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 6 of 8)
The Americans’ munificence dazzled the men from Tanna, as did the sight of dark-skinned soldiers eating the same food, wearing the same clothes, living in similar huts and tents and operating the same high-tech equipment as white soldiers. “In kastom, people sit together to eat,” says Kirk Huffman, who was the curator of Vanuatu’s cultural center during his years in the island nation. “The missionaries had angered the Tannese by always eating separately.”
It seems this is when the legend of John Frum took on a decidedly American character. “John Frum appeared to us in Port-Vila,” Chief Kahuwya says, “and stayed with us throughout the war. John was dressed in all white, like American Navy men, and it was then we knew John was an American. John said that when the war was over, he’d come to us in Tanna with ships and planes bringing much cargo, like the Americans had in Vila.”
In 1943, the U.S. command, concerned about the movement’s growth, sent the USS Echo to Tanna with Maj. Samuel Patten on board. His mission was to convince John Frum followers that, as his report put it, “the American forces had no connection with Jonfrum.” He failed. At war’s end, the U.S. military unwittingly enhanced the legend of their endless supply of cargo when they bulldozed tons of equipment—trucks, jeeps, aircraft engines, supplies—off the coast of Espíritu Santo. During six decades in the shallows, coral and sand have obscured much of the watery grave of war surplus, but snorkelers can still see tires, bulldozers and even full Coke bottles. The locals wryly named the place Million Dollar Point.
After the war, when they returned home from Port-Vila to their huts, the Tanna men were convinced that John Frum would soon join them, and hacked a primitive airstrip out of the jungle in the island’s north to tempt the expected American planes from the skies. Across the South Pacific, thousands of other cargo cult followers began devising similar plans—even building bamboo control towers strung with rope and bamboo aerials to guide in the planes. In 1964, one cargo cult on New Hanover Island in Papua New Guinea offered the U.S. government $1,000 for Lyndon Johnson to come and be their paramount chief. But as the years passed with empty skies and seas, almost all the cargo cults disappeared, the devotees’ hopes crushed.
At Sulphur Bay the faithful never wavered. Each Friday afternoon, hundreds of believers stream across the ash plain below Yasur, coming to Lamaraka from villages all over Tanna. After the sun goes down and the men have drunk kava, the congregation gathers in and around an open hut on the ceremonial ground. As light from kerosene lamps flickers across their faces, they strum guitars and homemade ukuleles, singing hymns of John Frum’s prophecies and the struggles of the cult’s martyrs. Many carry the same plea: “We’re waiting in our village for you, John. When are you coming with all the cargo you promised us?”
Threaded among the singers’ perfect harmonies is a high-pitched Melanesian keening that hones each hymn with a yearning edge. I look around in vain for Chief Isaac until a senior man in the cult whispers that after drinking kava, Isaac has disappeared among the darkened trees to talk to John Frum. The weekly service doesn’t end until the sun comes back up, at seven the next morning.
The John Frum movement is following the classic pattern of new religions,” says anthropologist Huffman. Schisms split clumps of faithful from the main body, as apostates proclaim a new vision leading to sacrilegious variants on the creed’s core beliefs.
Which explains Prophet Fred, whose village, Ipikil, is nestled on Sulphur Bay. Daniel says that Prophet Fred split with Chief Isaac in 1999 and led half of the believer villages into his new version of the John Frum cult. “He had a vision while working on a Korean fishing boat in the ocean,” Daniel says. “God’s light came down on him, and God told him to come home and preach a new way.” People believed that Fred could talk to God after he predicted, six years ago, that Lake Siwi would break its natural dam and flood into the ocean. “The people living around the lake [on the beach beneath the volcano] moved to other places,” says Daniel. “Six months later, it happened.”
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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