In John They Trust
South Pacific villagers worship a mysterious American they call John Frum - believing he'll one day shower their remote island with riches
- By Paul Raffaele
- Photographs by Paul Raffaele
- Smithsonian magazine, February 2006, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 8)
Other boys mix water with the pulp and twist the mixture through a cloth, producing a dirty-looking liquid. Daniel hands me a half-coconut shell filled to the brim. “Drink it in one go,” he whispers. It tastes vile, like muddy water. Moments later my mouth and tongue turn numb.
The men split into small groups or sit by themselves, crouching in the darkness, whispering to each other or lost in thought. I toss back a second shell of the muddy mix, and my head tugs at its mooring, seeking to drift away into the night.
Yasur rumbles like distant thunder, a couple of miles over the ridge, and through the trees I glimpse an eerie red glow at its cone. In 1774, Capt. James Cook was lured ashore by that same glow. He was the first European to see the volcano, but local leaders banned him from climbing to the cone because it was taboo. Daniel assures me the taboo is no longer enforced. “Go with Chief Isaac,” he advises. “You can ask him tomorrow.”
After I drink my third shell of kava, Daniel peers into my undoubtedly glazed eyes. “I’d better take you back,” he says. By the seaside at my hut, I dance unsteadily to the rhythm of the waves as I try to pluck the shimmering moon from the sky and kiss it.
The next morning, I head to Lamakara to talk to Chief Isaac. Surrounded by an eerie doomsday moonscape of volcanic ash, Yasur looms behind the village. But at only 1,184 feet high, the sacred volcano has none of the majesty of, say, Mount Fuji; instead, its squat shape reminds me of a pugnacious bulldog standing guard before its master’s house. My driver points at the cone. “Haus blong John Frum,” he says in pidgin English. It’s John Frum’s house.
In the village dozens of cane huts, some with rusting tin roofs, encircle an open ceremonial dancing ground of impacted ash and the mound where the American flag flies each day, flanked by the much smaller flags of Vanuatu, ex-colonial ruler France and the Australian Aborigines, whose push for racial equality the villagers admire. Clearly, John Frum has yet to return with his promised cargo because Lamakara is dirt poor in consumer goods. But island men, wrapped in cloth known as lava-lava, women in large flowered dresses and mostly barefoot children in T-shirts appear healthy and seem happy. That’s no surprise: like many South Pacific coastal villages, it’s a place where coconuts drop by your side as you snooze. Yams, taro, and pineapples and other fruit thrive in the fertile volcanic soil, and plump pigs sniff around the village for scraps. Tasty fruit bats cling upside down in nearby trees.
Chief Isaac, in an open-neck shirt, green slacks and cloth shoes, greets me on the mound and leads me into a hut behind the flagpoles: the John Frum inner sanctum, off-limits to all but the cult’s senior leaders and, it seems, male visitors from abroad. “Office blong me,” he says with a smile as we enter.
The hut is dominated by a round table displaying a small U.S. flag on a pedestal, a carved bald eagle and imitation U.S. military uniforms neatly folded and placed in a circle, ready for use on John Frum Day in a little more than a week. Above, suspended by vine from a beam, hangs a globe, a stone ax and a pair of green stones carved into circles the size of a silver dollar. “Very powerful magic,” the chief says as he points to the stones. “The gods made them a long time ago.”
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Comments (11)
I agree, Jamie... no conclusion. This story needs a follow up. Has someone gotten them the outboard motor yet?
Posted by Catherine on December 24,2012 | 10:12 PM
Why didnt you buy him a outboard motor instead of just putting it in his face that he doesn't have one? Shoddy ending, no conclusion.
Posted by Jamie on July 14,2012 | 09:54 AM
Like one native said, "John Frum is our Jesus", Christians could very well say "Jesus is our John Frum".
Posted by Peixe on July 13,2012 | 08:04 AM
I recently read a book called "The Man With The Bird on His Shoulders" by John Rush and Abbe Anderson. This book is about meeting the "John Frum" people in the early and mid 90's.
Posted by Morgan on December 29,2011 | 10:11 PM
The writer might have mentioned right off the bat that John Frum is "John From [America]." This is like, "Hello, I'm John from America, and I run the Navy PX on your island."
Posted by Mina on December 27,2011 | 07:35 AM
The cargo cult is about the one unchanging, constant and universal fact: human nature. Confusing cause and effect is as common in "advanced" societies as in the south Pacific backwaters. Vulgar Keynesian economics is a terrific example. The current debate in Congress regarding debt,deficits,spending and taxes is another. Human beings are human beings. Let's stop being so full of ourselves in the "advanced" countries. Our sophistication is superficial. Our dominant characteristics seem to be hubris and sophistry.
Posted by Tom C on August 1,2011 | 12:14 PM
It's certainly an interesting phenomenon, but it is hard to get past the writer's patronizing, mocking, superior, and ultimately disrespectful attitude. This might have worked a century ago, but it is really not so much fun nowadays to laugh at the the simple natives and their funny ways.
Posted by pgemosa on September 23,2010 | 01:11 PM
This is what the early Christians must have been like, in fact cargo cults are almost identical to apocalyptic christianity.
I'm almost sure it's a matter of time before some American televangelist or fraud tries to go to Tanna with boatloads of cargo and call himself John Frum and claim to be the new king or messiah ... he might easily get away with being worshiped, especially if he's gracious and wealthy.
Posted by Saadaya on August 30,2010 | 10:43 AM
But isn't that where religions started. People making observations of the world around them and coming up with diety's to explain how it worked such as rainfall and the sun moving across the sky?
Posted by N. Fiumara on August 17,2010 | 07:53 PM
Interesting that the author implies religion, what the islanders actually did was practice science:
Much like any scientist, they made the best interpretation of the cargo phenomenon that they could, given their observations and world view.
Posted by s. billets on June 24,2010 | 11:37 AM
This is very interesting. I would like to know more. Thank you. Gerard
Posted by gerard salomon on November 4,2008 | 11:56 AM
Your February 2008 issue, page 20, Points of Interest, Rocks of Ages article states .."the northeastern corner of Utah". You may want to re-evaluate your directions. I believe that the Arches are in the southeastern part of the state.
Posted by Charlene Gillespie on February 1,2008 | 10:32 AM
Re.January,'08 28 Places to see before you die. The 28 places in the article are beautiful and very interesting to see. But why wasn't Jerusalem, Israel the birthplace of the 3 Monotheistic religions included? A view of the Western Wall with the Mosque in the background is most beautiful. Israel is very beautiful, the country was transformed from desert and swamps to a green and vibrant democracy with immigrants from 80 different countries in less that 100 years. I trust that you will consider to show Jerusalem and Israel in a future edition unless you have done it recently.
Posted by Amos Turner on December 26,2007 | 04:06 PM