The Canoe Is the People
Indigenous Navigation in the Pacific
Building a Vaka
If you want to build a vaka, first plant a garden.
Ni-Vanuatu saying
Building a large vaka can take more than a year. It can only begin if the right trees have been planted and are ready to use. A spiritual expert often performs a ritual GLOSSARY ritual - ceremony to ask the spirits for permission to cut down a tree. The experts might be paid with valuables like weaving and food as well as shown great respect. Another expert guides the vaka builders. In Satawal, heís called a senap (master vaka builder). Young children watch, and older boys help out.
Before Europeans arrived in the Pacific, people used things from the world around them to build canoes - like stone or shell axes to cut the trees and shape the canoe parts. There were no steel tools and certainly no chainsaws like today! A canoe builder knows which trees are good for different canoe parts. The wood for hulls must be strong and long-lasting but not too heavy. Other canoe parts - like the outrigger GLOSSARY outrigger - side float and the sleeping platform on Satawalese canoes - are made from softer woods. Some of the wood used for the sleeping platform is brought by ocean currents GLOSSARY currents - the directional flow of the sea from unknown places. If a community doesnít have building materials or a canoe builder, they may trade for canoes from other islands.
After the canoe is tested, thereís a ceremony to celebrate. In Satawal, they throw food all over the canoe. When theyíre finished, they feast!
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Building a vaka and transmitting knowledge
Satawalese senap (master vaka builder) Edward Remoi supervises the construction of a large voyaging canoe. Construction is a group effort involving many men – from boys to adults. Many different tools and techniques, both ancient and modern, are used. It is an exceptional opportunity to pass down knowledge and know-how to young boys who are eager to observe, participate, practice, and learn.