Cash cropping, Catholicism and change : resettlement among the Kuni of Papua
Date
1986
Authors
Gostin, Olga
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Canberra, ACT : National Centre for Development Studies, Research School of Pacific Studies, The Australian National University.
Abstract
In 1961, a Roman Catholic priest informed his Papuan
congregation in the mountainous foothills of the Owen Stanley
Ranges that he intended to relocate the mission station in the
plains further south, and there start cash-cropping. Thus began
a unique rural settlement which had neither government nor official
mission backing, and which entailed the subtle interplay of the
Kuni people's aspirations to modernize,with their adherence to
traditional values and social organization.
This monograph is the story of the relocation, and is based
on fieldwork conducted between 1963 and 1965, with revisits
spannin~ a total of twenty years, the last being in 1983. Even
before European contact in 1901, the Kuni had developed marked
flexibility within their own social organization and adaptability
with neighbouring tribes. This trait served them well during the
early contact period which culminated in their evangelization in
1935. World War II disturbed the equilibrium by opening new
opportunities for employment and migration. The decision to resettle
and engage in cash-cropping was a direct response to the
trend for able-bodied men to leave the area.
The study focuses on problems of social change generated by
a new lifestyle entailing unprecedented population concentration
and cash-cropping. Changes in leadership structure, patterns of
residence, kinship organization and social custom are all reviewed
over a span of two decades. An interesting feature of the study
is the role of Catholicism and the Catholic ethic in rationalizing,
inhibiting and at times facilitating change.
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