Kuwait Times

Pacific villagers mull Charles as Prince Philip’s successor

-

YAOHNANEN VILLAGE, Tanna, Vanuatu: Pacific villagers who worship Prince Philip are considerin­g whether his son Charles should be anointed his successor as the remote jungle communitie­s hold a marathon mourning ritual. Chiefs from the villages of Yaohnanen and Yakel on Vanuatu’s Tanna island gathered this week to remember Philip, who died last Friday at Windsor Castle at the age of 99.

For the next 100 days, the elders will gather at a clearing shaded by an ancient, massive banyan tree to air thoughts and drink kava-the peppery, mildly intoxicati­ng root drink that is a vital part of important ceremonies in the islands. While most chiefs wear little more than a penis gourd, proceeding­s unfold with the gravity of a papal conclave, as worshipper­s mull the future of their spiritual movement without its figurehead Philip. “The connection that we’ve had with the royal family will endure,” chief Jack Malia said. Access to Yaohnanen and Yakel still involves a grueling drive on a pot-holed road running through lush volcanic jungle, but these days trucks roar along a newly-constructe­d highway just a few kilometers away.

Such modern developmen­ts hold little interest for the villagers though as they proudly maintain a kastom way of life that has changed little in 3,000 years. It is a rich tradition of story-telling and legend, replete with magic and spirituali­sm, giving rise to the firm belief among the Tanna villagers that Philip is one of them.

While Philip-renowned for his gaffes and hailed as ‘legend of banter’ by grandson Prince Harry-may seem an unlikely deity to Western eyes, his role is deeply engrained in Tanna’s ‘kastom’, or customary, belief system. Most worshipper­s favor Charles to take his father’s place in their heart, but they fervently want him to do something Philip never achievedvi­sit the island dwellers that hold him so dear. Chief Malia said that spirituall­y Philip was always part of the villagers’ lives, but “we never got to see him” as the royal consort never set foot on Tanna.

“We never got the chance to meet face to face like you and me right now,” he said. “If [Prince Charles] would agree to come someday, then he must come down here so that we can sit together and talk.” The so-called Prince Philip movement is believed to have arisen in the 1970s, as a response to the increasing encroachme­nt of the modern world. In appropriat­ing Philip, the man who stood at the right hand of Britain’s ruler when it was still a world power, their narrative subverted its power by planting the seed of Tanna kastom in its heart. According to them, Prince Philip was the embodiment of a powerful spirit that brought fertility and wealth to the people of Tanna.

 ?? — AFP ?? Village chief Albi in Yakel, a remote Pacific village on the island of Tanna in Vanuatu that worships Britain’s Prince Philip, following the Duke of Edinburgh’s death on April 9.
— AFP Village chief Albi in Yakel, a remote Pacific village on the island of Tanna in Vanuatu that worships Britain’s Prince Philip, following the Duke of Edinburgh’s death on April 9.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait