Purging parliament: a new christian politics in Papua New Guinea?

Date

2014

Authors

Eves, Richard
Haley, Nicole
May, Ronald
Cox, John
Gibbs, Philip
Merlan, Francesca
Rumsey, Alan

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Canberra, ACT: State, Society and Governance in Melanesia (SSGM), Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, The Australian National University

Abstract

In November and December 2013, a controversy erupted in Papua New Guinea when the speaker of the national parliament, Theodore Zurenuoc, a devout Christian, tried to rid Parliament House of what he described as ‘ungodly images and idols’. Zurenuoc had already begun by removing the carvings from a lintel above the entrance to Parliament House, but planned to remove many more carvings throughout the building. His plans were strongly opposed, and considerable debate was generated in the two national newspapers and in social media. Those who opposed him saw him as a ‘religious fundamentalist’ and his actions as ‘sacrilege’ and ‘cultural terrorism’,1 while those who supported Zurenuoc’s plans saw him as a ‘God-fearing’, ‘modern-day Reformer’ and ‘God’s anointed vessel’. Despite the protests, which included a number of high-profile critics, and the intercession of the prime minister, the speaker was unrepentant, vowing to continue his work until there were ‘no traces of elements of cult and demonic worship in the national parliament of PNG’ (Evara 2013). (First paragraph of paper)

Description

Keywords

Papua New Guinea, parliament, christianity, religious fundamentalism, national identity

Citation

Source

Type

Working/Technical Paper

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

Open Access

License Rights

Restricted until