Fiji Sun

‘Minimum Stay In Levuka Should Be One Week’

- FREDERICA ELBOURNE SUVA Feedback: frederica.elbourne@fijisun.com.fj

Success is living with the opportunit­y and grace to use one’s talent for one’s livelihood, and improving the lives of others, and the physical world.

It’s a philosophy that self-taught writer and communicat­ions specialist, Mary Rokonadrav­u, lives by.

“There is no writing programme in the Pacific,” she said.

“Every writer in the Pacific Islands is self-taught, and that’s a testament to our resilience and love for the craft,” Ms Rokonadrav­u said.

Her writing career began with long-format novels, and the novella genre.

“In the early years, I could not afford the mail and courier costs, to send hard copies of the first three chapters, or first 50,000 words, to literary agents, in other countries,” Ms Rokonadrav­u said.

“I moved to short stories, and entered my first competitio­n in 2015, in which I won the Pacific regional Commonweal­th Short Story Prize.

“The short story was my second choice, but I’ve come to love it too much to abandon it.”

One of her achievemen­ts was a four-year writing programme for the rehabilita­tion of offenders in seven correction­al facilities in Suva.

Ms Rokonadrav­u is of mixed heritage – a descendant of the Indian indentured labour system, she has indigenous Fijian, and European settler blood.

“I was adopted by a Tamil South Indian family in Fiji,” she said.

What is one place in would friends to?

Fiji you take

Levuka, Ovalau.

It is a cultural world heritage site under the United Nations Educationa­l, Scientific and Cultural Organisati­on.

For me, it has deeply personal significan­ce, as it was home to 12 years of my formative education.

Its history, as the seat of the British colony, ingrained in me my appreciati­on for human cultures and history.

The very school that at one time only admitted whites as students, then whites and the children of Fijian chiefs, was open to everyone by the time I began school.

The town is a crash course in the history of Fiji, a time capsule, a microcosm of almost 200 years of contact history.

As a writer, my stories and style of telling come from this beach town that is a tapestry of human migration, dispossess­ion, loss, resilience, and hope.

To visit Levuka is to encounter art and history.

The minimum stay should be a week, and the best guides are its locals.

What is your favourite spot for a coffee or pie?

I’m for tea in its traditiona­lly brewed leaf tea state, not teabags.

Lemon leaf tea, or lemongrass, is also a favourite, and best served at home.

I’d say if you can get these at any coffeeshop, do so – it’s the real Fiji.

The best pies were from my childhood – our neighbour, aunt Priscilla Warbrooke, made wonderful pastries in Levuka.

In Koro, bubu Ana of Nababalavu, Nabasovi, made the best pies and cookies.

In Suva, the many coffee shops offer a good range, and some have found their way into these outlets from small family kitchens. You’ll know these by taste.

I rarely visit coffee shops, but do get occasional takeout packs.

The pies from Hot Bread Kitchen are great on the go.

Rhubarb Cafe is good for the sit-down.

What is your favourite backyard spot?

Levuka.

It feeds my writing soul.

It’s unfortunat­e that we lack the will and imaginatio­n to make it a model heritage site with lessons for the UNESCO World Heritage system.

I believe its citizens can, and I’d like to be part of that.

We have a small project going through the renovation and opening of the Ovalau Club soon.

What are some places in Fiji that are on your bucket list?

Vanua Levu, and Taveuni.

A leisurely, unplanned road trip around the two islands would be ideal.

There are coconuts, rice, pine, fish, taro, yaqona, and sugar.

The people who build their lives around this harvest – that’s a magical space for stories.

These seemingly simple products are repositori­es of stories spanning geographie­s and bloodlines through hundreds of years.

 ?? ?? Writer and communicat­ions specialist, Mary Rokonadrav­u, was adopted by a Tamil South Indian family in Fiji.
Writer and communicat­ions specialist, Mary Rokonadrav­u, was adopted by a Tamil South Indian family in Fiji.
 ?? Is one landmark in Levuka Town. ?? Fijian Labour Corps monument
Is one landmark in Levuka Town. Fijian Labour Corps monument
 ?? For a sit down. ?? Rhubarb Cafe in Flagstaff, Suva, is a good place
For a sit down. Rhubarb Cafe in Flagstaff, Suva, is a good place
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Fiji