The Press

Tribe’s despair prince may never visit

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BRITAIN: Buckingham Palace may have announced his retirement from public life, but nearly 16,000 kilometres away a tiny community still hopes the Duke of Edinburgh will change his mind.

So remote is the village of Younanen that it has only now received word of the duke’s decision to retire.

It matters because inhabitant­s on the South Pacific island of Tanna revere him as the son of a local mountain god who will one day return to them.

The news has been greeted with despondenc­y among the locals.

‘‘Prince Philip has said one day he will come and visit us,’’ Jack Malia, the village chief, said on Saturday.

Holding one of several photograph­s of the duke proudly displayed by the villager, including one from 1980 where the prince is in a suit, holding a club they made and sent to him in London, he added: ‘‘We still believe that he will come but if he doesn’t come, the pictures that I am holding ... it means nothing.’’

Each day, the villagers pray to the duke, asking for his blessings on the banana and yam crops that sustain their poor community.

‘‘If he comes one day, the people will not be poor, there will be no sickness, no debt and the garden will be growing very well,’’ said Malia.

Local legend tells of the paleskinne­d son of the mountain god who ventured across the seas in search of a rich and powerful woman to marry.

Anthropolo­gists believe the Duke of Edinburgh became linked to the legend in the 1960s when Vanuatu was an Anglo-French colony, known as the New Hebrides. It is now an island nation.

Villagers at the time were likely to have seen portraits of the duke and the Queen at government offices and police stations run by colonial officials.

The belief that the duke was the mountain god’s wandering son was reinforced when he accompanie­d the Queen on an official visit to the New Hebrides in 1974.

The duke was told of the cult by John Champion, the British resident commission­er, who suggested Prince Philip send them a portrait of himself.

‘‘Prince Philip is important to us because our ancestors told us that part of our custom is in England,’’ said Malia, who took over from his father as village chief in 2003.

Younanen is not marked on maps and reaching it requires a local guide and a three-hour drive through dirt trails from Lenakel, the island’s capital.

Malia added that the duke had told villagers not to ever take money from people who visited, but that they should accept food, such as rice, to share among themselves. – Sunday Telegraph

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Chief Jack Malia, second from right, from the Imanourane tribe, holds photograph­s of Prince Philip as he sits next to other villagers in the village of Younanen on Tanna Island in the Pacific island nation of Vanuatu.
PHOTO: REUTERS Chief Jack Malia, second from right, from the Imanourane tribe, holds photograph­s of Prince Philip as he sits next to other villagers in the village of Younanen on Tanna Island in the Pacific island nation of Vanuatu.

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