , in part aimed at Japanese milit ary installat ions and t roop con cent rat ion s but also int ended t o clear t imber an d undergrowth from roadways . Before this offen sive , durin g the American presence at Torokina , American planes dropped 2 5 00 gallon s o f diesel oil aimed at Japanese gardens in various par t s o f the is land . Apparently it was n o t a success and the pilo t s had difficulty in different iat ing b etween Japanese and indigenous garden s , many o f which we re p robab ly also sprayed with o il ( Packard , 19 7 5 : 81 ) . Despite these uncertain t ies the Aust ralian for ces main tained this policy , and from Feb ruary 1945 onwards they were making s t r ikes , usin g incend iary gelatrol , against crops and gardens , t o s imul taneously reduce food supply an d morale (whilst also driving away the Bougainvillean labour force and clearin g j ungle cover ) . In J uly 19 4 5 to me et in it ial requirements some 22 , 000 gal lons o f gelat rol were supp l ied t o the Aust ral ian forces , s ome o f whose leaders were un sat is f ied with this and con t inued to press fo r napalm which may have b een , b ut probably was not , used in Bougainville (Anon , 1 9 4 7b ) . In any case , in military terms , it was a success ful bomb in g ; in the area bordered b y the Hon gorai and Mivo rivers an d the two S iwai east-west roads few t rees or garden s survived the war . Coconut s and s ago palms were dest royed and gardens 71 t o rn apart ; animals and villages almost disappeared from cent ral S iwai and elsewhere the s ituat ion was only a l it t le bet ter . S iwais were con fus ed and demoral ized . The s ub sequent agricultural impact o f the Japanese oc cupat ion followed from two kinds o f int roduct ion : new food plant s and new t e chniques o f cult ivat ion . Some o f the plant s that they b rought with them such as squash , cabb ages and eggplants may have been ent i rely new to some parts o f Bougainville and o thers were variet ies of exist in g species . Although it seems that they int rodu ced no new variet ies of taro (Packard , 19 7 5 : 4 8 ) , they int ro duced several species o f sweet potat o , includin g trimun , (which matured in three mon ths , · probab ly fas t er than any species then presen t in S iwai ) and also tokyo and tokuhama , whi ch were also fast maturing variet ies apparen t ly imported from Japan . 15 Hal ing ( 1 9 6 0 ) e s t imat ed that they int ro duced about seven sweet pot ato variet ies to south Bougainville . They b rought their own variet ies of rice and , for unknown reasons , the milk thist le (Mimosa pudica ) ' , " now a maj o r pest in all types o f garden s , and als ·o the Afr ican snail whi ch seems t o have b een import ant only in Buin . It was , however , the techn iques o f cult ivat ion that mo st impressed Bougainvilleans . Apart from minor changes such as d i fferent t echniques o f planting cassava and trans plant ing pawpaws , which may not have b een important in Bougainville,. but have been recorded in east New Brit ain (Leadley , 19 7 6 ) , the Japanese also used human excret a on their garden s , a technique which certainly did not impress Bougainvilleans . What was most impress ive was the s cale o f Japanese agriculture ; both the cult ivat ed acreage an d the s iz e of individual garden s were ext remely large . S in ce in 194 4 , when the sel f-suff i ciency pro gram began , there were perhaps as many as 3 0 , 000 Japanese t roops in south Bougain ville (which compares with a local population , including women and children , o f around hal f that) , the extent o f cul t ivat ion was obvious ly phenomenal compared with what had gone before . Moreover , although there was prob ab ly no mechanizat ion of agriculture on Bougainvil�e , although small tractors were used by the Japanese on Kolombangara island (Oliver , pers . comm. , 19 7 7 ) , some new agr icultural implement s 15 Trimun seems to be what the Japanese called Taiwan Gago ( Taiwan Number Five ) , a variety developed by the Japanese in Taiwan and flown to Bougainville during the ir occupat ion ( S . Lin co ln , pers . comm. , 19 7 7 ) . 72 were in troduced such as the large rounded hoe ( S , NM-bai la) , now used in S iwai sweet potato gardens , and ext en s ive lab our l ines were organiz ed . Langtry (pers . comm . , 1 9 7 6 ) observed groups of seventy t o eighty Japanese wo rking in a s in gle garden . Mos t of the lab our was Japanese but S iwais were also incorpo rat ed int o the labour force and, in Buin b ut probab ly not in S iwai , captured Ch inese p risoners were drafted into Japanese gardens . It was a much mo re intens ive agricultural sys tem than Bougainvilleans had ever seen before ; furthermore it seemed to be supplyin g the whole Japanese army on the island more or less adequately with only a min imum of lo cal t rade , food impor t s and s teal in g . Only small quan t it �es o f rice were grown in S iwai be cause o f it s heavy demand on labour but this seems to have b een the crop that mos t impres sed S iwais both at the t ime (Anon , 1 9 4 5 ) and much later in their recollec t ions o f the war y ears . (The basic rat ion o f the Japanese s oldiers was al so , of course , rice and , in their turn , S iwais s t ole rice from Japanese stores . ) For mo st S iwais , especially adult males , rice was already known as a popular food b ut for many this was the first t ime they had seen it growing in S iwai . The rice that was planted may have b een a wet rice variety s ince it was planted in tren ches . In Buin there was probab ly rather more ext ens ive rice cult ivat ion , followin g f rom the longer s t ay of Japanese forces there , s ince the J apanese ope rat ed a rice mill somewhere near Tab ago miss ion . For the first t ime in Bougainville there was at leas t mechan iz e d preparat ion o f a food c rop and i t was a crop that was already becoming popular there . The Japanese usually grew sweet pot atoes in lon g , straight r idges , a s a t Mono itu (Lon g , 19 6 3 : 9 2 f ) , but somet imes these were b roken up into the small heaps that are now common in S iwai p o t at o gardens . Deep hoein g o f weeds was also pract ised . Throughout Bougainville both deep hoe ing and motlll din g were learnt f rom the Japanese ; neither were t e ch n iques that were known previous ly . Although the 1940 Annual Rep o rt fo r the Territ ory ( P CA , 1941 : 82 ) s t at ed that ' the general method o f plant ing sweet potat oes in the Territ o ry consists o f making small , low hills and ridges ' , this must have been a reference to the newly-dis covered New Guinea Highlands . There were few lowland sweet potato cult ivators and where sweet potatoes were a crop there seems t o be no re ference to moundin g ( e . g . Oliver , 1 9 5 5 ; Blackwood , 1 9 35 ; 312 ) . It was a te chnique that was particularly appropriat e t o the heavy rain fall o f south Bougainville and one that 73 became part i cularly useful with the ext ens ion o f sweet potat o gardens away from sandy , alluvial areas . (There is no clear eviden ce , although it s eems probab le , that , o ther thin gs bein g equal , moundin g actually increases the product ivity of sweet potato garden s . ) At Torokina on the wes t co ast o f Bougainville there were al so large garden s , begun by the, Ameri cans and extended by In June 1944 115 acres the Aust ralian forces and ANGAU . were plant ed there in an att empt t o give the t roops something to do and al so provide them with s ome fresh vegetab les (Bowman , 1946 : 42 7 ) ; these U . S . Board of E conomic Warfare gardens cont ained t omatoes , lettuce , canteloupe melons , corn and probab ly also radishes , cucumbers and s quash . Unl ike the ir Japanese count erpar t s the American cult ivat ors had t racto rs and t railers and used groups o f Bougainvillean women working under white supervis ion . Although S iwais were necessarily less familiar with these, un t il the very las t st ages o f the war when some were evacuat ed to Torokina , this kin d of agricultural development rein forced their opin ions o f .what they had already seen o f Japanese garden s in the . south . Large gardens , cult ivated by labour l ines and organiz ed with milit ary precis ion , were something that it might b e ext remely worthwhile to t ry themselves espec ially for rice , a new and des irab le food and a potent ial s ource . of cash income . The war tot ally di srupt ed the S iwai e conomy yet it gave some promis e of a rather different future . The death of taro 16 Where the taro Blight (Phytophthora ao loaasiae ) originated and how it arrived in Bougainville is likely t o remain a mystery ; it may have b een p resen t in Bougainville j ust before the war , intens if ied dur ing it and afterwards spread t o almo s t all of the island . Throughout Bougainville the almos t unanimous view o f the local people was that the disease appeared towards the end o f the war and had never been known before that . The ef fect o f the blight was devastat ing ; throughout l owl an d Bougainville Co loaasia taro was eventually completely wiped out ; not even isolated stan ds would grow . The low-lying plain s o f S iwai and Buin provided op t imum condit ions in which the di sease could flourish ; like the b l i ght o f the s ame genus that caused the Irish potato famine in the nineteenth century , it sp read mo st 16 A more detailed accoun t o f the r eplacement of taro by sweet potat o both in S iwai and Bougainville is given P. lsewhere ( Connell , 19 7 8a) . 74 rapidly during periods o f con t inuous rain (Packard , 1 9 7 5 : 62 ) and s outh Bougainvil le was an ideal environment . Almo s t inevitably Bougainvilleans mainly blamed the Japanese p resen ce for the introduct ion of the disease ; the as sociat ion was clearest in the south where there had b een bomb ing and a long period o f Japanes e o c cupat ion . 1 7 Although a small mino rity of S iwais n ow b el i eve that a disease killed the taro the standard exp lanat ion remains that the h eavy bomb in g o f the plains poisoned the soil t o the ext ent that t aro would no lon ger grow . Others believe that it came with Japanese plant introduct ions . A sl ight ly dif ferent vers ion ( relat ed to Packard by Lais i , of Hari) was that pet rol and oil had remained in the grotmd ( f rom the aeroplanes of the American Marine Corps wh ich dumped 2 5 00 gallon s of diesel o il on Japanese gardens ( Sherrod , 1952 : 2 10) so that it was too contaminat ed for taro cul t ivat ion . Both versions accoun ted for the s urvival o f taro in the motmtain s where there had b een little bomb ing and where there were plen ty of incised s t reams in which the poison could drain out . It was usually s aid that sweet potato did no t die because ' it was j ust like a bush vine ' ; S iwais told Packard in 1 9 7 3 that ' swee t potato was only a vine but taro was a t ree ' and ' t aro was like a man ; it could feel sick wh ereas sweet potato was j us t a vin e ' ( Packard , 1 9 7 5 : 82 ) . Taro had a soul and was not j ust another .plant , like sweet potato or the other crop s that survived ; it was the ab solute bas is o f the subsisten ce economy . Its ab sence was almost impos s ib le t o contemplate , s t ill less to reo rganize l i fe around . The in it ial S iwai respon se to the blight was to con t inue the garden magic wh ich had hitherto ensured good taro crop s ( and , to a minor ext en t , also produced good yams ) . None was suc ces s f ul ; the ir cures were considered to be insuf ficient ly power ful against a disease whose origin was al ien (Packard , 1 9 7 5 : 84 ) . S iwais soon real ized that taro could s t ill be grown at higher alt it udes but high motm tains were many miles away an d even at isolated Iru , the highest village in S iwai , success was not great . Repeat edly taro was b rought f rom dif ferent mountainous areas , wh ere f i ght ing had been les s , but nowhere in the plains could it be persuaded t o grow . 17 This p aragraph is de rived partly from accotmts given to me and par t ly from Packard ' s analysis of accounts he collected (Packard , 19 7 5 : 7 9) . 75 Throughout south Bougainville cont inued at t empt s were made ; cont inually they failed with the t aro dyin g well before maturity . In the early 1950s a dif feren t plan t ing s t rat egy was attempted with small isolated pat ches of taro being planted , o ften mixed with sweet potat o ; o ccas ional pat ches then survived to maturity . S ome S iwais , including those at Kapana (Packard , 1 9 75 : 89 ) , t ried plant in g t aro llll d er the eaves o f the ir hous es but without much success . Spaced plant ing seems to have b een the mo st success ful s t rategy t r ied anywh ere in Bougainville ; the administrat ion p roduced nothin g b et t e r . Even so by 1960 Coloaasia taro would s t ill not grow ; Hal ing obs erved in eastern S iwai : ' Original nat ive t aro is almo st ext inc t in this area , only two small gardens were no t i ced . No disease res istant st rains were not iced ' (APR, Eas tern S iwai , 1960) . S iwais have cont inued to make experiment s , mainly with t aro brought from upland areas , but so far with little succes s . There was no shortage of po s s ible solut ions to the prob lem but there were none that was success ful ; the t enac ity and versat ility o f the local response were never rewarded . ( Although a f ew variet ies o f t aro with lower yields have been estab l ished in Buka none ha s really b een succe s s ful in S iwai . ) • • • Development and des truct ion S iwai agriculture has p robab ly always been changin g . The s ub s is t en ce economy that exist ed centuries ago gradually incorporated new crops and new an imals as rare t ravellers beyond the island b ro ught their dis coveries t o the shores of Bougainville . Unt il the nineteenth cen t ury there is almo s t nothing known of whatever changes t o ok p lace ; few can have been significant compared with the changes that followed . The affluent economy o f the n ineteenth century began to incorporate new plant s , the most important o f these eventually turn in g o ut to be the sweet potat o . When labour migrat ion eventually b e gan from Bougainville t owards the end o f the century the pace of change increased : a new technology b as ed on s t eel tools enabled t ime savin gs and therefore a great ly increased capacity to experiment with new condit ion s . There was no int ernal demand for change , merely an interest in experimentat ion . The first hal f-century o f colon ial administ rat ion b rought little change ; German int erest s were fo cussed elsewhere and their economic po l icies had l it t le impact on Bougainville . Aus t ral ian admin is t rat ion , likewise , was concerned with law and o rder rather than economic development . However their 76 pacificat ion pro gram ended local war fare and again released more t ime for experimentat ion ; the cash that plant at ion labourers earned enab led them to ob tain bet ter tools . They had al so seen n ew techn iques and new crop s . Yet it was the mi ss ions , be tween the wars , whi ch mos t encouraged chan ge . Miss ionaries were rather more familiar with the lo cal condit ion s that administ rators rarely saw more than once a year . They proved that b o th new food and cash crops could be succe s s ful in south Bougainville but markets were remote and t ran sport to them almost non-exis t ent . S iwais o ccas ion ally sold copra to t raders in the inter-war years but it was not a source of income that could be depended upon so that un t il the war the whole sequence o f agricultural change in Siwai had s imp ly imp roved upon an al ready sat is factory syst em ; st eel tools had replaced stone tools , sweet pot at o had proved an easier crop to grow fo r pig food and o ther new crops and possibly animals had divers ified the diet . The war and the coincident t aro blight killed o f f the old system but b rought with them the seeds of the n ew . The ext raordinary labour int ens ity of Japanese gardening , and the ab ility of the Japanese to grow rice , had been ob served well by S iwais ; some , indeed , had been forced t o t ry their Rice was a new and excit in g possib ility . own hand at it . Taro blight totally removed Co locasia tar o from the sub s isten ce sy st em; sweet potato , perhap s the easiest and mo st product ive o f all the food crops that could be grown in lowland Melanesia , was its obvious successor as the main food crop . The s low evolution o f S iwai agricult ure that had gone on for cen t uries had b een completely disrupted ; the s t aple food crop had gone and in less than a couple o f y ear s the agricultural econ omy had b een diverted ont o a complet ely new path . It was , e f fe ct ively , almost the end o f a lon g period o f agricultural history in which product ion was aimed towards s ub s is t en ce requirement s . The war marked the s t ar t o f a new phase o f in corporat ion int o the internat ional e conomy yet S iwai s t ill remained , in many ways , a wo rld o f i t s own . Chap ter 4 . 1 tura 1 recovery : Agricu t h e rise o f r i. ce 1 . The S iwais are an eager people , keen to b et ter their villages , their children ' s educat ion an d , o f course , their f inanc ial p o s it ion (Gidd ings , 1 9 5 7 ) . . . . the [ S iwai ] native is not over fond o f hard labour ( Boag , 19 60) . The f irst patrol into Nagovisi t owards the end o f the war , which was carried out li terally within earshot of the bat t le soon after the Japanese ret reat , noted that , ' During the ret reat to Buin the Japanese ravaged every garden in their c ourse and even ate two or three nat ives ' (PR Nagovis i , 1 9 4 5 ) . They also ate o r des t royed even the t aro st �lks that were necessary for replantin g . Although there were small sweet potato , cas sava and yam gardens secreted • • . 1 Source s : Apart from a few published sources cited in the t ext and a few types cript reports that may be availab le out s ide Bougainville (such as the Bougainville Dis t rict Annual Reports and the Buin Sub-district Annual Repor t , b oth of which apparen t ly s tar t in 195 8-59 and end in 19 7 0- 7 1 , and Patrol Report s ) and apart als o from oral dat a , this and the following chapters are b ased upon b rief report s and let ters generally not availab le out s ide Bougainville and mos t not availab le o ut s ide south Bougain ville . S ome o f these , includ ing those at S iwai L . G . C . an d Buin Sub-dis t rict Off ice , have now b een burn t and access t o mos t of the rema in der would be quit e di f f icul t . Consequen t ly they have no t been cited in the text , which would have then b ecome almo s t unreadab le , but are lis t ed separately in Appendix IV . However , commen t s are attribut ed to didimen , kiaps and o ther out siders , and , as far as po ssible , where I have cons idered these observers were particularly conversant with condit ions in S iwai , they have b een iden tified . S imilarly , the mo st important of these report s have b een cited in the t ext . 77 78 in the hills these we re o f t en spoilt b y wild pigs . People were short of food and fo rced ·to eat immature sweet potato . There was insuf ficien t t aro planting mat erial for replacement o f all the dis eased crops and th ere were definite food sho rtages . The s ame was t rue o f S iwai where the war was s t ill going on and where the Japanese were even mor e desperat e . At the end o f the war the agricul tural economy of S iwai was in total disarray ; lowland garden s had almost disappeared : co conut s , sago and many villages were dest royed . It was not then known that taro would no t grow , hen ce the early attempt s a t re-establishing f o o d gardens con cent rated on taro and were all failures ; there was some s t arvat ion . S iwais were con f used about the who le sequen ce of events and shat tered by s ome o f its effe c t s . The first year o f the post-war era saw the economy at its lowest ebb ; there were few thoughts t o b e spared fo r cash crops and none f o r migrat ion a s plant at ion labour . The task o f S iwais and administ rat ion alike was t o res tore a war-damaged agricult ure , a s rapidly a s possib le , to self-sub s is t ence . Government int ervention The earli es t adminis trat ion responses were dramat i c ; the Sydney Morn ing Herald reported in November 1946 that ' A government food ship is hurrying to Bougainville , where 2 0 , 000 nat ives are facing hunger ' (Packard , 19 75 : 14 ) . At the same t ime a government o f ficial flew from Port Mo resby t o Queens land t o buy pigs , chi ckens and even do gs (but for all these there was no transport availab le to Bougainville for Th ere were further reports o f s t arvation and a whole y ear) . in 1947 the Adminis t rator o f the Territory , Colonel J . K . Mur ray , led a par ty acro ss southern Bougainvil le ; they fotm.d that although a few people had managed t o redevelop the Japanese rice plot s , after the war there was s t ill insuf ficien t food t o eat . They did however find that health was , on the who le , very good with only ' t iny signs of diet deficiency ' . A survey t eam in 1947 that followed the Adminis t rator ' s p arty found it nece s s ary t o make several b as i c recommendat ions in cluding those that f i fty pounds of seed yams and Chinese t aro (Xan thosoma) suckers b e given to each village in south Bougainville , there should be two dist ribut ions a y ear t o every household o f on e pound o f corn , two pollll d s o f peanut s , an ounce o f pumpkin seeds and one gramme each o f tomato and chinese cabb age . P lan t ing o f a quarter o f an acre o f good quality t apioca ( cassava) per house as a reserve food supply should be en forced immediat ely an d , as soon as po s s ible � 81 program ; s in ce DASF employed on ly thirty-five s t aff throughout Papua and New Guinea this was not ent i rely surpri s ing . Moreover the administration were far from enthus ias t ic about the ir p re-war s uc cess in en couraging lo cal agri cul ture : ' the nat ive peoples , due to their disinclinat ion to adopt new methods or ideas , are at present in a primit ive s t age o f agricul tural development ' (PCA , 1 9 4 7 : 13 ) . Despite the p res sure that was p laced on the administration by the Catholic miss ion in the y ears innne diat ely after the war , policies were apparently never refin ed or fur ther elaborated . The admin ist rat ion reac ted rathe r than ini t iated . Eventually in 195 6 it seems that there was some move t owards es tablishing at l east a plan for Bougainville ; the Buin sub-dis t rict agr icul tural o fficer , K . I . Tomlin , submit ted his own t en-year plan to the Dis t rict Connni s s ioner . He was clearly not op t imistic about eith er finance o r s t aff support and the plan ( Appendix I) is of more value as an account of south Bougainville in 1 9 5 6 than as a contribut ion to a not yet emerging agricultural pol icy . By the 1950s the nat ional adminis trat ion was beginnin g to formulate rudimentary policies towards agricultural change ; the stated aims , which in 1952 were novel and innovato ry , were ' to improve the Nat ive s ' methods of producing their p re s en t crops , and to improve existin g variet ies , an d secondly , to encourage the development b y b o th Europeans and Native s of n ew agricultural indus tries ' (PCA, 1953 : 6 1 ) . The 1 9 5 1-52 r eport also in cluded a lengthy accoun t o f the ' bush fallowing rotat ion ' sy s t em and , perhap s for the first t ime , there was no longer even an implicat ion that this was a was t eful and ineffici en t sys t em . Research cont inued to con centrate primarily on cash crop s but without estab lishin g crop or regional priorit i es . N evertheless the shi ft in orientat ion had immediate result s ; in 1950 it was already possib l e to observe ' a quickening of the t empo of nat ive development and an awareness in the more advan ced p eople that their labour is not the only thing they have to s ell ' (PCA , 1 9 5 1 : 2 3 ) . Nevertheless in the f irst quarter o f a cent ury af t er the war it remained impossible to detect the crystallizat ion of a con s is t en t administrat ion policy on rural development . Bougainville , an d especially south Bougainville , was always remote from administrat ion int erest and concern . Thus in 1 9 5 2 when the administrat ion were making concerted att emp ts t o develop rice farming in Papua and N ew Guinea a team of exper t s visit ed twelve dif feren t areas in the coun t ry , 80 that sweet pot at o is now generally accepted by the nat ives as the s t aple and the desire to return to taro growing on a large scal e is much less frequent ly expres s ed than was the cas e formerly ' . There is no eviden ce that Bougainvilleans lacked this desire t o return to taro despit e the hopes of admin istration off icers who were losin g int erest in experimen t at ion and who saw lit t le difference b etween t h e two crops . The Act ing Dire ctor o f the Department o f Agriculture , S t o ck and Fi sh er i es (DAS F ) s t at ed in 1 9 54 that ' there is no reason why taro cannot be superseded by thes e crops . . . yams , kongkong taro , sweet potat oes and t apioca ' yet at the same t ime ' al l over the is land . . . people . . . were b emoan ing the loss o f the ir taro and having t o eat what they regarded as ' p ig food ' - sweet potato ' (Tomlin , pers . connn . , 1 9 74 ; cited by Packard , 1 9 7 5 : 72 ; cf . Connell , 1 9 7 8a) . For a decade there was no mo re res earch on dis ease-res istant t aro yet for two decades kiaps , didimen , miss ionaries and Bougainvillean s en thus ias t i cally ' discovered ' diseas e-res istant s t rains o f taro , none o f which ever survived f o r long . The first agricul tural ext ens ion centre on Bougainville was built at Sohano , Buka , in 1946 as a respon se t o the f o od sho rtage on the is land and by 1948 both cot t on and j ut e were growing t h ere s ucce ss fully . This was of no use to t he s outh (or indeed any o the r part of Bougainville ) , where they were concerned with the b as ic food crops that the S ohano s t at ion had not developed . In early 1948 preliminary work b egan to set up a sub-cent re at Kangu on the Buin coast whi ch was in tended to provide facilit ies for dist ributing p igs in south Bougainville an d to serve as a bas e for ext ens ion work . The Buin s t at ion lasted only two years and closed in March 1950 becaus e of staff shortages ; pigs were s t ill urgen t ly required . S iwais o f t en observe , with the wisdom of hinds i ght , that Buins rej ected the agricultural stat ion whereas they had ins i s t ed that one b e built in S iwai . De spite these changes , dramat ic by the s t andards of the pre-war e r a , no consistent agri cul tural policy emerged e ither for the country or for the dist rict . The n ewly created Department of Agriculture , Stock and Fisheries (DASF) through it s director , W. Cot t rell-Do rmer , had announced that its aim was to ' build up a commun ity based on a type of rural peasant prop rieto rship , for nutrit ional improvemen t as well as for economic purposes ' al though at the same t ime , ' te chnical as s i s tan ce would also be provided for European During the firs t year almost nothing was settlers ' . accomplished towards implemen tat ion of an announ ced extens ion 83 sugges ted that n ew planters could be a great help in opening up the sparsely populat ed , high quality cocoa areas o f Bougainville and New Brit ain and therefore that the estab l ishment o f two t o four new European estates annually over the following f ive years , ' could provide a mo st valuab le s t imulus and demonst rat ion to indigenes ' ( IBRD , 1 9 6 5 : 9 7 ) . Why these two areas then needed s t imulus is not clear . S iwai re sponse to such moves , had they been aware of them, would have b een p redictable . Unlike the Gorokans of the New Guinea Highlands , S iwais had no in terest in having set t lers in their mids t and they were cert ainly no t seekin g buyers for their land . The administrat ion policy of p artnership never had any s ign i fican ce in south Bougainville . This and the following chap t ers seek to analyse the process and p attern of po s t -war agricultural developmen t and the role o f S iwais and o thers in thes e chan ges . The following sect ion attempt s to des cribe brie fly s ome of the earlier historical s equences as S iwais recall them whils t the sub sequent sect ions discus s these changes in the ext ended cont ext of exis t ing writt en records whi ch , without except ion , cons ist o f the report s and analyses o f European administ rators and obs ervers . This there fore also contains my own as sessment o f th ese changes . S iwai persp ec t ives on agr icul t ural change 2 Be fo re the war Catholic villages did not have r ice 2 rnevitab ly it is impossib le that this account accurately port rays S iwai j udgemen t s of their recent history ; there are many S iwais and almost as many vers ions of history . Mo reover almos t al l these accoun t s were collected within the framework of my own quest ion s . They are not what any s ingle S iwai would write although the j udgements are all tho se o f indiv idual S iwais . Maverick p ercept ions have been excluded . Hence i t is a composite and therefore rather unsat is factory view o f his t ory . Mos t o f the collected accounts reco rded here come from the villages around Amio and Konga . The area around Kon ga was in the forefront of some agricultural changes whils t the villages around Amio followed in much the same way and at much the same t imes that o ther areas followed . The s tories were those of young men and old men , some o f whom were prominent in th es e changes , and the dates are those that could later be verified . It cannot b e the complete story but then nor is any vers ion , even with it s complement o f recorded dat es and dat a . 84 although a few Methodist villages had ob t ained seeds from the Kihil i mis s ion and begun plantin g . But everyone l iked rice and durin g the war they saw that it grew well and the Japanese had shown them how to plant it . S oon after the war Rangai ( from Panake village) got o ther S iwai l eaders t o gether to try and st art something new . Kuiaka (Kapana village) wanted to plant rice , s in ce he had eat en and enj oyed it but Dio (Panake) thought that they didn ' t know enough about rice plant ing to s tar t it themselves . Teremo (Amio ) spoke out s t rongly arguing that they could plant it themselves and the Buin As sis tant Dist rict Commis s ioner , Mr Cole , thought that this kind o f leadership would enab le success and encouraged them by b r inging seed from Kihili fo r them to p lan t . At about the same t ime four leaders, Dio (Panake ) , Hianu (Unanai ) , Piruruho (Musimino i) and Ariku (Laku) , again from b oth S iwai religious groups , collected a small amount of money as a token ges ture and went to the Methodis t Minis te� Mr Voyce , at Kihili to ask him to help them s t ar t up some kind o f b us iness act ivity . He was not par t i cularly in terest ed whil st Bishop Wade claimed that it was not mission work to set up busines ses ; cons equen t ly they then went , at Mr Voyce ' s sugges tion , to the Buin ADC , who had begun the agricul tural s tat ion there , but this was no t successful s ince the admin ist rat ion had no ground in S iwai . He however ret ained their cash wh ich caused con siderab le resentment . The vis ion o f S iwai leaders was responsib le for this change in att itude to development ; 11ever theless the first developmen t s within S iwai were a result of lo cal init iat ive rather than admin istrat ion as s i s t an ce . The first village that t ried communal rice gardenin g was Panake , us ing some of Rangai ' s ground on the road to Rabaulu. Kuiaka , the Kapana leader , was not keen to j oin to gether the villages of Kapana an d Panake (as other villages had done ) and , al though he was will in g for there t o be a communal rice garden , Panake began their own garden first so that Kapana j oined with Kin irui , Munnu and S ikurai villages t o es t ablish a rice garden at Konga . Around 1948 this group were wo rking a garden o f about three acres an d were c onsiderably assisted when in 1949 the government put a rice mill at Konga ; it had b een located there s in ce this was ab out the b es t rice proj ect in S iwai . The villages o f Ieku and Turugum began a garden at much the same t ime and when Kaparo saw that the Panake garden was success ful they too b egan one o f their own . The area around Konga seems t o have b een ahead o f mo st other parts o f S iwai at t h i s t ime . 85 Mikompi , a leader who had been one o f the earliest catechis t s in S iwai and who ' l iked looking after money ' , organized the rice cult ivat ion at Kaparo . A f ield was cleared south o f the village l ine , p robab ly about 400 yards by 150 yards , and sub sequent ly another field near Hire of about the s ame size . In this they planted a ' s t rong ' kind o f r ice , l ike that of the Japanese , un t il the didimen later int ro duced an improved kin d of whi te r i ce ( from Mekeo ) which replaced this . The rice was winnowed on banana leaves when there was a wind , and threshed by a machin e con s t ructed f rom a b icycle bought from the Chinese trader Ton Lep in Buin . It was milled either in old cartri.d ge cases (which could be operated l ike a mor t ar and p es t le , a smaller vers ion being used for betel nut ) or in a t urtle shell . It was smoked and dried in a ' haus s un ' s o that it could be s t ored for sale . The f i rs t rice p ro duced was s old to villagers , espec ially ret urned p lant ation labourers , and also Mono itu miss ion , and the . money was collected by Teremo (Arnio) and looked after by Tom S ipana (Unanai ) , then an administ rat ion clerk in Buin town . Some of the early rice product ion was also carried to the port o f Kangu , where Buin town then was , nearly 5 0 km away , where i t was sold t o the administ rat ion , Buin mi ssion s an d Ton Lep , the f i rst of a numb er o f Chinese traders in Buin, who p aid a penny a pound . Not many peop le carried r i ce this far and some o f tho s e who did were paid not with cash b ut with ' cards ' ( credit notes ) which were useles s after Ton Lep died . S ome coconuts remained f rom b efore the war but new p lant in gs were not en couraged because the admini s trat ion felt that the soil was unsuitab le ; the little copra that was produced als o had to be carried t o Ton Lep in Buin . Even t ually enough money was collected from rice sales , mainly to returned p lantat ion labourers , t o estab lish a s t o re and a small b akery near Monoitu which Tom S ipana o r ganized , although he remained in Buin . Goods were obtained f rom Ton Lep ' s s tore in Buin . Various people looked after the s tore at different t imes , inc ludin g S umma (Arnio) who was able to writ e , and Motoi (Kaparo ) , who could count on fern l eaves . This was one of the f irst pos t -war stores in S iwai . S ome t ime in the early 19 5 0s Teremo h eard that Bishop Wade , the Bishop o f Bougainville , was vis it ing Piano mission in Buin s o he walked there , a distance of about 2 0 kilometres from Amio , and asked him for a better rice mill . He did this 86 b ecause, without rice sales , the old men and women had no money , unlike those young men who had returned from the plant at ions . He pointed out that s ince the people o f the Monoitu area had built the church for no co s t , this was a Soon aft erwards a mill was provided and instal led fair deal . at Monoitu and a thir d of the revenue f rom rice millin g there went in to church funds . This generated new en thus iasm for r i ce growing and Arnio and S iro i villages j oined with Kaparo to develop a n ew and . larger area . ( S iroi later began their own communal garden but this only las t ed a short t ime because many villagers wanted t o be gin thei r own garden s . ) Arnio and Siroi received their money separat ely and each village had a savings b ank accollll t where the money s t aye d . The adminis t ration r i ce mill at Konga and the miss ion mill at Monoitu app eared to have been two separate and s imilar foci for rice growers in the early 1 95 0s . Rice however grew b adly in many part s of S iwai or died from a disease which caused the b as e of the s t em t o go b lack . Con sequently Mikompi t o ld the Kaparo people t o grow p eanut s , whi ch he had l earned how to grow when he was a mi ssion catechist in Buka . P revious ly - s ome people in many S iwai villages had grown a few p eanut s in their own gardens b ut thi s was the f irst t ime peanut s had b een grown commllll a lly with the int en t ion of earning cash . The Kaparo villagers als o t ried corn . Th e revenue con t inued t o go int o the village s t ore (although in o ther villages t here were different sys t ems o f distrib ut ion ) but this suffered from a problem which b ecame quit e familiar for S iwai st o res . Too many p eople looked after the store and some of the money disappeared ; ' o l i kaikaim mani bi long mipe la ' ( literally , ' they ate our money ' } . There was no one with enough knowledge to rl.lll a s tore and thos e who looked after it became wo rried ; o l i seksek long bikpe la m:zni i kamap long s toa ( they were s cared o f the large amount s o f money that were made f rom the store) ' . S in ce the rice garden money disappeared in the s ame way , enthus iasm for connnun al work faded rapidly and neither s t o re no r conmrunal work was s t ill goin g in the late 1 950s . In Buin the lo cal people did not appreciate the possib ilit ies o f agricultural developmen t and would n o t give the didiman land so he left and first c ame to S iwai in 1 95 0 . Although- a house was built for a didiman at -Kon ga , S iwais too would not at first p rovide land for an agricul tural s t at ion un t il the Dist rict Connni ss ioner arrived in 1952 and 87 asked them again . The Konga s tat ion was then built on Keheno clan land provided by Kuiaka , who was an o lder man and spoke no P i dgin En glish but nevertheless appreciat ed the possib i lit ies of cash crop development . The first two didimen spent mos t o f their t ime operat ing and repairing the Konga rice machine , which S oiri o f Kapana looked after , but they also s t arted o ff corn and p eanut s . (Peanut s had been grown b efore b ut n ever for sale ; the changes in commllll al gardens followed these recommendat ions . ) The name o f Kevin Tomlin inevitab ly emerges from any dis cus s ion of the s t art o f co coa growing in S iwai ; moreover his is the only European name that emerges in di scuss ions o f recent agricultural history and h e i s a s respected and revered as any o f the handful of Europeans who have been clo sely as s o ciat ed with S iwai life in the p as t . Con sequen t ly 3 it i s not always easy to s eparat e man from myth . Tomlin was the first agricult ural o fficer t o be p ermanently pos t ed t o S iwai where he estab lished himself in July 1956 . Work on the Konga Agr icultural S t at ion b egan soon aft erwards and a ho�se was f in i shed there a y ear later . He was a man o f firm opinions an d o f con s iderab le energy , almo st all o f which was di.rected t owards agricultural improvement in S iwai . When his motorb ike was out o f order he would b orrow a b icycle t o t ravel around . ( On one such day in 1 9 5 6 h e t ravelled from Kon ga to I ru and on to Kimaku , Hiru Hiru , Usokoli and Tonu , a distance o f ab out 40 miles , at each o f which places he inspected possib l e cocoa plantat ion s i tes . ) He is rememb ered for the b litzes he carried out on un t idy co conut plantat ions , his insisten ce upon cocoa bein g the b es t cash crop ( and that those who were foolish enough not to plant co coa would have their heads beaten t o gether by him) and for his t o t al ab sorption in S iwai life ( on one o ccas ion dispers ing the last known volub le disput e between Catholic and Methodist fact ions near S i ro i , t ipping a blackb oard in the r iver an d telling them to go and do s omething useful , l ike p lan t ing cocoa) . During th e first three y ears t hat he l ived in S iwai Tomlin was s ing l e s o spent many o f his evenings dis cus s ing agricul tural development s with S iwai leaders and their supporters . 3 1 was often told that Tomlin was well over s ix feet tall ; when I eventually met him he proved t o be no more than about five feet , ten inches t all . Tomlin t ells a story of his own return t o S iwai in 1 9 6 9 , after a decade away , when he overheard a youth , who had never known him earl ier , remarking ' Is that really Mr Tomlin ; he seems quit e human ' (Tomlin , pers . comm. 19 7 7 ) . 88 Indeed he app ears to have act ed accordin g t o S iwai t radit ion by operat in g through the supporters , rather than goin g d i rectly to the l eaders , but en surin g that the leaders were carefully in formed about his p roposals . This made him ext remely popular , especially by con t ras t with his succes s or who ' expected the atmosphere o f - a coun t ry gol f club ' . His own demands on lab our were there fore t o lerated even when he doubled the t radit ional government work day hours from 9 un t il 2 t o 7 un t i l 5 in an effort t o provide access road s f o r t ract or s , and cont inually supervised the work t o the ext ent that when adul t S iwais , who for any reason were n o t working at any t ime , encount ered him they were filled with a sense o f shame . When Tomlin finally left S iwai , for a post ing in Papua , he was given a large number o f shillings by many individual S iwais . He donat ed the whole lot t o the Rural Pro gres s So ciety . When Tomlin proposed a Rural Pro gress S ociety , S iwais responded quickly ; some of the money that allowed them t o s e t up t h e S ociety c ame f rom the s ale o f pigs . Teremo believed that it was t ime to s top money , especially war_ damage mon ey , being hidden in the bush and t ime to do s omethin g use ful with it , s o that all the early members were asked t o cont ribute £ 1 each . Haranu (Miheru) believed that s everal mumis contributed £2 5 each t owards s et t ing up the society whereas ordinary men con t ribut ed £5 . Whatever the b alance in fun din g it is apparent that the leading suppo rt ers o f the S ociety were the S iwai leaders . The f irst communal cocoa was planted mainly by Kapana , Kin irui and S ikurai villages with the as s is tance o f men from many parts o f S iwai on Kuiaka ' s ground near Kon ga , at the suggest ion o f Mr Tomlin . There was a Kapana Company which looked after this plant at ion but it was believed that Kuiaka and another leader ' at e ' all the money so that too disinte grat ed . Lit tle of this cocoa now remains s ince it grew badly on poor soil , although it was used by the didimen as a demonstrat ion plot . At leas t hal f the villages o f S iwai began vil lage companies : a new idea of unknown origin . Their aims were fundamen tally the s ame as that o f Kapana ; vil lage leaders would provide land for plan t ing cash crops and the money from this would go in t o a s ingle fund which would enab le some equalizat ion o f incomes within the village . Almo st all o f these companies have now f inished although some , like tho se of Usokol i , Kumuki and S iroi l inger on ( c f . Chapter 8 ) . 89 In mo s t villages , s in ce the didimen had recommended it , the ear liest co coa plantat ions owned by individuals were planted by all the village men ; in S iro i , as elsewhere , the village bell was rung and all the men had to turn out for work . Three plantations were plant ed l ike this in the village and then , l ike the earlier communal rice gardening , the idea fell through and l ater planters had t o p lan t their cocoa us in g hous ehol d o r hired l ab our . The early planters , there as elsewhere bein g mainly leaders , had b een given an advantage . One o ther . Plantat ion had been planted communally : that o f t he S iro i Company on the edge o f the village l ine and a little l at er a Company copra p lant at ion was s t arted on the beach near Ait ara . The two p lantat ions were on the land of the two mo st important � ineages in S iwai . Thus , early int e rest in cash cropping b egan with the communal plant in g of rice ; this was init ially success ful b ut decl ined with the onset of diseas e , the inab ility to organize communal work ( and the s tores that followed from them) , and the lack o f an as sured market . Much o f the r ice produced was eat en within S iwai . Consequen t ly S iwais were always int .er.e st e d in new cash crops ; corn and peanut s were tried but again it proved difficul t to sell these crops and the Cocoa low return o ft en made the ef fort s carcely worthwhile . was init ially grown in the same way as rice , in communal plant at i on s , but these were more diff icult to organ iz e than rice garden s , s ince there was a lack of int erest in co coa and many S iwais thought that it t oo would be unsuccessful . S ome individuals showed that coco a could be suc cess ful and after that int erest in o ther p oss ib le cash crops faded as almost every S iwai began to plant coco a . A cash crop emerges A few S iwai villages , b ut p robab ly only those close t o the Japanese camps , grew rice after the war and i t cont inued to grow well so that administ rat ion patro ls met constant request s for assistance in rice growin g , husking and market in g . In March 1948 the sub -dis t rict o f f i cer , Mr Cole , found that at Ruisei the o ff i cials we re very anxious t o grow rice but refrained from doing so in any quant ity as they had no husking machine . They suggested that they would provide the cash if I would undertake t o sen d t o Aus t ralia on their b ehalf and purchase a suitab le rice-husking machine . They also appointed 90 two young men who were to be s en t t o any s choo l o r p lantation t o learn how · to operate the machine so that they could train others in the village on thei r return (PR Bougainville , 10/4 7-48) . By the middle o f 1948 garden cult ivat ion had been succe s s fully reorgan ized ; al though t aro would not grow and the admin ist rat ion was s t ill dist ribut in g various kinds of seeds t o the people , the garden s were already p roducing enough food to feed the local populat ion . The evidence o f the p at ro l rep o rts o f this period is that S iwais were no longer concerned about their gardens and were interested in expandin g rice growing ent irely b ecause o f its known value as a cash crop . It is no t always and everywhere clear why post-war enthus iasm for rice cul t ivat ion was so great . Cer tainly i t had been a prest ige food in Siwai before the war ; Oliver has des cribed how for large feas t s in 19 38-9 someone would go some f i fty kilometres to Buin and purchase a s ack of rice which would be con sumed by var ious leaders in the men ' s club-house (pers . conun. 1 9 7 7 ) . At least as early as 1 9 2 3 it was part o f daily pol ice rat ions and was al s o regularly eaten by p lantation workers . In the war it was a bas ic staple fo r both the Japanese and Aust ralian t roops and it was known to grow well lo cally . The associat ion o f rice and European affluence that had already b een fostered by plan tat ion labour experiences was th erefore emphas ized durin g the war . Meanwhile the environmen t had changed ; respect fo r the technological achievement s of European s had grown and c oupled wi th it was an admirat ion for the effectiveness o f co-ope rat ive organization in agricultural product ion . All o f the se however seem neces s ary but insufficient conditions . Mo reover the emphasis had shif ted dramat ically from the productio n of rice for c onsump tio� as it was from the few individually owned pr e-war rice garden s , to the product ion of rice for sale from l arge communal garden s . Participat ion in cash cropping was avidly sought in a way that it had never b een even a decade earlier . Elsewhere in New Guinea the same movement t owards the communal cul t iva tion of r ice was common in the post-war years , with the dis t inct ion that in a number of areas , especially around the Madang coast , it was encouraged by the admin is t rat ion rather than being a lo cal demand . The Garia only planted r ice b ecause they had been told to do s o (Lawrence , 1 964 : 2 6 9 ) whil st in T�ngu i t had actually been 91 the administrat ion who had ins isted on t h e connnun al o rganiz at ion ( Burridge , 1 9 6 0 : 2 6 0 ) . Nevertheles s there , and als o elsewhere { c f . Cro combe , 1964 : 2 9 -30) , there was a s trong as so ciat ion be tween rice cult ivat ion and cargo beliefs . The requiremen t , from the admin istrat ion , that in order to cul t ivate r ice the connnun ity should be organized as a whole , devo id of sect ionalisms , is clearly reflec ted in the arrangement for the cult rituals . Like cargo , rice pertains t o the en t i re united commun ity , and no t merely to p arts o f it ( Burridge , 1960 : 2 2 6 ) . The diffe rence between these communal rice gardens and o therwise ' rat ional ' agricul t ural act ivit ies was commonly ident i f ie d , as it was in the Orokaiva area , by the bel ief that ' mere p ar t icipation woul d , magically or myst ically , quickly raise their s tatus in all respect s to that o f Europeans ' ( c f . Crocomb e , 1964 : 2 9 ) . Despite these associ ations rice cult ivation was carried out in much the s ame way in Tangu as it was elsewhere in New Guinea ; the problems were also mt1ch the s ame ( Burr id ge , 1 9 6 0 : 2 60-1 , 2 80-1 ) eventually foundering on the p roblems o f labour o rganizat ion and the d i s t r ibut ion of returns . • • • It is now impossible to assess the ext ent to which there was a cargoist ic element in S iwai connntm al rice cult ivat ion or even that expectations were in some sense ' irrat ional ' . What evidence there is s uggests that although S iwai expect at ions o f the various returns t o r ice-growin g were ext remely high , they were no t tmreas onable and they did no t in corporate element s of cargoism ( see Chapt e r 8 ) . They expect ed that the their s tatus would indeed be improved by r i ce-growing and that they would be able to p ro duce as much rice as they had seen the Japanese produce . The administrat ion at t empted to respon d to the reque s t s f o r ass i s t an ce with rice growing ; their int erest was , in part , a result o f concern over rice p r i ces s ince the price of Aus t ralian rice ro se 2 7 8 p er cen t b etween 1945-6 and The concern was b o th that the 195 3-4 (Jef freys , 19 71 : 15 ) . price of rice would raise co sts in the plantat ion sector to an uneconomic l evel and also that supplies woul d actually become non-exist ent , irrespec t ive o f price . Import replace ment appeared to be a n ecess ity . Lat e in 1 9 48 a survey was 92 carried o ut to assess the possib ility o f growin g r i c e in south Bougainville ; it seems that emphas i s was placed on S iwai s ince the re quests had come f rom there . The f irst report caut iously emphasized the commercial po ssibilit ies o f large-s cale rice product ion cen t red in the area between the Mivo and Hongorai r ivers and south of the old Buin road that went thro ugh the v illages of Ruisei and Ru ' nai . ' S in ce the land is all h eavily t imbered the in itial clearin g required to brin g it t o a s t ate wher e t ractors , multi-disc ploughs , cult ivat o rs , seed-drills and harves ters could be used would take some con siderable time ' . Ac ces s was expec t ed to be through Mamagota which was s t ill the ma in landin g place for mi ss ionaries and o c cas ional traders . Init ial response to the repor t was t o propose an experimental s t at ion at Ruisei , where bo th wet and dry rice cult ivat ion could be tried . Mechani z at ion was deferred for future con s iderat ion and the idea o f wet rice was abandoned when no water re tainin g s o ils could b e fotmd . At the same t ime that large-scale mechan iz ed rice-growin g was being cons idered by the administrat ion , they wer e al so s tarting to ass ist with the small village developmen t s that S iwais had begtm thems elves . The first government effort at agricultural ext ens ion in S iwai , an d th e first act ivity of the new Buin agricultural s tat ion , was the supervis ion of rice plan t in g in September 1948 on two p atches o f land at Rabaulu and Mamagota villages which were in tended to b e used for seed product ion . A pat rol into hal f a do zen western S iwai villages fotmd rice planted at Kumuki . ' Rice had also b een planted at o ther places and seems t o b e doing well . All the nat ives o f the area are keen to grow rice ; all that s tops them is the absence o f a rice huller ' but the Bougainville Dis t rict Officer had already recommended that their en thus iasm be rest rained un t il p roper provisions could be made by DASF to give them inst ruct ion s on plant in g and harvest ing and to give them machinery (PR Boku 1 / 4 8-49 ) . Nevertheles s plan t ing went ahead rapidly . In Augus t 1949 fourteen acres were bein g prep ared for r ice plant ing at Konga and already an area of about one and a half acres had been harvested there . At Ruisei eight acres were bein g divided in to blocks fo r plant in g . At Morokaimoro there was ' a n ic e crop of rice about 2 feet 6 in ches in height ' and further clear ing was in p ro gres s . Many other villages want ed t o s t art big blo cks of this kind . S iwai was already well ahead of o ther parts of south Bougainville in rice plan t in g and almost every v illage had experimental r ice crops (PR Boku 4 / 49 -5 0 ) . 93 The mos t out standing characteris t ic o f rice farming was the emergence o f communal o r ganizat ion , essent ially a new form o f organizat ion in S iwai agricult ure . Before the war product ion t echniques did not require large-scale teamwork . Al though Oliver notes that the village o f Moronei had a gardening team, even this was unusual and only a very small proport ion of total product ion came from t eamwork , whils t even the Moronei team seems to have existed primarily to clear and fen ce land which was sub sequen t ly divided between indiv ideal village househol ds (Oliver , 1 9 5 5 : 309-13) . There was no conununal work or product ion o f the kind that later char acterized rice growing although there was an increase in conununal work for ' mo dern ' act ivit ies such as road maintenan ce (Oliver , 1 949b : 5 9 ) . Af ter the war the administ rat ion in some o ther p art s o f New Guinea had encouraged farmers t o develop j o in t ly a s in gle area o f cash crops in the village , in preferen ce to individual plo t s , but it was not a whole hearted policy , bein g merely the extens ion of a p re-war In S iwai conununal policy that had only l imit ed s uccess . organizat ion was inspired from within . When the o f ficer in charge o f the new Buin agricultural s t at ion made what was pro b ably the first full reconnais s an ce o f S iwai in May 1949 , he be came aware o f the emergent co-opera t ive sp irit . Villages , some o f which had t en t at ively grouped to gether int o larger villages after the war ( cf . Connell , 1 9 7 8b ) , were att empt in g t o make j oint village gardens ; o ther villages were s imply making one for the whole village . Thus in Ruhuaku the Buin didiman Dornan found that Ruisei , Hurai and Mus imino i had begun one large garden which was well un der way ; one acre was planted and about t en more acres partially cleare d . P iruruho , o f Musimino i , ' a very able man ' , was in charge and ' with s t r i ct sup ervis ion by a European this group will do well ' . Kut in and Kohkui villagers had begl.lll one small garden . Kl.llln u (which had incorporated Kereiso village) wan t ed a garden o f its own b ut had not y et s t arted . In o ther p ar t s o f S iwai the pat tern was much the same ; Konga had the b e s t established rice garden i n S iwai . Two and a half acres were almo st ripe and a large area was cleared for further plant in gs . Under the leadership o f the luluais o f the villages o f Kapana (Kuiaka) and Kin irui (probab ly Pakanu) s ix villages includ ing Kapana , Kin irui , Ml.llln u , S ikurai an d Ieku had worked on a s ingle garden . Eleven villages at Morokaimoro and seven villages n ear Mono itu had comb ined to develop one garden b ut usually no more than one or two villages worked t o gether . Dornan makes no referen ce t o any individually owned garden s , although a y ear later there were some . Later the didimen themselves began t o encourage these communal garden s , part ly 94 as a response to very s catt ered individual plantin gs ; in April 1 9 5 1 the didimen as s is ted in c learing two o f an intended four clan areas near to Kon ga . The Poporu clan had an area of 1 . 6 acres and Huhu had 0 . 8 - acres . In Sept ember 1951 they est imated that there were 10 acres actually under communal rice farmin g . The very large areas that were cleared s eem to con firm that rice was inten ded to be sold rathe r than eat en ; it was separat e from t he sub s is t en ce economy in almo s t every way . The emerging dis t ribut ion o f rice growing can be part ially t raced from Dornan ' s reconnais sance o f S iwai in 1949 ( Figure 6 ) although it is an incomplete p icture . He may _ no t have visited some areas , notab ly Mokakuru , and in some cases all the villages participatin g in communal gardens were not named . Like o ther sub sequent attemp ts at communal forms o f work o rgan iz at ion , i t i s impossible t o ident ify the mos t important factors that prompted t h e adopt ion o f t h i s ab sol ut ely new form of organization . Cl early s igni ficant was the observed s uccess of the large Japanese communal garden s that flourished in S iwai during the war years . All ied with this was the int ent ion that this should be a business venture to produce money and that the way t o achieve success was by mobiliz ing as much labour as pos s ib le . Moreover , as in the early communal rice-farming ventures of the Orokaiva ( Crocomb e , 1964 : 30 ) , it was not even real iz ed t hat cash crops could be grown by in dividuals . The bas ic S iwai model was the European plan tat ion sys t em , modified by the Japanese food gardens into more manageable propo r t ions . As was app arent to all concern ed the main con s t raint t o great er rice product ion was millin g machinery . The Kangu s t at ion at Buin had a rice mill in the middl e of 1949 but there was n o adequate transport from S iwai to Buin ; in March 1 9 5 0 about a hun dred drums of paddy were at Konga waiting to be milled and s ome was germinat ing . Some S iwais had been t rained to op erate a rice mill , but inst ruct ions had b een is sued that th ere should be no more plant in g un t il a mill coul d be obtaine d . In Ap ril 1 9 5 0 a mill was unloaded at Mamagota an d carried to Konga where it was ins t alled and where at l eas t fi ve t ons o f paddy rice were then st ored . In 1 9 5 0 , with the rice mill installed at Konga , the Buin didiman was attemp t ing to es tablish a commercial o rgan izat ion that might event ually become the basis of a S iwai Rural Progress So ciety . The in itial charges for mill ing would be ld . a pound . ( It was estimated that 100 pounds o f 95 6 t.e) A E X I ST I N G G A R DE N S PRO POS E D D E F I N I T E LY - ·· - · · CO M M U N A L · ·· - ···· · · .. P R O B A B LE G A R D E NS NO GARDEN WOR K COMMUNAL . "" o' S' :,...-' 0 2 Figure 6 . 4 6 / 8 km Rice gardens 1949 Source : Dornan 1949 .. :: - • ._ ,\O� Q)�f'/ WO R K / .. . . ../' C!>\)� / c, e<' .... / , ,II' I , ... ,., 96 paddy would give about fifty pounds o f commerc ial rice . ) S iwais would there fore pay l / 2 d . per pollll d o f paddy rice o r leave part o f their own rice o f equivalen t value . When a So ciety emerged it could pur chase p ad dy at 2 d . per pollll d an d commercial rice would be sold a t Konga at 4 d . p e r pollll d an d a t Buin a t 5 d . (This ld . p e r pollll d differen t ial represented the est imated co s t o f transport either by carriers from Konga to the coas t at Mamagota , and then on by t rawler to Buin , o r b y carriers t o the t rucking point which was then s even hours walk away on the Silibai river, but was soon expected to reach Aku village in B uin . ) The s olut ion to the t ransport problems , recommen ded by the didiman, was the in troduction o f b eas t s o f burden , such a s horses , bullo cks o r oxen ; now that the mil l ing problem had been solved market ing was the next bott leneck . The Buin didiman C . S . Franke , who had already had a couple of years expe rien ce runn ing the Mekee rice s cheme in Papua , pointed out , ' it is no solut ion to co lonial agr icul ture t o s imply induce nat ives to grow crops unless we provide him with all the o rganiz at ion required for market ing his produce ' . The administ rat ion hoped that an organiz .at ion might follow along the l ines of the Mekee So ciety of Papua when a S iwai Rural Pro gress So ciety could be set up , b ut it was expected that this would b e d i f f icult ' s ince few villages are conver sant with money ' . By then this was p robab ly a doub t ful j udgement but apart from the beast s of burden this was more or less the commercial o rganizat ion that did emerge a few y ears lat er . The didimen felt that the seed remain ing from the Japanese period was in ferior . This and b o th white and b rown r ice seed supplied by the Methodist Mis s ion at Tonu were the two pos t -war seed sources un t il the governmen t b egan in 1 9 4 8 to dist r ib ut e some Mekee rice from Papua . This was in it ially lit t le imp rovement , being weak in s t raw and un even in mat uring and in 1 9 5 0 an experimental plot o f Borneo rice was t ried at Konga , but the problem o f quality was n ever ent irely solved . A Japanese salvage team in Buin in 19 5 8 d i d n o t like S iwai rice and Ton Lep , t h e leading Chinese t rader in Buin , cons idered the rice grown at Mo goroi in up land Buin t o be vas t ly superior to that grown in S iwai (PR, Buin 2 / 5 8-59 ) . Rice was planted by hand and garden s were divided up b y f allen timber ; the usual method o f plan t ing was for one mar. to us e a di gging st ick and dibb le whilst ano ther followed behind placing seeds in the hole and covering them over . In smaller gardens there was t rans plant ing of rice from large gardens (APR, Buin 1 9 5 4 ) . 97 Thre shin g was done in the villages ; most had const ructed their own rice-threshin g machines from a wooden barrel , studded with s t ap les . These were hand operated but geared by the sp ro cket , chain and driving wheel of old Japanese army bicyc les ; they were , in fact , cop ies o f the machines that the Japanese themselves had used . The only limit t o their development was the availability o f o l d b icycles and the perfo rman ce of this part icular p iece o f intermediate technology seems to have been always sup erior to that of the modern r ice mills . Hand rice hullers were sold by DASF for £10 each . By 1 9 5 0 rice was availab le in commerc ial quant it ies ; in the two months o f S eptember and Octob er one ton o f commercial rice was produced and in the next five months there was another one and three-quarter tons . In this second period one ton was sold at 6d . per poun d to the administ rat ion , a S iwai t rade store and Europeans stat ioned in Buin ; the rest ( 1609 potmds ) was marketed within S iwai at 4�d . per pound . At the s ame t ime only 2 7 7 pounds were retained by S iwais , after mill in g , for their own consumpt ion . The early problems seemed to have been s o lved , cash was at last coming in and S iwai enthus iasm was enormous . Early in 19 51 it was repo rt ed that ' small plo t s of rice may be seen in all gardens . However p roduc t ion is almo s t entirely for sale and no t consumpt ion . Threshed rice is carried from the villages t o Konga Agricultural S t at ion where it i s hulled by the Admin ist ration machine there . Quality is excellen t but grain size is uneven there fo re some grain get s b roken durin g hullin g . It is cons idered that they will readily change over to p roduct ion solely of Mekeo rice when the o rder is given ' . The s ame kiap commented : ' From t ime to t ime , it app ears , the p eople have grasped upon one of several ideas by which they hope to secure their connne rcial s alvat ion . The mo st prevalent o f th ese ideas is the large-s cale cash p ro duct ion of rice . As Father Barrett , s t ationed at Mono itu in S iwai for several years , expres sed it , the Rice has become their s cr iptural Golden Calf , the panacea f or all the ir money-htm gr iness ' (PR, Buin 5 / 50- 51) . Rice had b ecome a cash crop and S iwais wanted to go much further ; all villages requested that the kiap pay 30 per cent of their war damage compen sat ion into a common S iwai fund for the purchase o f agricultural implement s , including a t ract o r , a plough , a It circular saw an d rice hull ing and threshing machinery . was a reques t that was never met . 98 After the war the co lonial adminis t ration agreed to make compensat ion paymen t s for death or inj ury and also . damage to p roperty ( in cludin g crops and t radit ional valuables) , that had b een sus tained in the war ; it was int ended that the local population throughout the war-affected areas should be enabled t o return t o a physical condit ion comparab le t o that of 1941 . It took more than· five y ears from the end of the war for anything t o happen so that its int ended aims had S iwai claims were mainly for long been met or bypassed . houses or coconut palms and , by March 1952 , mos t of the war damage claims had been paid o ut ; £17 , 843 was distributed and £17 , 6 75 . 13 s . was received back as deposits int o S avings Bank accotmts rather than being inmediately spent as it was else wh ere ( cf . Leadley , 1 9 7 6 : 2 00- 7 ) . Mos t claims tmder £5 were paid in cash ; in some cases , where the recipien t s were old , sick or crippled , more than £5 was given o ut in cash (PR, Buin 4/ 51-52 ) . S in ce there were 6 30 claims the t otal compen sat ion paid was about £30 per household . Cl early , S iwai demand for rice was no t the result o f any lo cal cash shortage . Although much of the war damage money eventually wen t towards establishing the S iwai Society it is equally c lear that it was not the payment o f what was , by p revious s t andards , a huge sum o f money that fost ered the drive t owards cash cropp in g . It is almo st a paradox that cash croppin g appar en tly emerged essent ially independent of a demand for cash . The s ingle year 1 9 5 0 was the z enith o f the S iwai rice In 1951 the Buin agricul tural s t at ion was closed economy . down , at exactly the moment when a milling and market in g organiz at ion had become established , and a cash crop had at las t emerged . Between 1 9 5 1 and 1 9 5 5 there were , at b es t , irregular pat rols through south Bougainville . Rice con t inued to be grown , a little was sold to the mis s ion s and the rice mill at Konga cont inued to rtm , mann e d by Soir i of Panake . The ab s en ce o f didimen mean s that records are sparse but it seems that for about four years very lit tle r ice was t aken as far as the governmen t s t at ion an the Buin coast at Kangu . Market in g and millin g were difficul t but there were o ther p roblems thro ughout south Bougainville ; in the Kono area o f Buin, much n earer than S iwai t o a marke t , rice was only being produced for home consump tion by 1 9 52 (PR, Buin 1 / 52 -5 3 ) and by 195 5 there was no int erest at all s ince it was apparently dyin g before maturation . Three y ears later it was s t ill o ften diseased and grew best in the drier years , of which there wer e very few ( PR , Buin 3 / 5 8-5 9 ) , although the climat e o f south Bougainville is suit ab le for opt imal rice p roduction in all months of the y ear (Hale , 1 9 7 5 : 2 0 6 ) . Whil st the Buin 99 station exis t ed , rice had al so been encouraged a t Mongontoro in the Kiet a s ub-di st rict ; this too was abandoned during the p er io d o f decline and replaced by coconut grove s . A further factor in the overall de cline was the return to rice-growing ; rice is very demanding of lab our , especial ly for weedin g ( compared with t radit ional roo t crop s ) and , in addit ion , i t s eems that the larger communal garden s , unlike household gardens , were ro tated less fre quen t ly hence soil product ivity Thi s , especially , was l ikely to fall af ter a couple of y ear s . dis couraged communal garden in g . By March 1 9 5 4 there were about twenty acres o f rice in Buin sub -dist ri ct ; at S :ln inai and Mus iminoi there were two clan garden s , each· about four acres in ext en t , but all the remaining rice was grown by in dividuals (APR, Buin 1954 ) . There was however a lat e r revival in communal growin g , especially in the Korikunu area , following the es t ab l ishmen t o f a rice mill at Monoitu in 1955 (and the res t o rat ion o f a marke t for the rice) . Later again Hal in g observed in 1 9 60 how some clans had banded t o gether in a j o int ent erprise to plant an acre o f crops within a defined clan area . Gradually however the clan as a whole lose interest in the venture and the bulk ot the work falls to one o r two individuals . On maturity of the crop the clan s t il l claim a high p ercentage of the return s (APR , Eas t ern Division , S iwai , 1 9 6 0 ) . Although the rice growing groups of ten came f rom individual villages , each village was divided betwe·en lineages an d there wer e frequent disput es over ground ; the members of one l ineage d id not l ike plant in g cash crops on the gro nn d o f ano ther lineage , s ince they only had r.'ights t o use such land for food crop s , hence several village s chemes even t ually b ecame l in eage s chemes . Moreover the t radit ion al work group s that had exis ted earlier were always for act ivit ies of short durat ion , rarely more than two o r three s uccessive day s . Group s were quite unus ed to workin g t o gether at i rregular intervals at all the s tages of product ion over a lon g pe rio d . There were no t radit ional ( o r administ rat ion ) preceden t s for sanct ions against those v illagers who were not int erested in con t inued participat ion in communal cash cropp ing . Fin ally there was also the venality and inexperience o f some o f the leaders o f these ventures ; there was no tradit ional basis for distributing cash in S iwai so that when returns were low and pro f it s dwin dled enthus iasm for connntm al cash-cropping naturally mel ted away . 100 When the dis advant ages of connnun al cash cropping had become more apparen t , especially elsewhere in Papua and New Guinea , the adminis trat ion emphas ized the role of individual famil ies in cult ivat in g separat e plo t s of cash crop s . By 1 9 60 communal cash crop plan t in g was bein g s t ron gly discouraged by the dist rict authorities , al though group work on individual holdings was encouraged . Thi s emphas is became clearly estab lished throughout the co'llll. t ry and in 1961 the Minister for Territories , Paul Hasluck , s t at ed the big maj ority o f the present populat ion are l ikely to f ind their advancemen t in changin g from village subsistence t o cash cropping , forming a nat ive peasantry that will not be a maj o r employer o f wage-earning labour ( Cheetham , 1 96 3 : 6 9 ) . . • . . . • Th is became estab l ished adminis t rat ion policy although much later some at t ent ion was also given to int roducing new food crops in to tradit ional agricul tural syst ems in o rder to improve nut rit ional standards . Af ter only one year o f real success , three or four years of failure were a b it t e r disappoin tment to S iwai hopes . As rice sale s declined s o S iwais swit ched their att ent ion t o other cash-earn ing alt ernat ives ; even so in 1 9 5 5 the kiap s t ill detected great enthus iasm fo r rice-growin g ' al though they couldn ' t explain why the Agri cult ural Officer s t arted them o f f and left them to it ' . The s ame kiap als o not iced some rice rot t in g in houses and at t ributed this t o ' the l az ines s o f the nat ives ' even though he s imult aneously recorded that people from villages near Unanai and Tonu had formed a s avin gs bank account , and depos it ed £100 , so that they would be able to purchase a rice machine (PR, Buin 1 / 55-56 ) . Throughout the early y ears of rice growing there was a contrast b etween , on the one hand , the enthus iasm o f S iwais and lo cal didimen and , on the o ther , the caut ion o f the district o f fice at Sohano who were arb iters of the development There was no o f f icial ef fort and f inanciers of new ventures . admin i st rat ion in terest in the gene ral expans ion of rice growing in New Guinea un t il after 1 9 5 2 although there were then odd pocket s of developmen t in Madang and Sep ik . Paul Has luck , the Minis t er for Territ ories , notes how he was then aiming at making the Territ o ry self-suf ficient in rice but , in the en d , prob lems of admin is tration and a decline in the co s t of Aust ralian rice prevented import sub s t itut ions (Hasluck , 1 9 7 6 : 1 33-5 , 306-7 ) . The DASF headquarters in Port 101 Moresby were therefo re un int eres ted and at one point the Buin didimen angrily complained that the o f f ice sent them copies of AustraZian Goat World b ut seemed un ab le t o provide l iter ature on eithe r rice o r t ropical agriculture . Al though a Rice Proj ect Manager was s t at ioned at Buin for two y ears , and in 19 5 0 a local materials house was built fo r him at Konga , he was rarely ab le to leave Kangu where s t at ion admin is t rat ion t ied him down . It was a f rus t rat in g period for S iwais . There was al so a con flict o f ideas between S iwais and didimen although this made l it tle dif ference to the expansion o f rice farming . Although , to some exten t , rice had al so replaced t aro as a sub s is t ence crop , it was the inten t ion o f Indeed , as S iwai growers that rice b e ·the b as ic cash crop . in East S ep ik (Allen , 1 9 7 6 : 2 0 7 ) , although villagers did eat much of the rice , there is no evidence that they were at all Rice was for interes ted in r ice as a sub s is t ence supplemen t . money . ( Throughout these early years S iwai and apparently didiman interes t in copra p roduct ion was t o t ally ab sent , p r imarily b ecause many o f the co conut palms had been dest royed in the war . ) Despite the opt imism of their first propo s als the admini s tration never expect ed south Bougainville t o export r ice , hence their lack o f int erest , and lo cal o f f i cers , although keen to encourage rice , con s idered that it would b e used almo s t ent irely t o imp rove the local diet ; ' at all t imes it was s t ressed that the first obj ect of the proj ect was t o supply the nat ives with a good grain which could be s to red for emergency and that the connne rcial s ide was only a secon dary considerat ion ' . Again , exact ly as in Eas t Sep ik , didimen as s isted the villagers with r ice as a cash crop whilst , in corresponden ce with headquarters , crit iciz ing them for this approach , arguing that cash cropp ing o f rice was impossible there . The main difficulty preven t in g connner cial rice p ro duct ion was t ran sport ; there were at leas t five maj o r rivers b etween S iwai and Kan gu , the only p o s s ib le port , and almos t no transport in the area . In 1 9 5 0 one Buin man owned a war-di sposal t ruck ; any o ther t ransport was government owned and almost impos s ib le to hire . Moreover in 1 9 5 1 the Mivo river was ' a more or less permanent obst acle to t ransport ' with rice having t o b e o f floaded on one side and carried over to the o th er . S ome S iwais in ten ded to buy t rucks with war damage payment s but they had no driving or mechan ical skill s , war damage payment s were insuff icient and They also observed the the admin is t rat ion di scouraged them. diff icult i es that the administrat ion had with their own transport . Even after the l imit ed success of rice growin g , • • • 102 Tomlin s t ill cons idered in 1955 that rice should not b e a cash crop s ince co coa , co f fee and peanut s o f fered better opportunit ies and , since rice could b e s t o red , it was a good ins urance aga in s t food shortages . S iwai produced 5 t ons o f rice in that year . What is mo st remarkab le about the S iwai experience with rice growin g is the way in which it dupl icated and in its turn was dupl icated by rice proj ec t s in o ther areas o f Papua and New Guin ea . Allen ' s summary o f the reasons for the failure of rice-growin g in the mid-19 5 0s in part s of the East Sepik provin ce is , in almo st every detail , the same as that of S iwai : People believed the mere growin g o f rice was enough . Their expectat ions were very high , and when no radical changes occurred in their villages af ter one o r two years they were disappointed . The returns from rice growing per family were very low . Areas planted were small , and large group s o f people cul t ivat ed one garden . When their rice was sold and the money dist ributed to al l who had part icipat ed in the garden , each family received only a few shillings , when they had been expectin g much larger amount s of money . Nor had they taken int o con s iderat ion the co s t s of carryin g rice harvested t o the mill s . . . Lack o f working cap ital meant that s omet imes when rice was b rought to [ the mills at ] Supari or Brukham , growers could not be paid . Many people complain that they were never paid for some harves t s and for this reason they decided to dis cont inue growin g . Many accused the bisnis men of emb e z z lement , but this almo st certainly did not happen . Lack o f techn ical skill in managing and runn ing the mill s resul ted in in creas ing mechan ical b reakdowns . Rice was s t o ck p iled in inadequat e st orage , and the weather , rat s , poult ry and peop le caus ed a deteriorat ion in the sto ckp i le and much rice pur chased was never milled (Allen , 1 9 7 6 : 2 0 4 ) . In a nearby part o f the East Sep ik Prov�nce Tuz in ( 19 7 6 : 37 ) ob served that ecological degradat ion followed the collllun ll al cult ivation of rice s in ce both t he des iccat ion o f the garden centre an d the greater dist ance between i t and the surrounding vegetat ion ret arded reaf forestat ion durin g 103 the fallow p e riod . It is pos s ible that this also o c curred in S iwai . Two separate accounts of the Mekeo rice proj ect in the Gul f o f Papua illus t rat e the s imilarit ies in greater detail . Environment ally it [ the Mekeo area ] was unsuit ed for upland r ice growin g . At the t ime the proj ect was developed in frast ructure was insufficien tly developed . The f inanc ial and s t af f res our ces o f the Adminis t rat ion were insufficient t o enable adequate capital support and supervis ion of the proj ect . The proj ect was beset by a number o f t e chni cal p roblems rel at ing t o p roduct ion , milling and marke t ing of rice and these should have been ironed out b e fo re exten s ion work pro ceeded From detailed enquiries it seems cert ain that the at t it ude to rice growing as a means of e conomic pro gress had been complet ely irrat ional - the people had regarded rice growing not so much as an economic act ivity , but more as a patt ern o f behaviour which , if followed , would aut omat ically accomplish their t ran slat ion f rom their exist ing e conomi c level to the s upe rior economic state enj oyed by Europeans The people reasoned that if t he government went to all the t rouble of sen d ing o f fi cials and pol ice t o s upervise the plan t in g and harvestin g o f the crop , then it must b e very valuab le indeed and that the small monet ary return they had received in p re-war years must be only a fract ion of its real value The land t enur e system in the Mekeo was neither oriented to ext ens ive cul tivation nor did it adj ust to this need (Jeffreys , 1 9 71 : 16 , 2 2 - 3 ) . • . • • • • . • . • • • . • • While the failure o f the government ' s s chemes cannot be at tributed to the Mekeo ' s lack of support , it is obvious that their respon ses were often negat ive and obs t ruct ive , if un int ent ionally so . People ' s · dis t rust of the administ rat ion and of their own leaders would have created serious ob st acles to development even in the absence of all o ther p ract i cal and admin i st rative diff icult ies . Field staff also had cause to complain o f vil lagers ' apparent inab il ity t o work t o gether at the village unit , and below . . . Villagers were as unaware of the result s of their own negat ive responses as they were of the effect s of high t ransport co sts . . . They had wanted the rice s cheme and the co-operat ives 104 to succeed - their perseverance over more than a decade at t e s t s . t o the t ruth of their s t at ement s . . . t hey b el ieved they had carried o ut their part to the b es t of their ab ility : they had planted rice , made copra and j o ined what ever s o c ie t ies the government had seen fit to devise . . . Peop le had begun to realiz e that they need not b e dependent on the governmen t for the things they wanted : they could earn money for themselves , s t art their own bus ines ventures ( St ephen , 1 9 74 : 305- 7 ) . The same kinds o f con clusions could cert ainly have been r eached from the other rice growing areas in Pap ua and New Guinea , and espe cially thos e around Madan g and in East New Brit ain . Lo cal people expected too much from rice cult ivat ion and did not always appreciate the high labour requirement s whilst the adminis t rat ion never gave suf f icient as s istance to ensure that prob lems of milling and market ing could always be solved . In Mekeo , j us t as in S iwai , Whatever the innned iat e cause o f the collapse in 19 5 6 , it stemmed not f rom the Mekeo ' s refusal t o grow enough rice , b ut from an admin ist rat ive failure to dispose o f what they produced : in 1959 f ield staff could barely cont ain their impat ien ce with the few obs t inate villagers who s t ill wan ted tg plant rice ( St ephen , 19 74 : 2 80 ) . Much of this imp at ien ce may well have also resulted from the fact that the import price of Aust ralian rice f inally s t ab il ized in the mid-19 50s , and sub sequently decl ined , whilst supply appeared t o be assured . This removed much of the in cent ive for the admin is t rat ion to develop a lo cal rice indus t ry whils t declinin g p ri ces als o dis couraged the lo cal produ cers . Communal organiz at ion was generally characterist i c o f the early pos t -war rice s chemes although everywhere prob lems resulted f rom this . As McAuley ar gued from his observat ion of the Mekeo s cheme : While the n ew ent e rp rise remains thus marg inal t o the sub s isten ce economy this [ communal organiz at ion ] may seem app ropriate ; but the s it uat ion is very different if the new form of commercial product ion be comes mo re and mo re central in the village economy ; the s o c ial and e conomic consequen ces are then far- 105 reachin g , for good o r ill Should collect ivised p ro duct ion be come dominant in the economic l ife o f a New Guinea community i t will b e necessary t o solve the prob lem o f communal l an d t enure . In the init ial s t age of group enthusiasm and goodwill , while the communal ri ce-field remains something except ional and marginal , yieldin g only a small cash return , individuals are con tent to lend their l and to the Rural Pro gress S ociety ; but this will not do in the lon g run (McAuley , 1952 : 2 7 9 ) . • . • Communal o rganiz at ion p roved even more inadequate in the Gona area where the people looked upon the harvest ed rice e ither as an inessent ial by-product of the grand bus iness of group act ivity and ceremonial or as having a purely symbolic value . Init ially they made lit t le move to e ither eat it or sell it (McAuley , 1 9 5 2 : 2 80 ) , and communal rice cult ivat ion soon failed there - for the same complex of reason s as it had failed elsewhere ( Dakeyn e , 1 9 6 5 : 118-9 ) . S in ce the Mekeo were able to s at i s fy the ir cash needs in other ways , by wage lab o ur , cop ra manufacture or sellin g betelnut , they had less incen t ive to t ake part in communal agriculture than S iwais whose al ternat ive sources of cash were limited . S ince the organ izers of r ice gardens had t radit ional status as leaders, these communal ent erprises were an integral part of S iwai s o ciet y . They b roke up b ecause o f internal pressures that aro s e from n ew cons ider at ion s ; as in Mekeo . . (cf . S tephen , 19 74 : 35 7 ) and Eas t Sepik , ignorance o f bus iness principles gave rise to suspicions that members of the group were not receiving a fair share o f the pro f it s , which in at least some cases was true , and the venture was aban doned in an atmosphere of disput e and int rigue . This was essent ially a new problem , the con fl i ct o f bus iness principles with t radit ional prin ciples o f exchange and dist ribut ion , b ut it was one that recurred within S iwai and indeed throughout Melanes ia durin g the pos t -war y ears . Divers ity and divers ification Although the admin is t rat ion expres sed the ir view that rice should be a sub s istence crop they took lit t le interest in o ther sub s i s t en ce crops ; the stat ion in Buka had no succes s with taro and there was no eviden ce of int erest in other crops there o r at Buin . The only reference to sweet pot at o in the monthly repo rts of the Buin s t at ion is in 1 9 5 7 when there was an increas in g foo d shortage b ecaus e the ground was too wet t o plant sweet potat o . Then there was 106 some o f fi cial encouragement o f moundin g . S ome didimen were imp at ien t with what they s aw as the inefficiency of agricul t ural methods : ' while cult ivation is carried out wi th a digging s t ick lit t le pro gress will b e ob t ained oxen are the only solut ion to the prob lem ' . No t surpri s ingly oxen did not arrive in S iwai and sub s is t en ce agriculture changed only as new introduction s were tried and mounding of sweet po tatoes became more common . . • . Although post-war enthus iasm for rice growing was enormous , peanut s , another crop int roduced and widely grown succes s fully by the Japanese , never met quite the same respon se . Both S iwais and adminis t rat ion cons idered that it s connne rcial po ss ib il it ies were slight . Market in g prob l ems were wo rs e than those for rice s ince there was l it t le demand for domest ic consumpt ion within Bougainvill e . New variet ies , mainly Virgin ia Bunch and Spanish Red , were introduced t o S iwai b ut they were s imply incorpo rat ed in t o domest ic gardens . Dis t ribut ion o f imp roved peanut varie t ies , and the test in g of sweet potat oes , sorghum and o ther f o o d crop s , were all o f ficial aims of admin is t rat ion policy in the 195 0 s , following the assump t ion that there would be a rapid populat ion growth in the Territory (Has luck , 1 9 7 6 : 135 ) . Apart from th� improved p eanut variet ies very little of this development reached S i.Wai and , indeed , the res t o f Bougainville . Peanut s were widely grown in the 1950s , both alon gs ide and a s an alt ernat ive to rice , but it was not un t il the Rural Pro gre s s Society began that commercial market ing b ecame success ful . The same crops were famil iar almost throughout lowland New Guinea ; rice and peanut s were invariable po st-war development s with addit ional emphas is being placed on sweet potat o as a cash crop in areas acces s ib le t o European set t lement . In specially favoured areas , l ike the Gazelle Pen insula o f eas t New Brit ain, they had b een pl ant ed much earlier ; in 192 7 Keravat Agricul tural S t at ion p roposed a rot at ion cycle of rice , maiz e �d peanut s and both rice and peanut s were cash crops there in the 19 30s ( Salisbury , 1 9 7 0 : 50-1) . S iwais ( and also miss ionaries and admin is t rat ion o f f icials ) had seen something of these suc ces ses and this may have in fluenced their own post-war s t rat egies . Another al ternat ive to rice was one that S iwais had During the war , damage to the long been familiar with . co conut groves was sub s t ant ial , so much so that there was no copra p ro duc t ion for nearly a decade afterwards . Innne diately after the war ANGAU forces brought many thousands 10 7 of nut s f rom the Short land Island s and dumped them on the beach to b e carr ied away to the gardens . Few ever got t o the garden s ; characteris t ically Tomlin s t ated that this was ' mainly through laz iness ' although there were only a few villages within eight kilometres of the coast . Whatever the reason ne ither the S iwais nor subsequen t ly the admin is t rat ion were at all in teres ted in copra unt il aft er the pro spect s o f rice farming be gan to fade . Res t o rat ion o f the co conut groves only general ly b egan around 1 9 5 3 , co inciding with a significant rise in copra prices , although a y ear lat er a small amount of copra was being p ro duced in Tonu and Ruisei villages . Tomlin est imated that total product ion was less than 10 cwt per month . Many areas st i ll had very few co conuts and nut s for planting were ext remely s carce . In some areas they were b e in g sold for 3d . each , al though a very few S iwai copra purchasers were b uyin g them for l d . The coast al villages could produce copra but inl an d only one S iwai vil lage had enough co conut s ; mo s t were b e in g eat en and for feas t s villagers had to st ore nut s for ' quite a few mon ths ' (APR Buin , 1 9 5 5 ) un t il there were enough . Inland therefore ' where very l it t l e area has been planted , villagers are b eing encouraged to plant ten palms for each member of the family , all in one cont inuous block close to the village . . . It i s al so desired that more palms be pu t in along the roads ' . The oldes t administ ration policy for agricu ltural development had b een resurrect ed . Inter plan t in g with p eanuts and sweet potat o was being encouraged so that the groves would b e well-maint ained in their early stages ; even so , only s ix months l ater , Toml in was conduct in g ' a b l it z o n unt idy co conut plantat ion s ' ( AP R , Buin , 19 56 ) . The copra was o f poor quality ; it was usual ly dried unevenly by roast in g on arc mesh trays (made from army re fus e) over 44 gallon drums , b ut it o f t en rot ted be fore it could b e sold ; mor eover even when it was ca rried to Buin the price was only 3d . per poun d . S iwai copra t raders ( see p . 1 07 ) were purchas ing co conut s at ten for a shill in g an d s el l in g the copra to Ton Lep in Buin . Somet imes they returned with the money but more o ft en Ton Lep retained it as credit ; the kiap explained that this prac t ice was to encourage busines smen to open bank account s in Buin . Many S iwais had less laudato ry explanat ions of the pract ice . Emergent ent rep reneurs had to cope with many disin cen t ives in these early days . Total product ion was increas in g but local enthus iasm con tinued to be directed t o the promise o f o ther crop s . The p rice p aid for copra an d the diff i culty o f carryin g it t o Buin were con s iderable deterren t s . 108 It did no t immediat ely A third possib ility was cocoa . att ract S iwai growers and was first grown elsewhere in south Bouga inville . Early in 1952 a Banoni man had reques t ed in format ion on co coa p lant ing from a pas s ing pat rol but the kiap had dis couraged him (PR, Buin 3 / 52-5 3 ) ; later that year a group of Nagovisi leaders t ravelled to Buin with a s cheme to grow cocoa in the Bait s i and Nagovis i areas . Sub sequen tly two Nagovisi wen t to Aropa plantat ion , near Kieta , and one wen t t o the agricul t ural s t at ion at Sohano , where co coa was then b ein g t e s t e d , to ob t ain the necessary pract ical experience to es t ab lish it themselves . The first man to grow co coa in south Bougainville was Widokuma o f Mo siget a , a village on the borde rs of Bait s i and Nagovisi , who planted a thousand cocoa t rees in March 1 95 3 . He had previously worked on a Rabaul plan t at ion , and possib ly also at Keravat agricultural stat ion where the cocoa s eeds came from . One year lat e r there were three blo cks o f co coa planted in s outh Bougainville : that o f Widokuma and two at a s ingle village in Buin . Almo st all the o thers who had cleared sites had p revious experien ce on plantat ions . None were S iwais , who were s t ill more o r less committed to rice and no suggest ion was made to them that they should develop coco a . Followin g pat ro ls into S iwai in 1 9 5 5 and 1 9 5 6 it was s imply noted that ' co coa has been int roduced and more could be planted if there were no doub t s about t ransport and market ' . There were o ther p rob lems too ; Tomlin observed in 1 9 5 5 that land disput es had caused a lot of pro spective cocoa growers to lo se in terest after t heir rights t o plant on land they had cleared had been disputed (APR, Buin , 195 5 ) . A year later the kiap pat rollin g S iwai repor ted the increas e in the ' numb er o f disputes over the ownership o f coconut palms now that they real ise t he value o f such palms for copra ' . He thought that these d isputes would be more numerous when the Rural Progress Society go t going and cop ra was produced there . Each luluai was therefore in structed to go ove r every p ie ce o f land in his control t o ge ther with a literate nat ive and the owners of the lan d and writ e down the t o tal numb e r o f coconut s owned by each native on each piece o f ground (PR, Boku 3 / 5 5-56 ) . This attempt at reco rding was not a suc cess and there are no In 1 960 t oo Hal ing claimed known reco rds o f the result s. . that the main reason for th e slow rate of permanent crop plan tin gs was ' due solely to the reluct ance of the individual to plant crops wh ich will be lite rally taken from him by the clan ' (APR, Eas t ern Divis ion , S iwai , 1 9 6 0 ) . 109 Apart from the issue of land acquis it ion and t enure there was als o a second prob lem. Al though cocoa (and , later on , co ffee) were reco gnized to share some o f the s imilarit ies of th e old t ree crop , co conut s , especially in respect of land alienation , there was one maj o r dif feren ce . Unl ike coconut s co coa beans could not b e eaten ; i f they did not become a goo d cash crop th ere was no chan ce o f t h eir being a us eful food . Those who had not worked on plantat ions where cocoa was grown were p art icularly conscious of this ; they queried ' can you drink water from coco a ? ' and were s cept ical o f a crop l ike this whos e food value was generally out s ide their range o f experien ce . Fo r cocoa more than any other previous crop S iwais needed a demon s t rat ion of it s p ro f it ab il ity . Durin g th e early 1 9 5 0 s , then , cocoa was not encouraged in S iwai but around 1954 the administ rat ion ' s att itude began to change . Cocoa had b een recognized as success ful at Keravat ; indeed it had been succes s ful on plantat ions b oth in New Britain and Bougainville be fore the war and in New Britain a few Tolais had p lanted their own co coa (Epst ein , 1968 : 61 ) . By about 1 9 5 3 it was b eing grown succes s fully on the Tolai Cocoa Proj ect and was being sold as wet bean to the administ rat ion ; cocoa was also spreading ext remely rap idly el sewhere in east New Britain where there had been few previous problems with ot her crops . Att empts were bein g made in 1 9 54 to develop co coa on settlement s chemes , such as S ilanga in New Britain (van Rij swick , 1 9 6 6 : 19 ) , and it was at las t reco gnized by DAS F as a viab le ' crop for the owner-manager ' (Henderson , 1954 : 45 ) . The annual report on the Territory of New Guinea for 1 9 5 3-4 provides the first indicat ion that en couragement was being given to cocoa plant ing in suitable areas , with e�phas is bein g placed on plantat ion-type development s rather than sporadic cult ivat ion in village gardens . In 1954 experiment s on cocoa growing began on the S ohano experiment al s tat ion at Buka Pas sage (PCA, 195 5 : 4 9 ) . In the following year a Cacao Act ion Plan was formulated , which recolllle ll nded the expans ion o f cocoa plant in g on all suitab le areas , includ ing int erplant in g with co conut s if po ss ible . The prin c ip les adopt ed were that co coa should be p lanted in blocks o f 5 00 t rees ( t o prevent indiscr iminat e planting s ince it was felt that small areas would be forgotten and become harbours for pes t s and disease) , all areas mus t be regist ered an d proce s s ing was to b e carried out in central ferment aries ( P CA, 19 5 6 : 4 9 ) . These changes in policy and pract ice had not b ecome apparent in Bougainville , although by 19 5 5 there were ' many cocoa groves ' on Buka and ' many others want ed t o plant cocoa ' there 110 (PR SOH 3 / 5 5 - 5 6 ) . In Nas ioi too several p lantat ion s existed and s ome were coming in to p roduct ion (PR KIE 2 / 5 5-5 6 ) . Southern Bouga inville , remote from adminis t rat ion in fluence and in teres t , was not yet n ear this s t age . By the middle of 195 5 two cocoa plantat ions in south Bougainville were b earing ; b oth of thes e were in Bait s i ( in clud in g that a t Mos igeta) but there were many o ther new The first plant ings had been made in S iwai ; p l an t ings . 5 80 t rees had been planted by Kepoama near Mus imino i and S ome o f the seed came o thers were ready t o s t art at Kon ga . from Kieta plantat ions and some from the S ohano s t at ion but mos t came from Mos iget a . At Konga ab out 400 trees were planted in that first year ; the cocoa seeds were supplied by the manager of Aropa plan tat ion , south o f Kieta , who had recently visited the area, and t emporary shade had b een p lanted by DASF didimen . It was not a smooth s t ar t . Tomlin noted the ' indiscriminat ive [ s i c ] plan t ing o f co co a All b adly plant ed and ill-tended b lo cks have now b een dest royed and the nat ives con cerned have been told to clear the land properly ' (APR , Buin , 1955 : 6 ) . He was then encouraging one individual in ' each o f the villages which are fairly concentrated ' to s t art a demonstrat ion plot . . • . After 1 9 5 1 , the one y ear in which rice product ion and sales s at is f i ed everyone , rice product ion began to fall of f and S iwais at l eas t , somewhat reluctan t ly , began to con s ider o ther pos s ib il it ies . Peanut s , copra and , t o a much smaller Overall there exten t , co coa were the main alternat ives . was an in terim pe riod of exper imentat ion in divers if icat ion which lasted four or f ive years ; it was a period o f un certainty . Ext ernal as sistance was almo st non-existent , market s were ab sent and the poten t ial of crops such as cocoa was little known . Con sequently enthus iasm for cash croppin g was n o longer a s i t had b een in the f i r s t post-war per iod ; migrat ion to wo rk in plantat ions res t ar t ed and there was a measure o f disillus ionment with the low cash returns that followed greater in corporat ion in the market economy . The agricul tural economy had made a spectacular recovery from wart ime devas tation but had not begun to p rovide the rewards so anxiously sought af ter . Chap ter 5 S iwai Rural Pro gress S ociety : the organizat ion of diversif ication The f i rs t pos t-war decade was a period o f abort ive promise for S iwai commercial agricul ture . Enormous local enthus iasm had resulted in no more than a s ingle y ear o f success where the cash returns to rice growing seemed t o have genuinely j ustified the eno rmous exp enditure o f t ime and e ffort . But 1951 was a decep tive year and the success could not b e repeated ; rice plan t ing began to decline and new crops app eared , ye t despite the attempted divers if icat ion away from rice, the re was s t ill l i ttle hint o f a success ful e conomic future for S iwai agri cul ture . Rice was dying and uns aleable , the returns to copra were t iny and cocoa was almo st an unknown crop at village level . However dur in g this period o f quies cen ce Tomlin had been appo inted didiman fo r the Buin area and had made patrols into S iwai where he was mos t impressed wi th the agricul tural potent ial o f the area and the willin gne s s of the people . Tomlin recommended that an agricultural s t at ion be set up at Kon ga , t o replace the one that had closed at Buin , and this was agreed . Following this succes s , and before the s t at ion had s t arted , he set about establishing a Rural Progres s S ociety . His own enthusiasm for S iwai and its development prospects is apparen t in ext racts from a report o f February 1956 which neatly sunnnar izes the existing e conomic s ituat ion : There is no form o f o rganized marketing in existence anywhere in the s ub-district at the momen t . Haphazard att emp t s have been made in the past by various tradin g int erests to b uild up their trading with nat ive produce but they have no t p rovided pro ducers with any real service , have not paid compet itive p rices and were not generally rel iab le . At present there are two Chinese traders operat ing giving the only market o ut le t t o nat ive p roduce . 111 112 The act ivi t ies of th es e individuals are no t very extens ive and are mainly con f ined to retail stores . They do no t indul ge much in copra buying and do not provide any t ransport for p roduce . Presen t at t it ude o f nat ives towards p roduct ion This coul d be des crib ed accurately by the word frus trated . The re is no t ranspo rt p rovided ; they thems elves are not suf ficient ly well o f f f inan cial ly or educat ionally to be able to purchase a vehicle or to be capab le o f rtmnin g it without as s i s t an ce . Should transpo rt be provided they could pro duce much more in the way of cash produce . They have the potent ial o f big areas o f part ic ularly fert ile so il and the labour force to handle it . They do no t en t ertain the thought o f carryin g bags o f copra to Buin over miles o f first clas s all-weather vehicular roads and should not b e expected to d o so . They have been caught t o o many t imes . They have grown peanut s and wat ched them go b ad in the s t o re , made copra and seen the same . Some grew rice at S iwai two y ears ago , about two t ons of it , and it hangs here today . Some nat ive busines smen have on odd o ccas ion s bought nut s with the in tent ion of makin g copra and have produced small amotmt s but ne�er of any quant ity or qual ity . Pro duct ion possib ilit ies the area has a great pot en t ial . As this o ff i cer has s t rayed further away from the main roads he has found more and mo re co conut s hidden in p o cket s by rivers and n ear old garden s and village sites . The. carryin g out of a mild b litz on the clean ing of grove s has b rought t o l ight many more nat ive palms than were imagined in our records , and a far greater number of young palms which were previously covered with secondary growth . With the p rovis ion o f mo tor t ransport and the erect ion of two connnun al driers the S iwai peop le themselves could produce at leas t 5 t ons o f copra per month . • . . Of co co a there are over 5 000 t rees planted and p reparat ion for fur ther plantin g is being made on much mo re ground . I feel s ure that a goal o f 5 0 , 000 t rees can be reached within 4 years . A b lock is bein g prepared for co ffee in the mountains above the cocoa l ine . This will be the forerunner 113 o f co f fee growing in that part icular area ; all the produce from here will go to Tarub a [ in Nagovisi ] , the proposed s i te o f one of the five co coa fermentarie s . Peanuts are being grown fairly widely . There are about four tons awaiting p urchase now but there is no transport to ge t them to Buin . Transport I t will be po ss ible onc e a few b ridges are repaired and s ome cut t ings made to drive from Jaba to Buin , via Taruba, S ovele , Mosige t ta , Tokono itu and Aku this should b e po ssible in 18 months to 2 years . . • • Proposed form of organised marke t ing A S o c ie ty could be formed to handle copra , peanuts and any s urplus rice and in later years assis t in the marke ting o f cacao . The society could p rovide transport for co conuts to two nat ive-material built Ceylon driers lo cated at central poin t s in S iwai and l ikewis e in the Buin area . Transport could b e p rovided again f o r cured copra t o the shippin g point s . Once Socie ty copra is collected a t shipping points it can then b e shipped to Buin by lo cal small ships , collected again there and cleared by MVS P olurrian which makes regular s ix-weekly trips direc t to Rabaul . Copra should be marketed under the S ociety ' s own b ran d . I e s t imate that o f 4 , 29 1 natives in the area about 3 , 5 0 0 could be memb ers . . . The wholehearted cooperat ion o f the people i s ass ured once w e can provide the ways an d means to marke t their p roduce . To date DASF has b een held in high regard by them and the assis t ance given them has been really appreciated . Once we have ventured into this next stage of development I feel s ure that the area will never look back . ( Tomlin , 1 9 56a) . Following a mee t ing in S iwai ' at which batmen and headmen f rom almos t all S iwai villages were in attendance ' he expanded on some o f the reasons why such a s o cie ty should be based in S iwai . S iwais ' have shown repeatedly to b e the mo s t p ro gres s ive ' people in south Bougainville ; they were ent irely a rural people who had ' no t been spoilt by payment 114 of exo rbitant war damage claims ' . There was a goo d internal road sys t em (because of Monday work) , an excess of lo cal building materials and they were ' gene rally much more will ing wo rkers ' ( Tomlin , 1956a) . The mee ting itself in February 1 9 5 6 passed a number o f resolut ions which summa ri z ed S iwai demands a t that t ime , al though the s e were h eavily depen den t upon Tomlin ' s advice . Obvious reque s t s were that a socie ty should be s e t up , with a t ruck , a driver and a clerk ; building labour would be supplied free and all co sts would be met by so ciety memb ers . S iwai re que s t s cent red around growing copra and r ice . They resolved ' that copra be pro duced on a communal b asis ' ; coconut s from all villages would b e made into cop ra at three so cie ty driers to be buil t at Konga , Hari and Kuhino . ' Wh ere roads permi t ; the so cie ty would provide transpor t t o tho se driers . The copra was t o be shipped direct to Rabaul and marke t ed under the s ocie ty ' s re gis tered b rand ' . It was resolved that ' ri ce return to the s tatus of a cash crop wh ere nat ives o ccupying and us ing ground do not have t itle to it and hence cannot estab l ish, permanent crops ' ; a b igger rice mill would have to be built at Konga , and the old one trans ferred to S ininai , and an engine-driven thresher con structed . Otherwis e ' all crops can b e expanded , especially co coa ' and a p eanut sheller would be purchased to increas e the in come f rom peanut s . The resolut ions concluded with Tomlin ' s observat ion that the demand to set up a so cie ty was best summe d up by the remarks o f one Siwai l eade r : Pas taim mipe la i laik le s long ol wok long wanem mipe la i no gat ro t bi long salim o l samting . Taso l sapos y umi kirapim Rura l Progress Society yumi gat ro t bi long salim ol samting na y umi i ken s trong tru long o l kain wok bi long winim mani na yumi no ken rabis moa . ( First we b ecame t i red of working b ecause there was nowhere t o sell anything . But if we s e t up a RP S we will have somewhere to sell things and we will wo rk hard at many kinds o f money-making ent erp rises so that we won ' t be poor any more . ) No S iwais knew any thing abo ut organized marke t ing , al though some may have seen early developments in east New Britain , but they needed little convincing that this was a good idea . The ills that the Society might cure were tho s e that they were ent irely famil iar with . The dr ive came from Tomlin and local response was overwhelmin g . 115 Following the en thus iasm o f Tomlin and the S iwai people DASF mus t have been convinced s ince only four mon ths later Tomlin repor ted that all was now ready for the o f ficial regis t rat ion of the So ciety . For the firs t t ime there was a visible agricultural o rganizat ion in S iwai : an ins t itut ion that had b een set up by the admin is t rat ion in response to the S iwai wishes that Tomlin had art iculat ed . Al though the organ ization itself was exact ly what was required to realize thes e aspirat ion s the init ial problems were cons iderable Inevi tab ly a new rice mill had no t arrived (and the exis t in g rice mill was producing very unat t ract ive r ic e ) ; nor was there any sign of the p eanut sheller but purchasing had b e gun and expanded rap idly with the s e cond half o f 1 9 5 6 . Rice was being pur chased , dire ct from gardens , at 3d . a pound ; coconuts were bein g bought for l d . p er pound of b roken husked nut s ( co llected from the roadside ) which was an improvement on the ld . pe r whole nut that had been paid by S iwai copra In June peanuts were being purchasers in the early 1950s . purchased at 4 d . per pound ( in the shell , at the garden ) and in October at 6 d . per pound . Parts of Baits i and Buin were also selling to the Socie ty and plan t in g of p eanuts was ' go ing ahead rap idly ' . More baske ts were b e ing purchased than had been expected ; they had ' proved to be a lucrat ive business ' and were b eing encouraged . ( This is the first record o f baske t sales in S iwai . ) Apart from the lack o f machinery there were the inevit able transport problems ; rice was bein g purchased in the gardens but could no t be b ro ught to the Soc iety . In October no cop ra had yet b een cured although a Ceylon type drier had b een comp l eted at Hanong and work was go ing ahead on o thers at Konga and Hari . Moreover the Socie ty had purchased 3 3 bags o f smoked cop ra from S iwai ' bus ines smen ' at 3d . per pound . A mo re unusual prob lem was the somewhat imp robable compe tit ion from a different market ; the Methodist Miss ion at Kihili was also buying p roduce . It was annoying to Tomlin that ' the character concerned is outwardly using his " divinity'' to ext ract from the natives any sort of produce that he can get his han ds on - at very nominal prices ' . This prac t ice did not las t long so that overall he concluded that , wi th 214 full memb ers ( at £5 each) and 414 contributo rs , all was go ing well . ' Pe t ty j ealousie s which previously exis ted amon g dif ferent fac t ions are b ecoming a thing of the pas t and all are wo rking to gether fairly well gardens seem to be ge t t in g b igge r and b et ter as more and mo re natives j oin in the race to see who can p roduce the mo s t ' . Af ter lit tle mo re than hal f a year it was an encouraging start . • . . 116 This was the first s tage in the emer gence of a marke t in g sys t em in S iwai ; the prices were in i tially extremely generous , particularly s ince in seve ral cases some of the produce , for examp le peanuts , may never have been sold b e fore . At the s tart o f 1956 the price that Chin ese traders p aid for copra was only 3d . per pound ; at Konga the S iwai S o ciety was giving exac tly the same p rice . Inevitably much of the op erat ion was artifi cial ; the S o c ie ty was buying peanuts at 6d . per pound and selling them shelled to DASF at Konga , for a shill ing a pound , who then had to marke t them . Purchasing was des i gned so that the producers would have the least pos s ible difficulty . Milled rice was sold at £ 7 5 per ton in Buin , and it was no t enough to mee t all the requirements o f the sub-dis trict . Copra wen t to the Market ing Board in Rabaul but basket s were the mo s t s uccess ful ; there was a great demand for them and they we re sold at 20 p er cent above the purchase price in Rabaul , S ohano and Kie ta . Po s s ible future marke t ing p roblems were bein g reco gn ized ; peanuts wen t t o a totally art i f ic ial marke t . ( I t is not clear if the peanuts purchas ed by DASF then were ever resold by them . Peanut s may have b een sold by DASF from the b each at Mamagota t o Chinese traders ; if this was the ir only marke t i t could not have b een important . ) I t was als o very dif ficul t t o f ind marke ts for s to ckfee d (a comb inat ion o f co rn , rice , peanuts and also sorghum) and i t would soon be necess ary t o find external markets for the rice . Tomlin also es t ima ted that about £20 a y ear could be made from selling po tatoes , swee t po tatoes , eggs , poul t ry and fresh vege tables to Buin town re s ident s . This s t rategy , to tally dependent on transport availab ility , never s eems to have been carried o ut which is scarcely surprising if Tomlin ' s e s t imat e of the pos s ible annual income i s accurate . Transport indeed made all market ing a problem. Until February 195 7 some Buin - owned trucks could be chartered ; by mid 195 7 they we re all b roken down and the only transport was the S iwai tractor , which spent 40 per cent of its t ime go ing to Buin . The implementat ion o f the Rural Pro gres s S ociety mean t that the adminis trat ion had e f fectively chan ged their minds on the pos s ib i l i t ies of connne rcial agricult ure in south Bougainvi lle ; once again they had b e gun to believe that rice , this t ime with o th er c rops , could be pro f i table . In 195 7 one kiap no ted how the Dis tric t Commi s s ioner had earlie r s t re ssed that rice was introduced t o the area as a consump t ion crop and not as a cash crop but now he was himself disap p o in ted to ob serve in S iwai that ' the fac t that only 350 lb s . 11 7 a week is b e ing sold seems to indicate that the p eople are marketing only the s urp lus ' (PR Boku 7 / 5 7 - 5 8 ) so that Bouga inville alone ' could ab sorb all lo cally p ro duced rice for a lon g t ime to come ' (PR Buin 1 / 5 8-5 9 ) . Tomlin too had changed his mind ; in 1 9 5 6 he not ed that desp ite the original adminis t rat ion aim of sub s is t en ce p ro duct ion rice had risen to be a cash crop and had then fallen back to its intended range . He wan ted comme rcial product ion to go ahead again . Paradoxically , when the admin i strat ion eventually recogn i zed the possib il i t ie s o f commerc ial rice p roduct ion in south Bougainville , S iwais themselves had almost given up hope o f i t ever providing much cash . Ye t once more rice p roduct ion was increas ing ; a marke t had b een resume d . Durin g that first important y ear Tomlin himself had gone to Wewak and Madang to study the operat ion o f Rural Pro gres s Societies there but even more important he had organized a vis·it by seven S iwais , the f irst dire c tors of the Society , to eas t New Britain to see the Nat ive Cacao S cheme , Lo cal Government Council o r ganizat ion , Vudal Land S e t tlement S cheme and anythin g else o f interes t . Tomlin wro. t e to the Dis trict Commi ssioner of eas t New Britain : I t is requested that the Department of Nat ive Af fairs , the o f ficers of the Nat ive Cocoa Autho rity and o f fice rs concerned with Lo cal Government Organizat ion g ive their co-operat ion to en sure that these natives return to the ir villages , well and t ruly indo c t r inated on the s ubj ect of e conomic development an d what is entailed in b r in ging i t about . The vis i tors were exp e ct ed to s t ay in New Britain for a couple of weeks but s eem to have s t ayed much longer . Tomlin had held meet in gs throughout S iwai and in each dist r ic t one man had b een selected by t h e people i n that area to b ecome a director of the S o c ie ty . They were Anthony Potungah (Kapana) , Hinna ( Ieku) , Mus ireu (Mo rokaimoro ) , S awang (Purikoli) , S iwa ( Tonui ) , Kuipuru (Arnio ) and Kepoama (Musimino i ) ; each o f these was a prominent man but none was then a S iwai leader or big man , in the sense that he might be referred to as mumi ( c f . Olive r , 1955 ) . All had some experienc e o f work outs ide ; some , l ike Kuipuru , were involved in mis s ion work and o the rs , l ike Kepo ama , had already demon s t rated their int eres t in cash crops , includin g co coa . l 1 r interviewed all these directors apart from S iwa o f Tonu . 118 The seven directors s tayed for p erhaps three months in eas t Kew Brita in ; they visit ed Keravat agr icul tural s tat ion and saw how cocoa should be planted , and the way group wo rk could do this best , and in spected various To lai gardens . They were al so taken int o th e upl and Bainings area, which was a much poo rer inland area where there were no cash crops , apparently to demons t rate how much more p rogress ive and success ful the To lais were . Drying o f cocoa and fermentary con s t ruct ion were demonstrated (al though there were then only sundriers in Tolai) . They saw cat tle at Vunakakaul but they were no t taught any thing ab out them s ince they were s t il l only o n the agri cul tural s t at ion : ' bikpe la samting bi long gavman taso i ( an important gove rnment development only ) ' . They also saw two co-operat ive societies , one at Vunamami , and saw how their co-ope rat ive stores op erated . At the same time they vis i ted some o f the lo cal government councils in the Gaz ell e , although they had expe cted that the t rip was only to be concerned wi th agri cul ture , including at leas t two vis i t s to Vunamami council to obs erve the kind o f dis cus s ions and the manner o f vo t ing . On their re turn the directors t oured their own parts o f S iwai , explainin g the advantages of plan t ing cocoa and how it should be done and p romis ing to check sub sequent ly that they were do in g it co rrectly . They also told the p eople tha t they shoul d work in groups , so that the village men would first estab l i sh one man ' s co coa and later ano ther unt il even tually every family would have co coa . Almo st everywh ere this p ar t i cular s t rat egy was eventually unsucce s s ful ; after a few men had had their co coa gardens plan ted for them people both lost int erest in group work and also in co coa . 'OZ i no harim gut mipe la ( They didn ' t As Savan g said : listen to us p roperly ) ' and Anthony Po tun gah was t old that these new i deas were ' Giaman taso i ( Jus t lies ) ' . But the d irectors themselves were slow to develop their own cocoa ; two decade s l at er they were retro spect ively enthus ias t ic about what they saw in Tolai but on their return only Kuipuru and Kepoama , who had previously s t arted co coa plant at ion s , maintained their interest in cocoa . The o thers followed much mo re s lowly . Throughout S iwai there was l i t t le posit ive react ion to the Tolai trip ; there was no en thus iasm fo r ye t ano ther cash c rop , especially one that had a delayed crop and permanent ly oc cupied land . 2 A locally success ful 2 At about the s ame t ime Has ing ( Jeku) and Maimoi (Turugum) went to Wewak , in the Eas t S ep ik Dis tric t , to look at peanut plan t in g an d they also saw co ffee . When they 119 demonstrat ion was required . Fo r the y ear ending Novemb er 1956 Tomlin made a rough e s t imat e that total S iwai p ro duce amoun t ed to 2 tons o f copra , 5 tons o f rice and 2 t ons of peanut s . When Toml in wrot e his first annual report o f the S iwai DASF s tat ion in July 19 5 7 business was booming . In the firs t year o f operat ion , 1956-57 , S iwai had pro duced 6 . tons o f copra , between 35 and 40 tons o f rice ( a mas sive increase over the 1951 product ion ) , 16 t ons of p eanut s , 12 tons of ' o ther c ereals ' ( mainly corn for chicken feed) an d £600 worth o f baskets . This was much higher than he had predicted even six months earlier and had been done with only one t ractor ; a reques t to the Nat ive Loans Fund in Port More sby for £ 3600 to purchase a truck had not yet succeeded . At leas t the p eanut she ller and the r i ce mill were working well but co rn cob s were b ein g purchased at l�d . a pound where it had It was a fairly impressive s tart been 2 d . a pound befo re . for the Society and optimism reigned supreme ; ' . . . the Buin sub dis trict has never seen greater progress in any one year than it has in the y ear 1 9 5 6 -7 ' . Even apart from agricul tural changes about fifty miles of new ro ads had b een buil t and a whar f con s t ruc ted at Buin . The ' percen t age o f labour po t ent ial workin g away from the area has de creased sharply and there are very few wo rking on plantat ions ' ; moreover , ' even aged females , no t no rmally occup ie d in any wo rk before , now have their small peanut and corn gardens in tere s t has tho roughly penetrat ed all age groups ' . S iwais were al ready generally cons idered to be ' part icularly " cash crop" cons cious ' and be caus e they wanted to go ahead s o quickly the Bougainville agricultural department always retained ' a s o ft spo t ' for them , ( D . N . Brown , pers . connn . , 1 9 7 5 ) . • . . In the next couple o f y ears almost no copra was made ; by 1 9 5 7 there were s t ill very few growers . The exis t ing ones produce little copra and the groves are no t weeded ' (PR Boku 1 / 5 7-5 8 ) . P ro duct ion for cash was almost en tirely of r ice and p eanut s . At the s t ar t of 1 9 5 8 rice was again declin in g a little in popularity s ince Tomlin was reconnnend ing peanut s , rather than rice , because peanuts could be used as a catch crop in new co co a plantat ion s but lat er in the y ear 2 ( cont inued) returned they explained the virtues o f p eanut planting but no one was in t e rested . ( I can t race no administ rat ion record o f this trip , which could have been b efore the society began , hence the date is impo ssible t o p inpo in t . ) 12 0 ' since readj ustment of prices [with r ice go ing from 3d . to 4d . p er pound and peanut s from 6 d . to 4 d . ] has b een affected , much more rice is being grown and peanut acreage has b een A year later a cut down s l ight ly in favour o f it ' . co -op erat ive o f f i cer from Rab aul no ted that the r i ce price of 4 d . per pound was effectively sub s idizing rice growing to p reven t a swit ch to peanut s (at the same price) ; he reconnnende d that the r ice p rice be lowered to 3d . o therwise rice s tocks would be come too large . Apparently the advice was acted on but on ce again pol icy was s omewhat vague . The ext ent to which the adminis t rat ion should in terf ere in man ipulat ing the marke t was never spec ified ; scarcely surp ri s in gly , one kiap noted in 1958 that the p eople cons idered the S iwai so ciety and DASF to be synonymous (PR Buin 3 / 5 8-59 ) . At leas t there was a general assumpt ion on the part o f local officers that S iwais wo uld respond rap idly t o changing prices . But what ever the pri ce , rice marke t ing was no t progre s s in g ; one tract or load disappeared into the f looded Mivo rive r , whil s t the admin istrat ion p romised t o p urchase an other cro p but failed so that 2 8� tons had t o b e s old a t a dollar . a Some was resold to society ton less to Wong You at Buin . memb ers at 8d . a pound . Ri ce mil l in g too was always a the new mill , ins t alled in 1956 , was adequate only problem : for produc ing rice for local t rade rs and Bougainvilleans . After one month it was diff icult to operate and only Tomlin himself was ab le to manage it . Peanuts p romis ed wel l ; in Thi s November 19 5 8 , ' marke ting has b een progre s s in g well alone will pull the balance sheet r ight o u t o f t h e " red" [ the first o fficial indicat ion that f inan ces were no t as they should be ] and en sure a good net s urp lus in the next balance ' but no more than a month lat er the merchan t who had bought mos t of the society ' s p eanuts had made a lo ss on his last two con s ignmen ts t o Aus tralia and the prosp ec t s were In the s ix months b efore Novemb er 195 8 the Society doub t ful . had purchas ed 36 tons o f peanut s , 1 7 t on s of rice , £300 o f b asketware , £ 3 3 . 5 s . o f cane furni ture ( al l o f which came from Buin ) and 4 tons of s to ck fee d . Al though th� Society was ' in the red ' the income to growers was £3 , 0 7 7 . 11 . 7 in a four month period , which was apparen t ly typ ical of this p eriod ; this had been built up from nothin g over a perio d o f only two years and speaks volumes for the in tere s t o f the S iwai people in ' local development ' . Moreover fo r the first t ime the S o c iety had a S iwai secretary , Luke Pauru , al though the manage r , Kanku , was from Buin . . . • Early in 1 9 5 9 the So ciety further diversified i t s interes t s ; j oin t ly with DASF a sawmil l was const ructed t o 121 purchas e lo gs from S iwais and mill them f o r u s e in lo cal cons truct ion . In March this was workin g very well ; the Dis t rict Agricul tural Off icer cons idered that the ' arran gement be sanct ioned and allowed to con t inue ' since t imber was produced at an average co st o f £2 per hundred s quare feet compared with £6 or £ 7 from the usual suppliers in Rabaul . Mo reover a S iwai was op erat in g the mill and no sup ervis ion was required . Neve r theless the S en ior Agricultural Officer in Port More sby found that ' the present sys t em of share work [between DASF and the Soc iety ] is highly irregular and cannot be sanct ioned ' so that when the blade b roke s ix weeks late r h e re fused t o sanct ion the purchas e o f a new one . Bureaucracy collapsed a promising local industry and one that , de spite many s ub s equent attempts , has never b een re-e s t abl ished . Neverthele s s in the first hal f o f 1 9 5 9 the So cie ty made a pro fit o f £ 7 04 from peanut marke t ing and, al though they lo s t £21 on rice transac t ions , this was the fir s t overal l profit that the So cie ty had recorded . (De sp i t e adminis t rat ive p l easure over the apparen t early success of the Socie ty the implicat ions of the fragmented accounts that remain is that , apart from durin g thi s one p erio d , losses were cons i s t ently reco rded . ) Once again i t was a very short pe riod o f pros In perity ; once again init ial o p t imism appeared unfounded . the second hal f o f the y ear a period o f decline b egan . Tomlin had le f t S iwai and the quali ty of p roduc t ion suffered ; Won g You cancelled his o rder for rice ( s ince he claimed i t was ne ith er r ip e when c u t nor was i t dried prope rly) and the European peanut merchant was concerned with the poor quality o f the p eanut s . The f inal 1 9 5 9 S iwai Soc iety accounts were very dis appo in t in g s ince in that y ear the peanut market , never very a s sured , collaps ed compl et ely . Even so , as late as June 1959 S iwais were s t ill b ein g recommended to con t inue growing p eanut s ' as the Honorary Adviser [ the European didiman at Konga ] is con f i dent that Aropa E s tate will soon recommence buying ' ; mor eove r , at the same t ime , the rice p rice had fallen and the peanut price risen so that the So ciety coul d no t fulfil its o rders f o r rice , ' partly b ecause members pre fe r t o p roduce p eanuts at Sd . per pound rather than rice at 3d . per pound ' . By the end o f the year the Soc ie ty decided that they did no t wish to purchase any more peanut s , although fo r the first months o f 1 9 6 0 they did agree to purchase village s tocks at ld. per pound ; they argued that ' i f p eople want to keep planting them it should be for their p igs ' b enefit ' . In its p lace the S ociety recommended more 122 plantings o f rice and corn and more baske t manufac ture while the Socie ty ' s Adviser was considerin g the pos s ib il ity of in t roduc in g o il palms . After 1960 no more p eanuts were ever again purchased by the Society , although nearly a decade later they became one of the mos t importan t foods in S iwai markets and later the main p roduce s old to Panguna . Official , and lo cal , concern for the future o f the So ciety and therefore marke t ing in S iwai was growin g . The failure o f the peanut market s eems t o have induced a fairly rapid response by p eanut growers ; in eastern S iwai alone Halin g es t imated that although 7 6� acres were plant ed in the previous year no more than 8 acres were then tmder cul t ivat ion (APR Eastern Divison , S iwai , 1 9 6 0 ) . Two years later in the same area peanut s were no longer grown as a cash crop but s ome were grown by a few people for food (APR Konga 1/ 61-62 ) ; the Bougainville co-operat ive o f ficer no t ed that ' Un t il 1 9 5 9 , peanuts were a good cash crop ' but had become ' an expens ive lesson in economics as far as the S iwai are concerned ' . In Buin the ' failure of the peanut market is con s idered to have made the Buin very conservat ive ' and they were tmin teres t ed in t ryin g o ther c rops ; there was a little more opt imism about condit ions in S iwai . At leas t one agricult ural o ff i cer felt that there was a possible consolation ; p roper attent ion could now b e given to cocoa and co f fee , whi ch had b e en igno red b ecause of the quicke r and eas ier re turn to peanut s . In fact there s eems t o have b een tm iversal disappo intment in the s udden failure o f peanut s , which had become the b es t cash crop an d a more important s ource of cash than rice ; throughout south Bouga inville there was an inevit ab le d i s t rus t o f alternat ive cash crops . Rice too was once again pas s in g through a disappoin t in g perio d . Al though almos t all Bougainvillean pro duct ion now came from S iwai it was suffering from d isease (Leptocoryza varieoPnis ) especially at altitudes below about 140 metres ; p roduct ion had decreased and the seed had degen erat ed . Moreover , although the Society could easily s ell all the rice produced in S iwai within Bougainville , it was of poor qual ity , needed lengthy cooking and the p rice they ob tained for it was so small that the rice economy was rtmning at a lo ss . Reques t s for new r ice seed had b rought only a small quant ity from central administrat ion whils t staff shor tage had hindered extens ion work . In these c ircumstances of decline , copra once aga in began to revive . There was a low turnover o f copra and the purchase price was very low but a 123 small surplus was expected to be maint ained and i t gave the b es t pro f it margin even though it was all used for stock feed . No t all the copra produced wen t to the society ; the three villages of Ru ' nai , Kotu and Ait ara had set up a s ingle village fund to manage j ointly owned and planted co conut plantat ion s . As sisted , in some way , both by the Department of Nat ive Af fairs and DASF they had two copra driers working and their copra was carried by mi ss ion ships from the beach at Aitara to Sohano . The revenue from this was shared out t o villagers according t o the nun.her of days that they worked . (Transport problems eventually caused its decline around 1 9 6 5 . ) Between 1 9 5 9 and 1 9 6 1 there were s teady sales o f copra t o the society and the first so ciety drier had been built us ing 44-gallon drums . However in 19 6 0 all the copra produced in east ern S iwai was bein g sold to three individuals who had their own driers and who then sold copra to the Society (APR Eas tern Division , S iwai , 1960) . The Society at least p rovided a bet ter market than the Chinese t raders from Buin who came irregularly and with whom there were o f t en disput es over p rices . By 1 9 6 1 copra seemed to have finally es tabli shed itsel f as a cash crop with long-t erm potent ial . Drfers were bein g cons t ructed at Hire and Horino and planned for Mamago t a , Kunn u , Laku and Musiminoi ; each -of these villages had large areas of coconut s near the coast , some surviving from b efor e the war . At tempts were als o being made , with unknown succes s , to increase corn p ro duct ion sin ce this was a profitable en terp rise but there wer e even prob lems with baskets . Many had proved to be unsaleable s ince ' no-one knows what s tyle Europeans like ' ; moreover , much o f the pro f i t s seemed t o be going to middlemen , rather than to the S o ciety , b ecause of the problems involved in t ran s po rt in g the baskets to Rabaul . S t andard izat ion minimized problems of sales but especially befo re the emergence o f Bougainvillean market s the ' middlemen ' have always exis ted . It seems that the Society left no s t one tmturned ; in the second hal f of 1960 the mos t profitable item was tmspecified ' vegetables ' purchased for £ 7 and sold fo r £16 . The high p ro f it was p artly due to a low purchase rate of 3 / 4 d . p er pound which suggests that this was probably one ton of sweet po t atoes sold in Buin . If this was so it is the only recorded case of sweet po tatoes being marketed by the S iwai society and a po ss ible indicat ion o f the desper at ion then app arent t o the adminis t rat ion . ( It also sugge s t s that th ere were quantit ies o f swee t potatoes s urplus t o dome s t ic requirements . ) 124 Co co a was s till a lon g way from real i z ing its po tent ial ; the whole o f Buin sub -d i strict p roduced only 3 tons in 1 9 5 9 6 0 (po ss ib ly a l l from Mo s igeta) and in S iwai there was s t ill In the whole o f S iwai t here were reported l i t t le pro gress . to be 1 5 0 0 t rees at the s t ar t o f 1 9 5 6 and 5 0 00 not lon g afterward s (Toml in , 195 6a) . P lan t ing gained sl ight momentum in the late 1950s but there were on ly small re turns t o the earliest producers . What happened to the earliest cocoa produced in south Bougainville is not clear ; it may s imply have rot t ed . The first reco rd of any s ales is in April 19 5 8 when the S iwai Society purchased e ight b ags o f co coa from Widokuma in Mo s igeta and sold them in Rabaul but it was ' no t o f goo d qual i ty ' (Tomlin , 1 9 5 6a) . As late a s 1 9 5 9 the Bougainville co-opera t ive off icer reconnne nded ' that permanent t ree crops be int roduced ' t o S iwai , although in the prev ious year Has ing (Jeku) had won the K . I . Tomlin Trophy at the annual Buin Agricultural Show fo r the best owner-managed co co a garden in the distric t . Extens ion work was ' handicapped by the land t enure problem ' but it was expected that ' the newly fo rmed Siwai Lo cal Government Council will as sist the planting of p ermanen t crops by campai gning for individual family ho ldings of land in st ead of the tradit ional communal land us age ' . The future of cocoa was s t ill uncertain ; even the admin i s trat ion was unsure of i t s poten t ial . The 1 9 5 9 - 6 0 Annual Report fo r th e Territory of New Guinea was n o more hopeful than to s t at e that in Bougainville ' further p lant in gs of cacao and robus ta c o f fee were made in the int eres ts o f In the south there was even dive r s i f i cat ion ' ( 19 61 : 6 7 ) . less conf idence . Even the as sets of earlier y ears were fading away ; the tractor was no t st andin g up well t o the long and arduous t r ip to Kangu beach at Buin . Each t rip cost the S ociety £6 per ton , which was a prohib it ive price on almo st anything produced in S iwai . At least S iwai was b e t ter o f f than Nagovis i where ' con side rat ion should be given to shelving the Society ' s act ivit ies un t il river cro s s ings are b r idged o r suitab ly forded ' but the s i tua t ion was s t ill deteriorat in g . ' By the t ime cocoa comes into b ear in g there may be no tractor to t ranspo rt the c rop to the market ' . Competitive marke ts for the small amo un t s o f p roduce had al s o re-emerged ; rice and baskets were sold to the mi ss ions at Tonu and , to a les ser extent , Monoitu , al though lat er a special mee t in g was held a t Amio , early in 1962 , to ensure that this compet it ion did not b reak the So ciety . 12 5 The earlies t t rading accounts of the S iwai Society are now lo s t . ( Indeed , it was t en months befo re s t at ione ry o f any kind reached Kon ga and there may never have been accurat e records . ) Those that do exist (Appendix I I ) from the first four years of operat ion , al though in complete and inadequate , do shed some light on the Society ' s problems and successes . They suggest the artificial ity of the s ituat ion ; al though the quan t i ty o f each crop pro duced was relat ed t o the So ciety ' s p rice these were no t real ma rket prices but simply prices fixed by the Society at the in st igat ion of the didimen , which were expec ted b o th to st imulate p roduc t ion and to enable a p rofit t o be made on each crop . Profit s rarely fitted t ime periods ; it was not that the So cie ty had ready credit available , rather that the administration sub s idized purchas in g . ( It is not clear how , or for how lon g , this may have existed . ) It was a period of trial and erro r ; effe ct ive ly the Society was purchas ing whatever came on the market and selling whatever and whenever it could . Repeated large s t o cks , at the end of each t ime period , of product s which could not ne ce ssar ily b e success fully stored for long periods nor s ub s equen t ly sold , indicate the diff icult ies that the S o ciety had in identifyin g market outlets . Thes e two y ears from 1 9 5 8 to 1 9 6 0 cover a period when there were few problems in en couragin g p ro duct ion but many in selling the resul t ant p ro duce . Rice and peanuts s t ill dominated cash crop p ro duct ion in the two years from 195 8 to 1 96 0 . Howeve r the decline o f peanut pro duct ion i s well illus t rated in the S ocie ty ' s accotm t s ( Appendix I I ) ; purchas es o f p eanuts fel l from £2118 to £ 81 fo r s imilar per iods in l it t le more than two years whil st there was no compensat ing in crease in the income from othe r pro duct s . ( Even in the las t period o f 1 9 6 0 when cocoa showed some re turns these wen t t o a very small number of p ro ducers . ) Mo reover p eanut s were such a large p art of to tal product ion and therefo re S o c iety purchases that over the same two-year p eriod tot al purchases fell f rom £ 302 9 t o £595 . Fluctuating prices and p ro duct ion make general izations about S iwai incomes from the Society difficult ; however it is p robab le that in 1958 the total income that S iwais received from sales to the S o ciety (which represented at least three quarters of all agricultural sales from S iwai) was about £ 7 000 whereas in 1 9 6 0 it may have been no more than £180 0 . This was a con s i derable fall in income ; dependen ce on rice and peanut s had p roved inadequate as a source of cash . 126 Inevitab ly there was o f f ic ial concern f o r t h e organization o f the S o c iety ; in 1 9 5 9 the As s is t ant Registrar o f Co op erat ives in s ist ed that the So ciety ' mus t no t be allowed to op erate at a lo ss ' ; although societ ies were ' no t pro f it making concerns for the b enefit o f o ut s ide invest ors they mus t at l eas t keep capital in tact ' . A year lat er the co-operat ive regis t rar in Rabaul was worried . He eventually refrained from recommending liquidat ion b ut was con cerned about the peanut market , sugges t ing that there should b e an inves t igation o f the po ssib ilit ies of growing o ther tree crop s in south These Bougainville , such as g inger , vanil la and cas t o r o il . do no t seem t o have been tried an d in February , 19 61 , the Society secretary in formed the d irectors that unless the next bal an ce sh ee t showed a p ro fit the Socie ty would be forced t o close sin ce there were no longer any pur chasers f o r the rice . No t surp ris ingly all the members ins isted that the Society go on ; only one man , who was b l ind and therefore thought to be short of money , t ook back his share capital . This was the great est crisis that the So ciety had faced and what exactly happened then is not cl ear ; nevertheless d isaster was somehow aver ted . Once again rice returned t o the fo re ; a new market was ident ified and the Society s taggered onwards towards a s t il l uncer t ain fut ure . By then there was a new interest involved in agricultural The S iwai Local Government Council which held developmen t . its first meet ing in January 1 9 6 0 was , with Teop-Tinput z Council , the firs t to be set up on the island . From its incep t ion it was concerned with agricultural chan ge ; indeed at its third mee ting the As sistant Dis t rict Officer told memb ers t o plant cocoa , cof fee and coconut s . There followed the f i rs t dis cus sion that the coun cil had ever had on anything o ther than admin istrat ive mat t ers an d in the first few years of the council there was a familiar pat tern o f a t alk t o the coun cil by an admin i s t ration o f f i cial , a sub sequent d is cuss ion of the event ual s uggest ion and then , usually , as sent . By the seventh meet in g , in Augus t 1 9 6 0 , the Coun c il were becoming more amb it ious ; they requested an aircraft landin g s t r ip ( to cut out carrying cocoa and cof fee over the long road to Buin ) b ut they were beginning t o evolve their own ideas on the o rgan izat ion of commercial agr iculture . The Coun c il obj ec ted t o the didimen requesting them to plant j o intly 5 00 co coa t rees per head ; they cons idered that it would be better if each ind ividual , working alone , b egan with 2 00 and lat er worked up to 5-00 t rees and that the kiap shoul d give them as sistance in marking out the are a . The Chairman sugges ted that rice and co rn fi�st b e plant ed and then the grol.lll d could 12 7 be marked o ut fo r cof fee or coco a . The dis illus ionmen t o f this p eriod i s refl ected in some o f the discuss ions . Laisi (Hari) , one o f the S iwai l eaders , complained o f the vagaries o f agricul tural pol icy and practice : Bipo a l kiap i save tokim mipe la long p lanim pinat, rais na korn . Bihain yupe la i tokim mipe la gen long p lanim kakao na kopi, taso l rais na pinat i lus pinis (Befo re the kiaps used t o te11 · us t o plan t peanut s , rice an d co rn . Aft erwards you t o o [ the kiaps ] t o l d u s again to plan t coco a and cof fee but rice and peanuts have complet ely fin ished ) ( S iwa i Local Government Coun cil Minut es , Oc tob er 1 9 6 0 ) . S t ill in their first y ear o f exis ten ce the Coun cil had appointed their own ' didiman boi ' , Kuipuru of Arnio (one o f the S iwai Society Directors ) s ince h e was known to be hard wo rking and had already finished his own co coa plantat ion . He would go r�und and as sist in developing the new cocoa gardens ; the salary was £1 8 a year and his b icycle co s t £ 10 . Al t hough there was some con fus ion between the exact s t rat egies that the S o ciety , the Coun c il and the admin ist rat ion reconnnended , ove rall there was no doub t that each o f these in the ir own way were determined to expand cash crop product ion throughout S iwai . In the early 1960s meetings o f the Society were much like tho s e o f the Coun cil ; they provided goo d oppo rtunit ies for the advisers t o lecture a l arge group , includi�g S iwai leaders , on the merit s of part icular crops and the t echn iques involved in cult ivat ing them and rather les s oppo rtunity for S iwais t o set out their own aims . In July . 19 61 councillors were warned no t to plant food crops in amongst co coa and co conut s , whilst in January 1962 S ociety memb ers were b e ing lectured on the necess ity for plantin g leucaena as shade fo r cocoa and cof fee , but t here were o ft en con flicts between the in tere s t s and pol icies of d i f feren t lecturers . In April 1961 the Konga didiman , David Brown , spoke to the Coun cil about catt le farming ; there were only plans to s tart a cat t le proj ect at Sohano hen ce at £ 800 f o r a b ull and £90 for a small cow , there was app aren tly lit tle lo cal in teres t then . Three y ears later , in March 1 9 64 , a different didiman told the Council that S iwai was no t a good area for ca t t le . Although ' plenty o f people wanted to keep cat tle � he po inted out that the income from this was b elow co co a and also b elow b aske t s . 128 Con f l i c t a l s o occurred between the Council and the Socie t y ; the Socie ty dire cto rs at t empted to get workers fo r the Socie ty whilst the councillo rs wanted people for Coun cil work . In 1961 the Council inst igated a sy s t em un der which all adul t males in the Co uncil area wo rked alternat ely for two weeks as d ire cted by the Council (which in cluded work on their own cash crop s ) , followed by two weeks according to their own wishes . Al though the council lors were usually mo re in f l uent ial leaders than the d irectors , Coun c il work was less obvio usly reward ing so that the conflict was no t eas i ly reduced . Mo reover the con flict s eems t o have b een one of authority rather than over the actual work to b e done . Par t ly as a re sult o f this and the disappearing market s, by October 1 9 6 1 int ere s t in the Socie ty had ' declined very rap idly ' even though a fieldwo rker had b een ass igned to the Coun cil to in sp ect the development o f cash crops in S iwai . Tlie extent to which the So ciety actually o rganized their own p riorit ies for crop development , machinery , market in g and s o on i s unclear b ut i t i s certain that their own wishes played a small p art . Apart from plan t ing and maintaining the new cro p s , of wh ich they were t o t al ly famil iar only with rice , mo st o f the op erat ion s o f the So ciety we re then b eyond the t e chn ical competence of the people . Machinery could not b e rep aired , ac counts could n o t b e maint ained correctly and market s could no t be e s t ab l ished . Inevitab ly the directors were very depen dent on their European advis ers , although the const it ut ion of the So ciety p rob ab ly gave them t o t al con t ro l . What impact changing l evel s of int erest in cash crops had on the s ub s is t en ce economy is not cl ear . Thus , in 19 5 7 , at a t ime when cash croppin g seemed to be succe s sful Tomlin obs erved that ' much more t inned meat and fish are consumed ' ; on the o ther hand , a y ear later , he felt that ' cash c ropping has had only a minor e f fect on tradit ional sub s i s tence cropp ing and has no t altered the qual ity o r the var iety of such foods grown the actual quan t ity grown o f such crop s as sweet p o t ato , e t c . has b een reduced only s l i ght ly if at all ' . Neve rtheless r ice consump t ion was s t eadily increasin g . In 1960 Halin g re garded it as the mo st importan t food crop after swee t potato ; ' by far the great est proport ion ' of planted r i ce was consumed in S iwai . By then rice was ent i rely grown in hous ehold , rather than connne rcial , gardens and it was est imated that in the Rataiku area alone (where rice always grew bes t ) there were 1 4 2� acres o f rice , which represented 0 . 16 acres p er p erson ( compared with 0 . 42 acres per p erson o f sweet po t ato ) and rice followed sweet potato • . • 129 a s a rot a t i on crop ( AP R Eas t ern Divis ion , S iwai , 1960 ) . These f igures are unlikely to be whol ly accurate but they certainly indicate what an impo rtan t component o f the sub sistence e conomy rice had be come ; it was never the cash crop that S iwais wanted it to be but it had , even tual ly , produc ed significan t changes in the sub s is t en ce economy . Once again , after the firs t f ive years of operat ion of the S iwai Rural Pro gress Society , the future o f cash cropp ing seemed to hold out lit tle oppo rtunity in the S iwai area . S iwais had seen rice and p eanut s int e rmit t en t ly s ucceed and fail , and failures had b een more common than s uc ces ses . Although didimen were ab le to o ffer an at t ractive future to co coa g rowers mo st S iwais felt that they had seen it all before ; this t ime , for the f irs t t ime , it was the adminis t rat ion , rather than th e S iwais themselves , that pushed cash cropping through ano ther d is appo int in g spell in to what they at l eas t felt would be a period o f succes s . Even so , durin g this half decade , there were the f irst real indicat ions o f very rap i d S iwai responses , via plant in g s trategies , to chan gin g crop prices . In o ther part s o f New Guinea the 1950s marked the emergence of cocoa and cof fee ; in 1 9 5 0-51 only 31 7 t ons o f cocoa b ean s and 33 tons o f co f fee b eans were expo rted . In 1 961-62 these figures were 10 , 014 tons and 3444 ton s respec t ively (Hasluck , 19 7 6 : 13 9 ) but in south Bougain ville there was no con f idence yet in the fut ure of cash crop s . In 1 9 6 0 S iwais themselves were again looking outwards ; as Fathe r Lebel , who had been s tat ioned for some t ime at Monoit u , recorded , ' The S iwai RP S is at a s tand s t il l . Many youn g men are goin g away t o work on p lantat ions t o find their t ax money ' (Catho lic Action , 1960b ) ; desp ite a s ign ifican t ins t itut ional change the future was again gloomy . Chap ter 6 Cof fee and cocoa : towards the cash economy Perhaps it is always darkest immediat ely before the dawn ; the commerc ial economy o f S iwai in 1 9 6 0 p romised very little to either the S iwais or the adminis t rat ion o f f icials who had lab oured to bring cash in to the area b ut , unknown to either , the s tage had already b een set for the mass ive expans ion o f a sin gle cash crop . Nevertheless at the s tar t o f the 1960s , apart from the disappearance o f p eanuts as a cash crop , con dit ion s were much as they had been throughout the previous de cade . The old crop s were being persevered with and there seemed to be no p romising newcomers . The administ rat ion could p romi se S iwai lit t le ; there seemed no alternat ive but to con t inue with rice , where there had somet imes been good prices , and make cop ra , for which the price was often low but there had always been a market . The fate o f the c rop that had hither to earned the mos t cash , peanut s , was discour aging but th ere was st ill some hope that a new market might be found . Nevertheless for the first t ime it was didimen and admin istrat ors , rather than S iwais themselves , who seemed to be mos t enthus ias tic , although , as Tomlin later recalled , ' the faith o f the in fluen t ials acted as a bolster ' ( 19 6 9 : 1 ) . Rice retained its impor tance for some t ime ; as the didimen enc ouraged the new t ree crop s, the S iwais main t ained their des ire to grow and sell rice . In 1961 the society directors wanted t o plan t a soc iety rice garden (on the lines o f earlier communal efforts ) but the Society ' s adviser warned them against it because o f p o s s ible problems involved in o rgani z ing labour . A year later each director was p resent in g the S o ciety at its monthly meet ing with a report on how many baskets and how much rice had been p roduced by each vil lage p er month and which vill ages were workin g bes t (p resumably at rice growing) . For the y ears 1961-62 sales of the 45 tons o f rice produced in S iwai p rovided a revenue o f £165 7 , over 90 per cent of the Society ' s income . Al though sales to the So ciety fell ( apparently b ecause the price wen t from 4 d . to 3d . ) rice planting was increas ing so that in 1 9 6 3 pro duct ion had increased to 60 t ons and DASF were 130 13 1 int roducing a new fuller-grained variety . However in 1964 there was ano ther setback ; once again the Konga mill had broken and spare p arts were unobt ainable for the best part of the y ear . Rice trade at the Society was almost non existent although the p ri ce had more than doubled to 8d . per pound . On ce aga in it was a frus trating period ; at exactly the time that rice reached its highe s t price it could not be milled . But rice p ro duct ion remain ed ahead o f its comp et itors ; even in 1 9 6 4 -65 40 tons of rice were p roduced in Siwai comp ared with 2 2 t ons of cocoa , 10 ton s o f copra and 1� t ons o f co ffee . S iwai i t s el f was becoming the main market fo r rice ; in the f irst hal f o f 1 9 6 3 S iwai people purchased rice worth £2 7 8 . 12 s from the Socie ty . The Japanese rice varieties had been rep laced by Mekeo rice from Papua , which had higher yields and was also prefe r re d as foo d . Hopes were s t ill high , mainly on the part of the administ rat ion , so that in 1964 it was expected that a new rice mill would be set up at Boku and rice growing extended into that area . This was never built . S imilarly when there was a foo d sho rtage in 1965 , followin g h eavy floodin g , the So cie ty ' s adviser hoped that this food shor tage would encourage an in crease in rice plantin g . (Why rice was expect ed to survive better than swee t potato is not cl ear . ) In 19 64-65 rice sales f rom S iwai So ciety brought in £3240 , desp ite - decreased plan ting (when the rice mill was out of orde r) ; in mid-1 965 replan t ing had begun and rice was continuing to ' make an important contribut ion to the economy ' . Despite the large income from r ice , much larger than any earned previously , this was the last f lourish o f the rice economy . The exact s equence of decline is no t clear but two factors were crit ical ; firstly , cocoa had begun to provide large incomes an� secondly, the price of rice declined sharply so that in 196 7 , when the society was purchas ing rice at only two cen t s per pound , there was little in teres t in producing it . One reflect ion of the fact that by 196 7 rice growing no longer h eld quit e the same int erest for S iwai agr iculturalists was the rather p laint ive comment of one councillor , relat ed to a mot ion on fencing in chickens , that ' even if the whole of a garden is p lanted with rice chicken s can finish it all in a s ingle day ' . Nevertheless early in 196 8 John S imiri (Mus iminoi ) , a Konga didima:n and also Chairman of th e Lo cal Government Council , and the directors o f the S iwai Society o r ganized a plan t o res tar t rice growing , in response to constant concern over the poss ib il ity that , 132 l ike almo s t al l the crops that had gone b efore , cocoa too would eventually fail . S imiri was himself then engaged in spraying a paddy rice f ield at Panake , whi ch he est imat ed at 12 acres . Something may have come of this s ince between 1 9 6 9 and 1 9 7 1 there were a numb er of r ice sales to the Soc iety from Panake ; even so the f inal dec l ine of rice had begun b ut , p redic tab ly , it was a ve ry s low decl in e . Af ter more than two decades in S iwai it was no t des t ined to d isappear quickly . Even in the 19 70s attempt s were made to revive p ro duct ion of rice for s ale . In 1 9 7 1 the Rice Growers ' As soc iat ion (Aust ralia Pty Ltd) were in teres ted in starting commercial r i ce proj e c t s in the Buin sub - district , possibly with the shared in teres t of the co-op e rat ives , following the complet ion o f the trans-isl and road in 1 9 7 2 . No thin g came of this interes t . In 1 9 75 there were more island-wide moves to rest art r i ce plan ting ; didimen toured Bougainville with n ew high-yiel d ing rice variet ies b ut there was no apparent interes t ; en thus iasm for rice had f inally evapo rat ed . The advan tages o f rice , its known comme r c ial value , ease o f growing an d access to land (un l ike permanent t ree crops ) were f inally insufficient for i t t o compete with co coa or even, in the end , sweet potat o es . Ri c e was s t ill produced for sale in S iwai at least un t il July 1 9 7 3 , when S iwai S ociety pur chased r ice worth $ 1 7 from one Panake man , but b efore that there had been no purchases s in ce November 1 9 7 1 . Once again the r i ce mill had broken down . In the two and a hal f y ears b efore that some 2 3 separat e pro ducers ( Fi gure 7 ) had sold rice to the Society earn ing $ 12 5 ; s in ce the So ciety was no longer int erested in r ice purchas in g the p r i ce was prob ab ly very low s o that much larger quan t it ies of rice may have been sol d in t ernally in S iwai marke t s , apart from b e in g grown for domest i c consumpt ion . In 1 9 7 5 , on one o ccas ion, I saw r ice from Panake on sale at Konga marke t ; it may also have b een grown on a t iny s cale in a few other villages but this s eems t o have b een the f inal flourish o f S iwai rice . It p ers isted lon gest an d earned the mos t cash for growers closes t to Konga . Ove rall rice cul tivat ion eventually proved t o be unsucce s s ful for a variety of reasons , none o f which had originally creat ed p rob lems , namely the emphas is on cotmmm a l cul t i vat ion and management . These final deteren t s included the lack of in fras t ructure , essent ially roads b oth within S iwai and between S iwai and potent ial markets , inadequat e administration guidance and f inally changes in the supply 1 33 0 0 RICE PROD U C E R S 2 4 Figure 7 . 6 8 km Rice producers 19 69-7 1 134 situat ion of r i ce in P ap ua New Guinea . (It is s ignificant that none o f tho s e expat riates who t ried was ever ab l e to make a long term commercial s uccess of rice growing anywhere in the coun try . ) None o f the s e factors was e f fe ct ively able to deter the S iwai rice producers un t il the 19 7 0s when the rap idly r i s ing price of co coa , and improved acce s s ib ility , proved b eyond doubt that emphasis could mo st effectively b e pl aced on co co a . Af ter a chequered career spanning over th ree de cades a historic cash crop di sappeared from S iwai ; dive rs ity o f crop product ion was con t inuing to declin e . Corn disappeared mo re quickly from the cash e conomy ; unlike r ice and peanut s i t had neve r b een plan t ed in s ingle crop gardens . Nor was it pr imarily a cash c rop , having been a small p art o f the S iwai garden economy fo r the whole o f the century . Its price was neve r high and , probab ly following chan gin g administ rat ion requiremen ts for foodstuf f s , the market co llapsed . Like peanuts it b ecame j ust ano ther componen t o f subsistence gardens . Copra too was neve r a very succes sful compet itor ; throughout south Bouga inville it grew badly ( Sumbak , 1 9 7 0 ) and in several areas , like wes t e rn B uin , even l imi t ed success o f co coa and r ice meant that by 1 9 6 4 copra manufacture had ceased to be important (PR Makis 5 / 64-65 ) . Copra prices after the war had s carcely r isen s i gnif i can t ly un t il the ear ly 1 9 5 0s ( Appendix I I I ) and it was generally no t un til the late 1 9 5 0 s that S iwais b egan to re-es t ablish coconut plantat ions . In the e arly 1960s the p rice o f copra on ce more s t agnated so that in many vill ages there were no real co conut plantat ion s beyond sub s is t en ce and ceremonial requirements . Thus in 1 9 6 2 Ham was the first S iroi villager to p lant a coconut plantat ion ; a few oth er villagers followed this lead but tha t was all . Other p arts of S iwai were much the same so that in 1962 there was not on e copra drier in either the Hai s i or Rataiku areas . Yet copra always retained its S ince co conut s were marginal role in the cash economy . planted as one of the shade trees for cocoa it was inevit ab le that , desp ite unp roduct ive t rees , there should be a s urplus o f coconut s above domestic requiremen t s . Con sequently in the late 1 960s , in creased cocoa plan t ings and greater use of co conut s rather than Zeucaena as a shade t re e meant that pro duct ion of cop ra increased again , although it always remained greatest in the coastal villages where there were b et ter trees . 135 The S iwa i Society purchased l i t t le copra in the early 1960s and there are no surviving records of whatever trans act ions o ccurred , hence prices and quan t it ies are unknown . One set o f ext ant records refers to the period from mid November 1 9 6 5 to mid-June 1 9 6 6 ; in this seven-month period no mor e than eight individuals sold copra t o the Soc iety ( as the price ro s e from 3d . to 4d . in that period) . Th es e s ellers came from S in inai , Kumuki , Nukui , Toito i , S iro i , Turugum, Materas and Kunnu . To tal S iwai p roduc tion mus t have been greater , s ince the Ai tara-Ko tu group were s t il l producing copra and o th er p ro ducers may also have sold t o t raders from the b each . In 1 9 6 5 the Ait ara group were st ill selling to a privat e t rader on the beach rather than to the S iwai Society who had o ffered to help them and may have been ab le t o o f fer them a better price . For tho s e who had cop ra driers the ef fort gave a reas onab le cash return ; thus the elderly leader , Manako (To itoi ) , earned £ 21 . 1 7 from 1504 pounds of copra . (Ten y ears later the price had no t increased . ) How the return to e ffort then compared with that in to co coa or co ffee is now impo ss ib le to say ; only one man sold two of these three crops at this t ime and he had l it t le o f e i th er . Th roughout the 1960s , copra again remained in the background . Co ffee One of the las t int ro duct ions int o south Bougainville was cof fee robus ta ; this seems t o have b een ent irely a government de c i sion based o_n the ava il ab il ity o f a stat ion and didiman at Konga and con s iderab le lo c al enthus iasm for all kinds o f new developmen t s . I t is unl ikely that many S iwais could have seen co f fee growing on plantat ions , although co ffee had been grown in some north Bougainville plantat ions befor e the war , an d there were app arently no lo cal pressures for its int roduction . At the s tart of 1 9 5 6 Tomlin made a co f fee nurs ery at Konga and dis t ributed seeds and marked out a plot fo r one man in I ru , cons idering that co ffee was mos t l ikely t o b e succes s ful a t higher alt itudes , indeed that it ' shoul d be planted above the cocoa l ine ' . It was al so recommended for the more remot e villages , which t ended to be higher up , because an individual grower was ab le t o process his own co ffee . It was therefore viewed by the administrat ion , at leas t , in much the s ame way as cocoa an d returns to the two crop s could also b e expected to be much the same ; admin ist rat ion policy aimed at plan t ing cof fee in areas where cocoa did not flourish (PCA , 1 9 5 6 : 4 9 ) and , as with cocoa , the admin i st rat ion recommended that adult males p f ant 5 00 t rees each . 136 I n 19 60 most of t h e cof fee in eastern S iwai was recorded as ' mainly in higher villages ; b et ter main tained than cocoa ' . Has in g (Jeku), who had previously won a prize fo r cocoa a t the Buin show, won the co ffee prize in 1 9 6 0 and a census of coffee trees throughout S iwai carried o ut in the same year ( Figure 8) found more than twice as many coffee trees as there were co co a t rees , and they were distribut ed quite widely . Konga (with 6 30 tree s ) was the only place where the co f fe e was mat ure and I ru apparen t ly the only place with mor e than one grower . There were more than 5 000 t rees spre ad ove r e ighteen villages . Neither the reconnnended number o f trees per grower no r the geographical ' cocoa l ine ' had b een ob served . Cof f ee was the first o f the two new tree crops to produce a cash return in S iwai . In July 1960 , whi ch was probab ly the first mon th in whi ch co ffee was pro duced commercially , the Society was paying l / 3d . a pound for co ffee if it was good and 9d . if it was not goo d . There was probab ly very litt le sold s ince at the s tart of 1 9 6 2 most of the co ffee in eas t e rn S iwai was s t i ll n o t b earing (APR Eas t ern Divis ion , S iwai , 61-62 ) . A census of the whole of S iwai in 1962 recorded that 250 pounds of co f f ee were sold t o the S oc iety , but no more than two b l o cks were then producin g . The s e census f i gures show an apparent (and probably spurious ) declin e in the number of co ffee t rees ; there were s ome 240 mature trees and 4 031 innna ture t rees . But by then cocoa had already gone wel l ahead ; there were eight or t en t imes as many cocoa trees and 1000 pounds of co coa were bought by the S ociety . Although the 1 9 6 1-62 annual report for the sub-dis t rict s t ated that the r e had b een no new co ffee plan t ings in S iwai , and early in 1 9 6 2 the didimen were advis ing again s t further p lant ing , there mus t have b een cont inued local int erest s ince a couple o f y ears l ater some 4 76 4 mature and 4486 immature t rees were reco rded . Co ffee may have been quickly reco gnized as in s ome way in ferior to co coa, and even pe rhaps to ri ce s ince early in the 1960s there was a lack o f in terest in some e s t ab l ished co f fee gardens . In 1964 ' p reviously neglec t ed ' co f fe e plan t at ions were b e ing worked aga in followin g o n the s p o t purchases by the S ociety at 4 / - per poun d . S ince the price of cocoa bean was then . only 4 d . per pound for wet bean ( and l / 3d . for dry bean ) cof fee s eemed to have reasonable price advantages , an d int erest was s t imul ated despite the greater labour input s that coffee required . Even so there was l i t t l e enough plan t in g or product ion ; in 1 9 6 3 the S o ciety received three quart ers o f a ton of co ffee ( comp ared with 12 tons of cocoa ) . 137 Figure 8 . Cof fee producing villages 1960 . S ource : 1960 Village Census 1 38 The only y ear for whi ch there is a complet e record of co f fee sales t o the S iwai So ciety ( the only out let for co ffee) ( Figur e 9 ) . Thi s was a year in wh ich the coffee is 1965 price was 1/- pe r pound , whi ch was lower than in the previous y ear , but s ince the co coa p r i ce remained much lower than this , ' the previous ly neglec ted cof fee indus t ry has had new life breathed in to it ' (PR Buin , 12 / 64-6 5 ) . Sales p art ially reflect the suppo sed earlier dis t ribution of coffee t rees ( Fi gure 8 ) ; Tonui had inco rporated Taira in to a s ingle l in e vil lage by then but other apparen t changes in dist rib ut ion probably indi cat e neglect of some of the earl iest coffee plantations . The only one o f the f irst So ciety directors who then produced co ffee was S iwa of Tonui ; the rest , an d almost all S iwa is who subs equently b ecame bus ines smen , were already connni t ted to co coa . Al though one or two mwnis , in clud ing Norus e o f Kumuki , were s elling co ffee , the l imit ed evidence sugge s t s that t rad it ional S iwai leaders were not at the fore fron t o f co f f ee growing . Co coa and especial ly rice were crops for whi ch there was a local demand an d in whi ch both tradit ional and younger ' modern ' leaders took the in it iat ive ; cof fee was a crop reconnnen ded primarily by the admin is t rat ion . Tho se who t ried it were a much more random sample of villagers . Income from the cof fee was not great ; only three growers earned mo re than £10 in the year 19 6 5 . The lead in g s eller was Unkon g (Arnio ) who had sold 4 80 potmds and received £24 . Unkon g was born in Arnio around 192 5 . Before the war he went to work on a plan t at ion at Hakau in northern Bouga invill e ; his father rece ived a p re s ent o f about £2 when he s i gned on whil s t he himself worked a three year contract durin g whi ch he claims t o have received three shill in gs a month and £30 at the c omp l et ion of the contract . (His real in come may have been l ess than £1 0 . ) He worked on b o th co coa and co f fee there so that when he decided , aro und 1 9 6 0 , to plant cof fee on his wife ' s ground near Mamago ta he was already famil iar with i t . Some prior experience with cof fee seems to have b een the main characteris t ic of the early coffee growers . Unkon g was no more famil iar with coco a and was en couraged by the didimen 's suppo rt for co ffee . At f irst pleased with his income , he became disappo inted that he had b acked the wrong crop but cont inued produc ing co ffee unt il about 1 9 6 9 . Soon aft erwards he planted his first cocoa t rees near Mamagota ; now, 139 © 0 POUNDS 2 Figure 9 . 4 OF COFFE E 6 8 km Coffee product ion 1 9 6 5 140 as an older man w ith no par t icular n eed for cash , he has no mo re than 2 0 0 cocoa t rees but has an adequate in come . His co f fee t rees are reverting to bush . Nevertheles s two y ears _ o f l imited success encouraged some S iwai co f f ee pro ducers , especially s in ce in 1 9 6 7 the Society was payin g only two cents p er pound for c o co a (wet b e an ) compared with 15 cents per pound of co f f ee . It was only then that the local didimen began to ac tually dis courage tho se who wanted to plant cof fee ; even then in Muwoku village , at leas t , growers were s t ill reques t ing co f fee in 19 6 8 . By mid-19 6 9 the Bana Society (of Nagovis i ) was handl ing s everal tons o f co f fee per y ear , the Buin So ciety was handlin g about f ive s acks and the S iwai So ciety even less than that . In other p arts o f s outh Bougainville co f fee seems to have s tarted mo re slowly than in S iwai , although in upland areas i t was always expect ed by the adminis t rat ion to rival cocoa . Thus in upland Buin , in 1 9 6 6 , it was ' s t ill thought to have the b es t po t ent ial ' (PR Buin 7 / 19 6 5-6 6 ) and a y ear later was s t ill b e in g planted whilst in upland Nagovisi it remained even longer . Co f fee produc t ion was s t ill increas in g there in 1 9 7 2 when the kiap s t at ed that it s t ill s eemed to b e wo rthwhile (PR Boku 1 / 72 - 7 3 ) . Alt hough histo rical ly more important in S iwai , the compet i t ion from cocoa was too great and co ffee disappeared earl ier there than elsewhere in south Bougainville ; even so it was a s low declin e . S iwais who had inve s t ed in co f fee were natural ly reluctan t to abandon a permanent t ree crop that h ad b een a reliab le source o f cash income . But in i t s l a s t y ears the co f f ee came mainly f rom the uplan d areas where it h ad b e gun ( Figure 1 0 ) ; in the end the demise was fair ly abrupt although even in 1 9 7 0 the Buin co-operat ive o f f icer was s t il l t rying t o f ind a b et t er market (po s s ib ly CRA) for S iwai c o f fee , and four t ons were pro duced in the y ear . In the penul t imate year 1 9 71 there were f i f teen sellers ; in the last year there were only f ive . S iwai co f fee p ro duct ion con t inued un t il ab out S eptember 19 7 2 when the S o c ie ty recorded its las t purchas es ; the f ive growers then were from the villages of Tonui ( two ) , Iru , Moko l ino and Maino ita . Kuba (Maino ita) earned $ 1 8 . 80 and the others earned $2 7 . 32 between them ; co ffee p ro du ct ion ended , as it had begun , quietly . The ma in dis incen t ive to great er co f fee plant in g , an d especially pro duct ion , s eems t o have been the demand o n labour rather than low prices . Although co f f ee is supposedly 141 A C O F F E E S E L L E RS TO S IWAI S OC I E T Y � c: 0 0 2 F igure 1 0 . 4 6 8 km Coff ee p roducers 197 1-72 142 unsuit ab l e t o a wet , equat orial climat e b ecause of its need fo r a short dry , cool spell it grew quit e s a t is factorily in S iwai and there is no evidence that the trees thems elves were unproduct ive . S iwa is foun d that , apart from the work invo lved in establishing a plantat ion , the labour o f picking , carry in g , ferment ing , pulp ing an d carrying to Konga was t o o great . Main t enance , such a s prunin g , was rarely carried out , even by the b iggest co ffee pro ducers . Cocoa was less labour int ens ive and even rice seemed to be much the same ; co coa eventually replaced rice and , scattered throughout S iwai , co ffee plantat ions are revert ing to fore s t . Cocoa t riumphant At the s t art of the 1 9 60s co coa growin g was st ill a novel venture thro ughout S iwai ; in January 19 60 the didima:n Hal ing counted 15 b lo cks of 32 8 0 t rees in Rataiku ( two were larger than 5 00 t rees ) . Only three were mo re than a year old ; all were badly managed , there were o ft en no shade t rees and co coa was usually mixed with sub s i stence gardens (APR , E as t ern Division , S iwai , 19 6 0 ) . A year later when the f irst systemat ic count throughout S iwai was conducted co coa was growing almost everywhere (with the except ion of the Hai s i area which may no t have b e en vis i t ed ) . There were over 7 000 mature and 1 8 , 000 immature t rees spread over 35 villages (Figure 1 1 ) . Apart f rom Muwoku , mos t of the villages with mature t rees were fairly close t o Konga , although Kin irui , the n earest village , had no trees at all . Arnio , with 800 mature and 1 89 6 immature t rees , seems to have led the field with Mus imino i close behind . ( As in every sub sequent coun t the didimen themselves were expected t o count every t ree , al though even in the earliest years this would have b e en ext remely di f f i cul t because of the disp ersal o f village t rees , hen ce mo s t coun t s were b ased on growers ' e s t ima tes . ) In 1 9 6 2 , another coun t was made by the dire ctors of the S iwai Soc iety (Figure 12 ) whi ch more or les s con firms the dist r ib ut ion recorded in the f irs t survey . Even so , the di f f eren ces b e tween the two surveys are in dicat ive of the l imit ed value of all crop coun t s ; mo st are no mor e than general guides t o numbers and d i s t r ib ut ion . Their accuracy has steadily declined . Although there were growers throughout S iwai there were few o f them and mos t S iwais were quite un in t erested in cocoa . However , the didimen had b ecome ext remely enthus ias t ic ; at the Coun c il mee t ing o f Novemb er 1961 the Buin didiman told the Coun c il to make a rule that each man must plan t 5 00 cocoa t rees an d look af ter them. He was also con cerned that people 143 were no t taking enough in tere s t in co coa and that tho se who did have plantat ions were no t lookin g after them but were allowin g the bush to encroach on the cocoa ; ' Sapos man i no save lukautim gut kakao garden bi longem, didiman em i gat lo long rausim dispe la garden, taso l mipe la i save isi long yupe la ( If someone does no t look after his cocoa plantat ion properly , the didiman himself has a law for ge t t ing rid o f this garden , b u t so f a r we have b een easy o n you) ' ( S iwai LGC Minutes , Nov . 19 6 1 ) . How the didimen might have r emoved a garden is f ar from cl ear ; they were j us t very keen on cocoa growing . The o ff i c ial guidelines for cocoa growing were that each hous eho ld should have a 5 00-t ree holding ( covering about 2� acre s ) with a pos s ib il i ty , at least in Nasioi ( Ogan , 19 7 2 : 12 6 ) al though it may never have b een expres s ly formulated in S iwai , o f working up to a 3000-tree plantat ion ( on 15 acres ) which could b e main t ained by a household with two adult sons . During the y ear 1954-55 a Cacao Action Plan had been drawn up by the nat ional adminis trat ion , where the principle o f 5 00-tree b lo cks had first b een s e t out . The ' aim was to p revent indis criminate planting , s ince didimen believed that small areas tended to be forgo t t en and s ub s e quently became a home for pests and dis eases . (At much the s ame time 500 trees was also b eing reconnnended as an appropriate number o f co f fee trees to p lant whils t , a few y ears late r , the number once more reappeared as the reconnnended number o f rubber trees . ) The council was no t ent irely convinced about making any rules but agreed at l east to recommend tha t S iwais look after their co coa gardens . Each month , almo s t without excep tion , the councillors were lectured on th e values o f hard work and , to a lesser extent , health and educat ion ; the counc illors themse lves o f t en responded willingly but their messages were not always t ransferred into ac t ion . The next month was no excep t ion ; the Buin As s istant Di strict o f fi cer pointed out : Yupe la; lukim long Kie ta, o l i gat 300, 000 diwai kakao, na p les ia Kie ta emi' no s tre tpe la graun o ls em long Siwai, em i ple s i gat maunten taso l na bikpe la diwai moa . Na yu, yu gat gutpe la graun na yu save les long mekim garden . Siwai i gat 20, 000 diwai taso l na dispe la em i liklik samting long o l narape la . Trai mekim dispe la yia 1 96 2 em i wanp e la gutpe la yia tru bi long yupela o l Siwai (You have seen around Kieta that they have 300 , 0 00 cocoa trees and the Kieta area isn ' t level l and 1 44 A 0 M AT U R E 2 F igure 1 1 . 4 COCO A 6 TREES 8 km Cocoa producing villages 1 9 6 1 1 45 • 0 M A TU R E 2 Figure 1 2 . COCOA 4 6 P L A N TAT I O N S 8 km Cocoa producing villages 19 62 146 l ike in S iwai ; i t ' s only go t mountains and much bigger t ree s . But you people , you have good land S iwai has and you ' re too lazy to make gardens . only 2 0 , 000 t rees and this i s t iny compared with o ther areas . Try and make 1 9 6 2 an excellent year for the people of S iwai) . S iwai cocoa t rees produced the ir f irst co co a in 1 9 6 1 . A small amount o f cocoa was sold on an experimental basis to DAS F . However almost all o f this cocoa was sun-dried ; there had not b een enough s un and two tons had ro t t ed and b een completely des t royed so that the only cocoa purchases that the socie ty made in that y ear were from Mos igeta in Bait s i . ( Indeed the society had made even earlier c ocoa pur chas es , all o f them from Mo s iget a . ) In March 1 9 6 2 the S iwai Society made the ir first purchases of S iwai cocoa . Sellers of we t bean had to carry their p roduce to the DASF s tat ion , apparently on only one day p er fortnight , where they then had to s t ay and assis t the s tat ion lab our to dry the bean The so that they would know how the ferment ary wo rked . fermentary had been p lanned in 1 9 60 when it was also determined that the ini tial paymen t for cocoa beans (pos s ibly wet but probab ly dry ) would be 6d . per pound . A new c ash crop had emerged . The earl i es t exis t ing records o f co coa pur chas ing by S iwai So c ie ty dat e from Augus t 1 9 6 2 , only a few mon ths after the firs t sales within S iwai , and the record o f the twelve mon ths a f ter that provide s a valuab le guide to the d i s t r ib The ut ion of p rod uct ion and the incomes o f early producers . amount sold to the socie ty was less than the potent ial total S iwai product ion since ve ry small quant it ies taken from or left on immature t rees were not sold to the society . Although one Kuhino man sold two pounds to the society and re ceived 6 d . , mo s t sellers carried much mo re to Konga and ignored Rather more important , in October 1962 the small amo un t s . so ciety took various quant i t ies o f cocoa from f i f t een sellers whi ch , when i t reached Rabaul , was rej e c t ed by the inspectors ; the society re fus ed to pay anythin g to the growers . Mo reover all the co coa that the society obtained in the four months between November and Feb ruary was lost when the MVS Polurrian cap s i z ed ; once again no one was paid al though in neither case were the growers at faul t . S everal o f these s ent no It was not an impressive mo re co coa to the society that year . s t art t o S iwai coco a market ing y et , unl ike co f fe e , there was never disappo intment in the amoun t of labour involved in ob tain in g satis factory marke t prices . There are no records 14 7 o f negle cted cocoa plantat ions . Product ion figures from 1962-63 ( including co coa rej e c ted and drowned) emphas ize the e arly concentrat ion of product ion , ! and growers , around Konga ( Fi gure 13 ). Western S iwai apparently produced very little despite their clo se links with the Bait s i area where cocoa p roduct ion had first b egun in south Bougainville . All the big pro ducers were even then drying much o f their own p roduct ion ; fermentaries were being operated by Has in g ( Jeku) and Kepoama (Musiminoi) whils t Kuipuru ( Arnio) and Kuiaka (Kapana) had access to the society fermentaries . Surpri sin gly only two o f the seven directors o f the socie ty were pro ducing cocoa ; their rhetoric and ob servat ions had no t convinced even themselves . S ince the price o f wet b ean o s c illated b etween 2 d . and 3d . _ a poun d , tho s e who earned most from co coa were tho se who dried their b eans and received from 9 d . t o 1 / - per pound . Kuiaka earned most in the year £5 7 . 19 s - desp ite los in g about £1 7 worth in the Polurrian . Kepoama received £48 . 3s an d Kuipuru got £31 . l s ; b oth o f them also lo s t cocoa in the s ea . S ignificant ly the b igges t earner o f all was the company plantat ion in Arnio village ; the vil lage produced co coa which sold fo r £62 . 4s . I t was s carcely surprising when the owner o f the gro un d on which the connnun al plantation was growing decided to take it over hims elf a year later . Kepoama , who received £48 in that year was the app arent l eader . Within three more months he had received £2 36 . 7 s from the s o c iety , an ext raordinary sum in 1963 . Born around 1 9 25 he had a couple o f years _ in s chool , served in the war with ANGAU but never went away to p lant at ion work and therefore was quite unfamiliar with coco a growing . Af ter the war h e was one o f the first people t o b e intere s t ed in rice growing and s ub sequently became the first person in S iwai to plant cocoa . En couraged by Barry Holloway , at that t ime a young policeman in Buin and with the as s is tance o f Hatah then working in a Buin store , who p rovided money to pay for lab our which cost two shillin gs , p lus food , per day , he cleared land and p lanted about 250 t rees . When he travelled to New Britain in 195 6 , as one of the Siwai Society direc tors , his own cocoa was al ready b earing fruit . 1 Dry b ean product ion figure s have been conve r t ed to wet b ean here as elsewhere in the t ext us ing the rule o f thumb that the re is a 60 per cent weight lo ss from wet to dry b ean . 148 @ 5 POU N D S OF WET BEANS N U M B E R O F PRO D U C E R S F igure 1 3 . Cocoa Production 19 62-63 149 Wi th the assis tance of Hat ah ' s bro ther , Tokura , he buil t the first tiny fe rmen tary in S iwai , which used both fire and the sun to dry the b eans . His f irs t output , one rice sack ( about 50 pounds ) o f By dry beans was sold to Tomlin a t the society . 1 9 6 3 he had more mat ure cocoa t rees than any o ther S iwai and was already buying small quantities o f wet bean in the Hari-Mamagota area t o dry and re-sell to the socie ty . He was the first co coa based S iwai bus ines sman . In the first y ear the soc iety had demonst rated that al though there might s t ill be p roblems cocoa provided for a few individuals an income greater than had b een achieved from any o ther crop . I t was a demon s t ration that was not ignored al though ironically the so ciety itself made a loss on co coa in 1962 because much of its purchase was o f poor qual i ty . Al though the to tal income from cocoa was not great S iwais obs erved that the few individuals involved received much large r s ums than had been p reviously ob tained from any other c ash crop . Con sequently even this t iny new income , because o f it s uneven dist ribut ion , may have b een enough to generate the int erest tha t resul t ed in a mas s ive ext ens ion of plan t ings ; it was estimated that in the nine months , between Ap ril and Decemb er 1962 , some 16 , 5 00 t ree s were planted in Siwai bringing the tot al numb er of t rees to about One year later , at the end o f 1 9 6 3 , th ere were a 52 , 000 . Co coa growin g was unde r way . repo rted 119 , 000 t rees . Many o f the exho rtat ions that adminis t rat ion o f f icials made in the Council and So ciety mee t ings were appeals to a S iwai spirit o f p ro gress and development rather than to a mor e obj ect ive analysis o f the e conomic s ituat ion . The kiap who had claimed at the Ap ril 1962 Council mee t ing that S iwai was b ehind both Buin and Nagovis i in their rat e of cocoa plantin g was p robab ly fairly accurat e but when later in the year it was s t ated that ' Siwai em i Zas tru Zang o Z wok bi Zong painim rrani ( S iwai is the very l as t p lace in s t artin g work t o get money) ' , this was somethin g o f an exaggerat ion , albeit p ardonable , espec ially s in ce a dif ferent kiap was no t ing at the same t ime tha t , in southern Buin , cash crops ' remain merely a s ideline for the indus t rious ' (PR Buin 2 / 62 - 6 3 ) whils t three y ears l ater in eas tern Buin the people were s t ill more int eres ted in coconuts s ince they cons idered that cocoa was a European crop . S ome o f them felt that s in c e they were unable t o compete with Europeans they would s t i ck to copra ; they claimed that the high coco a p rices did not 150 impress them (PR Baku 5 / 6 5 -6 6 ) . S iwai , in reality , was ahead of almo s t all th e rest of south Bougainville . There we re s t ill however appeals directed to particular villages tha t seemed to be un intere s t ed in cash crops so that the first youn g S iwai didiman told them : Sampe la p les o l i no laik p lanim kakao na kofi sa1nting . Tupe la p les hia, Siroi na Ruisei, o l i s lip ye t . . . o Z i no girap . Moa gut o l man bi long Siroi i mas tingting gut na girap long p Zanim kakao long dispe la yia ( Some villages are no t in terested in planting coco a , co f fe e or any cash crop . Two places in S iwai , S iro i an d Ruisei , are st ill as l eep . . . they haven ' t got s tarted . It would b e b e t t er if the S iroi men thought wisely and began to plant co coa this year ) . A year lat er in 1 9 6 4 , whilst the councillors from Hanon g , Tonui , Arnio , Mo ronei and Kapana were claiming that every man in their villages had planted co co a , although not necessarily as many as 5 00 t rees each , the council cha irman was demanding an explanat ion o f why S iro i villagers had not ye t s tarted . There were known to be disput es over land ownership b ut the chairman , who was from Unanai , and therefore familiar with S i ro i , observed , Mi save sampe la Siroi o l i save gat gaden taso l, o l i no save wok long en o l taim . Samp e la o l i save wok long gaden bi long o l long wanpe la de taso l long wan wik samting ( I know that some p eopl e o f S iro i only have food gardens and don ' t work there all the t ime . Some only work in their gardens about one day a week) . A mot ion was unanimously agreed that every man had to p l ant 5 00 co co a trees . The Society and the Council were at last united in their at t empt s to encourage cash crop pro duct ion . The Soc iety directors maintained their p ressure on vil lagers to plant cash crops an d reported the s uccess or f ailure o f these in it iat ives . In lat e 19 6 3 the So ciety received repo rts f rom the direc tors re sponsible for the Rataiku and Korikunu areas . In Rat aiku , two villages , Mo rokaimoro and Mokol ino , were 'empty tru ' ; they had no cocoa , co f fee , rice o r coconut s . In the Korikunu area , Ru ' nai and Ko tu were the s ame whils t in Hari , the young wanted t o plant cocoa but the o l d were 15 1 preventing their acces s t o ground . Indeed this was a more general problem ; Father Leb el , then stationed at Mono itu , obs erved how some men would plant on three or four plo t s o f ground b e fo re mat ril ineage elders allowed them t o keep their co coa on the site (pers . conun. 19 75 ) . There were no reports from other p arts o f S iwai but a So ciety s tore had b een built at S ininai and a ferment ary was bein g cons tructed there . The census that was carried out at about the s ame t ime ( Figure 14 ) indicates that the s t at ed dist ribut ion was more or less true ; in Ruisei , the largest of all S iwai villages , there was not a single cocoa grower whereas villagers on either s id e had more than ten . Apart from a few mainly smaller villages , cocoa had reached almost every corner o f S iwai in c luding Iru , the s upposed st ronghold o f co f fee growin g . Ab solutely everyone was convinced about the virtues o f cocoa ; S o c iety and Coun cil , didimen and S iwais were all equally enthus ias t i c . So too were the mi ssion s ; Father Lebel (pers . conun. 19 75 ) rec alled how by about 1960 he was t ellin g S iwais to plant cocoa in his s e rmons and in his convers at ion s . P ro gress was now rapid . Even in this phase o f cocoa growing a number o f the earlies t cocoa plant ers had b egun t o hire l abour ( pp . 2 0 1 - 2 ) Accordin g to Tomlin (pers . comm. 1 9 7 7 ) very few o f the early cocoa growers spent money ; rather they s aved it unt il they had enough to hire labour . Nagovis i labourers were recrui t ed to clear ground for more ext ens ive cocoa plant ations and were p aid wages of around £1 per month ; many remained in S iwai for p eriods o f over three months . Thi s employment s ituat ion , which s eems to have few contemporary parallels el sewher e in P apua New Guinea , l as t ed for four o r f ive y ears after 1 9 5 5 and ended primarily b e cause Nagovis is began to develop their own cocoa plantat ions . It was an early ind icat ion o f the determinat ion of the early cocoa producers . S iwai society made its first pro fits from coco a in 1 9 6 3 and in the y ear ending in May 1964 it provided the main income o f the s ociety ( £9 9 6 out o f a to tal o f £1610) . As one didiman noted with pride , ' Rott ing o f pods on the trees , lack o f o rganized pro duction , t ransportat ion e t c . . . . is now ancient his tory ' . The s ame year was the one in which co coa planting really t ook a hold in S iwai ; in the s in gle year of 1964 about 140 , 000 co coa t rees were planted in S iwai ( Figure 1 6 ) a rate that was not quite main tained in the fo llowing year when cocoa p rices reached a record pos t-war low (Appendix I I I and Figure 1 7 ) . The Konga fermentary was working satis factorily and more amb i t ious developmen t 152 @) • 0 N U M BE R NO 2 Figure 1 4 . OF GROW E R S G R OW E R S 4 6 8 km Co coa growers 1963 153 proj ects were Wlder way ; in 1 9 6 3 the Soc ie ty expanded cocoa buying to include Nagovisi , Bait s i and Banon i but only dry bean was purchas ed s ince there was too much t ime and labour involved in buying wet bean . Con sequen t ly the Society secretary recorded that ' centralized fermentaries have b een const ruc t ed throughout the above areas ' whilst the Society had also b e gun t o build ano ther fermentary and store at Kan gu on the Buin coas t . Co coa could be carried and s to red there when t ransport to Buin was easy ; there were eleven large rivers between Boku an d Buin and unpredictable floods had prevented co coa reaching exp e c t ed ship s . ( I t was even claimed that basket product ion had fallen b ecause o f the int erest in cocoa plan t in g . ) Both admin i s tration an d S iwais remained convinced about the po t ent ial of cocoa. In the y ear ending in S ep t emb er 1965 , despite low cocoa prices and bad weather (wh i ch apparently reduced yields ) co coa gave the Society an income o f £2 3 3 7 o u t o f a total o f £4 785 ( rice still contribut ed £62 7 ; b aske ts b rought in £12 7 6 and co ffee a mere £131) . For most of this period the So ciety pai� 2 d . a pound for we t bean and 9 d . fo r dry bean . All the earlie s t So ciety co coa sal es were to Rabaul Tradin g Company ; there were s t ill the familiar diff icult ies of transpo rt plus o ther mo re llll familiar problems . In 1965 Rowntrees , ult imately the main purchaser o f New Guinea cocoa , re fused to give a grade to the whole o f S iwai product ion b e cause o f its t ast e . (Ten years l ater good S iwai cocoa was the best in Bougainville and ranked with any in the wo rld . ) Nevertheless by 1965 the developmen ts in S iwai were con s i dered to be the best in Bougainvill e . Just as S iwais had gone to New Britain to s ee how cocoa was grown and so cieties operat ed so , in its turn , the S iwai S o ciety became a mo del o f integrated development , based upon coco a , and there were o f fi ci al vis itors from Buin , Kie ta and Buka , all areas which had hitherto been in advance o f S iwai in terms of cash crop exp an s ion . By then some large co coa plant ers were b eginning to emerge in S iwa i . In mid-1965 the Buin Annual Report l isted seven ind ividual grower s in s outh Bougainville wi th more than 1000 t ree s , b ut all were in Buin . One o f these had 3000 t ree s ; although none had ful l-t ime labour some were hirin g men fo r short p eriods of t ime . Widokuma had begun a separate Mo s igett a Company in Baits i ; the company had 6000 cocoa trees , were purchas in g wet bean f rom neighbouring villages and market in g their co co a independen t ly . However a 1963 cocoa census of S iwai had already iden t i f ied ten growers with more than one thousand trees , al though none o f 154 them had a thous and mature t rees . ( It is po s s ib le that this is wh at th e Rep o rt in cluded and that there were s t ill no large S iwai pro ducers even in 1 9 6 5 . ) In 1 9 6 3 Soiri (Kapana) , who was a didiman at Konga , had 216 8 innna ture trees , whil s t neither Kepoama n o r Kuipuru were far b ehin d . Buin was not as far ahead as the Repo rt impl ied . But it was not all s t eady progres s ; in July 1965 cocoa prices s lumped to a low o f £ 6 9 p e r ton ( in s t o re , Rabaul ) . There was a growing feel ing , amon gs t both expat riates and Bouga invilleans , that it was scarcely wo rth the price of picking and proces s ing the b ean s . One kiap was anticipat ing serious unrest in the future (PR Buin 11 / 6 4 -65 ) . This turned out to be the rock bot tom price ; there was no unrest , s imply a delayed expans ion in plan t ing unt il prices ros e again . Cocoa eas ily survived its only cris is of con fidence and , in th e three y ears that followed , co coa prices went up again , the So ciety had a ' meteoric rise ' and turnover in creased six- fold . One o f the few y ears for which there are reas onab ly comp rehens ive records of the purchases of the S iwai Socie ty is 19 6 5 -6 6 , which also happens to b e the las t y ear in whi ch the S o ci ety dealt with a s ub s t ant ial variety of agricultural pro duce . In that year of low cocoa p rices they paid out $ 12 , 3 8 7 to 7 75 members ; the mo st important product of all was baske t s fo r whi ch the So ciety p aid $ 4 9 3 7 (40 per cen t ) , clos ely followed by co coa purchases o f $ 4 914 (40 per cent ) . Rice ( $ 9 5 2 ; 8 per cent ) , co f fe e ( $ 811 ; 7 per c en t ) and copra ( $ 6 5 2 ; 5 per cent ) were minority specialit ies : r ice and cof fee decl in ing and copra remain ing much as it had done for some t ime al though in the co coa p rice slump o f 1965 copra prices had b rie fly been better than cocoa prices . Un fortunat ely there are no adequat e Society records o f b asket purchases yet i t seems that for more than a decade after the start of the Society , baskets remain ed a stan dby product s o that whenever there was some cr is is in agriculture , o r merely a lull before t ree c rops became ripe , b asket p roduct ion inc reased significantly . As early as June 1 9 5 6 , Rangai (Panake ) had a ' wholesale sto re ' deal ing in baske t s ; the r e was always an identif iable market and s t eady in comes were always po s s ible . Indeed the first indi cat ion from a pa t ro l report that there was an apparent ly permanent divers ion of labour f rom b asket s to agriculture came in 19 6 7 when the k-iap ob s e rved that ' money earned from baskets is supplement ary to earnin gs from cocoa or copra (unle ss the person doesn ' t have any ) ' and that ' they are usually made in spare t ime and no t dur in g the day (when garden or co coa wo rk take precedenc e ) ' 155 ( P R Konga 1 / 6 7-68) . Baskets provided something o f a prob lem and the S ociety was always amb ivalen t in it s at titude to baske t producers . At t imes of poor crop p roduct ion they were dependent on baske t purchas es t o retain profitab ility and consequen t ly lashed out against tho se who sold their baskets elsewhere o r who came to t rade fo r them; there were many of these occas ions s ince demand for baske tware for a very long t ime s eemed t o b e above the supply . On the other hand , when the Society was tempo rarily short o f cash from overspendin g o n cocoa purchases , a s in July 196 7 , the directors agreed to suspend basket buying in this cas e for two mon ths b e caus e o f its low p ro fitability . Five y ears lat er t h e s ituat ion was much the same , with the Socie ty un in teres ted in f inding new marKet s for what app eare d to b e a surplus o f baske t s . In that f ive-year period the arrival o f a large numb er of Europeans to work in the mine operat ion had result ed in a considerab le inc rease in demand , a rise in p rice and the product ion of large numbers of sub-standard b aske t s by les s regular makers ( cf . War d , 19 75 : 76 ) . When this market had been s aturated prices fell and producers were dissat is fied . Neve rtheless after 1 9 6 5 , for the first t ime , a cash crop promised an income cons i s t ent ly high er than could b e ob tained from basket-making . Cocoa and companies Rather l ike the communal rice gardens that had b egun when widespread rice plant ing s tar ted , the people from almo s t every village in S iwai , and indeed elsewhere in Bougainville , planted communal coco a plantat ions in their vil lages , at much the same time that they began to plant the individual c o coa plantat ions . Thus in S iroi village , a lat e starter in co coa growin g , the village men worked together in the mid1960s to clear and p lant cocoa plantat ions for three of the more p rominent villagers ; after this they cleared and planted a cocoa plantat ion , the S iro i Company plantat ion , for the whole vil lage . This was done essent ially at the ins t igat ion of a youn ger man , then the village councillor , who had become convin ced o f the n eces sity to ins t i gate bus iness- type act ivit ies in th e village , and who had already seen the s t art o f compan ies (S , NM-kampan.i ) , as all these essent ially plantat ion ent e rp rises were known , elsewhere in S iwai . A l it t le l ater , and in the same way , a copra plantat ion was planted on the coast n ear Aitara ( s ince two village men had access to land and it was believed that it would be easy to load copra ont o ships there) . The es sen t ial aim of the S iro i Company was to t rade cocoa and copra and save the money 15 6 unt il there was enough to buy a truck for the village which would enab le further business developmen t . Although the lat ter aim was never r ealized , the S iroi Company , which could depend on the lab our of all the village men for one day a week for s everal years , made a considerab le income from cocoa Inevitab ly selling and some income from cop ra sellin g . disput es over the receip t s based on inadequate maint enance of t he re cords make it impossible to as sess the Company ' s income ; the receipts t hat exist in S iro i sugges t that in the years from 1 9 7 0 to 19 72 the Company made at least $ 100 a y ear from both cocoa and cop r.a sales to the S iwai S ociety alone , in which the Company had its own share . Comp ared with the achievement of s ome o ther vil lage compan ie s that of S iroi was unimpressive ; o ther village s , inc luding Kumuki and Toit o i , certainly eventually earned enough from their companies to purchase land cruisers , and many of the village companies were runnin g trade s tores by the start of the 19 70s . By the mid19 70s few of the companies were s t ill as success ful as they had b een only half a decade earlier ; mos t had succumb ed in some way t o the t ide o f individualism . Despite the failure o f the early conmnmal rice garden s , in th e sense that the reco rds were inadequate an d d isputes aro se among participant s after the first flush o f enthus iasm was over , the conmrunal e thic was maintained and the village companies exemp lified this ethic . Once aga in group ventures became more important at a t ime when innovat ions were bein g in corporated int o th e village economy . This par t i cular fo rm o f communal organ izat ion , the Company , was almost ub iquitous in S iwai in the mid-19 60s although the t erm kampani itself seems to have emerged around the s t art o f the 1960s . In 19 6 8 , a y ear when some companies such as that in Arnio village had already disin t e grated , there were at least 5 0 villages in S iwai with co coa compan ies ( Figure 15 ) ; this p ar t icular lis t , culled from a variety o f sour ces , is undoub t edly in complete whi l st the smaller villages , many of which did no t have companies , may have worked alongsi de their neighbo ur s in a s in gle company . Mo reover the company plantat ions wer e almo st a l l very large ; although new plan t in gs were rarely carried out on the company plantat ions after about 196 7 many were , for s everal y ear s afterwards , the largest s ingle holdin g o f cocoa in the village . The S iroi Company plantat ion , with about 1000 t rees was the lar ge st in S iroi fo r n early a decade and there were a number of other companies with more than a thousand t rees . The essence o f the compan ies , as in S iroi , was that they linked together men from di f feren t l ineages within a village in a s ingle co-op erat ive ent e rprise although 15 7 0 VIL L A G E COMPA N I E S 1 c: .�, 0 2 Figure 1 5 . 4 6 8 km Village comp anies 1 9 6 8 15 8 in many villages , as was t rue also in Nagovisi (Nash , 19 7 4 : 107-8) , the companies had a dispersed memb ership based on membership in a s in gle mat ril ineage group . The s e latter companies wer e invariab ly the mo s t success ful . As in the earl ier communal ventures there were almo s t always disput es over the organi z at ion o f work and the use o f the in come from crop sales . Thus as early as the middle of 1964 a Council agenda mo t ion read , ' All those who set up companies (NM-wok kampani ) mus t in form b o th the kiap and the co uncil s ince plenty o f disputes arise out o f them ' . The minutes of this mee t ing are lost but the p rob l ems rose again s in ce in 1966 the councillors were once again debat in g the topic and con cludin g that the companies were a ' good thin g ' . In th e S iroi Company , which is probab ly typ ical o f mos t S iwai comp an ie s , the re were con t inuous disputes which eventually resul t ed in the decl ine of co-op erat ive work on the co coa plantat ion and the almost complete abandonment o f the co conut plan tat ion . The Company had its own bank account and income was depo s i t ed there but it was rarely drawn upon for any reason ; some o f the early a ims , inc luding payment o f s chool fee s and medical charges ( cf . Nash , 1 9 74 : 108 ) , s eem never to have b een realized . Individuals who fel t that the income should h ave been dis t r ibuted for the s e and o ther purpo ses became dis illus ioned , failed to turn up for work on the plantat ion and thereby created further o rganizational prob l ems , in almo s t exactly the s ame way as had happened on the r ic e gardens o f a decade e arlier . Exact ly the same probl ems o ccurred in the co coa companies o f Nagovis i and Mit chel l ' s explanat ion o f these is als o valid for S iwai : It is diff icult for Nagovis i , with no clear hereditary leader ship , t o decide on how decis ions shall be made . Probl ems will be t alked over ext ens ively , but a s t ubborn individual can keep a decis ion from b e ing t aken , even when the o thers are agreed . Also , there is a definite disinclin at ion on the part of most Nagovis i fo r argument and heated debat e ; a p erson o r a couple who are unhappy about some aspect o f the kampani are much more likely to withdraw quietly and cease to par t icipate than they are to cause a ruckus Within the kampani there were no e f fe c t ive s an c t ions to force tmwilling labourers to main tain the c ac ao , nor were there any o rganizat ional mechanisms which would allow for the dividin g up of any funds which might b e earned [ this . • . . • • 159 problem.] was usually the one which led to the dissolut ion of the group . . . I suspect that this re fl ec t s a belief on the part o f older Nagovis i that money is to be equated with viasi [ shell valuab les ] , t reated in the s ame way and hoarded . The thought that the communal p ile o f money is growing is said to be one whi ch makes old people very happy ; they do no t care whether it is dist ributed or n o t . Young people , however , usually do n o t see things in this l ight (Mit chell , 1 9 7 6 : 89-90 ) . The companies foundered o n t h e s ame rocks that had sunk the rice s chemes and mos t of the e arly s t o re s {pp . 249-50) . Int ended t o move the agricultural economy towards a ' modern ' economy organized around b us iness princ iples , their e s s en t ial communal o rgan izat ion , roo t ed in t radit ional forms of co op eration ( s uch as fishing , hun t ing and ceremonial garden lab our , where the product was invariably eaten or used by the pro ducers ) , was inimicable to succe s s . Compan ies existed and in many cases thrived success fully for well over a decade in south Bougainville . ( Indeed many s t ill exis ted in the mid- 19 7 0s . ) Although they do no t appear to have b een · s igni ficant elsewhere in Bougainville ( cf . Ogan , 19 72 : 1 75 - 6 ) they also existed in New Guinea , for example in New Ireland (Lomas , 1 9 7 4 : 2 18 ) and in Papua where , for example , Bakoiudu migrant s set up a communal rubber kompani (Go s t in , 19 7 2 ) . In the Purari delta o f Papua an e s s en t ially s imilar form of communal economic organizat ion , also known as the ' kompani ' , had emerged earlier (becaus e of the more rapid payment of war damage compensat ion ) but foundered on the inability t o mast e r t e chnological p roblems , ob tain access to market s , and use adequat e accoun t ing p rocedures (Maher , 1961 : 6 4 - 8 ) . In o ther parts of Papua such as Milne Bay (Moul ik , 1 9 7 3 : 88) and even in Guadalcanal ( Bathgate , 19 75 : 8 5 8 ) the kampanis were much more obvious ly related t o t rade s t o re management only . For each o f t he s e areas , and for S iwai as well , t he o r igin of t he kampani i s un cle a r ; why it developed in the s ame b asic manner in many parts of Melanesia is equally uncertain . On ce again it refl ected the t ransposit ion o f expatriat e bus iness organiz ation , l ike bisnis ( see pp . 249-50) and p lante s in , to lo cal s itua tion s which were not the s ame as the alien variety but wher e the t erms were appropriate . The b re akdown o f communal farming fol lowed rathe r Commun al rice farms di fferent p att erns for rice and cocoa . 160 declined partly b ecause o f prob l ems with the rice itself ; i t was somet imes impo ssible to sell and i t suffered from diseas e , but more impo rtant was the impo s s ib ility o f satis factorily main tainin g group lab our in condit ions where the returns were very low , partly b ecause o f mismanagemen t . The concept s of reciprocal e conomic ob ligat_ions that had existed in pre-war sub s ist ence garden s and feast - giving act ivities were not applicab le to the new communal rice f ields and no clear definit ion o f what would t ake their place was ever achieved (Mahe r , 1 9 6 1 : 6 8 ) . Tho se who were mos t en thus iast ic about rice left to begin their own gardens ; o thers s imply dropped out . Cocoa had no s imilar t e chnical problems but leaders , to some ext ent disillusioned with r i ce , were less en thusiast ic about cocoa , hence exerted less pressure on suppo rt ers t o establish an d maintain communal garden s . Indeed , it was partly the low int erest born of dis illus ion with rice, and hence pres sure , on the part of leaders , that result ed in the slow adop tion of co coa whi ch was , in any case , a slow maturing crop . Diversific at ion and dis illusion There were st ill some at temp t s to int roduce n ew cash crops int o south Bougainville although n one were promp ted by the 1 9 6 5 s lump in cocoa prices . Perhap s the least success ful o f al l t hese was rubber ; it was first planted in 19 6 3 in s outh Bougainville at the Buin DASF s tat ion and one Buin-based didiman ( Roger Por teous ) was suf ficient ly enthus ias t ic to travel around s outh Bougainvil le to encourage i t s development . There was some j us t i f ic at ion for in t ro ducin g rubber int o south Bougainville ; i t had previously b een s ucce s s ful on Bougainvillean plantat ions so that in 196 1-62 rubb er - wo rth £ 7000 was expo rted from Bougainvill e , the only rubber exported from Papua New Guin e a . Mo reover at ab out the t ime it was tried in south Bougainville resul t s from the smallholder rubber s chemes o f Kerema in Papua were in conclus ive and , although s t ill dependen t on an upt urn in price , rubber showed some po ssib il ity of future success (Ho gb in , 1964 : 10 9 -14 ) . In any case it was t e chn i cally easier to grow , t o keep disease free and to pro ce s s to a higher standard than coco a . In Bougainville the int en t ion was that i t would b e grown with coco a , in it ially as a shade t ree . Unt il about the eighth y ear the value of co coa produced would be great er than that o f rubbe r . Sub s equently the cocoa could be gradually lopped as the rubber b ecame t appab l e . Rubber was 161 planted by 49 people in the south , which was the only part of the island where rubb er was t ried (4 7 in Buin and 2 in S iwai ) , most in b lo cks of 5 00 t rees , which by 1 9 7 0 were almo s t all o f tappab le s i z e . Lo cal plant ings occurred be tween 1 9 6 5 and 19 6 7 . Jo shua Mon toro , o f Hanong , a man who was willin g to t ry many new things , f irst planted rubber in January 19 6 7 ; he had about 1300 rubber t rees which were s t il l growin g in 19 7 6 , when he was talking about replacin g them with cocoa . He had first s een them on Aropa plantat ion , when he was at s chool near Kieta , and heard that they provided a good income . Cons equen t ly he did not want t o wait un t il they b ecame estab lished in Buin but wen t ahead on his own . Hining o f Rabaulu , at much the same t ime , was the only o th er S iwai to plan t rubbe r . Both looked after their trees f o r s everal years un t il dis i llusionment s et in . None o f the trees g rown has ever produced rubb er and Cocoa was always adopt ed more quickly than never wil l . rubb er . By the t ime that rubbe r was introduced the admin is t rat ion throughout Bougainville favoured cocoa , and it was a crop known to almost all the Bougainvilleans who f irst t ried it . They were llll l ikely to t ry the almost unknown rubber ( although Aropa plantat ion , n ear Kieta , had 1 7 5 acres S oon af ter its int roduct ion rubber prices fell in 19 5 7 ) . t o the extent that the administ rat ion could not support furthe r ext ens ion of plan t ings (so there would never have b een enough t rees in south Bougainville to support the pro ces s in g plant s that would have been required) . Cash returns from cocoa came much mo re quickly . At least S iwais never dis covered the considerab l e demands on l abour of rubbe r cult ivat ion n o r the llll p leasantness o f some o f the working condit ions . Neither have they ever seen rubb er produced in S iwai ; drawing latex from the ornamen t al rubb er trees arollll d Kon ga s chool always p rovoked interest and surprise . Seemingly inevitab ly , in the l i ght of p revious experi mentat ion , there was even a fore s t ry p roj ect in S iwai ; although s ome S iwais had b een t o the Bulolo S chool of Fo res t ry in the early 1960s , they b ro ught back only the Bap t i s t religion . A lat er S iwai visitor e s t ab lished his own forest ry plantation . 162 Kinokua , born in Morokaimoro around 192 2 , was educated b efore the war in the village s chool and at Kihili an d , a f ter the war , at Mb anga in New Georgia . He then returned to Bougainville and became a Me thod ist teacher and catechist mainly in the Buin area . Tiring of this , after about t en o r twe lve years , he used some of his s avin gs to trave l around New Guinea where he vis ited friends in Bulolo and b ecame enthused with the teak growing there . Re turning to S iwai he buil t his own hous e a few miles out side the Morokaimoro village line n ear the Mivo river where he plan t ed teak trees on his ext ens ive land and ignored all village activities . When a didiman interviewed him in June 19 71 he had planted 2 4 8 teak trees and was in t eres ted in trying Kamarare trees and pines ; he had diversif ied his economic activit ies to include nin e pigs , thir ty chickens ( s ince he hoped to sell b o th eggs and b irds ) and s ales of corn . Although he had cons idered b eginning marke t garden ing , s e t t ing up a trade s tore and starting a cat t le p roj e c t he was not int eres ted in coco a . Five y ears later the t eak was growing well but he was becoming worried about road acce s s ib ility to this r emo te part of S iwai , s ome two miles north east o f Moronei , where apart from a few cocoa p l antat ions his was the only economic a c t ivity . His chickens had never b een commercially successful but he had got a half share in a t rade s tore at Jeku ( Tikai) and was spending mo re t ime in the Mo rokaimo ro l ine . Now t ired of wat ching th e t e ak grow he was thinking o f s t ar t in g a cocoa plantat ion n earby . Unlike almo s t everything else, the administrat ion has never re commended t imber growing as a cash crop for individual villagers ( as opposed to small village p lo t s for village use ) . Kinokua , to an even greater ext ent than the rubber plant ers , was an individual ist who p referred his own un t e s t ed development s t rategy ; un fo rtunat ely it was a bad choice and , like o ther individual ists be fore and after , he eventually took up co coa and became in te gra t ed into what had become the s t andard pattern of S iwai change . Throughout the post-war years the re were always new crops to b e tried , s ome at the ini t iative o f S iwais them s elves and s ome in respons e to adminis t rat ive p ressures . 163 Every crop that was tried somewhere in New Guinea , with the exception of a few crops l ike tea and pyrethrum that were climat ically con f ined to the highlands , at some point found its way int o south Bougainville . Mos t o f these minor crops flourished briefly in the cash economy before disappearing for ever . Such a crop was the English po tat o . Potatoes were tri-ed succe s s fully in s everal parts of Bougainville ; in 1956 villagers around the Banoni village o f Piva were selling goo d quality potatoes to the mi ssion at 6 d . a pound . Other Banoni villages were reques t ing seed po t atoes which they could l at er sell in the Buin market by t ransport ing them on the fortnightly mail run o f the MV Isis (PR Boku 2 / 5 6 -5 7 ) but t ransport p roblems finally resul ted in this t rade en din g in 196 8 . In S iwai there was no s imilar enthus iasm for the po tato ; they were t r ied by the governmen t in upland areas o f Buin and Nagovisi and at Iru in S iwai (APR S iwai No . 2 , 195 6 ) and although , like almo st everything else , they grew ext remely well , the impossib ility of marketing substan tial quan t it ies and the local dislike o f potatoes as food meant that they were n ever accepted . At various t imes , especially in the lat e 1960s , when there were several Europeans in S iwai , potatoes have b een grown for sale b ut there are none now . In the 1 9 50s Buin villagers close to the small town had planted extra areas of sweet potatoes for sale to the admin is tration , and probab ly also sold various o ther kinds o f vegetab les . P r ices were probab ly quite low ; in 1 9 5 5 Buin villagers were sellin g sweet potatoes at a rat e of 2 0 pounds fo r a shilling (PR Buin 2 / 5 5-56 ) , however for a brief period around 1 9 6 0 there was a b oom in sweet potato purchasing and sweet potatoes were actually exported from Buin to Giza in the wes tern Solomon Island s . These were both markets quite inaccess ib le to S iwai and there were no local alt ernat ives although some S iwais were ab le to sell vege tab les to miss ions Thus in 1 9 55 the and t o pas s ing administ rat ion patrol s . kiap recorded that ' a plenti ful supply of bananas , a nat ive type o f bean , Chinese cabbage , es chalo t s , pawpaw, p ineapple , yams and cray fish to gether w i th numerous eggs were presented to the p at rol ' . The food was pur chased [ a t unknown rates ] for s t icks of tobacco ; sweet potato was in such plenti ful supply that the p at ro l could not buy it all so much was lef t f o r the p i g s ( P R Buin , 1 / 55-56 ) . It was certainly not a trade that S iwais could rely on . In 19 6 8 the adminis tration was predict ing that the const ruc t ion of the airst r ip at Boku , at the same t ime that mine town con s t ruct ion be gan at Arawa , would resul t in a demand for fresh vegetab les from S iwai 164 that could eas ily become impo rtant with airfreight overheads of only 2 c . to 3c . per pound (PR Boku 12 / 6 7 -6 8 ) . In the event the con s t ruc t ion of neither Tonu nor Baku airstr ips resulted in the airfreight ing of ve getables from S iwai . Howeve r air s t r ips in the most i solated par ts of Bougainville , especially Oria and Lehu in the remote int erior o f Buin , were used for air freight in g cocoa and co ffee whils t some t ime after 19 7 2 , when the t ran s -island road fin ally l inked S iwai to th e copper mine and the east o f the is land, the product ion and ext ernal market in g of vegetables did b ecome a valuable adj unc t t o the s t andard cash crop s . This was a rather lat er phase in the deve lopment of S iwai agricul ture . Finally and least important of all , there were also o il palms . The World Bank team that s tudied New Guinea in 1 9 6 3 had recommended that an oil palm plan t at ion b e estab lished in Bougainville ( IBRD 1 9 6 5 : 12 0) . Al though a success ful o il palm proj e ct was subs equent ly developed at the Buin agr icul t ural st at ion , the success of cocoa meant that it could never have b een ext ended to vil lages . Moreover , by the time it was apparen t that o il palm too was success ful there, it wa� politically impossib le to implement a set t lement s cheme in Bouga inville . The o il palm was probab ly the only t ropical lowland cash crop grown success fully elsewhere in the coun t ry tha t never reached S iwai . Af ter cocoa , an d the brief interest in rubber , there were no sys temat ic attempt s by the didimen to int roduce new crop s in to the area . Cabb age , tomato and o ther ve getab le seeds were dist ributed to those who asked for them to encourage pro duct ion for the local south Bougainvillean markets bu4 by the l ater 19 60s both didimen and S iwais knew that they were only in terested in co coa . The only possible al ternat ive that either s ide cons idered seriously was cat t le but co coa remained dominant . Experimen t s with o ther cash crops had done no more than disillus ion the experimenters . The consoli dat ion of the coco a economy From 1 9 6 6 onwards high incomes from cocoa resul t ed in a s teady increase in the numb ers o f co coa t rees b ut the Council , and their advis ers , were never completely sat isfied . In July 1 9 6 6 the Council was concerned that not all men had 5 00 t rees and some of thos e that did were not looking after them properly ; Purauko (Tonui ) complained : mi lukim p lenti man ol i sindaun long wokim baske t na o l i no save tingting long go long gaden bi long o l (I have seen plenty of men 165 s it t ing making baskets and n o t even thinking about go in g t o their gardens ) ' . Indeed the whole Council decided that people were no t working hard enough ; the chairman recommended that every day from Tuesday t o Friday councillors s t rike the vill age gong and send all the men to work whilst all the councillors voted fo r a mot ion that everyone should work on their conununal ( company) gardens for one week in every month . At the s tart o f the 1960s cocoa growin g had been st ill a novel vent ure in S iwai (p . 14-2 ) but in the first hal f o f that decade cocoa became success fully estab lished almost throughout the area . Yet from 195 9 onwards , culminat ing in the record low of July 1 9 6 5 , co coa p rices fell fairly st eadily (Appendix I I I ) . The impo rtan t factor that spurred the extens ion of plant in gs was not therefore the relat ive price o f cocoa but the sub s t an t ial sums of cash that had been received by the early producers . After the sl ight lull in cocoa plan t in g in 19 6 5 , when the weather was very bad and pr ices low , the st eady in creas e in plantin g resumed in 1 9 6 6 and has cont inued ever s in ce ( Figure 16 ) with only minimal relat ionship to the price of co coa ( Fi gure 1 7 ) . There had previous ly b een disputes over the own ership of land , especially b ecause a permanent t ree crop was b eing planted , but never claims that there was an ab solut e shortage o f ground . In 1 9 6 7 there was the first indi cat ion that this was po ssib ly becoming the case ; S iumai (Noronai ) pointed out to the Council , ' Long mipe la bi long antap, mipe la no gat inap graun bi long p lanim kakao . Olge ta graun o l i pinisim pinis o lsem i orait long lukautim pik ( For those of us who l ive in the moun tains there is not enough lan d for plan t ing co coa . All the ground is used up and its only good enough fo r keeping pigs on) ' . 2 This was an exaggeration but the problem was probab ly never far from S iwai thoughts . Although all sub s equent reco rds o f the society are incomplete some of the receip t s do indicate how much the early coco a growers earned in the n ext few years . In the last s ix months of 1 9 6 6 alon e Kepoama s old some 7 7 9 1 pounds of dry b ean and received about $ 75 0 ; Komoru , who had taken over the Arnio village plan t at ion , sold 11 , 5 12 pounds for about $950 and Hatah ( Rano ) who began product ion b etween 1 9 6 3 and 1 96 6 , s old 14 , 389 pounds and received about $ 12 00 . A year lat er he earned over $ 1 900 . Thes e figures may well 2 rt is al so pos sib l e to translate the last sect ion as ' and it ' s only sufficient for looking af ter p igs ' but the first t ranslation is more probab ly correct . 166 0 � x (/) (!) z � z <l ..J Q.. 400 300 � 8 u I.&... 0 200 0::: I.LI m :::E :::> z 100 1959 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 YEAR Figure 1 6 . Cocoa plant ings 1 9 59-72 be incomplete b ut they do repres en t what seems to have b een a not atypical s ix month period . Clearly however the success o f these few men was atypical ; most other S iwai growers received much les s (b ut there is no in format ion on the number o f growers and their receipt s ) s ince they were selling wet bean . Apart from that at Konga , fermentaries seem to have then exis ted at Amio , Hanong , Materas , Maisua , S ininai , Jeku and Rano (wh ere Hatah and Kepoama worked together ) so that in mos t part s o f S iwai there was reasonable access t o ferment aries and during this period the S oc iety b egan t o purchase sub s t an t ial amounts o f dry bean , which approximately t reb led the incomes o f the produ ce rs . 167 1 2 00 1 1 00 1 00 0 900 800 en a:: <( .....I _. 0 c 700 600 500 400 300 200 1 00 0 ---+�-t----1.---+-�+---+�-+---t���+--+-�-+---11---+-� 1956 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 YEAR Figure 1 7 , Cocoa price 1 9 5 6 - 7 2 Ferment aries developed more slowly even though t h e tiny driers that were first con s t ruct ed demanded no great t echno lo gical expertise . In May 1961 the Ass istant District Conuni ss ioner told the Council that Mi lukim p lenti kakao i s tink nating . Mi laik yupe la mekim box long em na mekim drai . Sapos husat . kakao i redi pinis, em i mas go lukim box bi long Basing na wokim bi long em o lsem ' ( I have seen p len ty of cocoa j us t ro t t ing . I want you -1 6 8 t o make b oxes [ fermen taries ] t o dry the cocoa . Whoeve r has ripe cocoa beans must go and see Has in g ' s ferment ary and make one o f his own l ike that ) . Widokuma had the first fermentary in south Bougainville at Mos i get a and Has in g (Jeku) the first in S iwai . But again there was con fus ion over policy ; in November 1 9 6 4 the Cotnl cil were told that it was necessary for one man to have at least 5 000 coco a t rees before a fermen tary could be j us t i f ied . Whil s t in 1 9 6 9 it was stat ed in the Territ ory Annual Report that the con t inued poli cy of the didimen was that members sell their wet bean cocoa direct t o the S oc iet ies s ince dry bean co coa , pro cessed by individual s , was usually o f po or This had indeed been the o riginal nat i onal policy quality . set out as part of the Cacao Ac tion Plan in 1 9 5 5 (PCA 1 9 5 6 : 49 ) . Th ere is no in fo rmat ion on the numb er and dist ribut ion of f ermen taries for the first few years of co coa pro duct ion but by mid-19 6 7 there were a rep o rted eleven fermentaries in Siwai ( in cluding three Society fermentaries) and the administ rat ion then believed that it was ' very necessary to Co-operat ive o f f i cers and didimen in crease the number ' . were not always in accord . All the ind ividually owned f ermentaries were o f bush mat erials and it was estimat ed that they dried as much as 80 per cen t o f the S iwai co coa crop . The S iwai So ciety was considering the ins t al lat ion o f mechani cal driers to cope with the ant icipat ed in crease in p rodu ct ion that would fo llow when more than hal f o f all Small fermentaries grew the trees were bearin g cocoa . rapidly ; one y ear lat er the number had doub led to fifteen . When the didimen carried o ut a cen sus o f co coa growers in 1 9 6 8 they fot.m.d s ome 805 cocoa growers dist ributed throughout S iwai . There were growers in every village except Aitara and by this t ime the number of growers in each village had become more or less proport ionate to the populat ion ; thus there were 35 growers in Matukoli , 31 in Kaparo and even 2 9 in Ruis ei , which had final ly got s tarted , whils t small villages like Ko t u , Lakemba and S ikurai had no more S iro i , with only nine growers , was st ill than three growers . Some 5 4 o f these 805 growers something of a disappo intment . had mo re than a thous and trees although the average number o f t rees per grower was ab out 600 . A year later the didimen repeated their survey , this t ime recordin g 92 6 co coa growers with an average number of trees per grower o f around 4 70 . S iroi had improved from n ine to th!rteen growers but elsewhere 169 the changes were l es s s ub s tan t ial . � New cocoa plantat ions were s t ill being estab lished and old · plantat ions ext ended but by this t ime all those mos t interes ted in cash c ropp ing had already begllll their plan tat ions and those then beginning plantat ions were le ss int erest ed in planting very large areas . S ub t rac tin g cocoa companies , and a few others (such as mi ss ion plantat ion s ) , f rom the 19 7 3 list of growers produces a to tal of around 860 distributed amongst approx imat ely some 1 2 00 adult males (aged ove r 2 0 ) . S ince this to tal included a s i gnificant p roport ion (perhaps one in f ive ) o f ab sentees and old men the in co rpo rat ion o f new cocoa plantat ions appeared to be approachin g sat urat ion poin t . A further count o f cocoa t rees in Augus t 19 72 revealed that the numb e r of new plan.tings had fall en st eadily s ince 19 6 9 , although the average number o f trees per grower was about 640 . Plantat ions had generally been related to road developmen t s and those some distance away had usually b een neglected to s ome ext ent ; mos t of these earlier plantings had now ceased hence it was believed that the ext en s ion of feeder roads would s t imulat e more plantin g . However by the mid�l960s a numb er of hous eholds had left their line villages to es tab lish their own individual houses , o r small hamlet s o f close kin , near t o p revious ly distant cocoa plan tat ions . An old set t lement patt ern was being revived . The didiman , probably B . R. Fren ch , then reco rded that ' the average plantin g . of 6 4 0 trees is either related to a minimum requirement fo r money for coun cil tax , s chool fees , et c . or due to a " comp rehension gap" - people not b eing ab le to see thems elves as b ig-t ime o p erators with higher incomes . Time is not a l imit in g fac t or . ' In that parti cular year a holding o f 6 4 0 t rees might have pro duced wet bean worth l e s s than $ 100 (well in exces s of c ouncil tax and s chool fee s ) but in o ther years it was two or th ree t imes that . Nevertheles s French was generally correct ; mos t S iwais did not see thems elves as ' b i g-t ime operators ' , b ut not because of some comprehen sion gap . Their wants were then sat i s fied with these income levels . On the o ther hand there were already a large number o f success ful busine ssmen i n S iwai , o f t en us in g their cocoa plantat ions as a basis for diversified developmen t ( see Chap ter 8) . 3 s ince this census also recorded three growers with over 2 000 t rees who had not b een recorded in the 1 9 6 8 census , whils t a large number o f others were recorded with less t rees in 1 9 6 9 than in 1 9 6 8 , it is imposs ible to place a great deal o f t rust in the census data . 1 70 As more of the new co coa p lantat ion s came int o product ion and o thers reached f ull product ion , after ab out seven y ears of growth , the amoun t of co coa produced in S iwai increased much fas ter than the rate of new plan t in gs . Thus in 1 9 6 8- 6 9 s ome 2 2 4 ton s o f cocoa were sold t o the· S o c iet y ; three years later in 1 9 7 1- 72 314 ton s were sold t o the S ociety ( and a fu rthe r 7 6 t ons sold elsewhere ) . E s t imates made in August 19 72 sugg e s te d that the next year would more than doub le th e 19 71- 72 output . Because o f a fal l in p rices incomes did not rise quit e s o quickly ; nonetheless in 1 96 8- 6 9 the S o ciety received $ 1 30 , 7 8 7 from cocoa sales . In January 19 7 0 t he kiap , J . G . S teven , e s t imated that about 2 0 per cent of the annual product ion of cocoa was lost - through diseas es , such as capsid bugs , p ink diseas e , thre ad b l ight , longico rn bugs and als o through ' b ad man agement ' . This seems a high estimate , at least for the disease component , although in 1 9 6 9 DASF b rought in the first measures t o combat disease ; fertiliz ers were int roduced and eight DDT dust ing mach in es were dist ribut ed within S iwai . Lit tle use seems t o have b een made o f e ither fertilizer or dust in g powder yet there i s now l it t le evidence o f cocoa diseases in S iwai plantation s ; i t was s imply a further indicat ion that S iwai cocoa production was becom in g of regi onal importance and deserved spec ial ized att ent ion . In 196 7 the Buin , S iwai and Bana ( B an on i -Na govi s i ) So ciet ies j oined t o gether to estab l ish the Bus iba S ociety which was intended to l ink s ome of their e f fo r t s through a central workshop for tr uck s and t ract o rs , and a warehouse from which consume r goods could be dist ributed t o the memb er s ocieties . Although in it s f irst e i ght months of operat ion it had a t urnover o f $ 2 00 , 000 problems o f management and it s general dup l i cat ion o f the act ivi t ies o f t he individual societ ies resulted in it s virtual collap se in 1 9 7 0 when the S iwai and Bana Socie ties b oth with drew . It was an amb i t ious experiment in large-s cale integrat ion which in the end proved an expens ive disappointment . Even in the early 19 7 0 s the S iwai Society itsel f had n o t managed t o achieve completely succes s ful operat ion ; in Augus t 1 9 71 i t was forced t o stop purchasin g wet b e an cocoa for three weeks when the s upply of sacks ran out . Outlyin g areas too were less wel l s erved ; in the same month the p eople o f the Hais i area complained tha t the Society t ractor was not vis it in g them often enough to purchas e their co coa regularly . They had no Society directo r in their area and mos t people 171 had been s ellin g t o co coa dealers ' for s ome t ime ' ; one of the reas on s for the privat e sale was that the Society refus ed to make on the spot paymen t s for wet bean cocoa s in ce they preferred to make the growers return with the t ractor to Kon ga . In this way they were ab le to ensure a ready supply o f labour when the t ractor became b ogged ; not s urprisingly the Hais i people res ent ed the long walk home . No more than a handful o f villagers actually tm ders t ood the way in which the S ociety estab lished the price o f co coa . Nor were the So ciety above making a number of penny-pin chin g economies , which contrib ut ed little t o e f ficient adminis t ration s o that this con t inued to be a prob l em. (For example towards the end of 1 9 6 7 the Society directors refused to appoint a new secretary from Hutj ena on Buka island , s ince the air fare was too expens ive . ) Yet they had become a mass ive ent erprise by the s tandards of rural S iwai ; by 19 70 there was an impres s ive row of four fermentaries at Konga , plus o f fices and s t o res , a t � uck , a landcruiser , two tractors and t railer s , all of whi ch p rovided full-t ime employment for some twen ty three people , with a full-t ime European co-operat ive officer . At the s ame t ime the DASF s t ation at Konga als o had a European o ff icer and fourt een agricultural as sistan t s ; special i s t int erest in S iwai agriculture had never been s o great . Rather earlier in 1 9 6 8 the S ociety directors had agreed , following a sugges t ion from the Vice-Chai rman To ' o s ih , that wh en the S oc iety had obtained enough money they should purchas e adequate land for a plantat ion o f their own . It was in tended that this be on the scale o f a European-owned plantat ion . Nothing ever c ame o f this idea and when in 19 7 4 Toboruai plantat ion i n Buin was offered f o r s ale t o the S o ciety they demurred . Ret rospectively they were probab ly fo rtunate to have es caped ownership and management of a large plantat ion . The revenue that the Society had earned from cocoa sales enab led them to cons ide r o t her poss ib le sources of earning money ; att empt s at divers if i cation were prompted both by a fear that the cocoa p rices might eventually collapse compl etely and by concern that the lar ger and more success ful S iwai cocoa p ro ducers were al ready selling their own cocoa elsewhere and that this t rend migh t con t inue , eventually threatening the S o ciety ' s future . In 19 6 9 the Society became intere s t ed in developin g a large s cale cat tle farming proj ect in S iwai ; this s cheme , whi ch eventually failed to come to f ruit ion , i s discussed in t h e following chapt er ( pp . 1 87 -9 6 ) . The following 1 72 year they decided to set up a bakery at Konga but nothin g came o f that . A l i t t le lat er they d i d however , apparent ly without di scus s ion o r dis sen t , purchas e 7 000 shares in Bougainville Copper Limited . The frus t rat ing inab ility t o develop th e cat t le s cheme persuaded the society direct ors to look el sewhere and , clearly in fluenced by European advisers , they determined to obt ain land and take up business leases Thus in August 19 7 1 the Chairman in the new t own of Arawa . o f the S o ciety wrote t o the Di rector o f the Departmen t o f Lands , S urveys and Mines request ing three urban al lotmen t s in Arawa , so that when individuals of the S iwai areas have suf ficient cap it al and commercial knowledge an opportllll ity will exist for them to commen ce bus iness . They are par t i cularly worried that they will be left in a s imilar posit ion to indigenous people in o ther dis t r ic t s of Papua New Guinea who f ind it impo s s ib le to commen ce b us iness en terprises in the main cent res becaus e they have no l and or buildin gs in thes e cent res . They are concerned that they may become the ' poor rel at ion s ' in Bougainvil le becaus e they have not b een in the happy po s it ion t o receive the benefits affor ded s ome Kieta people through B . C . P . Develop ment of the are a . The So ciety ant icip at ed that the earliest stores would be o f j o int Bougainvillean-European ownersh ip , result in g eventually in complete ownership b y Bougainvillean s . Within a mon th the S ociety t ook up two busin es s / commercial leases in the t own ; they cont inued to pay rates on these b ut the s ites were never developed so that by April 19 74 the Society wished t o get rid o f the land , cla iming that they were tr icked int o t aking it by their white co-op erat ive advis ers . Another at t empt at d ivers ificat ion had come t o a disappo int ing en d . By the end o f the decade copra prices had s t ill not Copra once risen whil st cocoa p rices were risin g rap idly . again was b ecoming no more than a minor cash crop ; thus in October 1 9 6 9 the didiman repo rted that in Mamagota village , which was probab ly reasonab ly typ ical o f condit ions el sewh ere , ' very lit tle cop ra is being made at the moment and many nut s are being left in the bush to rot . They s ay that they have too much work with their cocoa to worry about copra ' . ( In Aitara 75 bags o f copra had ro t ted whilst they wait ed s ix 173 mon ths for the arrival o f a ship . ) Consequen t ly for the finan cial y ear 1 9 6 9- 70 the S iwai S o ciety had a turnover o f $ 16 8 , 3 76 f o r co coa , $18 , 96 1 f o r baskets and a mere $ 5 30 for copra . By then there were more than twice as many cocoa growers a s th ere were coconut growers . However coconut planting was being en couraged as a shade crop in new cocoa plantat ions s o that new co conut plant in g never ceased whil st those who ret ained their faith in coconuts were eventually , if b riefly , rewarded in 19 74 when the copra price rose sharply . Even in Augus t 1 9 7 2 there were as many as 21 copra driers in S iwai ; four of these were owned by Hari villagers and the dis tribut i on (Figure 1 8 ) partly reflects the historic do minan ce o f co conut s in the coas tal , low-lying areas of S iwai . Never theless at the s t art o f the 1 9 70s co coa complet ely dominated the S-iwai cash crop economy . Despite all these development s there were s t ill p roblems ; the great est of thes e was t ransport . The only pl ace that co coa could be exported from was Kangu on the Buin coas t b ut by 1 9 6 7 the de ficiencies of the Kan gu port were par t i cularly apparent ; there were no storage facilit ies there , there was a lack o f cargo space on ships and s in ce Bougainville was the ' end o f the l ine ' (PR Buin 6 / 66-6 7 ) ships return in g t o Rab aul o f ten left without b ackloadin g s in ce they had too much t o take o n els ewhere . Con sequen t ly by the t ime cocoa left Buin its quality had generally deteriorated . But for the maj ority o f S iwais this was not the main t ran sport prob lem ; their problem was one of get t in g For mos t part s o f mos t years the the ir own cocoa t o Konga . Society tract o r could not negot iat e the t racks into Rat aiku , no r could it go north of S in inai ; elsewhere , especially in Mokakuru , small areas were cut o ff for smaller t ime p eriods . In 1 9 6 7 there were s t rong demands f rom western S iwai that a buying point be estab l ished at S in inai or that they be al lowed t o j oin the Bana So ciety , based at Beret emb a in Nagovisi . The S in inai area had already ( in 19 6 5 ) requested their own s eparate s ociety and in 1 9 6 7 the counc illor for Hais i requested that the people from the four villages there be allowed to take their shares out of the S ociety . In the end they did n ot , although in 1 9 6 6 , when members from b oth Hai s i and S ininai wanted to j o in the Nagovis i Development So ciety , some had their share c apital returned to them . Later in 1 9 6 8 the S ociety direc tors reco gniz ed the dangers of fiss ion and dec ided to build f ermentaries at Miheru and Haisi . Neither was built and they were s t ill dis cus s in g the idea two years later . There were no obvious solut ions to these transportat ion problems ; remot e , upland areas found 174 ./ 0 ' ' ' ' COPRA D R I ER ... 0 2 Figure 1 8 . 4 6 8 km Copra dr iers 1 9 7 2 1 75 market in g difficult al though , in s ome s en s es , they gained from it s ince it was an indirect incent ive for them to S ome familiar const ruct their own fermentar ies early on . dif ficul t ies remained ; the So ciety directors were st ill spending much of their t ime t elling people t o plant more t rees and Kerukai (Kap aro ) comp lained t o the other Society directo rs that he was unab le to persuade people t o plan t 500 co coa t rees each . Other p rob lems were of a rather dif ferent order . Transport difficulties represented , t o some ext ent , the prob lems of succes s ; sub sequen t ly , conflic t s b e tween bus ines smen and fears of lab o�r shortage were minor p rob lems that even more obvious ly s t emmed from the success ful e s t ab l ishment of a cash crop . There was no doub t that co coa growing had brought prosperity . At the annual mee t ing of the Society a pro f it of $10 , 045 was announced , which was almost cert ainly enormous ly in excess of any previous year . By 19 6 8 pro f it s were poten t ially s o great that one o f the Chinese t raders in Buin a t t empted t o lease a quarter of an acre in S iwat for a ferment ary site and al s o obtain a l icence t o. purchase wet bean throughout S iwai . Al though the owner s were will ing t o lease t h e l an d S iwai Council b rought s trong pres sure to bear on them and the Chinese t raders remained no nearer than Buin town . (Two y ears later the Society and the Coun cil united to oppose the gran t ing of a pedlar ' s licence t o ei ther a European or a Chinese t rader from Buin who both wanted to t rade inside S iwai ; they s tated that s in ce there were nearly 70 private s t ores in S iwai , any S iwai could ob t ain anything he wanted f rom these . ) By 1 9 70 there were fears that labour shortages would diminish the rat e of plan t in g , as they seemed to have done in Buka ; a spec ial DASF repor t on south Bougainville Co coa Product ion s t at ed that there was an ' acut e lab our sho rt age ' . Early planters had had sufficien t labour but intending planters could not get enough especially s ince the copper mine had att racted many young men . It was feared that because of the apparent labour shortage and the lure of a new cat t le indust ry cocoa p lantin g would decline . At the February 19 7 0 Bus iba S o c iety directors ' meet ing a mot ion was p assed that Bus iba should find labour f rom outs ide Bougainville ( ' Highland lab our ' ) s ince local labour was in such short supply . The S o ciety were also willing to cons t ruct houses for such labourers , a remarkab le change in the usual att itude t o outs i der s . 1 76 In January 1 9 7 0 the kiap pat ro llin g through S iwai found that he was contin ually b ein g asked if cocoa would become the same as peanut s (PR Konga 1 / 6 9- 7 0 ) . This proved to be a to tally pes s imis t i c assumpt ion , although following p revious S iwai experience and the 1 9 6 5 slump in prices , exce ss ive con cern was s carcely s urp risin g . Apart from the dist ribut ion o f some excep t ional crops such as potatoes and coffee at Iru there were few regional variat ion s in the innovation of new crops . Is olat ed Ai tara was ignored but otherwi se crops seem to have spread quickly throughout S iwai ; many , like co ffee , began at the Konga agricultural s t at ion o r , like cocoa , were quickly cen t red there but , al though patrol o f ficers o f t en claimed to ob serve that villages near Konga were the first to ac cept these new in tro duct ions the little numerical evidence that exists suggests that this was rarely significan t . Unt il the emergence of the Konga s t at ion and , as soc iated with it , the spread of cocoa the villages that suffered least war damage , such as Mamago ta and Aitara on the coast and mountain villages like Mo rokaimo ro , were probably the wealthiest in t erms o f cash earnin gs , but affluence b ased on copra sales was not great . Dis t r ibut ion of war damage claims t o the central villages removed this disparity but that was a temporary In 1 9 5 5 there was no great food surplus in the benefit . Konga area ; ' . . . it is not a very wealthy area ' (AP R Buin , 1 9 5 5 ) but the central villages soon pushed ahead as cash crops be came e s t ab l ished . Mos t new cash crop s were established at Konga init ially so that it is no t surp rising that villages living close to Konga o f ten grew and mas t ered these crop s first but any lag between a s t ar t at Konga and adoption elsewhere in S iwai was very slight . Di s t ances were short with the excep t ion o f Ait ara and the remot e Hais i area ; this was the l a s t p a r t o f S iwai to adop t cocoa and in 1 9 6 2 when the people o f that area decided to build thei r own so ciety collecting poin t for rice and b aske t s the so ciety adviser was del ighted s ince ' support from thes e more outlying villages is often poor ' . Hais i an d Hiru-Hiru villages were at t ached to the Bana Local Government Council for many y ears and it is only recently that this area has been inco rp o rated more clos ely in t o the rest o f S iwa i . Iru , whi ch had b een at the forefront of cof fee production , clung t o this for a lon g t ime but eventually gave way to co coa no later than many o the r p laces . In isolated Ait ara cocoa planting began only in the 19 70s ; in 1 9 6 9 they were 177 st ill primarily dependent on copra and acces s ib il ity was such that it was mo re convenient to sell it on the irregular visits by ship of a Chinese trader from Sohano , rather than carry it to Konga . It is possib le that the people of Iru were dis co uraged by didimen from planting co coa , which is certainly a mo re bulky p ro duct than co ffee ; it is even more l ike ly that no one was int eres ted in explaining cocoa growing in Ait ara . (Even Toml in was unaware o f the existence o f Aitara village in 1 9 5 5 . ) In a quar ter o f a century after the war p eanut s and , fo r a t ime, rice became estab lished as food crops but there have been few new fo od crop int roduct ions . I recorded one kind o f ban ana brought back by a S iwai miss ionary from Tari in the Southern Highlands of New Guinea and a more decorat ive kind o f b amboo brought from Fais i . 4 The didiman , Hal ing , found twen ty-one varieties of sweet pot ato in Rataiku in 1960 ; he s ta t ed that l es s than hal f o f these had been there more than twenty y ears . The o thers had e ither been int roduced by the Japanese or by l ab ourers returning from the Solomon Islands (APR Eas tern Division , S iwai , 1 9 6 0 ) . This report was probab ly to some extent erroneous , yet it does reflect a continuous and parallel p ro cess o f int roduct ion and experimentat ion , for food crops as well as cash crops . Yet these chan ges in the sub s i s t ence economy are quite dwarfed in significan ce by the int roduct ion and ext ension of cash croppin g . Al though spat ial variat ions in developmen t were quite small a n ew p attern had emerged ; the early po st-war disad vant ages of villages in the cen t ral area had been reversed . These were now the villages closest to Kon ga , where development e f for t s had b een concent rat ed , and with the best , all-weather ro ad acces s . The in creas ing s uccess o f coco a t ended t o emphasiz e thes e re gional dif ferences , desp ite the rather great e r concent rat ion of fermentaries in the uplands . However , al though the f irst indicat ion o f a con cern over land shortage came from N o ronai , a Rataiku village not obviously without land reserves , subse gE_�n:t: p� es sures were con cen t rated _ _ _ 4 In 1 9 65 the didimen at Boku were t rying to int roduce a new species o f b amboo that would grow at low alt itude s s ince they thought that people were was t ing too much t ime bringin g bamboo from the hill areas fo r house -buildin g . A f ine grass , which some S iwais have made int o small l awns , may also be a post-war int roduct ion . _ 1 78 By 1 9 6 7 S iro i and Kaparo mo re in the cen t ral S iwai vil lages . villagers were beginn in g to t ake up land for cash crop s south of the o l d Buin road and a few y ears lat er a differen t pat tern of inequalit ies , ran ged around the availability o f land , was beginn ing to emerge . The uneven dis tribut ion of the new cash crops also creat ed regional inequal ity within south Bougainville . The const ruc t ion of the agricultural stat ion and sub s equen t Rural Pro gre ss Society at Konga re sult ed in mos t exten s ion work init ially b e in g concentrated around there hen ce cocoa ( and co ffee) grew mo st quickly in S iwa i . Nagovis i briefly had a Rur al Pro gress S o c ie ty but it was ine f f i cient an d soon clo sed , although it i s possible that the lo cally developed Mos ige t t a Cocoa Comp any was much more success ful than the S iwai Society for some t ime . By 19 5 8 the people o f both northern and so uthern Buin , who had l o s t the ir early agr icul tural s t at ion , were complaining that they had been negle c t ed at the expense o f the people o f S iwai and Nagovis i ; the p eople o f wes t e rn Buin were les s con cerned s ince they were ab le t o sell sub st an t ial quant i t ies of peanut s and rice to the S iwai Society . The in it ial advantages that followed the exist ence of an agricul t ural s t at ion for two y ears at Kangu had lon g s ince dis appeared and the advantages of easier access t o Buin town and port could not compet e with the more sub s t an t ial admin is t rat ive as s i s t ance to S iwai , although the lo cat ion of a s t at ion at Kon ga is always explained by b oth administ rat ion and S iwais as s imply a result o f S iwai en thus iasm for developmen t . When the Buin Market ing S o ciety b e gan in 19 5 9 , then dependen t on sales o f rice an d sweet potatoes (PR Buin 1 / 5 8-5 9 ) , S iwai was well ahead and even fur ther ahead o f Nagovis i where in 1 9 60 one kiap claimed , without s uppo rtin g evidence , tha t ' the p eople are dirty , lazy and backward ' (PR Baku 3 / 60-61 ) . Transport orientat ion towards Kan gu event ually res tore d Buin ' s advantage but Nagovisi remained relat ively isolat ed un t il the 19 70s . Chap ter 7 P igs an d cows : animals in the agricultural economy Throughout the post-war decades there were also changes in the animal populat ion o f S iwai , al though the administra t ion rarely seem to have t aken much int eres t in any lives t o ck other than cat t l e . Although theoret ically enthus ias t i c about local pig-breeding and poultry-farming within P apua and New Guinea , in p ract i ce they were more con cerned with Europ ean developmen t s in these fields . S iwais thems elves were primarily int erested in pigs , but never for market ing ; they o ccas ionally cons idered the connn erc ial possib ilities of poult ry an d f inal ly experienced a wave of enthus iasm for cat t le . Aft er the war there was a shortage of p i gs throughout southern Bougainville , and especially in S iwai where they had b een almo st wiped o ut during the war . When the adminis t rato r , Colonel J . K . Murray , led a t eam acro ss s outhern Bougainville in 194 7 , two y ears after the war , they found ' only f ive domes t icated p igs and all o f these were o f the wil d b ush type ' ( Co t t rell-Dormer , 194 7 ) . At tempt s were made to purchas e pigs by t rading with shel ls in the Mount Hagen , Chimbu and Bena Bena areas o f the New Guinea highlands , to resell for a nominal pri ce in s outh Bougainville , but the at t empt s were unsuccess ful and they h ad to be b rought from elsewhere (PR Kieta 9 / 4 7 -48) . By the s t art of 1948 the numb ers of chi ckens an d dogs were repo rted as sufficient , but there were not y et enough p i gs (PR Bougainville 1 0 / 4 7 -4 8 ) ; in thos e y ears there was some difficulty in organiz ing proper feas t s al though it was a lit t le easier in moun tain villages . Th e pigs that survived the war , for example in the moun tains o f eastern Buin , were o f very poor quali ty despit e some pre war mixing with pigs brought from European plant at ions (PR Bougainville 1 1 / 4 7-48) . By mid-1949 there was apparently an incre as e in numb ers ; the average S iwai vill age had two or three pigs but Unanai , where the villagers were report ed to b e having some success in b reeding pigs , had about twenty • . i.7 9 . 180 The Buin s tat ion was then us in g Berkshire (PR Boku 4 / 49-50 ) . sows and Tamworths for breeding and boars were being sold for £5 each . By 1951 the numbers o f pigs seemed t o have in creased but there was s t ill an un even distribut ion ; the area around S in inai had relat ively few and ' exorb i t an t prices ' were bein g charged , such as £5 for a s uckl ing p i gle t , whil s t th ro ughout Siwai i t co s t £2 for servic ing sows . However a cens us of dogs , poul try and p i gs c arried out early in 1 9 5 1 sugges t s that the shor tage was generally over ( Figur e 1 9 ) . In some villa ges , no tab ly Matukoli , Mo ib inai and Ko tu , there were more pigs than people and fo r the whole of S iwai there were 43 p igs to every 100 people , a p roport ion roughly the s ame as i t was befo re the war and also the same as it was in 1 9 75 . By then all the p i gs had a s t ron g ' European s t rain ' bred in to them (PR Buin 5 / 5 0 - 5 1 ) , although this was also t rue before the war . Sub s equen t ly , the patrol repo rts have not in cluded any re feren ce to a p erceived shortage o f pigs anywhe re In the e arly 1 9 5 0 s there were , once in s outh Bouga inville . again , adequate pigs in S iwai ; in f ive years the pig po pulat ion seemed to have returned to it s pre-war numb ers , a surprisin gly rapid rat e of recovery . The mo st sub s t an t ial change in po st-war animal husbandry was the swit ch from fen c in g garden s to prevent pig depre dat ions , a practice that was un iversal b efo re the war , to fen c in g in pigs but not the garden s (and later cash crop s ) . This change o c curred in some parts of Bougainville not lon g after the war ; as one kiap noted early in 1 9 5 1 : Throughout S iwai it has now b ecome the custom for the p i gs t o b e fenced in and the gardens in the main left un fenced . The southern and eas tern villages have made s uch fen ces from the large s upplies of ar c mesh abandoned in the area and there were no complaint s o f p i g des t ruct ion in these villages . This has also meant that gardens are much closer t o the villages and much t ime is s aved walking to them (PR Buin 5 / 50-51) . The adminis t rat ion may h ave also encouraged this change before the war ( Ol iver , 1 9 5 5 : 12 8) . Some of the early p i g compounds may have b een except ionally large ; in 1 9 5 7 the kiap noted that there were some as l arge as 5 to 7 acres (PR Boku 1 / 5 7 -5 8 ) . This chan ge resulted from admin i s t rat ion policy ; it was aimed at clo ser s up ervi s ion of the pig populat ion , so that 181 ® N U M BE R OF PIGS / ' ' , , .... _/ 0 �I o 2 4 6 8 km L.._�-'-�--"-���---' Figure 1 9 . P igs 1 9 5 1 Source : P R Buin 5 / 50-5 1 1 82 mat ing could b e mo re clo sely con t ro lled in an attempt to imp rove pig st rains (Hasluck , 19 7 6 : 135 ) . There was , however , a sub s t an t ial element o f administ rat ive conven ience ; p ig damage for a lon g time had been the mo st important topic discus sed in village court s . In areas where there were mo re p igs the change was very slow ; in August 195 6 the kiap , David Elder , was s t ill reconnne nding to the Buin s that they reverse their fen c ing policy on the grounds that gardens we re b ecoming more valuable and p i gs les s valuable as cash crops increased in import ance and there was , according to the kiaps , a ' decline in the social value o f p igs ' . Mo reover , it would be easier for patrols to settle disputes and , f inally , imp o rted stock coul d be int roduced to improve p i g qual ity . The Buins th ems e lve s cotmter-argued that the fen ces kept out wild p i gs which con t inued to cause damage (PR B uin 1 /5 6 -5 7 ) . In s ome areas the int roduct ion of cash crops was a more s ignificant in fluence on this change t han administ rat ion policy ; moreover there was often con fus ion as to what to do with th e p igs , individual villages and village rs reactin g in different ways . Amongst the Rumb a valley Nas ioi o f eas t ern Bougainville , pigs almost died out dur in g the t r an s i t ion to cash cropp in g in the late 1 9 5 0s an d early 1 9 6 0 s a s villagers dec ided to give up p ig rearing , rather than e ither allow them t o roam wild and damage p lan t at ions or fence them in ( Ogan , 19 7 2 : 11 8 -9 ) . In S iwai the almo st complete absence o f p i gs after the war and the early int roduct ion of rice gardens (and later o ther c ash crops ) meant that there were sub s t ant ial s avings in labour t ime ( and also timber) from fen c in g pigs rather than garden s , hence the change was rapidly ef fected . S iwai had clearly t aken the lead in fencing p i gs . The kiap , D . J . Hook , commen t ing on the neighb ouring Nagovis i and Bait s i areas in 19 5 7 , ob served that there was a general ' le thargy and unwill ingnes s ' even when it came to fencing in pigs ; S iwai was hel d up as a ' model ' o f agricultural development (PR Boku 1 / 5 6-5 7 ) . But al though the adminis trat ion ' s arguments had , in a sense , been b es t received in S iwai , there too there was not tmmit igated succes s . In 1956 the kiap complained that the pigs were not well-fenced and damage was bein g done to r ice and cocoa plo t s as well as to sweet po tato gardens (PR Boku 3 / 55-56 ) ; two y ears later p ig damage was so b ad in Nagovis i that t he kiap urged implement at ion o f the Nat ive Adminis t rat ion Regulat ions of 1924 which allowed that on its second trespas s a pig could b e killed (PR Buin 5 / 5 7- 5 8) . Kiaps cont inued to worry unduly about p i g damage , which seems t o 183 have remained a con s is t ent p rob lem fo r t idy administ rat ion , if not fo r p ig b reeding . The mo st s igni f icant change that followed this administ rat ion at t it ude to p i gs was not in the ag r icult ural sphere at all . It was , as in neighb ouring Nagovis i , ' the end fo rever o f such pig-human res idential associat ions ' (Nash , 1 9 7 4 : 7 8 ) or , at least in S iwai , for a couple o f de cades . The p rice o f p igs rose sub s t an t ially during the p eriod of short age after the war although they did not , as one kiap claimed , lose the ir ' so c ial value ' . Kiaps collect ed little data on the p rice chan ges so that there are , at b es t , a few casual obs e rvat ions · . Thus in early 195 7 in eastern Buin it was impl ied that the price of an \lll. S pecif ied numb er o f p igs re quired for a wedding had recently reached £15 0 , an d that . mee t in g th is cost was a pro b lem for many people ( PR Buin 5 / 5 6 -5 7 ) . In S iwai , in 1955 , the kiap recorded that there were many nat ives who cannot afford to pay the t en to fifteen pollll d s asked for a p i g . At one feast held in Maisua village £150 was paid by 10 nat ives to pur chase 8 p igs which were eaten at their feas t . This , I think , is a typ ical example of any feas t held in the S iwai area . Many nat ives wish to get the p rice o f p i gs back to the pre-war standard but this is made quite impos s ible by the fact that the demand is so great and the s upply of war damage money is mo re than suf ficient (PR Buin 1 / 5 5 -5 6 ) . Clearly there was some confus ion over the availab il ity of adequate cash within S iwai but there was al so the impl icat ion that earnings from cash crops were s t ill ins ignif icant . There are few reco rds of the pig b reeding polic ies o f the didimen o r o f the impact that these have had ; almost certainly didimen were primarily concerned with the cash crops that met thei r con cep t of agricultural development rather than w ith p igs , whos e use remained emb edded in the social s truct ure . Nevertheless there were changes ; Hook ob served how European boars had imp roved the s to ck and increas ed the s iz e of litters , so that as many as t en pigle ts were being born rather than the two o r three that came from the old village p igs (PR Baku 1 / 55-56 ) . To some ext ent succes s appeared to depend on constant admin is t ration as s i s t an ce ; Hook later no ted that mos t S iwai p igs had some trace o f European s t o ck in them but that s ince most o f the boars in t roduced by DASF after the war had e ither died or been cas trated ; ' the old pract ice of leavin g sows to b e 184 servi ced by b ush b oars has ret urned ' so that he an d s ome S iwais were concerned that the quality o f lo cal pigs would s oon deteriorate (PR Baku 3 / 5 5 -5 6 ) . A year l ater a new kiap ob served only s ome S iwai p i gs that showed ' t races of good b reedin g ' (PR Baku 1 / 5 7-5 8 ) usually from the imported Berksh Berkshires . Throughout three decades of agricul t ural change in S iwai adminis t rat ion interes t and pol icies as sis ted in the imp rovement of p i g s t rains and in their management but never suc ceeded in making p ig husb andry a commercial succes s . Indeed it is doub t ful i f any didimen believed this po ssible o r if any S iwais were then int erested . Chickens and ducks Unl ike p igs , chicken s were only b riefly in short supply after the war ; whether they survived bet t er than pigs , regenerated faster o r were reintroduced by the administ rat ion is not clear . By 1 9 4 8 chickens in S iwai were again suff icient . A few years l ater they were plenti ful b ut , unlike ducks or pigs , they were con s idered to have l i t t le value (PR Buin 1 / 5 5 -5 6 ) ; however the kiap Hook repo rted , a year later , that many S iwai s had built chi cken runs and were in tending t o sell both eggs and poul t ry (PR Boku 3 / 5 5 -5 6 ) . Some o f these may have succeeded b riefly but it seems un likely ; providing feed and p reven ting disease were new prob lems that were not Subs equen t ly un der s t oo d well by th ese early poult ry p roducers . there are scarcely any wr itten records of poul t ry product ion in Siwai an d it seems that for well over a de cade chickens ( and to a much l esser ext ent , eggs ) remained s imply a supplemen t to the diet ; qual ity did not improve and nothing was marketed . Chicken s const ituted the scavenging economy . It was not un t il 1 9 6 9 that the first real poul t ry proj ec t go t un derway ; the owner o f this proj ect was Haranu , of Miheru , who had al ready b een clos ely associated with the mo re important economic development s in S iwai and especially the emer gence o f t rade stores ( pp . 20 1 -2 ) . At this t ime he had a small t rade s to re n ear Arnio vil lage ; using revenue from this he obt ained a loan from the PNG Developmen t Bank which enab led him t o set up the poult ry s cheme . The Konga didiman corrnnen t ed on the scheme in May 19 69 , ' at p resen t he has five roo st ers and six hen s . They lay four eggs a day . He will sell about 50 eggs very sho rtly to Barclay Bro thers , Boku at 15 cents for two ' . The Bank loan enab led him to build up t o about 2 7 chi ckens and their eggs were sold t o Barclay Brothers (who were then engaged in cons t ruct in g the main road between Kon ga and Baku) , and also to kiaps and 185 other lo cal administ rat ion o ff i c ials . The income from this was very small , pos s ib ly because Haranu could not ensure a regular supply of f resh eggs , and there were no local S iwai purchasers so that despite reques t s from the didimen that he main t a in the s cheme , he let the e ggs hat ch and s old all the resultant chickens at $2 . 5 0 each for l ocal p art ies . Within a y ear he had repaid the loan o f $240 but once a gain the problem of market s and access to those markets p revented a potentially valuab le proj ect from go in g ahead . It was not unt il the mid-1 9 7 0 s that any poult ry proj ects gave the impression o f long-term viab ility . Ducks must have been well-est ab lished by 1 9 54 although they were no t counted in 1 9 5 1 ; one kiap , A. J . Humphries , obs erved that the Mus covy ducks were o f excellent quality but that ' the s t andard price was t oo high t o permit a t rial of their eat in g quality ' (PR Buin 1 / 54-55 ) . Perhaps no one actually paid this part icul ar ' s t andard price ' s in ce a di fferen t kiap , a year later , repor ted that the ducks , st ill of excellen t qual ity , were ' used as a form of currency and a sign o f wealth . They are bought and sold for about £2 each and , unlike p i gs , they are never eaten ' ( PR Buin 1 / 5 5 -5 6 ) . In western Buin at the same t ime , a separat e kiap also des cr ibed ducks as being importan t as currency rather than Subsequen t to this as a protein source (PR Buin 3 / 5 5-5 6 ) . use as ' currency ' , for whi ch I have no addi t ional in format ion , ducks became , l ike chi ckens but in much smaller numb ers , s imply a diversificat ion of the S iwai diet . There are n o records of duck or duck e g g market in g . Catt le Unt il the emergen ce of cat t le in village agriculture there were no animals that were con s istently p ro duced for market ing , p igs were always , in a s ense , marketed but exchange was more or less circular and recipro cal . No one was ab le to make money from b ein g a success ful pig-breeder an d no one tried t o establish a modern , large-s cale pig herd . Chi ckens , not a component of S iwai exchan ge t ran sact ions , were more easily incorporated in t o a market economy yet there were no markets for chickens and e ggs and the sporadic at tempts at market ing failed to succeed . Baskets and crops , even in poo r y ears , were usually a more consisten t source of income . 186 Cat t le were an ent i rely d ifferen t p ropo s it ion from p i gs and chi ckens . Before the war the administ rat ion had made n o at tempt t o interest local farmers in c at tle p roduct ion b ut Lutheran miss ion s at Ma.dang and other places on the New Guinea mainland made some at t empt ( IBRD , 1 9 6 5 : 12 4 ) ; after the war the s it uat ion ch anged l it t l_e nn t il the 1 9 5 0 s when the adminis t rat ion made a s t art at a l ocal dist r ib ut ion o f cat tle . By 195 8 there were p o ss ib ly s ome 1 7 , 000 cat tle in the Terr i t o ry and the administrat ion was at t empt in g t o develop this rapidly b o th on village holdings and European plant at ions (Hasluck , 19 7 6 : 30 7 ) but it was slow p ro gress . Th ere had been a few cat tle on the two S iwai miss ion . st at ions b efore the war b ut none survived Japanese war t ime requirements ; befo re that they had done no mor e than supply After the war s ome mi ss ion s once the mi ss i ons with · milk . again reared cows ; Turib oiru mission in Buin had a couple o f Herefords in 1951 an d b y the 1 9 60s cat tle were flourishing at mos t mi ss ion s tat ions in Bougainville includ ing Kihili , Monoitu and Tonu (PR Buin 1 1 / 64-65 ) . Although there was n o consistent drive b y didimen , adminis t ra t ion , mis s ionaries or Bougainvilleans for local people to develop thei r own cat t le proj ect s , by 1964 some S iwais were int eres t ed in keep ing cattle ; mos t o f these had seen succes s ful c at t le p roj ect s elsewhe re in New Guinea . Con sequen t ly after much discouragemen t , a few years later , the f irst catt le reached south Bougainvillean villages . The first reco rd , in a patrol report , of cat t le in vill ages was in February 1968 when a cow and a small bul l were obs erved in the Buin village o f Bogis ago , not far from Tabago Catholic mi ss ion where they had been pur chased . They seemed t o be wel l fed but were ve ry much an experimen t ( PR Buin 2 / 6 7-68) . Later that year Kuheo o f S ilaruho village became the first S iwai t o get his own cow ; in Augus t 1968 it was doin g well . The cat t le economy , o f f i c ially int roduced as an alternat ive to cocoa , had begun . Cat tle were obviously quit e dif ferent from anythin g that h a d preceded them in S iwai ; they were l it tle known an d ext remely large an imals , they required large amount s o f fenced l and and the economics o f main tain ing them was quit e tlll known to S iwais , ye t cat t le farming was suited to the s outh Bougainville envi ronment . The main difficulty is the poverty of the grass land that develops in cleared fore s t s or on regenerat ed garden land , hence didimen placed cons iderable emphas is on ext ens ive plan t in g of Para gras s (Brachiaria mu tiea ) to supplement the natural graz ing . High rain fall i s n o t a p ar t icular d i s incent ive t o tropical cat tle farming and 187 the dif ficult ies o f e s t ab lishing cat tle in S iwai have not been as s o c iated with the phys ical environment . Adopt ion o f cat tle was quite slow ; a year aft er Kuheo received his cow three individual p roj ects had begun although Kuheo was s t ill the only man to actually have a cow . There had however b een one new development ; in 1 9 6 8 the S iwai Society had decided that they would l ike a cattle proj ect ( and als o a store and cemented roads ) . F o r reasons that are n o t ent irely cl ear , enthus iasm fo r this proj ect rap idly expanded and within a few months many S iwai leaders and villagers were keen to st art a b i g catt le proj ect on 3000 acres o f land near Ruisei . This s ingle proj ect b rought the greatest dis co rd b etween didimen and S iwais that has b een reco rded in the history o f agricultural change in S iwai . Didimen ins isted that the only p o ss ible form of development was by small individual or clan owned proj ects ; almost all S iwais ins is t ed that the b i g proj ect was essent ial . The bas i c argument for a large cattle proj ect was s et out by the S iwai Society secretary ( guided by the European So ciety adviser) in March 1 9 6 9 : The s oc iety is almo st complet ely dependent upon cocoa and thus it would be wise t o diversify any propo s ed investmen t s . Many roads o f inve stment have been cons idered and it seems fairly de finite that a mode rat ely large scale cat t le proj ect would be the mos t suitable . Reasons why it is cons idered that a cat t le p roj ect wouid be suc cess ful are : a . Availability o f large t ra c t s o f ext remely fert ile and acces s ib le land . b . The near certainty that Con z inc Rio Tinto o f Australia will go ahead with copper mining in the Kieta area . The estimated populat ion of the t own ship for C . R . A . s t a f f is 5 , 000 people . The p resent average consumpt ion o f meat b y s t a f f is j ust a fract ion under 2 lbs per head per day . c . Obviously , to provide such large quant it ies of meat , a large s cale p roj ect wil l be essent ial . The S iwai people are capable of do ing this and there is no doub t in my mind that they are the only people in Bougainville who have t his capacity . d . Cat t le thrive in the local environment . e . There are no app arent catt le dis eases in the are a . 188 S ince the S o c iety was expected to have a turnover in the 1 9 6 8 -6 9 f inanc ial year o f the order o f $ 15 8 , 000 it was con sidered ( assuming co co a pr ices we re maint ained ) that the � ociety woul d b e ab le to invest a min imum o f $ 10 , 000 a year i� such a proj ect . Anthony Potungah (Kapana) argued that s in ce mo st people already had cocoa plantat ions it would b e d if f icult for an y individual t o begin his own cattle proj ect ; consequen t ly a l arge company was nece s sary . On ce again S iwais we re reverting , this t ime more s t rongly , to the idea o f commun al management o f a new economic venture . This belie f may have b een re � forced , a s the administ ration cert ain ly . believed , by the ir ob servat ions o f the op erat ion o f the copper company ( CRA) and o the r l arge plantat ion and t rading compan ies , all of whi ch were highly p ro fi t able . S ize may h ave been the key . The administrat ion was far from enthus ias tic ab out such a large-s cale cat tle proj ect ; the Director an d As sistan t Director o f DAS F came from P o r t Moresby and po in t ed out the mass ive cost involved and the neces sity for an eno rmous b ank They were s t ill optimis t ic loan to est ab l ish the proj ect . about the potent ial for c at t le : ' a comb ined coconut-catt le venture for the area s eems a sol.lll d prospect if the coconut problem can be corrected ' . Lo cal didimen were concerned with local problems ; they cons idered the f inanc ial diffi cult ies but they also feared disputes between clans ( especial ly over land) and worried that there was no one with the necessary skills or in fluence to s t art a large company of this kind which would have to have European management . Moreover they somehow estimated that the proj ect would require about 6 0 0 l ab ourers f o r 2 00 days a year and consequen t ly were concerned ab out the withdrawal of l abour from cocoa and feeder road The head Bougainville didimen even proposed maintenance . that ' we are to talk to those concerned on var io us aspec t s of the ven ture an d no t to become invo lved ; w e will advise but not as sist as normally we do with the organis ing of such a venture ' . S iwais resen ted these col.filter-proposals s in ce they refus ed to believe that the individual proj ects that the didimen p referred could ever be succes s ful with somethin g as new as cat t le . The admin i s t rat ion were not convinced and the Konga didiman felt that ' cat t le are not as impor tant to the Siwai as their meet ings imply . I feel a b it o f drama is j us t as important to them as a cow ' . The didimen there fore favoured smallholder proj ect s o f about 10 to 20 acres , with a s to ck of about ten hei fers and a bull . Moreover Catholic mi ss ion policy , more app arent in Buin , was that even this was too amb it ious and that p roj ect s should 189 conse have no more than one or two an imals (Ward , 1 9 7 5 : 60 quently the didimen decided that four S iwai ' in fluent ials ' shoul d go to New Guinea and inves t igat e cat t le proj ect s there in the expe ctat ion that this experien ce would rein force DAS F views on the ir suitab il i ty . I f this failed there was always the po s s ib ility of recourse to a different tac t ic ; the res ident didiman argues that ' pos s ibly a visit by Mr Tomlin would b e help ful if h e is in t h e area a s h i s word seems to be gospel here ' . · I t was int ended that four S iwais would visit both Lae and the New Guinea Highlands to ob serve cat tle schemes but in the event they go t no further than Lae . The four men chosen , po ssib ly by S iwai S o ciety , were Gideon Matiha ( Ruisei ) , Manua (Munnu) , Joshua Mont o ro (Hanong) and Paro s (Kumuki ) . They seemed to have s t ayed there for about a fortnight and although they produced a b rief account of the cat t le proj ects that they had seen colle c t ively they were divided and made no recommendat ions . However at a special meet ing of the S iwai S ociety Manua s tated that they had s een no large company proj ects : Long wanpe la p les o l i bin tok pastaim o l i bin kirapim wanpe la bikpe la kmrrp ani tas o l i no long taim kros i bin kamap name l long o l pipe l na o l i bin lusim ( In one area they said they had first started a big company but soon afterwards the people were involved in disputes and the company ended) . One of the people present comment ed 'Tru ya . Long hap bi long Siwai tu baimbai dispe la pasin i kamap sapos i l i wokim In S iwai too this kind of di spute will kampani (Very true . b egin if a company is set up ) ' . Manua ther efore recommended to the meet ing that the best pol icy was for ind ividual small scale proj ects but Jo shua Montoro was unconvinc ed ; he had a different vis ion of a possible futur e . Wanpe la mas ta long Lae i gat 1 , 3 0 0 bu lmakau na i gat 6, 0 0 0 acre na i gat tripe la kau boi o l i ran Taso l diope la mas ta i tok, 'I no long hos bek . kmrrp an i, mi na pikinini tas o l i s tap insai t longen ' ( One European at Lae has 1 , 300 head o f cat t l e , 6 , 00 0 acres and three ' cowboys ' who go rollll. d on But this man said ' It isn ' t a company , horseb ack . only me and my children rllll it ' ) . 190 However a numb er of p eople were afraid o f cows , an d the . . d�d�men event ually convinced mo st o f the people at the mee t in g :hat i t was b e s t t o wait fo r t h e success o f individual proj ects t ree or f � ur years , and then s et up a company if they remained convinced . Neve rtheles s he pointed out that j ungle had al ready covered up the S iwai So ciety co coa plantat ion and many c � coa ?ompanies in other vill ages had al ready given up following disputes . De spite the opt imism o f l eaders such as Lais i (Hari ) , Anthony Potungah and To ' o s ih (Turungum) , who favoured the large coun c il proj e ct , S iwais were generally un convinced and p referred to let ind ividuals or small group s accept the risks involved in int roducing cattl e . lil � Meanwhile there had b een s ome individual developmen t s . At the s t art of 19 7 0 three p roj e c t s had some s t o ck ; Kuheo ( S ilaruho ) had t en cat tle and at Kinirui an d Amio , Kunopi and Kamuai had four cat t le each . Tonu miss ion then had four cat tle an d the Konga DASF , b eginning to estab lish their demon st rat ion proj ect , had four cat t le thems elves . Not t o be out done by these individualis t ic developmen t s the S iwai Society had ob t ained two cat t le although they had no f ield availab le for them . By May 19 70 the didimen had iden t i f ied thirteen separate p roj ect s within S iwai an d were att emp t in g t o evaluat e their future succes s . Apart from that o f Kuheo which had progressed furthest , only three o ther p roj e c t s had cat tle , an d already the Konga didiman , R . D . Hill , was not convinced about the future of several o f thes e , such as that at Kapana : Barata , Konnei , P o t un gah (Kapana) Konnei an d Potungah are mere sleeping partners . Barata is not a b ig-head but is scared of cat tle and feels un ab le t o look after them on his own . I have told him countless t imes to cut back his Elephant gras s an d sub-divide but he p rocras t inates and mucks around so much I have reached the s tage where I figure he will never have a decent proj ect . He h as two wil d heifers (wild be cause Barata is s cared of them and his kids t ease them) in a well gras s ed paddock about 300 yards past the S ociety towards Kapana . He may want two more heifers n ext year but I can ' t s ee him get t ing around to cl earing the bush (Hill , 19 7 0 ) . In less than a y ear two o f the p artners in this connnun al proj ect had dropped out . However , to R. D . Hill at leas t one of the other p roj ect s , at Kinirui , offered rather mor e pot ent ial . 191 K\lll o p i (Kinirui) K\lll o pi has n ever had any t raining which is a good thing as it means he b elieves what he is tol d . He has worked as a cook for many years , is about 4 5 , a very hard worke r , intelligen t and a really good bloke . He has 4 heifers at the moment . Two he has paid for and two he is wait in g for a b ank loan to buy . I f the loan i s not app roved I s t rongly re connnend another applicat ion be put in . He is one o f the only cat t l e people in the area who is p repared to work on his own and he would be a good person to make an example of as I have no doub t s he will be success ful . He has ab out 8 acres cleared and fenced but is having t roub le get t ing pas t ures s o he s ays he wil l p rob ab ly not buy any from our next herd (Hill , 19 70) . Although all t hese p roj ects had b egun early and therefore represented the efforts of the few S iwais who were keen to introduce cat t le , it was already clear that there were going to ·be cons iderable prob lems ; s everal groups had fotmd it difficult t o ob tain adequat e gro\lll d and o thers had failed to clear their l an d . Two or three of tho s e involved had been on cat t le management cours es but mos t knew litt le ab out t e chniques of management . Kauma (Tonu) had ob tained a heifer from Tonu mi ssion b ut was ' con t ent to t reat it like a do g ' ; Huhu ( Ieku) did no more than ' s it down nothing ' and throughout S iwai the large amotm t of work necessary to estab lish cat t l e proj ect s had b een largely ab sen t . Kepoama (Mus imino i ) , the pioneer of co coa growing , had al so b ecome intere s t e d in ca t t l e b ut even he had not got far . The didiman recorded that he ' has go t some gras s and has marked out a bit o f grotmd but is probab ly an un likely s t arter ' ; so he was . The didimen too had their p rob lems ; every S iwai had reques ted that they init ially receive a small young hei fer so that they could get used to it and ' t rain ' it but all the cat tle they received at Konga were fully grown which made them diff icul t t o dist ribut e . Moreover they were already concerned t hat if a road or abat to ir was not built they would on ce again have to purchase back the cat t le before a ' real ' market emerged . By 19 7 0 t here fore cat tle farming had b e gun in S iwai but there were no indi cat ions that it would be success ful . The earliest cat t le proj ects were mainly lo cat ed near Konga (Fi gure 2 0 ) and re fl ect the fact that most of the 192 iJ ' ' ' ' C ATTLE P R O J E C TS ... 0 2 Figure 20 . 4 6 8 km Cattle proj e c t s 1 9 7 0 193 f irst cattle raisers had already b een success ful in �ocoa growin g ; for them cat tle were a means of dive rs i f icat ion away from cocoa rather than an act ivity preferred in i t s own right . Thus , with one except ion , none moved into c at tle raising without already having t ried cocoa . Three o f the proj ec t owne rs ( or part-own ers ) were S iwai didimen working at Konga who already had some knowl edge , at least in theory , o f the organiz at ion o f cat t le p roj ect s . The one except ion was Kuheo o f S ilaruho . Kuheo was born in S ilaruho in the last years o f German administ rat ion in Bougainville . His fathe r , Haranu , was the last S iwai to b e hanged by the administ rat ion at Monoitu in 192 3 when So.on afterwards Kuheo was about twelve years old . he ran away t o Buin and was t aken by a European t o Rab aul where he worked on a plantat ion n ear Kokopo for three y ears . There he worked as a cook an d also looked af t er cows . Later he worked at various places in New Guinea , includin g Kain an tu , where h e helped t o set u p the first st at i on an d airs t rip and was shot in the leg by a ' wild man ' . Durin g the first p art o f the war he wo rked in Rab aul , alon gs i de Michael Somare ' s fathe r , building airst rip s and trenches but he returned to S iwai to b ecome a s cout for ANGAU . He t aught villagers how t o fire 303 rifles and was h ims elf shot in the hand by the Japanese . Befo re the war he had married two wives and aft er the war he marr ied a third ; as he put it ' this was t he t radi t ional way o f carrying out bus iness to ob t ain land and p i gs ' . Aft er the war he d id indeed acquire a, l arge numb er o f p igs and much land and cons equently achieved a posit ion of high s t atus , usually b e ing recognised as a mumi . He was p o s s ib ly the first person t o fen ce his p igs but took little int erest in cash croppin g . H e had always wan t ed t o ob t a in cows based on his early experience in New Brit ain but the didimen d is co ur aged him unt il eventually they decided he In 1 9 6 8 , with was cap able of runnin g a p roj ect . his two son s , he b ecame the f irst cat tle owner in S iwai ; as the didiman recorded in 1 9 7 0 ' he is p re t ty thrilled that he is now going to see a b i g c at t le herd b e fo re he dies ' . 194 L ike mo st new int ro duct ions int o S iwai the early innovato r s o f c at tle we re mainly those who had some s ort o f p revious experien ce with cat t le . Howeve r few o f t hese , not even Kuheo , were lookin g towards cat tle as an economi c alt e rnat ive s up erior to anything that had gone b e fo re ; it was an addit ion an d not an alt e rn at ive in the S iwai _ e conomy . It was a move int o bus iness , but bus iness a s p res t ige rather than a s an improve ment in c ash-earning capac ity b eyond the exi s t ing cash crops . The idea o f a large S iwai So ciety p roj ect lapsed for a couple of years s ine� in the ab sen ce o f DASF support the Development Bank refused to grant a loan . The small s cale proj ects were at b es t disappoint ing so that in May 19 7 2 the Chairman of S iwai So ciety wrot e iron ically that ' If the current rate of p ro gress cont inues the S iwai people may have one or two head of cat t l e ready for s ale to Panguna/Arawa/ Kieta by the t ime the mining op erat ions are ready to cease . This I b el i eve is s cheduled for the y ear 2005 ' . Despi t e Lhis failure , b u t to some ext ent b ecaus e o f it , S iwai leaders , l ike Thomas Konnei , the Chairman o f the Society , remained convinced that a large p roj ect was the b e s t way to develop cat tle farming as a b us iness enterprise . Consequen tly in 1 9 72 the Society were examin ing new p roposal s . Thei r aim was t o e s t ablish a s ep arat e Society , which would collect $10 , 000 in share capital ( from $ 10 shares ) , purchase 3000 acres o f land at Ruisei and b e g in the p roj ect with 100 cat t le on 400 acres , in it ially with a European manager . Thi s t ime the admin ist rat ion had revise d their att itudes ; the Chief Rural Development Officer o f Bougainville , David B rown , cons idered that ' the S iwai people have developed s everal good smallho lder cat tle p roj ect s and now cons ide r they are ready to p rogre s s to the n ext s t age . This o ffice cons iders . . . that it would be t imely t o advance to t he n ext s tage o f development , i n the Buin sub -dis t rict , o f 100-head p roj ect s ' (B rown , 1 9 7 2 ) . Indeed c ircums t an ces had changed ; the road to Kie t a was open and there were obvious market s in the mine t owns . Mo re over _ BCL had exp ressed ' moral s uppo rt ' for the s cheme and p romised that Panguna Development Foundat ion would as s ist in s upplying the venture . Con sequently , with this level of support , the S iwai So ciety applied to the Department of Lands for a pas t o ral lease on the Ruis e i land . They expected to purchas e 3000 acres at $ 1 per acre and make imp rovement s t o it that would eventually raise its value t o $ 500 , 000 ; cos t s in the f irst year o f op erat ion would amount t o ab out $ 2 6 , 700 ( including $ 10 , 2 00 for clearin g and plant ing the land and $2 , 000 for the manager ' s s alary ) . At the s ame t ime that the Panguna mine was expanding its lab our force 195 and co coa was b ecomin g decidedly profitable , the Konga didiman expected that the cat tle proj ect would give plenty of employment at s t andard lab ouring rates to S iwai men whilst it was even recommended that a good inducement to share purchasers would be the proviso that only shareholders could work on the proj ect . No es t imates were made o f the poten t ial labour force . The expectat ions were hopelessly opt imist ic . The needs o f the copper mine , and a new road , seem t o have provoked a compl ete reversal o f policy on the part of the didimen . When the lo cal didimen began t o make a more crit i cal evaluat ion of the s cheme p roblems immed iately became app arent ; the area t urned o ut to be 6 3 7 acres ( an d n o t 3000 acres ) , although t h i s would not have made much dif ference s in ce it would s t ill s upport 6 30 head o f catt le . They also f ollll d that Sukina , the rep resentat ive o f the 102 people with rights of ownership t o the land , required $ 1600 compensat ion for the ' improvements ' on the l and , that is the bananas , almonds , b readfruit and o ther economic t rees that grew on the otherwise llll u sed land . Mo reover he was only will in g to lease the land for twenty years at an annual rate o f $ 2 p er acre . All o f thi s was s omewhat dif ferent f rom what the s upporters of the p roj ect had envisaged . On ce again land right s were dis couraging large-scale economic developments . The changing demands on the part o f Ruisei landowners p rovoked recons iderat ions on t he part of the S iwai S ociety so that at the s t art o f 1974 they had ab andoned the po s s ib ilit ies o f Ruisei and were search ing for a new s ite . There seemed no prospect of the p roj ect ever start in g as arollll d this t ime int e rest in the smaller s chemes be gan to decline . Po ss ib ly the greatest const raint to catt le farming was , and is , the availab ility o f land ; although the Konga didimen seem to have worked on the basis o f one cow per acre , est imat es for other t rop ical areas , including other parts o f New Guinea , suggest that the animal dens ity should b e less than half t hat . This means that for a smallholder s cheme with t en cat t le , the min imum herd s iz e that i s viab le , at least twenty acres o f land were required , yet very few individual S iwais or even groups could ob t ain right s t o such a lar ge area o f land , much more than was us ually required for co coa p lant ing , even though cat t le p roj ects did no t Consequently almost const itut e pe rmanent use o f that land . all the earli est proj ect s were to some ext ent commtnial group effort s ; none involved purchas ing land b ut some consisted o f a set o f f i elds fragmented becaus e o f the complexit ies o f land t enure . 196 The mos t s t r iking characteris t ic o f early int e rest in c at tle , on the p art o f S iwais , is the relat ive ab s ence of an e conomic mot ivat ion for ob taining cat t l e . Even the didi1aen make no refe rence t o the economic potent ial o f c at t le and ne ither the Society nor in dividual s seem to have b een concerned ab out the long- te rm nature o f the returns t o cat t l e farming . Just as in parts of the N ew Guinea Highlands ( Finney , 19 7 3) ownership o f cattle , as with some o ther bus iness ent erprises , was for pres t ige rather than p ro f its although it was assumed that profits woul d follow from thi s S imilarly cat t le were rarely compared kind of b us ines s . with pigs ; cat t le were symbols of pres t ige o r bus ines s and they were not the int imat e component of the so cial and domest i c s cene that p igs we re . The ecological d i f ferences emphas iz ed the social differences ; cat t le ate different foods and required much mo re land b ecaus e o f their more res t ricted diet . The ext ent and nat ure o f lab our input s in to the two forms of animal husb andry was also quite dif fe rent , espe c ially in the estab l ishment phase o f cat t le farming . Th e need for large areas o f graz ing l and was not well understood . Orientat ion t owards p res t i ge and the as sumpt ion o f easy pro fitab il it y we re the main reasons for the inadequacies o f cattle proj ect s . Divers i ficat ion and dis int erest Just as S iwais cons idered almost every po ssib le c rop with commercial pos s ib ilit ies , so too with an imals . In 1 9 6 9 a villager had reques t e d that the didimen p rovide donkeys in S iwai , p resumab ly as a b eas t of burden , and the Konga didiman , comment ing on h is unwillingness to provide them, s t ated ' Am I correct in as suming that donkeys would not b e suitable here b ecause of l imit ed loads , wet condit ions an d the lack of skilled people t o look aft e r them? ' (Ho rs es , on which some mi ss ionaries had b een known t o t ravel through p arts o f Bouganville in the pre-war years , app ear never to have b een cons idered as a possib il ity for rural t ransport . ) Lat er on in 1 9 7 2 the didiman received a couple of enquiries ab out t he possib ility o f obt aining goat s ; they had b een ob served on plantat ion s an d it was felt that they would make goo d food . The Dis t r i ct Livest ock Officer was firmly against this , believing that they woul d be di fficult to con f ine and would caus e con s iderab le damage in the villages by eat ing young t rees and so on . A rather different possib ility was the export o f but t erflies ; some of those in south Bougainville are amongst the rarest and most beaut i ful in the world yet S iwai request s in 19 72 fo r in format ion on export ing them 19 7 In the end none o f these diverse p os s ib were t urned down . ilit ies were t aken up in S iwai , o r indeed elsewhere in Bougainvil le , and mo st p eople remained quite content with the range of an imals available to them. The whole o f the animal economy , with minor except ions , was an addit ion to rather than a s ub s t itute for cash croppin g . Animals promised n o economic success s ince market s were distant and with the available technology animal product s were not s t o rab le . Cat tle init ially promised no more , so that it was only the demands o f a few in dividual s , and the as s is t an ce of mi ss ions rather than didimen , that enab led the int roduct ion of a developmen t of a rather different order . Cat tle represented b oth b us iness and p res t i ge ; they disappo int e d the ir supporters in that they p roved to be neither , especially s in ce the grandiose s chemes of the S iwai Society could not be implemented . With the potent ial o f cat tle unreal iz ed , no p art o f the animal economy b rought economic success to S iwai . Cash crops o f fered quicker , and apparen t ly larger , cash incomes so that whatever prest ige cat tle could p rovide was unable to compare with the economic b enefit s o f coco a . The S iwai animal economy was als o sub ordinat e t o cash cropp in g . Chapter 8 Bus ines s and cargo The co coa-cons cious S iwai is an ast ute b us inessman . As s uch he calls a dollar a dollar and a spade a spade { Donovan , 1 9 7 0 ) . The S iwai is no fool when b us iness is involved . He has a rather fierce p ride in his ab ility to work hard and better hims el f in a ' p roduct ive ' sense and an equal measure o f pride in his ab ility to l ive s imply and not j o in the ranks of the sophis t icates for whom he has no admirat ion and l i t t le t o le rance (Toml in , 1969 : 2 ) . Be ginning with the communal cult ivation o f rice in the early post -war years it was generally ass umed b y S iwais that the purpose o f growin g cash crops was to provide an income wh ich would be used not only to purchase various goods that wer e nee ded or want ed , especially foods tuffs like s alt and t inned meat , kero sene and b ush-knives , b ut also t o establish s t o res and thus b ring b us iness development into S iwai . Cash cropp ing and b us iness development were essent ially separat e p arts o f the s ame phenomenon ; indeed Nash s uggests that in Nagovis i the comb inat ion o f t rade s to res and connnun al cash cropping p erhaps followed a perceived European plantat ion model ( 1 9 74 : 102 ) . For S iwai this is e qually t rue . Befo re the war the s t o res that had b r ie fly exis ted in S iwai were es sent ially t iny b ranches of European and Chinese bus inesses whi ch were cent red elsewhere (pp . 62 -3) . Aft e r the war the Chinese t rader Wong You , who s e main int erest s were in B uka an d Kiet a , at t empted t o res t art h is S iwai s to re b ut , acco rding t o in fo rmants , he was told by Deokare o f Kaparo that s ince he had only paid 10 / - for the ground on which the store was b uilt he could not return to take more money from S iwai . Al ien-owned s t o res never ret urned t o S iwai , whereas they were accepted in Buin , and all the sub sequent s t o res , apart from those as sociat ed with the mi ssions , were 198 199 es s ent ially the creat ions of S iwai entrepreneurs . S iwais were no longer store labourers ; they b ecame s t ore-owners . The first s ix s t o res opened almo s t t o gether aroun d the s t art of 1 9 5 3 , not long after the dist ribut ion of war compensat ion money in S iwai . Although the average claim amounted t o some £30 per household , claims were no t evenly di st ribut ed within S iwai s o that S iwai leaders , especially from cent ral S iwai , were able to claim ownership of con s ider able nat ural resources ( s uch as coconut s and s ago palms ) and almo s t certainly received s ums o f over £100 . By any p revious s tandards familiar t o S iwais this was an eno rmous s um an d represent ed a s ignificant incent ive to at t empt a new form o f development . S ix separate S iwai leaders began s to res , Towai ( o f Kot u village) , No ' kia (Hukuha) , Haranu (Hire) , P iruruho (Mus iraka) , Teremo (Amio ) and S ihirong (Hari) , and th ere may have b een o thers in the mo re remote village s . Although the Ass is t ant Dist rict Commis s ioner in Buin , Mr Cole , disco uraged this new development , who s e res ul t s t o s ome ext ent eventually j us t i f ied h i s caut ion , it was a move that was inevitable . S everal of the s tores , like that at Amio , were rllll in conj tm c tion with the communal cult ivat ion o f rice on b ehal f o f l ineage group s ; the operat ions o f the two sect o rs were invariably indis t in guishab le . Like the at tempt s at communal cult ivation , the rat ionale o f the early s t o res (at least as it was exp res s ed in 19 7 5 ) was t o improve t h e access o f village people t o goods without paying high price s o r travelling t o the Buin coas t at Kangu . The intent ion that village s t ores would help people was familiar elsewhere in Papua New Guinea but was much less important than the belief that through the c reat ion of an extens ive network o f credit and gift relat ions , and by s imply owning a large collect ion o f s t o re goods in it s own room o r b uildin g , store-owners achieved p re s t i ge . For a t ime both these obj ect ives were at tained ; prices were lowered and p res t i ge was a ch ieved . Befo re these novel developmen t s in S iwai one Buin man , Kungka , had already b ecome a b us ines sman o f s ome not e . As early as December 1952 the kiap ob served that he had three trucks , three t rade s to re s , two b akeries and large rice gardens annually p roducing around two tons of excellent rice which was sold in the s t o res . The rice was machine hulled by h is own huller ; o thers could hire this for a rent of 25 per cent of their own c rop (PR Buin 4 / 5 2 -3) . Kungka was therefore some way ahead o f any serious rivals but , becaus e his own village was in wes tern Buin whils t he worked 200 from Buin port at Kangu , his bus ines s act ivit ies proved t o b e s omething o f a model fo r the rather later S iwai e f forts . One o f the first S iwai s to re owners was Haranu , now an elderly S iwai mumi o f s ome autho rity . Before the war he had gone as a kukboi to the k iap in Kiet a , who s en t him to Rabaul for further educat ion . Although he never achieved mo re than literacy at reading numbers he became a p lisboi befo re the war and during the war spent s ome t ime as a coastwat che r with Paul Mason in the hills above Kiet a . Aft e r the war he re turned to the village of Hire . The following accollll t , which cannot be collaborated in it s ent irety , is drawn essent ially from his own de s crip t ion o f his early post-war bus iness act ivit ies . After the war Haranu e s t ab l ished a copra plant at ion o f perhaps 400 t rees at the mouth o f the Mob iai rive r , which has now been des t royed b y the sea. He was the first pers on in S iwai to b uild a copra drie r . (Lat er he built a s econ d one near Hire , with the ass istance o f t he didimen s oon after they first came t o Konga . ) He sold copra , sago s eeds ( ' ivory nut s ' ) and o c cas ionally t ro chus and mo ther of pearl shells to Ton Lep , the Chinese t rader at Buin . In 1 9 5 3 , with h is war damage money , en couragement from the Catholi c B ishop Wade (who t o ld him this was a good way to us e the money) and s ome as s is t ance from Ton Lep he set up his own trade st ore at Hire and ass is t ed in f inan c in g and r\llln ing the store s at Mus i raka , Ieku , Hukuha and Hari . The s to re at Hari , which was r\lll b y S ihiron g , who had been a pre-war kukboi too , als o had a bakery (NM-haus bre t) . The five leaders who were involved each cont ribut ed £100 entirely from war damage money and othe r men cont rib uted £1 and £ 2 each . S ince there was a lot o f war damage money in S iwai they soon made £ 300 p ro f it . (Haranu claims that their cash act ually reached £4000 but this s eems improb ab le . ) All the goods fo r the s t ore came from Ton Lep in Buin , when po s s ible b ein g carried in Kungka ' s t ruck (which for more than a decade was the only locally owned vehicle in the whole of s outh Bougainville) , but more o ft en they were carried on various shoul ders . S omet imes Haranu paid no money for the cargo but s imply t raded copra and ivory nut s for it ; although his copra drier was later set up n ear the s tore and he 2 01 encouraged people to b ring copra and ivory nut s to him, this does suggest that the amount o f income generated by the store may have been unimportant . Late in 1955 Tomlin reco rded that coconut s were being purchased by S iwai s t orekeepers at a p enny each ( although in s ome villages there was s uch a short age that 3d . each was being paid for plant ing nut s ) while copra was being sold to Chines e traders at e ither 4d . or 4�d . per pound which can have left l it t le pro fit margin for these early b us iness men . The store l as t ed for two o r three years , o r p o s s ib ly longe r . Tomlin noted in October 1 9 5 6 that ' nat ive s t o rekeepers have formed a buy ing club and bulk their o rders so as to ob tain favourab le purchase p rices ' , s o that this group of store s may have las ted for mo re than three years . Haranu claims that he clo sed his store s ince he felt both that men with ed ucat ion would s oon s tart rlllln ing the s to re s and that Ton Lep was ma.king too much profit from them. P iruruho , who had the s t o re at Mus iraka , claimed that the kiap , Mr Cole , had o rdered him to clo s e his s tore after only about one y ear s ince there were too many disput es over money . The o ther related s tores clo sed after the same sort of t ime period , although s ome operated sporadically throughout the de cade and even longer . Although Haranu s t ated that some money was left when his store clo s ed it s eems that the first flush o f enthus iasm for store ownership and the ab ility to purchase s t o re goods had ended after the dwindling of the war damage payments and the inab il ity of cash c rops to p rovide alternat ive incomes . The cash that rema :ined must have b een decidedly less than the original investment . (Haranu hims el f later went on to b e one o f the main inst igators in establishing the S iwai S o ciety , establ ished the first poul t ry proj ect in S iwai with a loan from the Development Bank { p . 185 ) and in the 19 70s b egan a cat tle p roj ect . ) The emergence o f the early t rade s t o res coupled with the war damage p ayment s had a number of e f fects on S iwai l ife . Compared with o ther areas o f Bougainville relat ively few men were working out s ide S iwai ; in August 1955 the kiap calculated that 2 8 per cent o f adult S iwai men b etween the ages o f 16 and 45 were · wo rking out s ide S iwai . Although this represented nearly a third of all adult males it was nonethe less lower than other areas ( c f . Connell , 1 9 7 8b ) . The kiap 2 02 believed that this is p robably due to the fact that with the large sum of money paid as War Damage Compensat ions , the c irculat ion o f money is , at present , quite sufficient for their n eeds and any great des ire to earn more money will therefo re not b e noticed in the area unt i l this money has reached its ult imate end , which is one of the many trade s t o res in the dist rict Product ion o f copra also decl ined during the period when the compensat ion money was being spent and it was no t unt il October 1 9 5 5 that Tomlin noted with relief that the final complet ion of the payments had ' fo rced people b ack into p ro duct ion ' . In October 1955 Toml in reco rded t hat ' nat ive b us ines smen employing a few lab ourers have b een growing rice to sell in their s t o res ' . It may well be therefore that the first hired lab ourers , working out s ide their usual lin eage group and receiving cash p ayments , emerged at much the same t ime as the first b us inessmen . Tomlin ' s conclus ion on the b us inessmen o f b o th Buin and S iwai is fairly clear : There are a great numb er o f nat ive b us inessmen throughout the who le sub -dist rict . Most o f these individuals have b een t rained by miss ions and plan t at ions and are generally better educated and a cut above the rest . They comb ine with their small t rade s t o res s ome agricult ural act ivit ies . Quite a few grow rice to sell in their stores and peanuts for sale through t raders . Thi s generally means that they have other members o f their famil ies as s is t ing them, or they employ o ther nat ives to ten d their gardens . Cocoa growin g is now b ecoming the fashion with these characters and quite a few are payin g casual labo urers t o plan t it (Tomlin , 1 9 5 5 ) . Although at that t ime the emphas is on cocoa cult ivat i on was more typ i cal o f Buin , the general characte r is t i cs o f S iwai b us inessmen are demarcated here . The employment o f lab ourers marked a new phas e in the connne rcial i z at ion o f S iwai agricult ure . Few o f these were regularly employed although by the early 19 6 0 s there may have been some indiv iduals who s pent more t ime on wage labour than on 203 agricult ural act ivit ies o f their own . At much the s ame t ime that Haranu ' s s t o re closed Anthony Pot ungah set up a s t o re at Konga and it is almo st certain that there was never any t ime s ince 1953 when there were not s ome local ly-owned s t o re s operat ing in S iwai . Thus in August 1 9 5 5 there were fourteen licensed trade s t o res in S iwai b ut according t o the kiap , D . J . Hook , only the three at Konga , Harikagu and Hari appeared to be p rosperous . Some o f the s t o re s were in very small villages and Hook even found some in gardens . He also ob served that al though the ret ail prices allowed a p rofit of ab out s ixpence per art i cle , pro fits were o f fset by the free dis t ribut ion o f foods t o the ' friends o f the s torekeepers ' but that it was impo s s ible for them not t o do that . The t ime when any local s tores would operate cons ist en t ly at a pro fit was s t ill more than a de cade away . Anthony Potungah began his firs t s tore around t he mid1950s b ut apart from him , all thos e who later became s uc ce s s ful s t o re-owners did not s t art unt il the 1960s . Pot ungah h imself found the condit ions for running t rade stores in the 1950s very di fferent f rom two decades later when his store was one of the more s uc cess ful in S iwai . Po tungah had no formal educat ion b ut learn t to read and write dur in g the war . Aft er the war he be came a carpenter fo r Ton Lep in Buin . He wat ched care fully how Ton Lep us ed to mark up the prices o f s tore goods and developed the idea o f estab lishing his own s t o re . Ret urn ing t o S iwai around 1955 he us ed h is savings to set up a s tore near Kapana village ob t aining his goods from Ton Lep ; mos t o f these were the s ame sorts o f things that are s t ill sold in the present s tores : rice , fish , lap laps , knives , kerosene and bat t eries . Although he did not want any as sistance thirt een people nevertheles s con t r ibut ed £5 each to the development o f the s tore , which also inco rporated a b akery . His stat ed aim in s e t t in g up the s tore was t o as s is t the old people o f S iwai by p roviding goods at prices they could afford whil st s imultaneous ly enab l ing him t o make one o r two pen ce p ro fit on each purchase . The s to re was quite succes s ful and he had int ended to develop the b akery int o a cafe (NM- haus kaikai ) but the ' shareholders ' told h im that they were unhappy because he was ' eat ing ' their money . He gave up in dis gus t , gave the s t o re key to one o f 204 them, Ktlll o pi , and told him to run it . then collapsed . The s t o re The same problems that existed for the management o f the communal gardens were therefore repeated in this and the vas t maj o r ity o f the store s that followed . Anthony Potun gah , pos s ibly with the wisdom o f hinds i ght , couunented that h e had never wanted ' shareholders ' but the collect ive o rganizat ion of bus ines s and money-makin g act ivit ies was s omethin g that it was impos s ible to avo id in the firs t decades of S iwai commercialism. Stores l ike th e grandiosely-t itled S iigiha Trading S ociety at Kakotokoli had s ome 108 members in 1 9 6 7 Disputes over the and were s t ill enrolling new sharehol ders . des t inat ion of incomes , in s it uat ion s where no one was abl e t o maint a in account s , prove d much t o o great f o r the long t erm stab il it y o f such ent erprises . The relat ive longevity o f the early st ores associated with Haranu and the other leaders was a funct ion both o f their novelt y and the ext ent to which a very small number of men provided the basic f inance . Neither o f these condit ions was generally t rue o f mos t o f the s t o re s that followed . In 19 5 6 Rangai , o f Panake village , had what Hook des cr ib ed as a ' well-es tab lished wholesale s t o re dealing in nat ive b aske tware ' but mos t of the s tores we re l it tle more than small coll ect ion s o f foodst uf f s . Neverthel es s in Feb ruary 19 5 7 Tomlin was able t o s t ate with s ome pride that ' lo cal n at ive s t orekeepers are caterin g well for the cons umer s ide of the bus in es s and many art icles are sold here at le s s than Buin p rices . This is having a marked e f fect on local diet . Much more tinned meat and fish are consumed ' . These were not apparently con s idered to b e expen s ive an d were eaten with the locally p roduced rice . One characterist ic that would seem t o dis t inguish S iwai f rom othe rwise comparable parts of Melanes ia , at leas t unt il the mid-1 9 60s , was the unwillin gnes s with whi ch income was spent in the t rade stores . Tomlin reco rded that , ' they talk scept i cally o f the money they are spending on consumer goods as "rubb ish money" b ecause it does not produce anythin g and is was t e d . This is the reason why they l imit it t o a smal l percentage o f their total income and s ave the res t . t o develop addit ional revenue producing busines s ' (Tomlin , 1 9 6 9 : 2 ) . He believed that S iwais were except ionally ' frugal-minded ' . Nevertheless despite this reluctance to spend freely , the purchases made in s t o res were s imilar to thos e elsewhere in Melanes ia ; mo s t prominent o f these were foodstuff s , then clo th in g , radio s , tools and household equipmen t . B icycles became important and were much used for transportin g cocoa ; 2 05 Tomlin was care ful t o note that ' anyone worth his s alt owns one , and uses it in conj unct ion with his work rather than as A high a means o f amus ing himsel f ' ( Tomlin , 1 9 6 9 : 2 ) . propens ity to s ave , even out o f quite small earnings , never proved to b e a disin cent ive to furth er store expans ion . It was obvious t o both didimen and S iwa is in the 1950s that the main deterrent to bus ines s suc cess was the lack of transport although , without con s iderable f inance from out s ide , which was consp icuously lackin g , it would have b een difficult to ameliorate this problem . Tomlin ob served that co conut s were being b ought ' by the bus inessmen ' but before they had smoke-dried the copra or devis ed a means of transpor t ing it to Buin the coconut s had o ft en developed s izeable shoots . In 1 9 5 6 a group o f villagers from Panake , Ruisei , Kapana and Ieku had b een saving their money (prob ably mainly war damage s ) with the intent ion o f buying a t ruck . They did no t succeed and the transport prob lem was no t ent irely solved satis fact o rily unt il 1 9 7 2 . By 1 9 5 6 the con cept of bisnisman seemed to be recognized , at least by Tomlin and p resumably by S iwais as well ; Tomlin noted that some o f them were managing to do quite well and that the Society ' has purchased a to tal o f 3 3 bags o f smoke copra from S iwai bus ines smen ' . He reco gnized a number o f individuals who were success fully organiz ing some comb inat ion of stores , copra purchas ing and smoking and somet imes b akeries to the extent that by western criteria there was a t iny group of smal l s cale ent repreneurs . Early efforts at o rganiz in g and rtmning trade st ores were made essent ially without alien ass ist ance ; Chinese storekeepers were prepared to p ro fit from providing cargo but the administrat ion b el ieved that the sto res would be failures and took no int erest in encouraging their development . Although most o f the goods came from the Chinese t raders in Buin the Methodist miss ion at Kihili als o supplied cargo ( and purchased copra) . Later S iwai bus inessmen , such as Luke Pauru , developed s ome skills from periods o f work with this miss ion which , for most of the pos t -war years , had a greate r in fluen ce o n the emergence o f business than i t s Catholic r ival which was rarely concerned with going b eyond encouraging cash crop p ing . During the 1950s the skills involved in t rade store management were gradually acquired but the prob lems o f o rganiz at ion were s t ill too great t o allow p ro fitab ility . It is apparent that in the early 1960s more stores than ever before were being established in S iwai , many b ein g known simply as ' canteen s ' . These latter were essentially the 2 06 result o f the ef forts o f a s ingle man o r a small group o f kin t o buy in b ulk large quan tit ies o f b as ic foodstuffs which wo uld b e sold only t o members of the man ' s househol d o r the group ; they wer e n o t int ended to supply large numb ers o f people or make a profit . They were in the s t ri ct s ense s t ores rather than shops , accumulated in the owners ' hous e . Late in 1 9 6 3 the ColDlcil ins t ructed s tore-owners that they mus t maint ain t rade stores in separate buildings ( fo r wh i ch a l icence cost i.ng £3 had to be pur chased) rathe r than keep go ods in the hous es that they slep t in . This did lit tle t o reduce t h e numb er o f these t iny canteens . The number o f bakeries was also increas in g rapidly although t h i s was not without its p rob l ems ( the Cotlll c il de c ided in 19 6 7 that the medi cal ass istant mus t in spect all of them with a view to taking t o court those owners who did not maintain satis factory standards ) . Flour was usually in sho rt supply ; skills in b read making were o ften conspicuous by their ab s ence and mo st had an essent ially ephemeral existence . Despite rather than b ecaus e of th e p roli ferat ion in numbers many of the s t o res were quite unsuccess ful as bus ines s ent erprises . As one kiap reco rded at the end of 1964 : ' t rade s to res come and go . They are not regarded as a lucrat ive ' source o f income b ut a s a thing o f prest i ge for it s owner and a convenien ce t o the vill age ' (PR Buin 5 /6 4 -5 ) . A year later the kiap noted that the two adj oin ing villages o f Rab aulu and Matukol i has as many as five trade s t o res but none o f them of fered any prospect o f a long term future . Many seem t o have b een essent ially a mean s of ext ending and s t rength ening s oc ial t ies and h ence their p rol iferat ion reflect ed these aims rather than commercial requiremen t s . Thus the early development of trade s tores in S iwai was much as it was elsewhere in Papua New Guinea ; they were nominally to provide various kinds of goods in the rural area and t o demon s t rate their owner ' s p rest i ge . T o succeed in bus ines s it was necess ary to save rather than share ; this was impo s s ible in the early years and s tores foundered on disputes over the e th ics o f dist ribut ion . By t he late 19 60 s , however , t rade s t o res had b e come an integral p art o f S iwai economic development . No lon ger were they divo rced from the agri cul t ural sect o r , with all trans act ions being made f rom war damage paymen t s , but s tores were rtlll from the pro fit s of the emerging co coa economy ; thus there was a cont inuous supply of ftmds for trade s t o re development . This did not o f course ens ure profitab il ity but , because it was relat ively easy to ensure p ro fi t s from co coa growin g , it did mean that s to res remained in existen ce 207 much lon ger than would have b een possible without this external s ource of funds . By the end of 19 6 7 there were a small number o f stores which seemed t o display suff icient potent ial to suggest long t e rm success . The res ident kiap s ingled out two stores , f rom the twenty o r s o then existing , those o f Hat ah and Paul Tup an a . There were als o four b akeries and from these he s ingled out that of Luke Pauru as the one with the greatest potent ial , especially s in ce Pauru had j us t become t h e first person in S iwai and po ss ib ly in the whole coun t ry , to apply fo r a loan of $ 400 from the newly formed Papua New Guinea Development Bank to ext end his b ake ry . At that t ime Pauru was s t ill a clerk with the Methodist Mis s ion at Tonu b ut he had a trade s t o re and a sound knowledge o f account in g procedures . Less than a decade later Pauru was the l eading S iwai bus ines sman , Hat ah was making the great est in come in S iwai from purely rural interes ts whils t Tubana ' s stores and visions had long s ince collapsed in disarray ( PP · 2 1 5- 8 ) · On the other hand not everyone was familiar with t rade sto res and some apparently long -estab l ished t rade st ore goods s t ill had an un certain place in village diet s ; in �ay 1 9 6 6 a s en ior administ rat ion o ff icial answered queries at a S iwai Counc il meet ing emphas iz ing that t inned f ish were not really snakes . At the end o f 1 9 6 8 there were enough s uc ces s ful s to re s f o r the S iwai Society direct ors t o cons ider set t ing up a separate wholesale co-operat ive society which could dist rib ute trade s t o re goods within S iwai . The Motuna Who lesale S ociety was not however o ffic ially established un t il April 19 7 1 partly b ecaus e o f oppos it ion f rom the Department o f T rade and Indust ry who believed that there were already enough wholesale societ ies (Bus iba , plus the Telei and Tut un a Societ ies in Buin and Nagovis i respect ively) in s outh Bougainville . The Motuna Society purchased goods f rom Rabaul and Kieta and s old them to t rade stores within S iwai at a mark up o f 5 per cent . Des pite b rief p eriods of p ro f it ab ility the Society was run ext remely inef f iciently , mainly b ecause the direct ors were on the whole t rade st ore owners with their own int erests t o maintain whils t the secretary was event ually gaoled for misappropriat ion o f the cash . Un t il the comp let ion o f the t rans -island road it performed the funct ion o f p roviding trade store goods in S iwai ; after that it could not compet e with direct purchas es by t rade store owners in Kiet a and faded away unt il it s eventual demis e at the en d of 19 74 . By 1 9 70 Luke P auru had already demon s t rated most o f the characterist ics that ult imat ely emphas ized his success in 2 08 bus ine s s . Early in the y ear he claimed t o the kiap that his stores had an annual t urnover o f $20 , 000 ; the new kiap , F . B . Donovan , provide d a pot ted b iography o f him in his pat rol report : Age 35 . Bus iness Manager to Tonu . Fluent English . Operates the local Commonwealth Savings Bank agen cy . He buys and re-sells coco a , has a t ractor and two more motorcycles , all for hire . He also has the mos t sophist icated t rade s tore in the _ area - glass showcases , cold drinks , ice cream, fresh b read and a loc al s tyle cafe , plus a small p lantat ion . Travels regularly to Rabaul for stock therefore his goods are cheaper than in Buin � Buys b i cycles in lot s o f 5 0 f rom Rabaul . Donovan p rovided a s imilar b rief b io graphy o f Hatah who , he felt , was the only other out s tandin g ent rep reneur in S iwai and whos e bus ines s career was quite diffe rent from that of Luke Pauru . At the same t ime , late in 196 7 , that S iumai was b ecoming con cerned over the lack o f ground for Rataiku cocoa planters ( p . 1 65 ) it was b ecoming more than apparent that some men were do ing except ionally well out of co co a , not so much b ecaus e they were the f irst planters but b e cause they were inves t ing their incomes in various kinds of bus iness enter prise . Demand for lan d was goin g to grow . It is us eful t o examine Hat ah ' s career s ince it p rovides a short sket ch o f the ext ent t o which economic differen t iat ion was already po s s ible , with reference to the early career of one S iwai bus inessman . James Hat ah was born in Kohkui around 1 9 3 8 ; he had about three y ears in the Musiraka village s chool before go ing to Ka.n gu . There he was allowed to look after the s chool s tore s ince he was not int erested in carpent ry . After that he worked as a store b oy for Ton Lep in Buin , who sub s equent ly sent him t o work in his b rother ' s s t o re in Rabaul where he st ayed for about five years at the end o f which h e was reportedly earnin g about £40 per month . Whilst he was there he sent money b ack to his b rother to b egin a co coa plantat ion ; with a kiap ' s ass is tance seven acres o f ground were purchased for £175 [ the first recorded instan ce o f l and sales in S iwai J . After three years , when · 2 09 the cocoa began t o b ear , he returned to S iwai . Around 1962 he began a small s tore at Kohkui , with some ass istance b o th f rom the missionary and Luke Pauru , modelled on that o f the Methodist Mis s ion at Tonu . There were five shareholders in the s t o re : he and his b rother , his father , mo ther ' s b rother and wife ' s b rother . This store made a small p ro f it wh ich was used to develop a second cocoa plantat ion on the far s ide of the Mob iai river and to build a modern s t o re with metal roo f and walls . In 1 9 6 6 a second store and b akery followed at Rano . Again there we re five share hol ders each of whom deposited $10 each . By this t ime Hatah was us ing the name J . Arthur and writing paper headed ' Rano Plantat ion ' which gave him a cert ain advant age over other local s t orekeepers in ob t aining credit and s t o ck from European and Chin ese b us inessmen . Neverthele ss he b ecame involved in a land disput e in Kohkui and was als o unable t o pay h i s creditors ; his s t o res were clo sed for a t ime and Burns Philp recove red various goo ds . Following these t roub les he moved to Ra.no and b ecame heavily commit ted to cocoa ; the earliest records of his cocoa sales are from the period March 1 9 6 5 to Oct ober 1 9 6 6 when he sold $ 1 , 415 worth of coco a ( and also $ 71 o f rice and two b asket s at $ 4 ) . S ince he earned at least $ 1 , 200 in the last s ix months o f 1 9 6 6 his s ales were growing rapidly ; in eleven months from April t o March 1 9 6 8 h e earned ano ther $ 1 , 900 f rom cocoa sales to the s ociety . However by 1 9 6 7 he had dis cove red that p ro f it s were greate r by selling direct t o t raders such as Peter Chung and Roger Port eous in Buin o r even Rab t rad in Rabaul . Peter Chun g , especially , helped him to s tart up his s t o res again . In 1 9 6 7 each of these t raders purchas ed dry beans from his fermentary and he himsel f was buying wet b ean from areas as far away from Rano as Unanai and Mamagot a , at a price ld . per pound above the S iwai Society price . It was his own idea s ince there were no p r ivate t raders in New Brit ain whilst he was there and he was the first in S iwai to t ry this . Con se quently in 19 6 8 he again had two s tores in operat ion , was sellin g dry bean to various t rade rs in cludin g , o ccas ionally , S iwai Society and he was also dealing in basket s . Cocoa censuses at this t ime suggest 2 10 that he had about 4 , 000 t rees although the numb er was rapidly increas in g . S ince most o f h i s t rade was p rivate there are no re co rds of the income f rom thes e operat ion s , which went almost ent irely to h im and his b rother , but it was enough t o enab l e him t o purchase a L an d Rover in 1 9 6 9 , one of the first p rivate vehicles in S iwai . Hiring o f t h i s b ecame another st rand in h i s b us iness empire which by 1 9 70 included 7 , 5 00 cocoa t rees an d ove r a thousand coconut t rees . By then he had b e g un t o use hired labour to look a f t e r the s to res and the plantat ion s . Hatah , after an early set b ack , b ecame an ext remely success ful bus inessman , go ing on to b ecome the l argest , rurally b ased , S iwai ent repreneur . He was not typical o f the other early cocoa growers ; although mo st t ried their hand at s ome kin d of bus iness development none was really success ful . Never thele s s , although untypical in the sense that h e was ext remely suc cess ful , his drive was almo st a p rototype for the develop ment st rategies that other S iwais sub sequently t ried , and ind icat ed the possib ilit ies that were then open to ent re preneurs in the area . Cargo The exis tence o f cult movement s in Bougainville was first reported as early as 1 9 1 3 when a group of leaders was arrested by the German admin is trat ion at Lon t is in Buka . Subsequent movements have occurred intermitten t ly in o ther p art s o f B uka , where they have b een amply documented (Worsley , 1 9 6 8 ) , an d to a lesser ext en t in parts o f eas t e rn and no rth we stern Bougainville . The phenomenon has not es caped Nagovis i but in b oth S iwai and Buin there is s canty evidence for cult movement s and what little eviden ce there is indicates that cul t movement s were quite unimportant t here , especially in comparison with other parts of Bougainville and most o ther coast al areas of Melanesia . Why this should be s o is not readily apparent . In his account o f the Nas ioi o f the eas t coast o f Bougainville , Ogan cons idered c argoism t o b e s imply a belief system involving ' the belief that supernatural ass is t an ce is ab s olutely necessary to achieve the material and social well bein g which Melanesians perceive as po ssessed by E uropeans ' ( Ogan , 1 9 7 3 : 15 ) , and there fore can b e carefully dis t inguished from p ar t icular o r ganiz ed movement s or ' cargo cults ' , whi ch 211 demanded some form of collect ive , co-operative operat ion . In this latter cont ext the earli es t reco rded cult activity in S iwai was in 19 61 when the two Catholic villages of Kaparo and Hire were recorded as ' act ively part i c ipat ing ' in cargo cults by the kiap who invest igated the p roblem ( this may not have been the first cult movement in S iwai s ince the kiap , A . I . Redwoo d , referred t o the ' usual spotless cemeteries ' although this norm could have b een that o f other parts o f Boug.ainville o r elsewhere ) ' After an inquiry , which included a twenty-four hour wat ch on the villages , Redwood reported that villagers were being organiz ed by a young A-grade teacher called Tuhori f rom Kaparo village , and that the cemeteries were spotless with all the grass and shrub s removed and gravel b rought in and laid out . Tuhori ' s followers explained that whit e men had hidden f r om them the road t o finding easy money ; t ree crops were a hard way . They felt that s ilver co ins and s t eel could be made in S iwai b ut the white men were not showing them how this could be done . They believed that in some way the cemeteries were the key to this wealth s ince in Aust ralia they were always kept neat and t idy but here , when villagers cleaned them up and kept them t idy , the Nat ive Affairs Officer always got ext remely angry . Moreover , on some important days in the miss ion calen dar , such as All Soul s ' Day , the Catholic p riest usually conducted mass in the cemetery . Tuhori was s oon sacked f rom the Monoitu primary s chool teaching s t a f f by Fr Lebel but , although Redwood re corded that a few months l ater the movement had died , some mani fes t at ions of t h i s almost ' class ical ' cult lin gered o n in several villages for ab out a decade . I • This part icular f o rm o f cult ism was only expressed in Catholic villages including Siro i , Kot u , Matukol i and Tokonoitu and was closely asso c iated with the Legion of Mary , 1 In May 19 6 1 the S iwai Coun cil discussed the possib ility o f obtaining a f ilm that would count eract the influence o f those people in t h e dist r ict ' who think that cargo j ust comes out o f cemet eries ' . In the end they decided not t o . The re fe rence here t o ' dist rict ' may have only referred to S iwai yet it is p robable that counc illors were cons idering the in fluen ce o f the opinion s o f people f rom the nearby Banoni and Nagovis i areas where cargo bel iefs were much more prevalent . Despite the widespread polit ical support fo r Paul Lapun , who was believed in many parts of Bougain ville to b e something of a p rophet , and who c ame from a nearby part o f Banon i , there is relat ively litt le evidence of S iwai cargo ist support for him . 2 12 a Catholic devot ional associat ion which aimed at st rengthen ing the faith o f lo cal people through a comb inat ion o f good works and regul ar p rayer mee tin gs (o ften three times a day at it s peak of popularity ) . 2 The Legion first reached S iwai in 1 9 5 6 b ut there was l i t t le interest un t il late in 1 9 6 2 when it was revived by a lay catechis t from Buka , Sylvester Carley , who as part o f his t each ing made the mist ake of recommen ding that graveyards be kep t clean . Thi s then es calated to the ext ent that in some villages p rayers were b e ing said and even meals cooked there ; in four or five villages b ones were dis interred , cove red with cal i co and used for worsh ip . The b ones from previously s cattered burials were also centralized in the cemeteries where ' they could be looked after properly ' . The minutes o f the Maria Kwin b ilon g ol Apo stel (Mary Queen o f the Apo s t le s ) Praes idium whi ch covered S iro i , Arnio and Kaparo villages ( although they existed f or only a few months in 1 9 7 0 ) re fl ect s ome o f the con fus ion . In March 19 7 0 one o f the memb ers was warning them again s t ' the custom of the people of Aitara of removing bodies from graves in the cemetery and b ringing them b ack to the village ' whil s t three months later they were concluding that it was best to p ray in the church b ut it was als o goo d t o p ray ' in o ther places ' o n come o ccas ions . The p raes idium owned a s ecret pouch (NM-sikri t paus ) where money donat ions were held , which was passed b etween memb ers at meet in gs s o that t h e money coul d b e felt . The theology was con fused and the apparent emphas is was very much on the potent ial wrath o f S at an and the ne ces s ity fo r regular at t endance at mas s , prayer mee t in gs and con fes s ion s . Especially during the lat e 1960s cons iderab le pressure was p laced on those who did not part icipate regularly in religious af fairs ; this kind o f rel igious revival ism also exis ted in several other S iwai villages . On one o ccas ion , in Unanai , a villager entered a shaking fit , claiming that he could s ee Jesus and Mary and that cargo was on its way . This particul ar form , more common elsewhere , appar ent ly o c curred a s n o more than this s ingle ep isode . Alt hough the res iden t Catholic pries t , Fr Lebel , cont inually railed against the foo l i shness o f cul t act ivit ies , and in July 19 6 7 devoted two pages o f his monthly news let t er , Catho lic Action , to a diat r. ibe against the pract ice whilst Carley himsel f c irculated in April 1 9 7 0 a small b ooklet Tok na Pasin Kago warning that the pract ice o f s aying ro s aries in the cemetery would not b ring cargo , 2 The same l ink be tween cargoism and the Legion o f Mary had als o b een earl ier present in Buk.a ( c f . Rimoldi , 1 9 71 : 1 38-9 ) . 213 these e f forts did l it tle to convince the small numb er of p ract isin g cult ists that there were not alternative routes to a ffluen ce , that the church was respon s ible for hiding from them, s o that it was not tmtil the early 1 9 70s that the Legions and the cults co llapsed more or less s imul t aneous ly . A more obvious ly secular variant o f cargoism flourished b rie fly around 1 9 5 9 , thus p re ceding a s imilar movement in Nas io i ( Ogan , 19 7 3) , when Ariku , a Tonu leader , declared that Bougainville should no lon ger be admin istered by Aus t ralia but that the English should g ive Bougainville aid . At the same t ime he set up a ' cultural centre ' - a small men ' s clubhouse ( S-kaposo ) which incorporated a ' bank ' and various t radit ional arte fact s , such as coconut implements and so on . This early indicat ion o f inc ip ien t or ' proto-nat ionalism ' (Valent ine , 1 96 3 : 3 9 -4 0 ) was not however sub sequently reflected in opposit ion t o the Local Government Cotm cils as it was in parts o f Nas io i . A further element that might have b een construed a s a cult. movement in S iwai was a b rie f at t empt by a n ineteen year old Mus imino i man to estab l i sh a Baby Garden , following what he had heard o r pos s ib ly ob served o f the Hahalis Wel fare Society in Buka . In 1964 he reques ted land to establish such a place but was turned down by his mother ' s b ro ther and the cotlll c illor for Ruisei . The kiap interviewed him and a group o f villagers at Mus imino i and reported that none was int erested in the idea . According to the kiap ' they were no t at all inclin ed the s ame way at the Kunnu debauchers ' (who se debauchery is left tmrecorded) and s ome men swung axes and kn ives in the air at the originato r of the idea . The kiap duly reported , ' The S iwais are a happy contented people and although they are not Purit an s they are by no means a morally loo s e people ' . Everything in this b rief attempt , the only one o f it s kind recorded in S iwai , is indicat ive o f a s ingle young man ' s move t o int roduce sexual licence rather than a cult movement . Unlike the Buka experience a sexual element was never a component o f cult movement s in s outh Bougainville . Followin g his experien ces in the Kaparo cult and as a teacher at Monoitu , Tuhori b ecame the secretary (NM-kus kus ) o f a set o f s tores that was bein g established by Tubana , a middle-aged man from Kotu who was also a Cathol i c catechist . ( Catechis ts were appo inted in each o f the Catholic villages to carry out the work of organiz ing and teachin g the village people , especially by carrying out church prayer services 2 14 and act in g as a l ink between p riest and p eople . Carley was al so involved in t raining catechists and even in 1 9 70 in a pamphlet OZ Kateket ( Catechis t s ) he was comparin g the Legion o f Mary t o an army in wh ich the catechis t s were the captains and the priest was the general . This was nat urally an image that appealed to memories of the ef fect ive wart ime o rgan i z at ion o f the Japanese army in S iwai . Tuhori himsel f , although no longer a teacher , was s t ill the Pre s ident of the Kaparo P rae s idium of the Le gion of Mary and Vice-Pres ident of the Legion for the whole S iwai area . The o rganizat ion o f this part icular bus iness ven ture was t o some people , S iwais an d kiaps al i.ke , indis t in guishable from the cult act ivit ies that preceded it and the s t o res that Tubana and Tuhori o rganized became the focus of another adminis t rat ion inquiry b ecause o f a complaint about s uspected cult activit ies made by the S iwai council p res ident in May 1 9 6 7 . The investigat in g kiap , R . E . Dargie , reco rded in a patrol repo rt : The act ivit i es are suspec ted to invo lve worship o f ancest o rs in ceme teries so that cargo may appear . It s eems that the whole village may b e involved so no de f inite proof is available . A man named Paul Tupana is s uspe c t ed of havin g some connect ion with th ese act ivit ies . Paul Tupana has estab lished a ' company ' called Paul and Company , Kotu , which is believed to have f inan cial as sets to the value o f $1200 . Th is money has b een collected from people in s even villages surroundin g Kot u , p lus village people in the Arawa area of the Kieta s ub -dis t rict . The p at rol o f ficer examined Paul Tupana ' s register o f shareholders and found that s ome men have investe d a s much as $20 in t h e company . H e aims t o establish a chain o f t rade s t o res throughout the S iwai and purchase a t ract o r . Lat e r that year Dargie revis ited Kotu and made no reference to any cult-elements in Tubana ' s o rgan izat ion , comment ing only that the organiz at ion was chaot i c s ince he and his a s s is t an t s were not very li terate and that dividends of ' shares ' wer e paid out in the form of t rade store goods . Darg ie did however pursue his concern over cargoism elsewhe re in S iwai , noting that ' beliefs in the oc cult remain in certain co 1mmm i ti es , i . e . Kot u , Tohu , Ru ' nai , Kaparo and S ir o i villages ' , a l l o f whi ch were Catholic villages , but that ove rall ' they had not really got to cargo cult thinking yet ' . Towards the end o f 1 9 70 another kiap recorded that ' cargo cul t s are not a goin g concern ' , while Tomlin could not 2 15 ' detect any vest ige o f cult ish belie f ' in S iwai and the annual reports for the sub -district and for Bougainville had never exp ressed concern over cultism in s outh Bougainville in the same way that they wor ried over s uch p roblems elsewh ere . The o rganizat ion o f s tores that Tuhori b egan las ted for at least four years between 1 9 6 3 and 19 6 7 . The f inance to st art the company was obt a ined from copra selling , es sent ially by the villages of Kot u and Ru ' nai , but als o by other villages as far away as Kaparo and S i ro i . All the copra was s old from the b each at Ait ara . In its earliest years it was known s ign ificantly as ' Advance Government Solomons Society ' and , in this per iod , it was des cribed by i t s secret ary as being j ust l ike a Development Bank , with returned plantat ion labourers t rying to follow white men . In 1965 it b ecame known as ' Paul and Company ' . The Catholic miss ion direct ly encouraged the establishment o f stores , b elieving that this would fos t er a meas ure of economic independence . The main store was at Kap aro , where Tubana had rights in land ; this last ed for ab out three y ears and at various t imes there were b ranches (NM-han ) in Unanai , Laku , Kot u , Siroi , S iuruhino , ( Some o f Lakempa , Hire , Ru ' nai and more b riefly el sewhere . these , like that a t Laku , s t ill existed in 19 7 5 . ) There was also a b ranch s t o re on the eas t coast at Arawa , which was then s imply a Nas io i village near th e Catholic miss ion at Tunuru . The mis s ion as s isted in ob taining store goods , from Wong You ' s t rade store in Buka and s omet imes from Rabaul ; the mi ss ion ship ' St Joseph ' sometimes delivered these to the coast at Managota and at other t imes they were b rought from Kangu on the Buin coas t . The variety o f goods that were obt ained , including mat t resses and blankets , made the main s t o re ' j ust like a Chin ese store ' in variety an d quan t it y and there fore somewhat larger than other S iwai store s . Like almost every b us ine s s that went b efore or afterwards large numbers of people , certainly over 2 00 , purchased shares in the company at £5 each , o ften us ing the p ro ceeds of their earl ier sales of rice and p eanut s . There were certainly over a hundred shareholders from a l arge number of S iwai villages , including villages , s uch as in Rataiku , that did not have a s t o re . Tub ana was unable to keep proper account s o f the company ' s op erat ion s and when a secretary was employed who had had s ome experience of st ore work and h ad attended Co -operat ive Colle ge , it was t oo late to restore solvency . Goods had gone to different b ranches without ac count in g and , l ike many other owners , Tub ana had given away various goo ds 216 freely . Fo r example , the s tore a t S iroi was run by Ham , a relat ive o f Tubana ' s ; at first he received no p ay for looking after the store b ut on complain ing was given a lump sum of $ 30 . All the pro fits o f the store went to Tubana and the st ore was reasonably well pat ron iz e d although as Ham ob served , ' there was no money in this v il l age ' . Other s tores operat e d in much the same way . Th ere was a l s o a b akery at Kot u an d copra driers were in operat ion at Kaparo , Hire and Kot u ; these ma y well have p rovided s ome pro f i t f o r the company t o b alance against the st ore de ficit s . In t h e end , in the same way that o ther S iwai bus inesses s imilarly fo1.lll d ered around this t ime , the deb t s became so great that no more goods could be obt ain ed and , in th is cas e , Tub ana was b rought to court in Rab aul . The Catholic mi ss ion o rgan i z ed a de fence lawyer for h im an d he managed to avo id gaol . Again , fairly typi c ally , most people could not b elieve that their money had disappeared in this manne r and various s tore managers and secretar ies were blamed for having ' eaten the money ' . Tuhori and o thers at tempted to collect the deb t s , by then b etween $ 1000 and $ 2 000 , from the d i fferent b ran ches b ut it proved to b e impo ss ible . Tubana managed to organ ize s ome o f tho s e involved into smoking co p ra at Mama gota , which reduced s ome o f the deb t , although it was never completely cleare d . The problems o f organiz at ion and admin i s t rat ion , without knowledge o f account ing procedure s , had once again t riumphed over S iwai att empts to increas e their degree o f part icipation in the cash economy . Paul and Company is unique for two separat e reason s . First ly , although it shared almo s t al l the o rganiz at ional characterist ics and the same eventual reas ons for failure as contempo raneous S iwai s tores , it was much larger than anythin g that had gone b efore . Hitherto s t o res had not b een j ointly operated in this way ; nor were they generally so well and widely s upported . Secondly , there was a ritual element in the management o f the stores . Tuhori encouraged people to carry out t radit ional wealth magic ( S -sinapo ) , which is ' directly and exclus ively concern ed with accumulat in g capital ' ( Ol iver , 1 9 5 5 : 35 6 ) , for the success o f the s t o re and the eventual format ion of wealth ( S-manunu) . Wealth magic involved t radit ional r i t ual pract ices (whi ch somet imes involved s t o ring the f in gernails or hair o f the dead in a box) which are st ill used in some parts o f S iwai . At the t ime , TubCl.Ila and Tuho ri , and at least s ome o f thei r supporters , b el i eved that this alone was sufficient t o ensure success and that money would eventually b e heard arriving in the box. The failure of the pract ice was then att rib uted to the fact 217 that the correct f o rm of invo cat ion was n o longer well known , especially s ince each mat rilineage segment had its own particular rite , and may therefore have b een carried out incorrectly . Now s inapo is believed by them to be merely o f some p o s s ible assis tance in these kinds o f bus ines s act ivity and no t to be the only important factor ; thus a de cade after the eventual failure o f P aul and Company the ritual element was st ill emphas ized as at least a part ial exp lanat ion for that failure . At the same t ime that some Siwais were incor porat ing ritual act ivit i. es into bus iness act ivity , shareholders in the Arawa b ranch o f the store were engaged in cult act ivit ies ; indeed Tuhori sub s equently disparaged their heaping b ones into b oxes in their at tempts to ensure the success of the store . By con t rast a sin gle b ran ch o f the store was established at Ohai , near Ruisei , and the Methodists who op erated that b ranch took no part in any o f the ritual act ivities . The role and extent of r itual in bus ines s activity was therefore quite variable and may have played a role in other s imilar S iwai ventures . 3 3 Around the s ame t ime in a number o f Catholic S iwai villages , including Siroi and Kaparo , but . prob ably not in United . Church · villages , individual matrilineages organ iz ed what was known as a Family Bank . All the memb ers of a mat rilineage would contribut e money to the bank and o ther money was obt ained by forming themselves into work group s for various kinds of act ivity ( fo r example cl earing land for coco a plantat ions ) . The money that was raised in these ways was o ften used to estab lish t rade stores , or set up other kinds o f bus iness act ivity , for the b enefit o f the memb ers . Again there was a ritual element involved s ince each mat rilineage had spirits ( S-mara) at tached to it and o ccasionally these had to be placated in particular ways . Mo reover although the Family Banks were essent ially a mode rn con cep t , they were generally equated with the tradit ional nunoku , the hoard of usually high value shell money ( S-tonui ) which was main tained by almo st every mat rilineage group . This was tradit ionally organ ized by the mat rilineage leader ( S-mumi ) o r the f irst born ( S -simiri ) o f the lineage ( c f . Oliver , 1 9 5 5 : 111 , 345 ) who would accumulate shell money from , amon gst other things , pig sales , and this could b e used in various ways such as waging f ight s and o rgan iz ing feasts , Indeed for the benefit o f memb ers o f the matrilineage . contemporary theory also held that the money in the family b ank could be used for the modern requirements of matrilineage members such as payment o f s chool o r hospital fees . The wel fare funct ions of the family b ank , or nunoku , had s carcely changed . 218 In cont rast to a numb er o f o ther socie t ies in Melanesia an d , in part icular , those o f the Madang coast area , tradit ional S iwai b el ief systems demon s t rated the ' relat ive unimpor t an ce o f religion as an exhaus t ive , ove rarching cosmolo gical syst em ' (Worsley , 1 9 6 8 : 300) ; more immediate en t it ies , such as earth spirits ( S -mara) are the connnon man i festations of the o ther wo rld whils t ' each mat rilineage may b e said to have a common and mo re o r less sys temat ic body o f bel i efs and p rac t ices ' ( Ol iver , 1 9 5 5 : 44 4 ) . Knowl edge o f this b elief and ritual system is o ften quite l imi ted . Mo reover the S iwai do not ' practice many daily , monthly , o r annually repetit ious ritual acts by which they coul d reas sure thems elves that they , having done their part s , might reasonab ly expect the sup ernatural t o to d o t h e rest . They po s s ess coun t less magical devices f o r e f fe ct ing de s ired ends . . . b ut i t was o u r ob servat ion that many of even th ese are performed with an air of s ome s cep t i c ism, wh ich is p rob ab l y not ent irely at t r ibut able to the inroads of Christ ianity alone ' (Oliver , 1 9 5 5 : 44 4 ) . The ab sence o f an act ive sup erio r being ( quite unlike the Madan g coas t ) coupled with the ab sen ce o f a ' l it erally memorized sys tem o f re li gious myths and an ins t i t ut ion alized t ribal p ries thood ' ( Ol iver , 1 9 5 5 : 444 ) enab led S iwai rel igious bel iefs and prac t ices to chan ge con t inually . Thus it was po ssible for the dif feren t o rganizat ional and ritual s t ruct ure s o f C atho l ic ism and Methodism to invoke very dif ferent forms o f respon s e ; the greater emphas is that Catholicism placed on ritual and on th e role o f Mary ( in part icular through the Legion of Mary) were amongst the specific dif fe rences that enabled such a diversity of response . . . • • . . Other factors emphas ised S iwai ep istemolo gy . None o f tho se who we re iden t if ied with cult movement s in S iwai was a charismat i c leader , hence the leadersh ip that was provided was never trans formed int o authority . No r were many prophet ic as surances o ffered . Those who were leaders at this t ime were either , l ike Tom S ipana the Council p res ident , st ron gly opposed to any indicat ion o f cult movemen t s , or were amb ivalent or closely as sociated with other act ivities l ike the S iwai Socie ty . Thus the audience that were respon s ive to Paul and Company n ever became a following , and hence never became a movement and an o rganiz �t ion , in the manner that cults had grown elsewhere (Wors ley , 1 9 6 8 : 312 ) . Both the Soc iety and even the Cotm cil ( cf . Connell , 1 9 7 7d ) were rather closer t o this s cheme o f development . The cult leaders o f fered l it tle challenge t o t radit ional l eaders and the social orde r was not disrupted . By con t rast to areas o f more int ense cargo ism S iwai had relat ively slight contact with 219 Europeans , although during t h e war that contact was undeniab ly t raumat ic , hence any sus tained comparisons between European material and s ocial wellbeing and their own were e f fect ively dulled . Moreover there was no sense o f relat ive dep rivation compared with other Bougainvilleans who were never seen as being in a superior s ituat ion . Otherwise at leas t one o f the times when s ustained e f forts a t b us ines s development failed might be expected to have been the precipitat ing ' cris is o f development ' in the same way that Rimoldi ( 1 9 71 : 311) observed the emergen ce o f the Hahalis Wel fare Society of Buka in response to divergen ces of opinion over the worth o f European developmental ins t itut ion s . This was not the case , thus emphas i z ing that the resort to cul t s was far from s imply an economic phenomenon ; on no o ccas ion was cul t ism isolated f rom other endeavours . Although the condit ions in S iwai that promoted the des ire for European goods were s imilar to those elsewhere in Melanes ia , the means adopted were different . For those means to b ecome a deeply ingrained c argo movement it was neces sary to have a highly intellectualized tradit ional religion , the assump tion s and beliefs of which could explain the origin o f cargo . Chri s t ian ity could be int e rp reted in the s ame way s o that a series o f permutat ion s might b e worked out by taking and comb in ing di fferent st rands of t radition al religion and Christ ian it y (Lawrence , pers . comm. 1 9 7 8) . This i s what o ccurred around Madang , and in other coastal areas o f New Guinea , but was so conspi cuous ly absent from S iwai . S iwai epistemolo gy di d not take this form; Christ ianity was rarely interpret ed in the same way and cultism was trivial and unimportant . At the t ime that Paul and Company existed Oliver ' s account o f pre-war pract i ces o f capital accumulation remained in essence true : The S iuai recognize perfectly clearly that prosperity depends mainly on hard-work and intelligent enter prise , b ut they also seek supernatural aid in I was never able to ob tain an accumulat ing wealth . expl icit s tatement about the relat ive importance to prosperity of industry and wealth-magic , b ut fo rmed the very firm imp ress ion that these hard-headed rat ional is ts look upon the magical c omponent in wealth accumulat ion as supplementary insurance (Oliver 1 9 5 5 : 356 ) . 220 Throughout S iwai in a period o f ove r a decade , s ome degree o f act ive p articip at ion in cargo cult act ivit ies occurred in p robably no more than about a doz en villages b ut in a variety o f forms . Even there not all villagers took In Methodist villages , a third o f all the villages in part . S iwai , there was almost no indicat ion o f cult ism, although one Panake man had built a house in the shape o f an aeroplane . Throughout the p eriod when cul t ism o c curred , mainly in the early 1960s , co in ciding as it did with a lengthy p eriod when , as Tuhori ' s followers had pointed o ut , cash c roppin g s eemed to b e _ p ro ducing little ret urn for the time and e f fo rt involved there was n evertheles s a cont inued and much great er interest in the ext en s ion o f cash cropping . Al though t radit ional wealth mag ic was p ract iced in conj \lll c t ion with one group o f stores , there i s no evidence that i t was in an y general use , whilst garden magic ( S -maki ) was not a component o f the comm\lll al rice fields of the earl ier post-war years . Despite constant unexpected failures S iwai commercial activit ies were generally p ract ised without recour s e to rit ual as sistance ; in this respect S iwai p ract ice was relatively unusual within Bouga inville , s ince in mos t areas cargo ism was much more pervasive , but was much mor e akin to that of east New Britain in it s n egat ive respon se t o cult s . Despite the longevity o f Tub ana ' s exper iment i t s eems t o have b een , in the end , little more than a rather dif ferent form o f diversific at ion ; like so many other attemp t s it too was unsuc cess ful . Bus iness divers if icat ion In the 1950s organiz at ion and management o f t rade s t o res p roved t o be except ionally difficult ; without the war dama ge payments few would have existed and none coul d have survived for s everal y ears . The range o f dif ficulties generally prevented o ut s ide intere s t in busines s development within S iwai ; within S iwai too the small numb er of s t o res meant that there was relat ively little competit ion . Durin g the 1960s familiarity with b us iness pract ices increased , the re turns to co coa cult ivat ion int roduced a measure o f affluence int o S iwai , compet it ion ensued , essen t ial ly within S iwai b ut t o s ome extent from b eyond , and bus iness enterp rises began t o expand and divers ify . As early as 1955 the Administrat ion had established the Nat ive Loans Board , which was a forer\llln er to the Development Bank . It was intended to make loans for rural development , as well as commerc ial and indust rial p urposes , and mos t loan s were in conj unct ion with rural settlement s chemes ( Crellin , 221 S iwai was too far away on the p eriphery for 1 9 72 : 5 0 7-8) , this scheme to have had much influence there . There is only one record of a S iwai , Tumam of Usokoli village , applyin g f o r a loan ; in Octob e r 1 9 6 6 , when Tumam app lied , h e had 1 300 cocoa t rees and , with the Buin Ass istant Dis t rict Connni ssioner ' s encouragement , he was applying for a loan to enab le him t o extend h i s plantat ion . N o record was kept o f whether Tumam ' s applicat ion was success ful ; it is probab le that i t was not and that he , l ike all other S iwais , had to develop his bus iness venture with h i s own or his kin ' s capital and lab our . The newly formed S iwai Lo cal Government Council b egan to take an int erest in agricultural development and , sub s e quently , in the organizat ion o f b us iness and market ing in S iwai . Thus in July 19 6 1 the S iwai Counc il dis cussed the manufacture of baskets ; the As s istant District Of ficer had p o inted o ut to them that many orders were coming in for baskets but there was insuf ficient supply . The council decided to establish a b asket commit tee who would travel between vil lages encouraging b asket manufact ure and collect ing b askets f rom producers . ( rhe committee prob ab ly never existed but the de cis ion enab led the council to satis fy the ADO . ) A year later the Society de cide d that all basket s should be s o ld to the S iwai Society , rather than to the Methodist Mis s ion store at Tonu which paid a s light ly higher p rice or to those Europeans who wished to buy them. Although one counc illor complained o f the nece s s ity for ind ividual f reedom it was generally agreed that without their s.ales of b asket s , and als o rice , the Society might eas ily die . Despite coun c il res olut ions the same problem recurred repeatedly . Basket manufacture , albeit on a small scale , had always proved to b e a success in S iwai so it was s carcely surpris ing that compe t it ion for b asket market ing opport un it ies developed early . The co uncillors themselves s ugges ted some pos sibilit ies for new kinds of agricult ural development within S iwai and o ccas ionally b eyond . At some t ime in 1964 the Council had sent a mot ion to Bougainville district leaders asking i f the administ rat ion would s e t up a sugar factory on the island . However , later that year when the S iwai Council itsel f discus s ed i t they eventually dec ided that i t would be too much work ; cocoa would b e enough . (How the idea ori ginated is not clear ; it may have come f rom a few Catholic S iwais who had gone to Fij i for religious t raining . ) The Council itsel f never became involved in b us iness development in the 222 same way that many councils els ewhere in New Guinea did ; indeed in 1 9 6 8 when the council decided to e s t ab lish a co coa plantat ion o f its own to generate finance this was only at the inst igat ion of the European adviser . Moreover the council n ever even found a s ite for such a plantat ion . (Almost the only bus iness in come that the. Coun cil ever received was from the hire o f the council t ract o r . ) Bus ines s was always eith er an individual or a S iwai S o ciety act ivity . In the mid-1960s when it b ecame apparen t that p ro fits could b e made from S iwai co coa Buin t raders , who had h itherto purchased only the small quantit ies of dry bean that had been b rought t o them by the early bus ines smen , attempted t o gain a st ronger foothold in S iwai t o purchase wet and dry bean there . The in fant co coa fermen t in g bus iness managed to gain s ome nominal protection when the Council resolved in 1 9 6 6 that ' no Ch inaman or anyone else could come into S iwai to start s uch a bus iness or else it would ruin the work o f the Society ' . A number o f lat e r e f fo rts were made by Chines e traders t o part i c ipat e in the S iwai economy , the las t o f these applicat ions prob ably b eing that o f Len Seeto in Novemb er 19 72 , but the Coun c il t urned h im down , arguin g that he already had much money and that he understood b us iness ext remely well so that lo cal people would not b e able to compete (NM-wokim resis ) with h im ins ide S iwai . T omlin explained this at t itude : Being bus ines s minded and frugal they would p refer that they operat e all retail bus iness thems elves and do not want comp etit ion from out s ide rs . They would pre fer to make do with small s t o res and put up with shaky managemen t and inflated p rices in the int er im period b efore development o f large locally-owned stores , than have s t i f f compet it ion come in to retard development o f their own enter p ris e . This att itude is a general one and extends to all spheres o f b us iness activity and land . Thus no land is made availab le to out s iders , other than the Mis s ions , and when in one instance it was proposed to sub divide the Agricultural Cen t re at Konga and zone some blocks for bus iness purposes , very vocal obj ect ion was made . They stated that the reason for its ori ginal releas e was only to allow the didiman space to estab lish h imself b ec ause he was an integral part of their development need s . The s ame is said o f the land used for educat ion p urposes (Tomlin , 1 9 69 : 1) . 223 Only Jus t in Seeto o f the Chinese t raders ever did manage to t rade directly within S iwai and then only fo r a month or so in 19 6 9 although all the t raders in Buin con t inued to deal with S iwai b uyers and sellers . By the t ime that Len Seeto was b eing t urned away there were already a cons iderab le number o f S iwai co coa t raders , although few o f them were then capable of compet ing with h im. An impo rtant phase in S iwai b us iness development b egan in 19 6 7 when Hat ah started purchas ing wet bean in different part s of S iwai to dry in his own fermentary ; he was the It was f irst of the private co coa dealers ( S , NM-praive t ) . an innovat ion which refl ected the p rob lems that the Society o c cas ionally had in payment ( s ince as late as 1969· co co a growers had t o wait several weeks for the S o ciety payment t o come from Rab aul before they could be paid) , the dis t in ction that the S o c iety had j ust made b etween So ciety memb ers and non-members (who rece ived l �c . per pound les s ) and , mo s t important o f al l , the ab ility o f individual S iwais t o organ iz e and develop their own co coa purchas ing , dryin g and market ing organiz at ion . It also re flected the fact that there was now s ufficient cocoa p roduced in S iwai and prices were high enough for individuals to dry their own cocoa to accept ab le standards and . sell it beyond the S iwai Society . By June 19 6 7 the Soc iety di re ct o rs were concerned at this developmen t , ' O l man nau ol i wok long sa lim nabaut ol drai aoaoa ' (Men are now selling dry bean c o co a all over the place) ' , and at tempted to inc reas e the purchase price o f dry b ean . In 19 70 there were perhap s only four important S iwai cocoa dealers : Hatah , Pauru , Kepaama and Joseph Honna ( o f Hiru Hiru village) . Al l o f them had p as s ed through the two preliminary stages o f s elling wet cocoa beans to the Society , l ater fermen t in g their own wet bean ( invariab ly supplemented by local purchases ) and sellin g dry b ean to the Society , t ransport ing it to Buin port and tradin g directly with Rab aul . If these were the four largest private dealers they were not the only ones and a n umb e r o f other S iwais occas ionally fo llowed s uit , all bypas s ing the S iwai Society , b ut mo st s ellin g to larger Chinese and European t raders in Buin . Cocoa p ri ce s had reached their highest po s t -war levels whils t the complet ion o f several bridges between Buin and Konga coupled with the emergence o f vehicle ownersh ip within S iwai ( and , to a greater ext ent , in Buin) meant that t ransport cost s had als o fallen . A number o f f erment ary owners could make prof i t s f rom occas ional t rips to Buin . 2 24 Although the Mono itu Catholic miss ion had a car around 1 95 6 , a l ack o f roads preven t ed its use f o r anything other than o ccas ional t rips to collect cargo from Mamagota , whilst the S o c iety t ractors of the 1 9 60s rarely ven t ured far b eyond S iwai and then never for anything other than So ciety bus iness . It was not there fore unt il _somet ime in 1 9 6 9 that Joseph Honna int roduced the first Toyo t a landcruis er into S iwai ; Pauru , Hatah and Jos eph Lue , the Member o f the House o f As sembly , soon followed suit and one� again there was a further b as i s fo r diversif icat ion within the S iwai rural economy . By mid19 71 , _ a y ear be fore the t ran s-island road had b een completed , there were about a doz en ut ilit ies in S iwai . Almos t all the owners were thos e who early on had b ecome involved in p r ivate cocoa deal ing although , s eemingly inevitably , few vehicles were individually owned . On ce again each vehicle had its part icular set o f shareholders although , as with the stores , few b ecame involved in the op erat ion and management o f the vehicle . In 1 9 69 some concern was expressed in the S iwai Counc i l o n the emergence o f p rivate cocoa purchasers within S iwai which , l ike the privat e sales o f b as kets and even rice beforehan d , was caus in g s ome lo cal discon t ent . For the first t ime , however , this was a development ent ir ely indigenous to S iwai so that the ab ility of councillors and o thers to obj ect to this compet it ion with the Society was s ub s tant ially impaire d . Although the Coun cil s ub s equently discus sed these chan ges on other o ccas ions and were inevitab ly con cerned ab out them they appear never to have passed any mot ion oppos in g them. Too many counc illo rs had a part icular int erest in co coa t radin g . A year later the p rob lem was raised again in a S iwai Society meeting when one of the dire ct ors complained that they thought the Co -operat ive Officer was h iding s omethin g from them s ince the Society were buy ing wet b ean at 5 cent s a pound whereas ' bus inessmen ' were b uy in g at 6 cent s . They att empted to set up a mee t ing with Hatah , Pauru , Ke.p oama , Honna and als o To riou (Ha is i) , who were then the mos t prominent S iwai bus inessmen . There may have b een a mee t in g ; i f there was it did not s olve the p roblem and the European co -operat ive o fficer sub s equently reported that b ecause o f this , ' en thus iasm in the Soc iety is at a low l evel ' . However the Coun c il eventually decided that privat e dealers mus t have o f fi c ial l icences and in 1 9 71 Hatah , Kepoama and James Iroro (Ma isua) were the first to o fficially apply for and receive pedlar ' s licences from the S iwai Council . 225 A month later the familiar cry was raised in the Council that the Society would die if more licences were granted . It was then decided that all cocoa ferment ary owners would have to regis ter their driers ( at $ 2 each) and that ferment ary owners could not purchas e co coa from other individuals unless they also had a t rade store licence (which co st $ 6 ) ; moreover if they travelled abo ut to purchase co coa they then had t o obt ain a pedlar ' s licence ( at $ 30 ) . There were st rong obj ect ions to this within the council and although many people did register their fermentaries , few obt ained trade store and pedl ar ' s licences and the whole s cheme proved almost comp letely inoperab le . Only the few who were int e r ested in maint ainin g the Council ' s revenue and ensuring that the Society did not collapse were int eres ted in legislat ion of this kind whi ch mos t individual S iwais saw as opposed t o their own inte res t s . F o r th e first t ime i t b ecame apparent that the collect ive int erest and respons ib lity that had fostered and maint ained S iwai So ciety was ins uffic ient to withstand the aff luence that had followed the rise in cocoa prices and the desire o f individuals with in S iwai , both co coa buyers and sellers , to b ene f it from the emergence o f a success ful cash crop in whatever way they chose . As had happened with rice p roduct ion before , collective organ izat ion gave way t o individual ism. Despite the emergence o f the private dealers and their suc cess in undercut t in g the S ociety ' s p rices it appeared that few of them were making s ubstant ial p rofits from the operat ion b ecause of the p roblems of cocoa quality and t ransport . The 1969 -70 Annual Report for the sub -dist rict even obs erved that ' They cannot comp ete with the societ ies , all o f which are ins talling modern equipment with the intent ion of p roducing a standard export qual ity cocoa and most of them can be expected to cease op erat ing eventually ' . Th is was not an unreason ab le con clus ion and indeed it was rep eated word for word in the following year ' s report , y et it proved to be quite unt rue s ince at the end o f 19 7 2 the complet ion of the trans -island road f rom Buin to Kieta and the s imult aneous rise in co coa prices resulted in the b alance of advantages swinging dramat ically to the private producers . 4 (A couple o f years later it was not th e future 4 Even early in 19 72 it was clear that s ome t raders were marketin g such large quan t it ies that they must have made large p ro f it s ; in the re co r ds of shipments for the four months January t o April , 19 72 ( the only period for which records are availab le) , Ronna , Pauru , Kepoama and Toriou 226 o f the p r ivate bus inessmen but t h e future o f the s o c ieties that was beginnin g t o cause concern . ) By the end o f the 1960s , although the rap id exp an s ion o f cocoa growing was un iversally welcomed by the adminis t rat ion , concern was b e ing _expressed in patrol reports an d repeated a t sub -dist rict and dist rict level , that there was a labour shortage in some areas , especially in s outh Bougainville , that would soon s low the plan t in g rates . The emergen ce of the Panguna mine workings as a s ource o f employment was held t o b e mainly respon s ib le for this prob lem . The dist rict Annual Report for 1969 -70 noted however that the ' mo re enterp ris in g Buka farmers ' were employing casual lab our f rom the New Guinea mainland o r f rom the poorest parts of Bouga inville , To rokina and Keri aka . In this cont ext the cocoa growers of S iwai , who had not b een dignified as ' farmers ' by the admin i s t rat ion , we re no longer so ' enter pris ing ' ; their s ources of labour were almo s t ent irely lo cal and casual , working more in a tradit ional context o f co-operat ion than as wage lab ourers . Mo re o r l es s s t an dard wage rates then existed for casual lab our throughout south Bougainville . In January 1 9 6 9 and for at leas t a year after wards the standard wage on a locally owned plantat ion was sometimes $ 1 per day (which could be compared with the wage of $ 1 . 40 per d ay then availab le to cas ual l ab ourers buildin g the Konga-Boku road , through S iwai , f o r the administ rat ion ) although lat e in 196 9 rat es o f 70 cents p e r day were b e in g paid in Musimino i and Ieku , and in t h e followin g year were st ill 7 0 cents in Mamagota . Apart from about a do z en employees of the S iwai Society , who were semi-permanent , an d a number o f more temporary employees o f bus inessmen l ike Hat t a , there were no permanent wage lab ourers within S iwai . It was economically more at t ract ive to work elsewhere . For at least s ome S iwais the ext ernal c l imate had chan ged sub s t ant ially ; many were workin g in well paid j obs in the various explorat ion and estab l ishment phases o f Bougainv ille�per Limited . Others were employed in skilled 4 ( con t inue d ) shipped 219 sacks of co coa through the port o f Kangu . The value o f this co coa at the prevailing prices was prob ab l y around $ 1 700 hence , a fter t ran s po rt and purchas e cost s , Ronna and Pauru , who sold three-quarters of this cocoa an d also had their own t ransport , must have received a reas onab le income f o r th�s t ime o f the y ear . The impact o f the trans island road will be examined in a later pub licat ion . 227 and semi-skilled j ob s elsewhere whils t Joseph Lue from Amio village , the Memb er of the House o f As sembly fo r the Bougainville Regional electorate , had b een on a t rip to Washington for consultat ion s with the World Bank . A handful o f others had visited Aus t ralia for military t rain ing o r edu cat ion . From each o f them in different ways skills , in format ion and cap it al were f iltering back into the villages , enabl ing b us iness act ivit ies especially to more readily adapt to and ado p t new t e chniques of organiz at ion and management which eventually enab led a more secure lon g term fut ure . By the end o f the decade , followin g the success of Luke Pauru , a number o f individuals o r groups had managed to obt ain loans from the Papua New Guinea Development Bank , mainly for the purchas e of vehicles or the estab lishment o f cat t le p roj ect s . Several o f them were ab le to maintain their repayment s sat is facto rily , o f t en complet ing them well within the allo t t ed t ime , hence S iwai ent repreneurs , despite the early evidence , were beginn ing to prove themselves to be good ' risks ' for the Development Bank ' s capital , especially by con t rast with tho se in some o ther part s of Papua New Guinea . It is naturally difficult to e s t imat e how much cash was actually circulat ing in S iwai in the post-war years ; much o f the evidenc e suggest s that the earnings from migrant lab our and from c ash c rops can not have b een great tmtil the late 1 9 60s when the copper mine and cocoa p rovided sub s t ant ial incomes . However saving , by s t oring cash or by convertin g cash into shell money , was always a p art o f S iwai l ife even for those who had few cash earning opporttmit ies . There are few hints o f this in the S iwai pat rol report s . However there is some ind icat ion o f what these cash reserves might have been s ince in the fairly remote Buin village of Lob igou , cons idered in 1964 to b e one o f the poorer villages o f south Bougainville , seven hous es were s imultaneous ly des t royed by fire and the kiap recorded the wealth that had b een des troye d . S in ce there was no compens at ion he believed that the claims were probably accurat e . Six owners claimed that they had lo st between them a total o f £ 14 4 and als o £16 . lOs . worth o f shell money ( P R Buin 5 / 64 -65 ) . The kiap also carried out an inventory o f ' modern ' goods in all the twenty-three villages o f western Buin , findin g , amongs t other thin gs , 149 b icycles , 16 radios , 3 cameras , 3 record players and 8 sewin g machin es . At a t ime when cash crops had s car cely b rought las t ing benefits in south Bougainville these sums attested b oth to the local p ropens ity to s ave and t o the p o s s ib ility o f 228 accumulat in g some money even in the early 1960s . It i s probab le that both savings and the acquis ition o f mate rial goods were great er in S iwai than in Buin . The kiap , F . B . Donovan , made e s t imates o f S iwai incomes for the financial y ear 1969 . He cal culated that from primary produce ( $ 1 00 , OOO), local labour on the Konga-Bo.ku road ( $44 , 000) , migrant lab our ( $1 70 , 000 ) and b aske t s ( $1 9 , 000) th ere was a t otal income o f $ 34 3 , 000 which gave an annual per capita income of about $45 . Ward ( 1 9 75 : 87 , 9 7) derives a mean per cap ita income for 1 9 71-72 o f about $ 2 5 , excludin g the earnings o f migrant workers , and $ 34 when it i s included) . Whilst for southern Buin , the kiap , C . A. Rivers , estimat ed that the average income , in cluding migrant lab ourers ' earnings , was $ 4 3 . 50 per capita (PR Buin 1 / 7 1 - 7 2 ) . In the ab sen ce o f any more specific data these are p robab ly reason able est imat es f o r this particular p eriod . By t he middle and lat e 1960s the emergent affluence that followed the success ful e stab lishment of cocoa growing was enab l in g the resus c itat ion o f almost forgotten b ank acco\lll t s which had b egWl after the dist ribut ion o f the war damage p ayment s . At l eas t as early as January 1 9 6 6 an o ff i cer from one o f the main Aust ral ian b anks was regularly vis it ing both Tonu and Konga to handle deposit s and with d rawals ; his act ivit ies were p robab ly to generat e publicity as much a s bus iness but they are indicat ive of s avings als o b eing made in the ' mo dern ' s ector rather than through either hoarding , convers ion into shell money o r expenditure , although each o f these were go ing on s imultaneously . In 1 9 70 the kiap recorded that there were 124 3 s avings bank acco\lll t s from Siwai - almo st exactly one per household . Ano ther development as sociated with the cash economy was the establ ishment o f small markets in S iwai . During the 1960s more than a do z en Europeans , en gaged in differen t k in d s o f adminis t rat ion act ivity , were living clo se to Kon ga ; i t seems that their veget able requirement s may have s t imu lated the emergence · o f a market there at some t ime in the late 1 9 6 0 s . From the s tart S iwais also proved to be purchasers in the marke t and by 19 71 it had b ecome large enough f o r th e council to con s t ruct permanent concrete buildings and tables for the sellers . At the s t art o f the 19 70s , two more rural market s emerged , the firs t n ear the Monoitu Catholic Miss ion and ano ther clo s e to the cros sToads at Osokol i , and not far from the Tonu Methodist mi ss ion . Once again the presence o f workers from out s ide S iwai , in 22 9 these cas es teachers and nurses mainly from elsewhere in the co\lll t ry , proved t o be a s t imulus to development but it was S iwais themselves who were th e main purchasers in these markets . Although earnings from cashcrops enab led some people to supplement their garden produce by food purchases , the maj ority o f purchases were by those who had permanent wage employment lo cally or required food for some part icular short term need . Purchase of vege t able foods was emphat ically not a common o r regular feature o f the S iwai economy but the existen ce of the market s was ind i cat ive of the inc reas in g economic di fferen t iat ion . The spread o f the cash economy was not without its disadvantages . Gamb l ing was established by the mid-1950s , as a by-p roduct o f plantat ion lab our migrat ion , although in Siwai it never came clo se to the proport ions it reached in other parts o f New Guinea . Fo r the f i rs t t ime in January 19 6 7 a Coun c il agenda it em was tabled to di scuss the fact that there was too much stealing in S iwai . Whereas Oliver was ab le to write , ' there is not much thievery ' ( 19 5 5 : 3 75 ) , and then invariably only o f drinkin g coconuts , cont emporary the.ft had b ecome more widespread and d ivers ified . Towards the end o f 1962 the admin ist rat ion relaxed its policy on alcohol ; New Guineans were at las t allowed t o drink spirit s in ho tels and b eer could be taken home . The S iwai Coun c il dec ided shortly afterwards that b eer should not however b e given t o any women . A month lat er the villagers of Ruisei banned the carryin g and con sumption of beer in the village . Wheth er this was merely a manifestat ion of S iwai fears over the e ffects of al cohol or whether it was a response to events that had already followed b eer drinking It merely sugges ts that what in S iwai is no longer clear . a decade later, was to b ecome a problem in part s o f S iwai may have already t aken some S iwai purchas ers beyond the t rad it ional range of t rade s t o re goods . In 19 70 the kiap was disturbed to note the number of people who had recent ly b een prosecut ed for selling alcohol without a licence ; he commented ' there ' s no doub t there is great demand for alcohol ic beverages and consumpt ion o f alcohol may b e come a problem ' . During that year the first licensed liquo r s tore in S iwai opened at Konga , prompting the kiap to comment , with some exaggerat ion : ' The S iwai men are p ro l i f ic drinkers and at t ack the amber with ab andon . Their only blemish is the part ies which sell s tubb ies for 40c-60c and the promoter makes a whack of a pro f it . However this has great ly declined with the open ing of a l iquor store in the area ' . Apparently 230 the first real council debate o n drinking was in November 19 7 1 when it was cert ainly apparent that b eer had become somethin g o f a prob lem . In a debate s uffused with moral inj unct ions , ' OZ tu.mbuna. bi Zong yumi o "l i no sav e d:Ping ( Our ancestors did not drink) ' and ' Man god i wokim i no bilong yusim nogut bodi bi "long em (Men c reated by god should not mist reat their bodies ) ' , demands were made that b eer drinkin g should be permit ted only in a special building (NM-haus d:ring) , whilst spirits should b e completely b anned . No mot ion followed from this and the p roblem was no t s olved . By the st art o f the p resen t decade S iwai had b ecome Cocoa and , incorporated into a modern , commercial economy . to a les s er ext ent , wages beyond S iwai provided an income level sub s tan t ially great er than it had been even half a decade earlier . This had resulted in con siderab le economic dif feren t iat ion as success ful bus inesses and wage lab ourers s imult aneous ly emerged within S iwai , a di f ferent iat ion that d id not parallel more tradit ional fo rms o f social and economic dif ferent iat ion . The f irst S iwai bus ines s men had b een mumis but their places were event ually t aken by younger men who had o f t en benefited b o th from formal educat ion an d s ome kind o f pract ical t rain ing . These younger men also had little b elief in the n eed for s up ernatural as s is t ance . Increas ing income levels resulted in a pro l i ferat ion o f stores and a great increase i n th e range o f goods ; a s S iwai needs were more eas ily sat i s f ied their want s shi fted t owards the consp icuous con sumpt ion of al cohol and with that some soc ial problems emerged . In three post war decades a cash c rop economy had emerged and , following it s success ful estab lishment , t rade s to res that had earlier f ai.led became viab le , c ommerc ial interes t s further divers ified , although not all were succes s ful , and bus iness app eared t o have estab lished a firm foundat ion in S iwai l i fe . Chapter 9 Taim bi long mani : the pro cess o f incorporat ion Is it any wonder that these people are p roud people . An in fant could b e born , delivered , at tend s chool , at ten d an option o f religions , work at any number o f j ob s , have a house built , marry , raise a family , grow co co a , have his vehicle fixed without havin g left h is home ( Donovan , 19 70) . • • . An accurat e perspect ive on the evolut ion o f S iwai agric ult ure is impo ss ib le . S t at is t ics are ne ither comprehens ive nor good and reliance on the exis t ing data can only be under taken with s ome d i scret ion becaus e o f unknown b iases in the data and , to a much greater extent , in the des cript ions o f chan ge . Both administ rat ion and S iwais had their o wn des ires , hop � s and expect at ion s , all o f which changed ove r t ime , and none of whi ch was always reflected in the real i t ies o f chan ge . The lack o f une quivocal standards o f evaluat ion ensures a partly incon clus ive analys is o f th e course o f chan ge ; especially in the earlier pe riods educated gues ses mus t be resorted t o . There my own p ercep t ion s an d b iases , especially in the select ions from exist ing repo rts and narrat ives , may further distort the analy s is . Con clus ions are somet imes tentat ive ; indeed the quot at ions that b egan Chapter 4 indicate the variat ion in conclus ion s that are p o s s ib le even over one shor t t ime pe riod . A numb er o f analyses have b een made o f the transit ion o f t radit ional village s ub s istence economies into cash crop economies in the Paci fi c are a ; one of the earli est of these was Sal isbury ' s comparison o f the S iane o f the Eastern Highlands and the Tolai o f New Britain ( Sal isbury , 1962 ) , which was followed by Eps tein ' s parallel analysis o f changes in Tolai (T . S . Epstein , 19 6 8 ) . A more theoret ical model o f the p rocess o f t ran s it ion was provided an d subs equent ly refined by Fisk ( 1 9 6 2 , 1964 and 1 9 7 5 ) and his mo del has been independ ently appl ied to a numb e r of regions of the Paci fic including parts of Guadalcanal ( Bathgate , 1 9 7 5 ) , Samoa (Lockwood , 19 7 1 ) , and Fij i ( Barnard , 19 74 ; Knapman , 19 7 6 ) , whilst others ( e . g . 231 2 32 S t en t and Webb , 19 7 4 ) have suggested re f inemen t s t o the b as ic model for Papua New Guinea . Eps t e in out l ined a more general descript ive sequence for the Tolai o f east New Britain with four st ages ident i f ied as the ' trans it ion period , 18 70-1895 ' , ' agricultural inves tment period , 1 8 9 6 -19 30 ' , ' investment t rial perio d , 1931-1944 ' , and ' tert iary investment period , 1 9 4 5 -on ' (Epstein , 1 9 6 8 : Chap . 3) . The f irs t stage was one o f early con t ac t with t raders invo lving sub s t ant ial copra sales and the expans ion o f coconut growin g ; the s econd s tage s aw a rapid ext ens ion o f coconut plant ing unt il the third s t age when rap idly fal l in g co conut pr ices resulted in some divers i fi cat ion , includin g t ruck ownersh ip . The fourth st age , fo llowing the war , was a p eriod o f much great er and more success f ul divers i ficat ion coupled with the int roduct ion of lo cal government council s . Bathgate has compared this sequence with that for the Ndi Nggai of wes tern Guadalcanal con cluding that the first three st a ges are al so app rop riate analys es of econ omic change there , although in a more at tenuat ed t ime perio d : 1 85 0-1915 , 1 9 15 onwards , and 1950-onwards , with the f inal stage not yet being reached ( Bathgate , 1 9 7 5 : 84 0 -1 ) . In S iwai it is not pos s ible to art iculate s tages o f e conomic change with this degree o f clarity b ecause the stages are unsat is facto rily de fined and because historical data on S iwai is inadequat e ; it is impos s ible to s tat e when either the ' trans it ion perio d ' or the ' agricul tural inves tment pe riod ' b egan . Nor is it clear when or why they ended . Thus , in the 19 30s , there seems to have b een a lengthy period when agricultural investment , in the s ense o f co conut plant ing , was discont inue d and labour migrat ion enab led the t enuous maintenance o f a part ial cash economy . ' Agricultural invest ment ' res tarted followin g the war and rap idly divers i fied int o an ' investment trial period ' which in the l ate 1 9 6 0 s , after another period o f regress ion , incorpo rated the ' te rt iary investment period ' . None of these phas es is dis c rete ; in d ividual households and villages were s imultaneously in d i f fe rent s t ages whil st in s ome cases regre s s ion was o ccur r ing at the s ame t ime as evolut ion . Moreover , for long periods of t ime labour migrat ion cont rib ut ed much more to th e cash economy than crop product ion . Ident i ficat ion o f stages with this de gree of general ity is no t a part icularly us eful task ; by con t ras t the more spe cifically articulated s tages in Fisk ' s model suggest a valuable bas is for comparison . 233 Fisk cons idered that although ' in this t ran s it ional process there are many pos s ible s tages that could be def ined , presen t ing an almost cont inuous range o f degrees o f market part ic ipat ion ' ( 19 75 : 5 3) it was possible to pick out four key stages that could be id en t if ied roughly in the real worl d . Thes e were : ( a) Pure sub s ist ence in isolat ion . At this s tage there is no effect ive contact with the monet ized sect o r , all consumpt ion depends on self-sub s i stent p roduct ion , and there is no sp ecializat ion , no t rade , and no divis ion of lab our out s ide the group . (b ) Sub s is tence with supplementary cash p ro duct ion . At this s tage the essent ials of life are s t ill mainly produced by the group that consumes them, but supplement ary p ro duct ion is llll dertaken in o rder to secure access to market goods and services not ob t a inable direct ly from the group ' s own resources . Examples are the s ub s istence gardener who produces s ome extra s tap le foo ds for sale , or who adds a small grove o f co f fee t rees to his garden , o r who leaves his family on the sub s istence garden and works for a t ime for wages . (c) (d) · C ash orientat ion with supplementary sub s isten ce . In this stage , the producer is oriented mainly t owards the monetized economy , and his main pro duct ive e f forts are direct ed at earning a money income ; however , some , even a ·.s ub stant ial part , o f h i s b as ic foods and o ther neces s it ies may be home p ro duced b ecaus e , in terms o f fact or cos t , it is more e conomical to do so . An example is the sugar farmer in Fij i who may , as a s ideline , produce the main food requirements of his family from land not in us e for sugar p ro duct ion . Complete specialization for the market . This is the s tage where specializat ion and divis ion o f labour are explo it ed t o the maximum, an d the p ro ducer is dependent on the market for all the goods and s e rvices he requires . This is , of cour s e , rarely reached in p ract ice , even in the mos t sophis t icat e d economies , for some o f these goods and services will normally be p ro duced internally within the family group . However , it is a stage approached clo sely by sub s t ant ial components of the populat ion o f advanced collll t ries , and , for 2 36 s ocial requiremen t s ) which enab les s ome t rade , s ome special izat ion and s ome divis ion o f labour . Becaus e of this , sub s i st en ce p roduct ion does not go on in total isolat ion although it must n eces s arily have o f ten p resented that appearance . What ef fe ct ively different iated this mode o f product ion from what was t o follow was its ab solut e s eparat ion from European in fluence ; un t il as late as the nineteenth century the t rade and specializat ion that had p reviously ex isted had b een independent o f European trade . There was the re fore a long period in S iwai history when the sub s isten ce economy was modi fied by a number o f small changes at the margin s ; these changes mus t have b een undramat i c and sanct ioned by S iwai leaders ( S -mumi ) . But what perhap s characterized this p eriod was that the changes that o ccurred within it were not des igned or de s t ined by the commercializ ation of the external world . If the b ulk o f S iwai his to ry is characterized by the mino r , incremental chan ges of several thousand year s , then more recen t h is t o ry is characterized by a numb er of dramat i c changes that directed the S iwai economy apparently irrevo c ab ly in new direct ions . As in other Melanes ian societ ies European innovat ions were irres is t ible ; iron tools reduced demands on garden lab our p rovidin g a surplus of t ime ( c f . Salisbury , 1 9 62 : 338) which , following the consolidat ion o f larger s o c ial group in gs , was eventually us ed in the p ro duct ion o f commo d it ie s that could b e exchanged for t rade goods . S in ce pre-contact S iwai was a world of ' s ub s isten ce af fluen ce ' ( pp . 4 6 - 7 ) , where needs could be satisf ied with small input s of labour even before the introduct ion of steel tools , the incent ives to cash c rop product ion had little to do with t ime ; they were a comb inat ion of market prices , acces s t o market s and a de sire f o r part icular goods . Despite the int roduct ion o f iron tools , p robably around the mid-ninet eenth century , accompanied by minimal labour migrat ion to Ge rman plantat ion s , which resulted in the int roduct ion o f other new goods , there is no eviden ce that there was any demand for trade go ods unt il at least the start of the present century . In p erhap s hal f a century of indirect , and o ccas ionally direct , cont act with t rade rs there is no ind icat ion o f increased interest in the product ion o f commodit ies that might be t raded . It may well have b een , however , that cont act was so slight ( especially s ince most S iwais lived some miles inland) , few commodit ies were storeab le for long periods and lo cal warfare was s o common , that any S iwais who were by then aware of the potent ial of t rade were e f fect ively p revented from participat ing . 237 Between the firs t two s t ages in Fisk ' s model there was therefore a period o f at leas t half a century when iron t ools had d ramatically changed the nature of S iwai isol at ion , and altered the mode o f p roduct ion , without b r inging about any more s igni ficant incorporat ion int o the commercial , t rading economy than was already presen t in many other part s o f coast al Melanesia . Following the es tablishment o f an Aust ralian admin ist rat ion , incorporat ion int o the cash economy b ecame more general , yet there is s t ill no evidence that this incorporat ion resulted from S iwai wishes . Indeed the administ rat ion resorted to two devices to encourage part ic ipat ion in t rade : firstly , villagers were o rdered to plant t en co conut s a head and , secondly , taxes were levied on almost all able-bodied males b etween the ages of s ixt een and forty . It is not apparent that the first rule was widely ob served in S iwai , other than by a number of p rominent individuals such as Kope who saw their polit ical interest s as bein g allied t o tho se o f the adminis t rat ion , whils t the secon d forced plantat ion migrat ion rather than cash crop p roduct ion ( c f . Oliver , 1 9 5 5 : 32 5 ) . Once again , however , surpris ingly l it t le i s known about the t rading condit ions of the p re-war years ; at the t ime that S iwais could have b ecome involved in copra p roduct ion p rices were ext remely low and t raders may have b een conspicuous by their ab sence . On the other hand s t o res almos t certa inly existed in the int er-war years wh ils t both copra and the main t rade alt ernat ive , the ivory nut s of the sago palm , could be s t o red for periods o f over a month . At least as late as the early 19 20s clothing was not in general use and the European t rade s t o re goods that then existed in S iwai s eem t o have come from plantat ion earnin gs rather than t rade . Thus during the 1930s the fall in copra prices reduced the incent ive to make copra or plant coconut s , s in ce the co s t o f goods was high (where they were availab le ) relat ive t o the labour input required to obt ain them . During this p eriod the S iwai domes tic economy ret racted t owards an abs olute concent rat ion on food product ion , as als o o ccurred in a s imilar s it uat ion in Ndi-N ggai (Bathgat e , 19 75 : 850 ) , with the dist in c t ion that labour migrat ion p rovided the cash required fo r t axes and a small numb er of necessit ies . During the pre-war years although direct t rade in cash crops was minimal there was a flow of b o th cash and t rade st o re goods int o S iwai ; although v irtually all food was s t ill produced in individual gardens a numb e r of t rade s t o re goo ds ( especially kn ives , cloth and lamps ) were coming int o general 2 38 use . Yet , us ing Arrighi ' s ( 19 7 0 : 2 0 6 ) dis t in ct ion , the use o f mos t of these was ' dis cret ionary ' rather than ' necessary ' . Th ere were two possible except ions : met al t ools (kn ives and axes ) , s in ce they mass ively reduced lab our t ime , and cloth , which mi s sion teaching had e f fect ively t urned into a neces s ity . Beyond thes e indispensable neces s it ies there was relat ively lit t l e demand , thus goods that had lon g been ind i spensable elsewhere such as soap , saucepan s ( cf . Knapman , 19 7 6 : 185 ) and salt , were st ill generally pro duced within S iwai . No purchased foods had b ecome , in any sense , sub s istence necess it i es . In the pre-war years the Siwai economy lurched towards par t ic ipat ion in the ext ernal cash economy , mo re at the in s t i gat ion of the administ rat ion ( and , to a les ser ext ent , the mis s ion s ) than as a result of S iwai needs and want s . Access t o market goods an d services was not ob t ained from the groups own resources , but through lab our migrat ion ( rather than cash crop cult ivat ion) ; the sub s istence economy cont inued to evolve but by in corporat ing cash crop p ro duct ion only at It is difficult to b alance remoteness from the margins . ma rket s against ob tain ing plantat ion wages ( although for mos t S iwais the latt er must have generally p rove d eas ier) and impos s ible to as sess the relat ive s ign i ficance o f admin ist rat ion p ressure and S iwai wishes . Perhaps the main impact of the two p re-war decades of Aust ral ian adminis t rat ion was in the mo re widesp read dist ribut ion of t rade s t o re goods , as a result o f the es tab l ishment in the twent ieth century o f plantat ions (and also mis s ion and government stat ions ) in Bougainville , and the emphas is that was placed on the acquis it ion of cash and goods by both Europeans and plantation labourers . S iwai had s carcely begun to enter S tage Two , ' sub s isten ce with supplementary cash p roduct ion ' , when the war pre ci p it ated a dramat ic shift in the organ izat ion o f agricult ural product ion . Following the war S iwais made every possible e f fo rt t o involve thems elves in the cash economy . Despite constant problems enthus iasm waned only rarely and indeed , in cont rast to the pre-war years , it was invariab ly greater than that of the administ rat ion ; however it was the relat ionsh ip b etween S iwai re quest s and administ rat ion response that characterized the o rgan i z at ion o f the post -war agricul t ural economy . No s ingle crop ever seems to have been wanted as a cash S iwais crop by b oth S iwais and the administ rat ion together . init ially wanted rice ; the didimen advised cauti on . The 2 39 didimen recommended peanut s and corn s o S iwais grew t hem but rarely with en thus iasm. When the administ rat ion reve rted to the idea that rice was indeed the b es t po ssible cash crop the ri ce was dyin g , the mills b reaking and there was lit tle lo cal enthus iasm for their b elated interest . Paradoxically the first cash crop to b e int ro duced int o south Bougainville by a Bouga invillean and ult imately by far the mos t success ful , cocoa , was init ially discouraged by the administ rat ion . Even when they had recons idered , the en couragement o f the So ciety directors , who unknown to thems elves had seen their future workin g , was not sufficient to en sure that cocoa got started throughout S iwai . Only too clearly it seemed to be ano ther false dawn ; there was a slow response to yet another possib il it y . The risks involved in plant in g a long maturin g crop like cocoa were generally avo ided un t il it became obvious that I f the adopt ion rate co coa was the mo st promising cash crop . for each n ew crop int ro duced into S iwai gradually declined , as the evidence sugge s t s , this refl ect s no more than a growing disillus ionment with the lon g term ret urns to innovat ion . It is no p aradox that cocoa , ult imately the mo st success ful cash crop o f all , was perhap s the mo st s lowly in co rporated into the S iwai economy . When cat tle were introduced in to S iwai it was partly a re sponse to the possible eventual failure o f cocoa . No thing coul d be s o success ful for so long after an era of disappoin tmen t s . I f there was an element of fatalism inherent in this , it was n evertheless a logical respon se to p revious even t s . In cont rast to rice , the act ual p ro duct ion o f co coa , after the early d i sas ters that at s ome point att ended every new cash crop , at last b rought in s ub s t ant ial cash flows and suc cess seemed as sured . This succes s , for the first t ime both con t in uous and increasing over a period o f years , ens ured In litt le that cocoa would dominate c ash crop p ro duct ion . more than a decade cocoa went from being merely a doub t ful economic p rospect , to an established p o s it ion as by far the mo st import ant cash crop throughout most o f the island . This , it s ub sequen tly t ransp ired , was only the beginning ; by the end of the 1960s it had almo st too e f fect ively disposed o f competit ion from other cash crops . In the 19 6 9 -7 0 financial year the S iwai So ciety (which then handled mos t of S iwai agricultural product ion ) had a turnover of $ 1 6 8 , 3 7 6 from cocoa , comp ared with $ 1 8 , 9 6 1 from b askets and $ 5 30 from cop ra . Rice and coffee sales were insigni ficant ( PR Konga 1 / 70-71 ) . Cocoa alone was triumphan t ; no new int roduct ion nor s ub sequent 240 revival coul d c�mpet e . After two decades , a cash c rop economy , b ased upon coco a , had become estab l ished . Again in cont rast t o the pre-war years , whenever t rade con dit ions p roved tmf avourable (with prices falling or markets d isappearing) there was never a move t o withdraw from the cash economy (by ab andoning _ cash crop product ion) b ut always renewed att empt s t o seek out b et te r condi t ion s , usually by divers ify ing p roduct ion . S iwais were respons ive t o market prices , although p o ss ib ly not , at l east in th e e arly s tages o f p o s t -war change , to variat ion s in the amotm t o f lab our requi red t o produce par t icular crop s ; that is , there was no differen t iat ion between rice and peanut s , ac co rding to the lab our input By the t ime that requi red , only to the comparat ive p ri ces . co ffee and cocoa were being grown s imult aneously a more sophist icated dist inction was possible , based on the returns t o labour . In format ion on the r elat ionship b etween market prices and plant ing rat es is quite inadequate yet after the init ial p eriod , when a small numb er o f p eople p lanted co ff ee and cocoa ( fo r reasons o ther than the expected return s ) , qual it at ive evidence suggest s that short term t rends in cocoa plant ing were influenced by past income from co coa sales rather than by curren t prices , and lon ger term t rends were in fluenced by the availab ility o f the one o c cas ionally s carce factor of p roduct ion , labour . P rices from the first harvests p rovided the b as is for the exp e cted future cash return s from cash c roppin g ( c f . Eps t ein , 1 9 70 : 195 ) . Given the tm certainty of fut ure prices ( and also that planters had no means of asses s ing even shor t term pri ce fluctuat ions ) it seems that S iwais have t ended to plant more cocoa t rees when lab our was availab le rather than when prices were high or moving upwards . 2 By the s t art o f the 19 70s almo st every S iwai household was more or less in Fisk ' s S t age Two , ' the essent ials o f life are st ill mainly produced by the group that consumes them, but supplementary p roduct ion is tmdertaken in o rder to secure access t o market goods and s ervices not ob t ainab le 2 A number of studies have examined the relat ionship between cocoa p r i ces and plant in g rat es both in New Guinea ( Ep s t e in , 1 9 70 , 1 9 7 1 ; Jones an d Stent , 19 7 1 ) and elsewhere . These have not been examined in detail here , p rimarily b ecaus e of the dear th of comparable material on his toric chan ges in S iwai , but will be examined in more det ail in a sub sequent monograph on cont emporary agriculture . 24 1 direct ly from the group ' s own resources ' ( Fisk , 1 9 7 5 : 5 3-4 ) . Almost every household (except some o f the mo st elderly) sold s ome garden o r cash crop p roduce but only a t iny minority (ent irely con s is t ing of some o f tho se with wage employment ) had their ' main p roduct ive e fforts directed at earning a money income ' ( Stage Three ) ( Fisk , 19 75 : 54 ) ; even then almo s t all o f t h i s small group st ill p roduced mo st o f their own food and const ructed their own houses . The vast maj ority of S iwai hous eholds produced both food crop s and market ab le crops and , in terms o f the distribut ion o f household lab our , spent more t ime on food crops than on cash crop s . • . • There had b een lit t le sub s t itut ion o f purchased foods for grown foods , and no evi�ence th�t the sub s isten ce acreage had declined as a result o f this s ub s t it ut ion although there was renewed hiring of wage lab our . Despite the rapid post war increas e in the S iwa i populat ion there was scant evidence that any o f these changes were related to populat ion growth , either as cat alyst or response . The changirg use of t ime in S iwai , which is not dis cussed in detail here , 3 is an important fact o r in the t ran s it ion o f the sub s is t ence economy towards a cash economy . Thus the bas ic model provides for the adequate performan ce o f social obl i gat ions as they are de f ined by the society ; t ime and labour must be invested in this perfo rman ce . Bathgate ( 19 7 5 : 852 ) argues , on the bas is o f his ob servat ion in west Guadalcanal , that as involvement in the cash economy inc reases s o p art icipat ion in ceremonial obligat ions decreases . This may t ake two forms , e ither s ome ceremonials are dis con t inued or they are maintained on a reduced s cale ; b oth o f these forms existed in Guadal canal . In S iwai i t seems that at l east l.lll t il 19 39 there had b een lit t le decline in ceremonials and ceremonial obligat ions (Olive r , 1 9 5 5 ) but after the war this was no lon ger t rue ; a number of customs , notab ly those connected with child growth magic , were almost complet ely ab andoned ( although there was als o an important element o f mi ss ion disapproval) whilst feast in g on the scale of earlier y ears was les s common . 4 On the other hand , in 3The dis t r ibut ion o f lab our t ime in contemporary S iwai agricult ure at least as it was in 1 9 7 5 will b e di scus sed in detail in a sub s equent mono graph . 4 This ext remely important t ran s it ion can not b e examined in det ail here , although further dat a and evidence is p resente d in an l.lllp ublished paper (Connell , 1 9 7 7e ) , s ince i t will b e the part ial s ubj ect o f a separate p aper . In very re cent 242 cont rast t o t h e eviden ce that Bathgate provides and more especially in con t rast to Ogan ' s ( 19 72 ) account o f economic changes amon gst the Nas ioi o f eastern Bougainville , it is apparent that th is decline in ceremon ial act ivity was much less marked in S iwa i . However there is s ome eviden ce that pig hus b andry , oriented t owards the ful f ilment o f s o c ial obl i gat ions , has given way to cash crop p roduct ion . In this important sense , ta.im bi Zong pas in was indeed giving way to ta.im bi Zong mani . Although the re is eviden ce that t ime was being diverted from social obl i gat ions t owards cash cropping there is no eviden ce that t ime was b e ing diverted away from sub s istence gardening as seems t o have happened in Guadalcanal ( Bathgat e , 19 7 5 : 85 2 -3) . Almos t all households were generally ab le t o provide the ir own food requirement s a t the st art o f the 1 9 7 0 s whilst th ere had b een no in t roduct ion o f crops , tools or techniques , other than thos e that ac companied the necess ary t ransit ion from taro t o sweet potato , that might have reduced lab our input t imes (although it is doub t ful i f , apart f rom any fert ilizers , the re were possible changes in the garden ing economy that would have enab led this ) . However it is p o s s ible , although the evidence is in conclus ive , that women spent more t ime on sub s isten ce act ivity whilst men diverted their own labour t owards cash crops . Cash cropping in mos t t ime periods th ere fore seems t o have us ed lab our that had a low oppo rtun ity cost . · In the post-war pe riod a numb er o f t rade s t ore goods that had p revious ly b een s imply ' dis cret ionary ' purchases became necessary , whilst the earlier neces s it ies became commonp lace purchases . The number of manufactured p roduct s that were necessary increased to in clude lamps (an d the ke ro sene for them) , saucepans , nails and soap wh ilst a numb er of foods t uffs had also b e come o ccas ional neces sit ies . The mo st imp ortant of these were sal t , rice , t inned meat and t inned f ish , sugar and co ffee . Although only salt was essent ial to general household food preparat ion the others were neces sary s ince almo st every hous ehold at s ome t ime called upon wo rk groups t o as sist in either hous e-b uildin g o r garden ing act ivit ies ; following this wo rk a meal was always p rovided con t ain ing some or all o f these ' mo de rn ' 4 ( cont inued) years both t rends , the ab andonment and at tenuat ion o f ceremonial s , have b een reversed following a general inc reas e in income levels . 243 ingredien t s . Needs in this case were group det e rmin ed . Fo r work group s meals solely from garden produce were no longer conside red to be adequat e reward ; in this context , but not generally , garden p ro duce was an inferior meal . Of course mo st of these foods , and several others , were eat en mo re regularly in the s ame way that many people preferred to smoke t rade s to re ( twist ) t obacco or cigaret t es rather than locally grown tobac co . S imilarly , although surprisingly few t rade s t o re goods had b ecome neces s i t ies , mos t s t o res re gularly sold a wide ran ge of goods . As in all s t age models the important quest ions are what act ually happened when S iwai s ociety , or part of it , moved between st ages and what were the mechan isms that prompted this movement ? As Fisk ob served , ' the prob lem is either to lift the s ub s istence group over the humps where the incent ive fact or is inadequate , or t o remove the humps ' ( 1964 : 1 72 ) . Fisk suggested three non -market in fluences that would effect ively overcome this p rob lem ; the first of these was an ' art ificial inc rease in the level of cash pro duc t ion ' , carried out by persuas ion o r compul s ion ; in S iwai this represent s the inte r-war s it uat ion of directed coconut plan t ing . The second was an ' art ificial inc re as e in the c ash ret urn p er tm it of lab our ' which could be achieved by the tempo rary s ub s idiz at ion of market ing , t ransport and p roces s ing facil it ies ; in S iwai the period o f direct gove rnment interest in encouraging cash cropping, espe cially in the 1950s with the est ablishment of the Konga agricult ural s t at ion ( an d the emergence of S iwai didimen) and the co operat ive s ociety , both of which were sub s idized for cons id erab le t ime p eriods . 5 The third was an ' artif icial increas e 5 As administrat ion an d S iwai interest in agricult ural development increased so the role of the mi ssions declined ; even so , the p o s it ion o f miss ionaries as long-term res idents with sub s t ant ial in fluen ce in local affairs , enabled them to remain important in shap ing agricul t ural chan ges . Cat tle first came from the mi ssions and Tonui villagers rememb er Mr Voyce demon s t rat ing r ice plant ing to them, whilst Tomlin , typically , not e d in 1954 of the Catholic p riest at Mono itu that ' tre O . I . C . of this s t at ion is a keen agriculturalis t ' . Indeed this was a role that Toml in, an d other administ rat ion o f ficials , expec ted from the mi ssion s . Yet the role o f the mis s ionaries was increas in gly one of emphas iz ing and legit imiz in g t he de cis ions of the administ rat ion and , t o a lesser ext ent , s upport ing those o f the S iwais thems elves . As in other areas of development the mi ss ions we re sup erceded by sp ecialis t s and their concerns b ecame more exclus ively spiritual . 244 in the ut ilit y of money ' which could be accomplished by t emporary sub s idiz at ion of the provis i on o f goods and services ; in S iwai medicine ( an d , for that mat ter , mi ssion s chools an d churches ) have always been sub s idized b ut the inadverten t sub s id ies p rovided by the earl iest post-war t rade s t o res may have b een the mos t significant influence on the ut ility of cash . Th rough thes e means S iwai became more dependent on a cont inue d relat ionship with the ext ernal commercial e conomy . Each o f these three non-market in fluen ces was clearly exo genous to S iwai social and e c onomic s t ructure and each , espe cially the first , was o f limited impact . There was however one in fluen ce within Siwai that was o f great significance and t hat was the nat ure of the leadership sys t em. Fo r at least the first two de cades aft er the war the st ructure and process of economic development in S iwai followed ve ry closely the model that Sal isbury has out l ined for the Tolai village of Vunamami , espe cially s ince in b oth areas the maj or dynamic forces ' were seen as the p erfect elas t icity o f polit i cal act ivity by b i g men ' in the early phases ; then In the next phas e came emulat ion o f the leade rs by the p opulat ion at large , and an inc reased tolerance for in dividualism In the final phase o f cap it al inves tment ( an d possib ly new innovat ion ) two fo rces were act ive : economies o f s cale o r o rganizat ional ef ficien cy facilitated p roduct ion , and affluen ce permit ted the estab lishment of new invent ions ( Salisb ury , 19 70 : 11 ) . . • . S iwai leaders had become involved in cash crop s , essen t i ally for prestige and power rather than immed iate economic ret urns , and it was this demand for pre s t i ge that enab led cont inued innovat ion s t o go b eyond the apparent barriers that low prices , inade quate market s and l imi ted demand fo r cash and s t o re goods provided for cont inuous (Before the war a incorporat ion int o the cash economy . combinat ion o f unfamil iarity and inaccess ib ility had e f fect ively prevented this process which was essent ially one of maintenance o f the t radit ional social st ruct ure through economic man ipulat ion rather than a more narrowly conce ived economic phenomenon . Even so leaders like Kope had made significant start s . ) This demand for personal achievement (mot ivat ed not by profit b ut nevertheless measured predomin antly in te rms of economic criteria) , formulat ed as a con cern for the s t at us o f the l eade r ' s own mat rilineage group rathe r than o f the leader himself ( in t h e s ense that leaders claimed 245 to be concerned with performin g a s ervice for others rather than maintain ing a sel f ish pro fit ( c f . Salisb ury , 1 9 7 0 : 2 3 8) -) , was suffic ient to push much o f S iwai society ove r the ' hump s ' in the Fisk model . Again , as in Tolai : ' The mark o f the success ful l eader is that he can convin ce others that they are not followers but partners in an enterp rise ' ( Salisb ury , 1 9 70 : 331) . Mos t o f these enterp rises were decidedly risky so that in the drive to achieve addit ional prest i ge leaders were staking the i r reputat ion s on the success of the new venture s de spite the communal organiz at ion . It was indeed essent ially the same pro cess that has earl ier been documented in Tolai (Epstein , 1 9 7 0 : 18 6 - 7 ) . Leade rs we re ab le to un dertake innovat ions largely because of their cont rol ove r access to land . A L . Eps tein has s t ated that in Tolai the coconut , be cause o f its lon gevity could be planted only on land to which a man held ' t itle ' ( that is , his right s were not me rely us ufructuary ) with the effe ct that ' part ic ipat ion in the cash economy , indeed , but t ressed the t radit ional syst em rather than d is rupted it ( 19 6 3 : 2 11) . Although there i s no evidence that in pre-war S iwai rest ri ct ions on land tenure af fected coconut plant ing , even in the early pos t -war y ears t here were problems o f access t o land f o r plan t ing co conut s which b ecame great er in the 1960s with the estab l ishment o f coco a . Co conut plan t ing and subsequently co coa-plan t ing proved in it ially t o b e a force of conservat ism, rein forcing the status o f S iwai leaders , by but t res s in g their con t rol and admin ist rat ion o f descent group land . Eventual ly younger men planted their own plantat ions and that status and authority decl ined . •. In the 1960s a new t rend in the response to economic opportunity emerged ; for th e first t ime some S iwais moved away from the l ine villages to take up more distant mat ri lineage land where there was more opport un ity t o develop their cash c rops . Although few moved more than two or three miles and almo st none moved b eyon d S iwai ( although a number of mat ril ineage groups had ac cess t o land elsewhere ) this was nevertheless an import ant change . In the same period there were al so a small but s ign i f icant number o f out right land purchases , again ent irely within S iwai , although s ince adequate land was generally availab le t o almost any prospect ive cocoa planter this was not the s i gnificant t enurial change it might have b een elsewhere . B oth of these t rends represented a movement , alb eit t iny , t owards a more individual form of cont rol o f l an d , with the t radit ional use-value o f land S iwai lan d gradually being replaced by it s exchange-value . 24 6 has b egun the t rans it ion from resource to commo dity . The emer gen ce of connnun al cash croppin g of rice was associated with the leadership and guidance o f S iwai b ig men ( S-mumi) although in New Guinea , as elsewhere in the Paci f ic , co -operat ives an d communal act ivit ies were welcomed and encouraged as the form of c ash ent e rp rise mo st suited t o the ' communal ' ethos of t radit ional so ciety . Thus S t anner commented : ' The communal sys t em is admirably suited t o co operat ive developmen t an d the idea appeals s t rongly t o the Fij ians ' ( 19 5 3 : 2 2 8 ) . But these were o ft en as sumpt ions without a bas is ; co -operat ion p roved to a relat ively s ophist icated , western form o f enterprise that had no inevit ab le appeal t o t radit ional sent iments where the communal ethos Subsistence cult ivat ion o f sweet pot at o , t o was often rare . an even greater ext ent than taro , which required great er input s o f labour , was such that it left b ig men cons ide rab le leis ure t o direct the effort s o f their fellows , a posit ion wit h which they were en t i re ly famil iar . Indeed organiz at ion of large-s cale ceremon ials gave such leaders some experien ce in the o rgan iz at ion of large numb ers of people , product ion for exchan ge and the handling of s ome kinds o f exchange t ran sact ion s . Mo reover much of the communal o rganiz at ion of cash cropp ing could be directed in p recisely the same way that earl ier admin ist rat ion act ivit ies , such as road-building or house-b uil ding , had b een done previous ly , whilst in fluen ced , in different ways by the kind o f lab our organiz at ion involved in p re-war plantat ions and Japanese war-t ime agricult ure . Leaders were far from conservat ive ; individually or in groups they made the init ial decis ions ab out the d irect ion cash cropp ing might take although they had no more exp erience of cash cropp ing than their fellows . Indeed t e chnical knowledge was quit e irrelevant ; the bene fit s of great er wealth we re known an d lab our and rice seeds were availab le . The re was nothing else to know , even though rice cult ivat i on was quit e dis t inct from anything that had gone before s ince it was a n ew c rop with a new form o f land t enure and an ent irely di f ferent form of lab our organ i z at ion . The most obvious explanat ion for the direct ion in which cash cropping moved , t owards connnun al rather than individual gardens , may be more s imply explained by local ob s e rvat ions o f Japanese and European pract ices yet there is al so a more complex explanat ion . If leaders had begun cash croppin g on their own , success would have ensured b oth a rise in individual wealth and p rest ige , yet there was always the possib ility that such a novel scheme might fail ; ret rospect ively the 247 risk was prob ab ly one o f lab our management rather than acces s ib il ity to markets or c l imat ic disrup t ion , yet any innovat ion on this scale inevit ab ly took place in a s ituat ion o f un certainty . Consequen t ly o rgan iz in g communal gardenin g enabled a leader to guard against t h e risk o f failure (which could then be at t ributed to the disappo int ing e f fo rt s of his su ppor ter s , a famil iar complaint o f S iwai leaders ) and moreover enabled him t o claim that communal gardens enab led wealth t o b e spread more widely . A s uc cess ful garden would in any case enhance his prest ige . Thus , although the development it self was not conservat ive it was framed in a conservat ive context , which enabled easy explanat ions o f failure , and , at the same t ime , maint ained dependence on sub s istence product ion . In t ro duct ion of cocoa took a different form . The earli es t innovators were not mumis ; they were individuals who had b ecome aware o f the possib ilit ies of cocoa as a cash crop and had b egun early . Their interest was ent irely cen t red upon the economic pot ent ial of cocoa and they were interested neither in demonst rat in g h igh status through the succes s ful direct ion of group lab our nor in acquiring p rest ige through ceremonial dist ribut ion o f the income . Thi s S iwai response to cocoa was mediated by the didimen who quickly b ecame convinced o f its value and so encourage d S iwai leade rs to par t ic ipate in communal co coa growing . Although becaus e of this communal emphasis mo st b ig men gained their own cocoa plantat ion s early on , they did not develop them qui ckly and other men almo st ent irely with experience gained from working out s ide S iwai b ecame b o th Society d irectors and the l ead in g bisnismen in the area . A S iwai mumi was essent ially the rep resen tat ive o f a mat rilineage group exercis ing a measure o f cont rol over its resources , especially land , on b ehal f o f the members . He did not ' own ' these resources and moreover was open to challenge s for l eadership from those who had b een frust rated in their at t empt s t o gain access t o land . In a situat ion in the 1960s where mo st men were ab le to ob t ain at leas t some land either through matr i f il ial o r pat ri fil ial inherit ance , and hen ce were in a posit ion to support different mu�is , the authority with which leaders could deny access to land to potent ial memb ers o f their own mat ril ineage groups was therefore limit ed . The flexib ility o f so cial group format ion , after an in it ial p er iod o f uncertainty , even tually enab led almo st unive rsal access to at l eas t some land on which cash crops could b e plant ed . The role o f b ig men in the early 248 stages o f cash crop and bus iness development , an d e specially the manner in which they op erated essent ially through the opportunit ies and con st rain t s of a more t radit ional S iwai soc ial and e conomic st ruct ure is suf fic ient indicat ion that the values and inst itut ions of societ ies that have experienced little c ontact with Europea.n s can b e ent irely adequat e for rapid post -contact economic change . Siwai values and inst itut ions helped rather than hindered the course o f economic chan ge , espe cially in the first couple o f de cades after the war , although they hampered some individual s t rat egies . Much the same con clus ions on the significance of � radit ional ' values and inst itut ions have b een made for Tolai ( Salisbury , 19 7 0 ) , Goroka ( Finney , 19 7 3 ) and some o ther Pac ific areas . This is not to deny the cons iderable s ignif icance o f a number of exogenous chan ges which p rovided the f ramework within which the S iwai economy could ope rat e in a dif feren t manne r . The three mon-market in fluences were important whils t one component of what Fisk calls the ' response fact or ' , that is the ' personality and character ' o f o f ficials and other agen t s of change ( 1 9 6 4 : 15 8-9 ) , espec ially in the form of K . I . Tomlin , was s ign ificant during one part icular t ime p eriod . Endo genous and exo genous influence have always been co-exis tent . Moulik ' s con clus ion that ' the emergen ce of new needs is one o f the maj o r st imuli for indigenous part icipat ion in cash c ropping and the cash economy ' ( 19 7 3 : 12 3) is therefore open to crit icism. The ' needs ' that were crit ically important to cont inuous S iwai part icipat ion in cash cropping we re generally not the acquis it ion of mat erial poss es s ion s or foodstuf fs but a drive towards s t at us , sel f-fulfilment and s el f -resp ect . Aft er the coconut plan t ing o f the pre-war years , and despite a growing dependence on ext ernal t rade , the level of part ici pat ion in the cash economy , perhaps surprisin gly , became to a greater ext ent to depend on their own terms . As F inney ob served , in his comparison o f leadership and economic development in Goroka and Tah it i , it is however o ft en t rue ' that any init ial at tempt to adapt exi s t in g mean s t o modern economic ends , within a society un dergoin g rapid change , may wel l result in a syn thes is o f the " t radit ional" and the "mode rn" that may not support cumulat ive economic growth and development ' ( Finney , 19 72 : 12 9 ) . Within S iwai the early st ages of economic change , organ ized by big men in a context o f comnnmal ent e rp rise , were b ased on s ome t radit ional forms o f e conomic co-op erat ion b ut on an ent i rely new and larger s cale and with external l inks to the cash econ omy . These early co-op erative enterprises , stores , rice 249 fiel ds , cocoa pla:ntesins an d kampa:nis , were essent ially t ran s it ional inst itut ions , a synthe sis of old and new . In - the earl ies t years the b ig men were the economic innovators and , as Gee rt z has ob served in a different context , ' it is in their ab il ity t o operate at once in the t radit ional world of estab l ished cust om and in the modern worl d of sys temat ic economic rat ional ity which is their chief res ource ' ( Geert z , 1 9 6 3 : 15 2 ) . Event ually their ab ility proved insuf ficient to adapt these t radit ional ins t it ut ions to a world o f sys t emat ic economic rat ionality ; support fo r st ores fell off in the same way that it did for the rice gardens . Although store shareholders and supporters b elieved that this management by the leaders had p revented profits bein g dist ribut ed t o them , especially b ecause o f the free dist rib ut ion o f some o f the store goods (which , o f course , had act ually gone to many of those shareholders) they did no t accus e the leaders o f st eal ing from t h e stores , complaining inst ead that the money had b een ' eaten ' . Shareholders we re p rob ably aware that there was both an element of risk in new economic ventures of this kind and that l eaders , at that t ime , were the only appropriat e individuals who could p rovide the neces sary exper t ise and management . Despit e the pers is tent failures o f the earliest t rade st ores , en thus iasm for s t o res , j ust as for cash crops , never diminished although it was not unt il the late 1960s that they began to make a con s istent profit . By this t ime few t rad it ional leaders were st ill concerned w ith t rade s tore management and the success ful stores were those that were run by younger , educated men , o ft en without a l arge numb er o f shareholders . In this way there fore the suc cess ful s t o res were divorced from the so cial and economic mil ieu in whi ch the older s t o res had operat ed and failed . Bus ines s divers i ficat ion , inco rporat ing bisnis kar ownership and cocoa buyin g , also tended t o take the new individual istic form. Older leaders who persevered with bus inesses found they had t o abandon the ' more ant ique props to innovat ive act ivit ies and rest their economic leadership on more techn ical economic bases' (Ge ert z , 19 6 3 : 15 3) . Not all these ' ant ique props ' have b een removed and , as Finney notes , this may not be ab solut ely necessary to ensure sus t ained economic growth and development (Finney , 19 72 : 12 9 ) . What is however apparent is that at the st art of the 19 70s the most success ful S iwai bus inessmen were those , l ike Hatah and Pauru , who had re ce ived a coIImlercial educat ion apart from S iwai t radit ions and had b uilt up their own ent erp rises primarily through their own resour ces . At the same t ime a number o f mo re 250 t radit ional leaders , like Haranu , h a d a ch i eved s i gn i f i cant and c on t inued l evels of s u c c e s s in a variety of e conomi c s phe res t h r o ugh a mo re t radit ional depen den c e on c o - o p e rat ive f in anc e and lab o u r o rg an i z a t ion . not two d is t in c t men t ; Emphat i c ally t h e re were s pheres and s t rat e gi es o f e con omic deve l o p in dividual b us ines smen and t h e i r ent e rp r i s e s , much they s eemed part o f econ omic rat ional ity ' howeve r ' the mod e rn wo rld o f s y s t emat i c al s o rema ined a p a r t o f a t radit ional Rap id e conomic change had n o t S iwai e conomy and s o ciety . re s ulted i n a dual e c on omy . By the mid-1 9 5 0 s bisnisman in S iwai as o f course was had b e come a s t an dard t e rm the b as ic n o tm , bisnis , wh i ch e s s ent ially re f e r red t o the management o f t rade s t o re s S -s tua ) . an d c o f fee we re p l an t e d an d a s e con d E urop e an t e rm , b ecame , (NM , At much the s ame t ime s mall p l an t at ion s o f c o c o a as lan guage ; p lantesin , a f urth e r con t rib ut i on to p lan t at ion , the S iwai vil lage p l an t at ion s we re s imul t aneously develop ed an d we re known as karrrpan is . Thus at l eas t four d i s t in c t f orms o f h ithe r t o al ien ent e rp r i s e had b e come e s t ab l i shed in a rathe r d i f f e rent fo rm in S iwai . The maj o r d i f f e ren ce was the ini t ial commun al o rgan iz at ion of the S iwai f o rm whi ch was s omet imes ma in t a ined fo r decade s . Th e advan t ages t o s cale that t he communal o rg an iz at ion o f cult ivat ion allowed were min imiz ed by the part icular f o rm o f s ubj e c t ion o f individual int e r e s t s t o t h o s e o f the c o - o p erat ive g roup ; tho s e who put mo s t work in were o ft en n o t t h o s e who t ook t h e mos t rewards o ut . The s ame b a s i c p rin c ip l e s als o app lied t o the S iwai S o c iety ; there ind ividual int e r es t s we re les s s ub s umed t o t ho s e o f the t o t al i t y o f the memb ers whil s t the s up e ri o r e c onomic managemen t o f the S o c i e ty enab l e d great e r re t urn s t o g o t o tho s e who d i d cont rib u t e the mo s t . own , On their ind ividual s we re o ft en ab le t o f o llow the p ract i ces o f the communally man aged garden s , their own in i t iat ive . p l an t at ion s an d s t o re s through Few were ab l e to chal len ge the S o c i e ty unt il l a t e in the 1 9 6 0 s when a small numb er o f S iwai s , p r imar ily with exp e r ien c e gain e d in mo re cash -con s ci ous envi ronmen t s , were ab le to ach ieve the l evel of management n e c e s s ary to market their own p ro duce and so bypas s o p erat ive an d it s sma l l e r p r o f i t mar g in s . p ro ce s s By 1 9 7 2 the c o this of c ompet it ion had s c arc ely b e gun an d t h e S o c iety rema in e d an empha t i c s uc c e s s p ro duct ion ven t ure s , mos t in con t ras t t o t h e connnun al of wh ich had lon g s in ce col lap s ed . Des p i t e the d is en chantment with admin i s t rat ion int e re s t and as s is t an c e , e s pe c ia l ly w i t h r i c e cult ivat ion , an d the fru s t rat ions of two de c ade s of d i s ap p o intment with t h e e f fe c t s 25 1 o f their at t empt s at part icipat ion in the cash e conomy , S iwais essent ially pers isted with p ract ical rather than with ritual means of obt aining new wealth . The few cult movement s were essen t ially desulto ry an d undramat ic , unaccompanied b y the emot ional ism an d hyste ria o f s ome o f tho se elsewhere in Melanes ia , and con f ined to a mino rity . They rep resented both an at t empt at divers ificat ion and an at tempt to est ablish relat ions with the administ rat ion on a morally acceptable b as is . But cult ism rep resented an al ien intellectual system that could not replace the indi genous sys tem ; S iwai leaders played lit t le part in those cult movement s that did exist even when their own s t atus and power were declining compared with younger men . By cont rast cash cropping represented an extension o f t radit ional e conomic interests and could b e incorporated with lit t le difficulty into t h e exis t ing economic system. That cult ism scarcely existed even durin g the more dramat ic failures of cash cropp ing , and then was con fined almost ent irely to one of the two religious groups in S iwai , s uggests that cargoism and b us iness were quit e dis tin ct ent it ies an d , above all , re futes in S iwai the ant i epistemological b as is for cargo cul t s that Finney claims for Goroka where ' b us iness has b een a cargo cult that works ' ( Finney , 19 7 3 : 14 4 ) . • • • • • • For the whole o f S iwai the vis ib le e f fe ct s o f the move from taim bi iong pasin t o taim bi iong rrani have characterized the post-war years and yet , what is apparent is that cust om has only margin al ly b een neglected or ab andoned . By 19 7 2 a growing acquaintan ce with the cash economy had only b egun to in fluence the o rganiz at ion , s cope and cont en t of s ocial b ehaviour an d obligat ions . What had changed , however , was the nature o f leadership . Be fore the war S iwai mumis were powerful l eaders with the authority to det ermine the cours e o f a range o f s o c ial and e conomic events . Following the war their in fluence was respon s ible for the main economic developmen t s within S iwai ; when these finally became suc cess ful on an individual basis , rather than on the collect ive b as is that the mumis had planned , their authority declined . New economic ins t itut ions , s uch as the co-operat ive society , emerged with the ab ility t o make decisions in areas where the mumis had restricted competence . At the s ame t ime polit ical inst itut ions , and espec ially the council , b egan t o erode another b as is for the b ig men ' s authorit y . The Coun c il especially was an alien ins t it ut ion that was not generated from the n eeds or wishes o f the S iwai themselves and caused some resentment on the part of big men some o f which was almost immediate b ut was sufficient ly con t inuous to eventually 252 provoke a change in the sys t em of lo cal government an d admin ist rat ion that marked an event ual reve rs ion to a mo re t rad it ional cust omary form of village or commun ity government ( c f . Connell , 19 7 7d) . The more obvious success of economic ins t it ut ions did not generat e opposit ion t o their partly al ien s t ruct ure ; for some t ime more individualis t ic household fo rms o f cashcropping and b us ines s ent erp rise and the communal fo rms of enterp rise that had been largely fost ered by the big men , had run together, with the lat t e r invariably giving way t o t he former as their superior sho rt -term economic b enefits became more apparent to the individual part icipant s . In the past there was a clear l ink b etween polit ical authority and economic re sources but this could not b e main tained throughout the dif ferent phases of p o st -war economic development s . In it ially leaders readily involved themselves in the new forms o f cash crop development , becaus e o f thei r own con t rol over right s in land , whereas for the s ame reas on yotmger men were not eas ily able to part icipate on an individual bas is . Although in s ome respect s t radit ional leaders comb ined b oth ' t radit ional ' and ' p rogress ive ' qualit ies they were ult imat ely unab le , despite thei r divers i f i cat ion int o busines s act ivit ies , t o comb at the individualism and fragmen t at ion that followed the success of cocoa . By the 19,60 s t radit ional leaders were no longer ab le to con t ro l and monopoliz e t h e f inan ces o f their s upport e rs ; mo s t individuals could get by , even in accumulat ing shell money for marriage payment s , without the support of their b ig man although few wished t o do so . Although b ig men were often able and willing t o p rovide the same range o f services that leaders had performed in the pas t , o ther inst it ut ions and individuals were also able t o do this , so that their prest ige and autho rity were inevit ab ly dimin ished al though it was only in the economic sphere that this was clear . The S iwai enthus iasm for chan ge had b rought them the agricult ural s t at ion and the first effe ct ive didimen in s outh Bougainville b ut it als o b rought them many false dawns and failures ; others envied their progress but in the end the cycle of s tart s and st ops gave S iwai the p resent agricultural system no faster than any other area of south Bougainville . At the st art o f the 19 70s the S iwai agricult ural economy had almost reached it s cont empo rary s it uat ion ; s ub sequent even t s partly s t emmed from one more important chan ge , the con s t ruct ion o f the t rans-island road in 19 72 which , without changing the essen t ial nature of S iwai agricult ure , e f fect ively changed many of the exist in g relat ionships of p roduct ion in agriculture 253 and especially b us iness . Nevertheless b y 19 70 , irrespect ive of these s ub s equent changes , a success ful cash economy had become unequivocably estab lished in S iwai ; the era of tm cert ainty was apparently ove r . I t was taim bilong mani . 254 Appendix I Ten year agricultural development plan Buin Sub-district Bougainville 1956-1966 This plan has b een tended on request for the District Commissioner , Bougainville , so that it may be included in a single plan for the Bougainville District . Plans of this nature can be very useful in both present and future administ ration of the area ; however , one which covers such a long period cannot be expected to be particularly accurate since we are only able to evaluate the priority of certain fields of development , from circumstances which exist at the moment . Additionally, since we know not how policy will change during the period we cannot form any idea of what financial ass istance would be available to enable us to br_ing the plans which we now lay down into effect at later date . The second hinge is the availability of staff to carry on with each development proj ect . proj ect . These two factors , finance and staff , broaden the gap in the accuracy and usefulness of such a long term plan . Since most other factors such as our resources , population and th in gs of that nature are relatively stable , our knowledge uf these enables us to t reat them as more-or-less definite ent ities and bearing them in mind we cannot e rr seriously in predict ing what developmental trends we must follow, allowing us then to scheme accordingly and make use of our long range planning as a very useful guide as we progress and look forward to the next stage of development . It is suggested that b ecause of unknown factors , the following plan be reviewed and amended at l east every two years in order to enhance its usefulness to officers who take over dut ies in the district later . The plan is set out in the following section s . Sect ion ( i ) Sect ion (i) Development of economic crops ( ii) Organizat ion of product ion and marketing ( iii) Development and improvement o f exist ing services and facilities ( iv) Resources and research (v) European settlement (vi) General (vii) Conclusion Development of economic cropping The aims of Agricultural Extension are as follows : Part 1 . Permanent t ree crops (a) Coconuts Every encouragement to plant up as great an area as possible in the Buin Linguistic area with a view to extensive copra product ion . In all other areas to completely rehab ilitate war damaged groves and to make new planting for food needs and copra production where the latter is pract icable . (b) Cacao To embark on a Sub-Dist rict-wide planting programme to supplement present plant ings . Future central fermentary sites have already been chosen , taking into account all appropriate considerations . 255 (c) Coffee A planting programme has b een started in the more inaccessible areas , and in higher regions . It is also being planted in the same areas as cacao . This crop is expected to share importance close to that of cacao growing, in the ten year p eriod . Part 1 1 . (a) Annual Crops Rice This will b e a particularly important crop in the Siwai area in the immediate future , however rice growing in Buin area will be increased and will be introduced as a home consumpt ion crop in the other subdivision s . ( b ) " Peanuts A crop which does particularly well here , and is expected to increase greatly . (c) Pot at oes This crop was recently introduced t o the higher areas of the Sub Dist rict and has a great future , it is hoped that at least Bougainville will be self-sufficient in potatoes later in the period planned for . (d) Other Cereals Maize , sorghums and millet s are now being grown for stock food , and extens ion of growing will be seen shortly , and is expected to cont inue . (e) Native foods and vegetables These will remain at sub s istence level until such t ime as a market outlet is found . At the moment approximately 100 , 000 lbs of sweet potatoes is bought from Buin natives per annum. Section ( ii) Organisation of production and market ing In the area such as this , where there are no inland transport services in existence and there is no intra-area shipping because of lack of harbours , o rganised product ion and market ing is very essential since it involves the provision of these services . The area is concerned with primary product ion only and this requires machinery for processing the different types of crops such as rice and peanuts , which can be very expensive . Hence if organisations are formed which can own both transport and processing machinery and provide these services to the producers from central estab lishments placed at strategic points , organisat ion of both production and marketing is greatly simplified and the capital necessary to start and maintain them is minimised. The ideal organisat ion to do this is either the Rural Progress Society or the Co-operat ive Societ y . The former has already been started in Siwai area , and although only in its second month is flourishing from support given it from the nat ives in the area . Once the natives running this Society are in a position to look after it by themselves , we can then start to organise similar bodies in the other sub divisions . The plan at the moment is to move to Buin later on , then Nagovisi and the Banon i . The basic function of this Society i s to provide (i) ( ii) ( iii) ( iv) (v) (vi) Transport Rice milling machinery Peanut shelling and grading machinery Central cacao fermentaries Central cof fee fermentaries Central copra driers 256 On-the-spot purchasing and guarantee of cont inual purchasing are the things which will ensure support for these bodies from t he nat ive pro d ucers . Should village councils be formed during the t en years , and I imagine they will b e , local organisation of production and market ing will be further simplified . Sect ion ( iii) Development and improvement of exist ing services and facilit ies Roads and b ridges There is nothing more important than good roads in this area . Since there are no harbour fac ilit ies except in isolated points along the coast it is essent ial that road t ransport handle nearly all produce hence the road system must be made permanent and be in all-weather condit ion . Bridging of more rivers will be necessary . The re-opening of all the prewar roads is progressing but needs to be speeded up . The only solut ion is to obtain heavy machinery . There is room and necess ity for many new roads to link the more remote parts with Buin . In quite a few cases the roads have been surveyed , but the nat ives have not sufficient populat ion to handle the ext ra work. Shipping Apart from greater frequency of services , we must have wharfage facilit ies and stores sheds at the wharf . The breakwater at present being built is the start o f this , but the proj ect itself must be speeded up . The amount of cargo that will be handled once product ion is organised is going to increase sizeably and better facilit ies will be necessary to deal with it in the near future . Sect ion ( iv) Research Resources research surveys will be necessary particularly if European sett lement is contemplated . The most important of these is a complete soil survey , of which a preliminary has already been made . An entomological survey would be of assistance so that plans for eradi cat ion of certain pests such as Elephant and Rhinoceros beetle can be formulated . Visits of overseas experts on different crops would b enefit local product ion . Fisheries resources surveys may lead t o development o f local fishing on a commercial b asis . Surveys of animals and hydro-power could also be useful . There has been a forestry survey of the Luluai valley and Tonolei Harbour areas but I consider that extension of this work will reveal quite a lot o f hitherto unknown stands of good t imbers which may have commercial possibili t ies . Sect ion (v) European settlement There are extensive t racts of land which could be opened up for European settlement as a gricultural leases . Possib le fields of product ion are copra , cacao , coffee , etc . However there must be a guarantee of availability of imported labour since the local populat ion could not possib ly stand the addit ional drain on manpower , part icularly if they intend going into economic c roppin g on any s cale themselves . If t imber leases are made available there will undoubtedly be interest shown in them. There is also a chance that secondary industries such as ply and paper manufacture may eventuate . 257 Sect ion (vi) General Departmental Acquis Staff necessary Two immediately an d possibly a third later. it ion of trained native staff essent ial . Est ablishments Extens ion centre at Konga in Siwai and a sub-stat ion at Taruba in the Nagovis i . These both staffed by Europeans . A third centre will be estab lished in the Buin linguist ic area lat e r . At the moment I can see no point in stat ioning an officer at Buin it self . Transport Light vehicles will be necessary at Konga and Taruba. Finance Sufficient to support centres and to open up new ones , as per annual estimates . Sect ion (vii) Conclusion As we picture it , the above is what we see open to development in the current ten years period 1956-1966 . Administ rat ion and technical departments will no doubt combine to see that we progress along the lines roughly mapped out . The main points in the plan are ( a) Development of economic cropping (b) Organisat ion of production and marketin g (c) Development and extens ion of exist ing services and conununicat ions (d) Surveys of our local resources . K. I . TOMLIN Konga . Siwai. September 1956 . 258 Appendix II Siwai Rural Progress Society : A. Jwie 1958 - November 1958 (5 months) Stock (2 1 . 6 . 1958) Purchases Sales Stock (26 . 11 . 1958) B. trading acco\lllt s Baskets Cane chairs � Rice Com 78 . 8 . 0 299 . 12 . 0 2 32 . 5 . 8 225 . 3 . 0 15 . 10 . 0 33. 5.0 58 . 6 . 8 44 . 10 . 0 18 . 3 . 0 2118 . 8 . 3 1 32 4 . 1 . 6 914 . 11 . 0 1054 . 18 . 6 521 . 7 . 0 52 8 . 8 . 6 102 1 . 3 . 6 124 . o . o 57. 2. 7 56. o . o 7 7 . 11 . 0 May 1959 - October 1959 ( 5 months ) Stock (·16 . 5 . 1959) Purchases Total* Sales Stock ( 19 . 10 . 1959) Baskets Cane chairs 1 3 7 . 18 . 3 7 3 . 11 . 0 229 . 7 . 11 97 . 14 . 8 131 . 1 3 . 3 1 . 10 . 0 Peanuts Rice Com 93. 9.6 514 . 11 . 8 50 . 12 . 6 775 . 6 . 0 814 . 7 . 8 9. 9.0 1674 . 12 . 6 1419 . 5 . 10 2 75 . 5 . 6 2 . 3 . 9 1402 . 14 . 1 2 70 . 4 . 6 5. 1.6 16 . 11 . 9 1260 . 11 . 5 3. o.o 3. o.o 45 . 0 . 0 59 . 7 . 7 59. 7 . 7 Balance Sheet (21 . 6 . 1959) Rice Peanuts Com Baskets Sales 1866 3074 111 292 Purchases from members Hire of t ractor Sack purchase Hire of rice machine 1678 104 30 75 1876 3 74 120 67 20 244 11 704 24 37 Loss 21 Profit C. October 1959 - January 1960 (3 months) Baskets --- Stock (20 . 10 . 1959) Purchases Total Sales St ock (11 . 1 . 1960) D. 131 . 13 . 2 14 . 6 . 0 172 . 7 . 0 47 . 15 . 0 n . d. Peanuts Rice 1260 . 11 . 5 16 . 11 . 9 200 . 13 . 0 25 3 . 18 . 4 1908 . 12 . 5 4 34 . 4 . 5 349 . 2 . 3 n. d. n . d. Com 5 . 1. 0 6.0 86 . 4 . 1 70 . 0 . 0 n.d. 15 . 8 . 0 7 6 . 10 . 0 70 . 3. 7 n . d. 2.8.0 3.0.0 3.0.0 n .d. April 1960 - August 1960 (5 months) Stock ( 6 . 4 . 1960) Purchases Total Sales Stock ( 30 . 8 . 1960) Baskets Peanuts Rice Com 46 . 17 . 0 80 . 5 . 0 1 7 3 . 9 . 10 141 . 2 . 7 n.d. 700 . 1 9 . 4 81 . 8 . 0 782 . 7 . 4 648 . 10 . 0 n . d. 69 . 11 . 3 340 . 5 . 0 595 . 10 . 9 588 . 1 . 4 n.d. 24 . 6 . 7 20 . 0 . 0 88.4. 8 10 . 4 . 0 n.d. Cocoa 31 . 4 . 2 34 . 13 . 2 1 36 . 6 . 8 129 . 10 . 4 n . d. 39 . 14 . 0 101 . 7 . 8 31 . 1 . 10 n . d. * This total includes ' stock ( 16 . 5 . 59 ) ' , ' purchases ' plus all other expenses milling, b agging , handlin g , freight , e t c . and , apparently , s ome disaggregation of administ ration costs . Wages must have b een very smal l ; in 1962 , the secretary , Luke Pauru, was get t ing £10 a month and there were no other qualified staff . 259 Appendix III Copra and cocoa prices 194 7-19 74 Copra (hot-air) ( ton) in store , Rabaul Cocoa ( ton) ex-wharf , Sydney Copra (hot-air) ( ton) in store , Rabaul Cocoa ( ton ) in store , Rabaul 194 7 January July £28 £31 n.d. n.d. 1962 January July £55 £55 £212 £212 1948 January July £38 £4 7 n.d. £240 196 3 January July £55 £59 £190 £225 1949 January July £48 £48 £240 £240 1964 January July £59 £62 £200 £1 75 1950 January July £48 £49 £240 £250 1965 January July £72 £72 £100 £ 81 1951 January Jul y £49 £55 £250 £300 1966 January July £72 $143 £1 33 $416 1952 January July £65 £69 £285 £290 1967 January July $143 $120 $ 350 $450 195 3 January July £69 £69 £2 75 £290 1968 January July $126 $156 $520 $490 1954 January July £69 £75 £370 £580 1969 January July $ 15 1 $126 $ 780 $ 750 1955 January July £75 £70 £505 £340 1970 January July $ 118 $ 140 $ 760 $ 4 70 1956 January July £70 £6 3 £305 £235 1 9 7 1 January July $ 131 $123 $520 $ 360 195 7 January July £6 3 £5 8 £245 £245 1 9 72 January July $110 $103 $ 300 $440 1958 January July f.4 7 f.4 7 £350 f.400 1 9 7 3 January July $ 108 $12 7 $550 $880 1959 January July f.55 f.55 f.340 £2 76 1974 January July $200 $ 3 34 $750 $1100 1960 January July £73 £65 f.2 33 £25 5 1961 January July f.55 £55 £210 £200 Source : Paaifia IsLands MonthLy. 260 Appendix IV A note on documentary sources The most important patrol reports and agricultural patrol reports relevant to the Siwai area are separately listed below rather than referred to in detail in the text . Thus ' PR Boku 1/72-73 ' refers to the report of the Patrol carried out by G . Schweinfurth in Banon i , Baitsi and Nagovisi in July and September 19 72 . Patrol reports up to and including 1955 are stored in the Papua New Guinea Archives (here re ferred to as PMA) in Port Moresby and subsequent reports are filed in various locat ions including Konedobu (Port Moresby) , Arawa and sometimes the patrol stat ions involve d . The following is a list o f all patrol reports known to me on the S iwai area; those marked with an asterisk are particularly useful accounts of the social and economic conditions at a particular t ime . It is almost certainly incomplete especially for the period between 1959 and 196 5 . The following sect ions list all other documentary material referred to in this monograph , classified according to the chapter or sect ion in which it is used . Pat rol reEorts Spec ial Pat rol Flight n . d . (1944) J . M . Joyes Southern Bougainville *PR Bougainville 10/47-48 R. R. Cole Siwai/Nagovisi/Baitsi/ Feb . -March 1948 Banoni PR Boku 1/48-49 c . w . Liddle Banoni/Baitsi/Siwai May 1949 PR Boku 4/49-50 c . w . Liddle Siwai September 1949 *PR Buin 5 /50-51 A. K . Jackson Siwai March-April 1951 PR Buin 4 /51-52 J . F . Norton Siwai March 1952 PR Buin 1/54-55 A . J . Humphries Siwai August-Sept . 1954 *PR Buin 1/55-56 D . J . Hook Siwai July-August 1955 PR Boku 3/55-56 D . J . Hook Siwai June 1956 PR Buin 6/56-5 7 G . R. G. Wearne Siwai Jan . -Feb . 195 7 PR Boku 1/57-5 8 R. J . Giddings Siwai August 1957 PR Boku 2/60-61 A . D . Pitt Siwai Sept . -Nov. 1960 PR Buin 5 / 64-65 A . Wallensky Siwai June-July 1965 PR Konga 1/66-67 R. E . Dargie Siwai May 1967 PR Boku 12/6 7-6 8 H . BalfourOgilvy Siwai and Baits i Dec . 19 6 7 -Jan . 1968 ........ 11 May 1944 *PR Konga 1 / 6 7 -6 8 R. E . Dargie Siwai Sep t . -Nov . 1967 PR Konga 2 /6 7 -6 8 R. E . Dargie Siwai Feb . -March 1968 PR Buin 2/68 -69 H . L . Balfour- Siwai/Baitsi February 1969 Ogilvy 261 *PR Konga 1/69-70 J . G. Steven Siwai January 19 70 PR Konga 2 /69-70 J . G. Steven Siwai March 1910 PR Konga 1 / 70-71 F . B . Donovan Siwai August-Nov. 1970 PR Boku 10 / 70-71 G . Schweinfurth Siwai May 1971 *PR Boku 2 /72-7 3 G . Schweinfurth Siwai (Area Study) Nov. 1972-March 1973 PR Boku 1 / 7 3-74 A. McGrail Siwai August 1973 PR Kieta 1/72-73 A. McGrail Nagovisi/Siwai October 1972 + PR Kieta 2 / 72 -7 3 A. McGrail Siwai/Buin/Bana November 19 72 + PR Kieta 4/72 -73 A· McGrail Bana-Siwai Jan . -Feb . 197 3 + Unavailable in 1975 Agricultural eatrol reeort s APR Buin Sub-Dist rict K. I . Tomlin March 1954 (Early 1954 ?) APR Buin and Kieta Sub-Dist ricts K. I . Tomlin 1954 June-July 1954 *APR Buin Sub-Dist rict K . I. Tomlin 1955 August-Oct . 1955 APR Buin Sub -District No . l 141 K. I . Tomlin 1956 Jan . -March 1956 APR Siwai No . 4 D . C . Shepherd J\lll e 1956 APR Siwai No . 2 K. I . Tomlin J\llle 1956 May-J\llle 1956) one patrol May-J\lll e 1956) *APR Eastem Division Siwai No . 9 G . E . Haling 20 J an . 1960 January 1960 AP R Eastem Siwai Konga No . l M . L . Jones January 1962 January 1962 Documentary sources difficult or imeossible of access The environmental stage Amdt , F . (1972 ) . ' Investigation on reports of food shortages due to garden damage caused by excessive rains in the Buin sub-district '.• DASF, Kieta , mimeo (4pp . ) . Bougainville Copper Pty Ltd (1969) , ' Bougainville . investigations ' , Pangtllla , mimeo . French , B . R. (1972 ) . Shaw , P . E . (1969 ) . Results of geological Letter to DASF , Kieta. Letter to Rural Development Officer , Konga. 22 September 1969 . The war economy Anon (1945 ) . Native Interrogat ion Reports (Australian War Memorial File 506 /8/5 ) . Anon (1947a) . Brief report on a Survey of South West Bougainville , Typescrip t . July 1947 (PMA) . Anon (1947b ) . Operat ion Aircraft . Destruction o f Japanese gardens an d the use of napalm bombs , Bougainville area, 1944-45 ( AWM File 337/8/1) . D . L . Campbell (1946) . History of tfLe Japanese OaCJUpation of BougainviUe . 1942 - August 1 945 , Fauro (AWM File 5 35 / 3 / 2 ) . Mareh 262 G . E . Haling (1960) . Agricultural Pat rol . Lugakei (Buin D . O . File 32 -lc . ) Rice R. R. Cole , ADO Buin , Let ter to DO Sohano 23 May 1947 (PMA Box 421 3 , File 33 . 1 . 2 ) . L . A. Dornan , Nat ive Rice Proj ect , Monthly Report , May 1949 (PMA Box 419 3 , File AGR 2 8 . k . l) . C . S . Franke , Notes on the Siwai Rice Proj ect , Buin Sub-district , 29 July 1950 (PMA Box 419 3 , File AGR 2 8 . k . l ) . C . S . Franke ; Annual Report of Agricultural Extension Service , Buin Sub-district July 1949-Jl.llle 1950 (PMA Box 4241 , File 38 . 2 . 10) . E . R. Wilson , Buin Rice Proj ect , Pat rol Report , October 1952 . G . G . Wilson , Rice Report , 29 October 194 8 , 2pp (PMA Box 3902 ) . Rice Proj ect 1948 - Monthly Report March 1951-September 195 1 , et c . (PMA Box 419 3 DASF File AGR 2 8 . k . l ) . Buin Sub -dist rict Agricultural Office Monthly Reports 1948-1950 (PMA Box 4 19 3 , File AGR 2 8 . L . l) . Diversificat ion A. K . Jackson , Nagovisi (Special Report) . April 1952 . (PMA) . D . C . Shepherd , Rural Progress Society , Siwai . Let ter to Chief of Division of Agricultural Extension , Port Moresby , 3 April 1956 . K . I . Tomlin , Agricultural Pat rol Report . Buin and Kieta Sub-dist rict s . 1954 . K . I . Tomlin , Supplement to Special Report on Organizat ion of Product ion and Marketin g , Buin Sub-dist rict , February 1956 . Siwai Rural Progress Society A . D . Boag . Letter to Regional Agricultural Office r , Rabaul , 23 March 1959 . Letter to Regional Agricultural Office r , Rabaul , 3 February 1960 . D . N . Brown . Lette r to Regist rar of Co-operatives , Port Moresby , 17 October 196 1 . Catholic Act ion . Vol . 8 , No . 2 , 1960 . Vol . 8 , No . 1 0 , 1960 . Vol . 14 , No . 4 , 19 67 . G . A. Halin g . H. Jackman . Let ter t o District Agricultural Office r , Sohano , 12 August 1959 . Letter to Co-operative Officer , Sohano , 20 January 1959 . Letter to Honorary Advise r , Siwai RPS , 24 December 1959 . Siwai RPS . Report on 6 months to 19 Jl.llle 1959 , 25 Jl.llle 1959 . Let ter to Dist rict Agricultural Officer , Sohano , 2 8 October 1960 . R. Joseph . Lett er to Co-operative Office r , Sohano , 10 December 195 8 . M . M. Pember . Letter to Assistant Regist rar , Co-operat ive Sect ion , Rabaul , 1 8 January 1960 . Letter to Assistant Registrar , Co-operat ive Sect ion , Rabaul , 29 April 1960 . S iwai RP S . Minutes 5 December 1959 . Trading Accol.lll t s 6 . 4 . 60-30 . 8 . 60 . Trading Ac counts 31 . 8 . 60-1 7 . 3 . 61 . Territory of New Guinea . Annual Report 1 959-60 , Canberra 1961 . 263 K. I . Tomlin . Supplement to Special Report on Organizat ion of Product ion and Marketing, Buin Sub-district , February 1956 . Special Report Siwai RPS , 18 June 1956 . Special Progress Report Siwai RPS , 4 October 195 6 . Annual Report Siwai Agricultural Extens ion Centre , 5 July 195 7 . Lett er t o Dist rict Conunissioner , East New Britain , 6 August 1956 . Special Report Siwai RPS , 26 February 195 7 . Letter and Loan Request t o Department o f the Treasure r , 2 6 November 1956 . Inspect ion Report and Balance Sheet 22 . 6 . 5 8-26 . 11 . 5 8 . Letter t o Dist rict Conunissioner, Sohano , 1 2 June 195 8 . Towards the cash economy R. Bassingthwaite , Siwai Area, Department of Trade and Indust ry , Rabaul , tmpub . mimeo , September 196 7 (File BD 9 . 2 . 6 . , Arawa) . Boku Annual Report 1963-64 . Bougainville Dist rict Annual Report 1962 -6 3 , 1964-65 , 1969-70. Buin Sub -district Annual Reports 1961-62 , 196 3-64 , 1964-6 5 , 1965-66 , 1966-67 , 1968-6 9 . I . N . Brown . Letter to Regist rar of Co-operatives , 17 October 196 1 . J . Christ ensen . Let ter to Regist rar of Co-operatives , Konedobu , 18 March 196 4 . Siwai RPS Balance Sheets , 2 8 October 196 5 . DASF, Konga . Cocoa Product ion : Siwai , mimeo , Konga, n . d . [August 19 72 ? ] South Bougainville Cocoa Production , August 1970 , 1 3 pp . (DASF Konga , File 2 1 . 32 . 1 ) . Typescript . B . R. French , History of Konga ' s stat ion , Siwai Society and Agricultural . Extension in Siwai , July 1972 . R. Frost . Lett er to Angco , Rabaul , 28 August 1969 . M. L . Jones . Letter to Registrar of Co-operatives , Konedobu, 8 April 1962 . J . Simiri . DASF Field Notes , August 1968 (DASF Konga) Oct ober 1969 (DASF Kieta) . Siwai Local Government Cotmcil , February 1960-0ctober 1975 . Siwai Rure , Vol . 3 , No . 4 , April 1962 ; Vol . 5 , No . 7 , July 196 3 . Siwai RPS , Minutes 9 July 196 0 , September 1964 . Balance Sheet , 1 3 . 9 . 68-2 8 . 2 . 6 9 . K. I . Tomlin . Field Officer ' s Journal , 5 October 1955 (PMA Box 4145) . G. G . Tually . Siwai RPS Inspector ' s Report , 11 October 1963 . W . T . Wh it e . Letter t o District Rural Development Office r , Kieta, 2 7 October 196 9 . Pigs and cows J . L . Anderson . D . N . Brown . Visit to Bougainville , 5 June 1969 [Konga File 14-la ] . Letter to RDO Konga , 1 August 1969 . Letter to RDO Buin , 13 June 1969 . Letter to Regional Controller , Rabaul , 27 June 1972 . DASF Konga. Proj ect Progranune , 29 October 1969 . L . A. Dornan . Rice Proj ect , Monthly Report , August 1949 . B . R. Fren ch . Letter to D . N . Brown , Kiet a , 22 May 1972 . 264 Letter to RDO , Kieta , 11 September 1969 . R. D. Hill . Cat tle s ituat ion , Konga . 18 September 1969 . Letter to Dist rict Rural Development Officer , Kieta, Minutes of Catt le Meeting held by the four Siwai Influentials who toured New Guinea Cat tle Proj e ct s , 11 October 1969 . Present and prospec t ive cattle owners - Siwai area, 20 May 19 70. T. Konne i . Lett er to P. Quodling, BCL ; 15 May 1972 . J . Montoro . O'l man bi long Siwai Zuk iuk nabaut Zang bisnis kau Zang hap bi long (The obse rvat ions of Siwai men on cattle proj ects in the Lae area) , Lae lp . , n . d . (Kon ga , 1969) . Typescrip t . J . A . P itt . Letter t o D . N . Brown , 5 April 197 3 . P . Quodling . T . Simiri . Let ter to Siwai Society , 3 1 May 1972 . Field notes , August 1968 [ DASF , Kiet a , Archives ] . Siwai Society . General meeting , 2 8 October 1968 . Letter to Chief of Division of Animal Indust ry , Konedobu , 3 March 1969 . Bus iness Siwai Co-operat ive Chairman . Mines , 20 August 1971 . R . D . Hill . Let ter to Director, Department of Lands , Surveys Letter 1 October 1969 . B. R. French n . d . Cocoa Production: Siwai , W . T . White (Buin Co-operat ive Officer) . 4pp . (Augus t 1972) . Typescript . Letter , 2 October 19 70 . Cargo s . Carley (1970) . (19 70) . OZ Kate ke t , Tok na Pasin Kago, mimeo , lOpp . 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' Stone and s teel tool use in a New Guinea society ' , Ethnology , 8 (2 ) : 199-205 . Troughton , E . L . G . , 1935 . 'A new genus and species of giant rat from the Solomons ' , Reco:rds of the Australian Museum, 19 (4) : 259-62 . 271 Tuz in , D . F . , 1976 . The Ilahita Arapesh: Dimensions of Unity , Berkeley and Los Angeles , University of California Press . Valent ine , C . A . , 196 3 . ' Social status , pol it ical power , an d nat ive responses to European influence in Oceania ' , Anthropo logical Fo1'Um , l , 3-55 . van Rij swij ck , 0 . , 1966 . The Silanga Rese ttlement Proj ec t , New Guinea Research Bulletin, no . 10 , Canb erra. van Wij k , C . L . , 1962 . ' The soils of Bougainville Island - their distribut ion and main characteris t ics in relat ion to agricultural development ' , Papua and New Guinea Agricultural Journa l , 15 ( 3-4 ) : 12 3-32 . Ward , M . W . , 19 7 5 . Roads and Development in Southwes t Bougainvi lle , New Guinea Research Bulletin , no . 62 , Canberra . ' In their own image : Aust ralia ' s impact on Ward , R. G . , and Ballard , J . A . , 19 76 . Papua New Guinea and lessons for future aid ' , Australian Out look , 30 (3) : 4 39-5 8 . Whitmore , T . C . , 1966 . Guide t o the Forests o f the British Solomon Islands , London , Oxford Un iversity Press . 1969 . ' The vegetat ion of the Solomon Islands ' , Royal Society London Phi l . Transactions Bul le tin , 255 : 2 5 9 -70 . Worsley , P . , 1 9 6 8 . The Trumpet Shal l Sound: ( 2nd edit ion) , London . A Study o f 'Cargo ' Cults i n Me lanesia , Yen , D. E . , 19 7 4 . The SWeet Potato and Oceania , Bernice Bishop Museum Bullet in , no . 2 36 , Honolulu. 273 DEVELOPMENT STUDIES CENTRE PUBLICATIONS Monographs No . l Labour and the law in Papua New Guinea , D . W . Smith , 1975 . A$4 . 00 . No . 2 The role o f the Papua New Guinea Defence Force , Paul Mench , 19 76 . 2 31 + xii pp . 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