Pukapuka

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Pukapuka
Native name:
Te Ulu o te Watu
Pukapuka Aerial efs 1280.jpg
Aerial view of Pukapuka Atoll
Pukapuka
Geography
Location Central-Southern Pacific Ocean
Coordinates 10°53′00″S165°51′00″W / 10.88333°S 165.85000°W / -10.88333; -165.85000
Archipelago Cook Islands
Area5 km2 (1.9 sq mi)
Administration
Demographics
Population425 (2016)
Ethnic groups Polynesian
Pacific Ocean laea location map.svg
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Pukapuka
Location of Pukapuka Atoll in the Pacific Ocean
Map of Pukapuka Atoll Pukapuka.png
Map of Pukapuka Atoll

Pukapuka, formerly Danger Island, is a coral atoll in the northern group of the Cook Islands in the Pacific Ocean. It is one of the most remote islands of the Cook Islands, situated about 1,140 kilometres (708 miles) northwest of Rarotonga. On this small island, an ancient culture and distinct language have been maintained over many centuries. The population of Puka Puka is around 400 people.

Contents

Etymology

The traditional name for the atoll is Te Ulu-o-Te-Watu ("The Head of the Stone"), [1] [2] :375–377 The modern name Pukapuka (sometimes written as Bukabuka) originally applied to the main island of the atoll, and is of uncertain etymology. [3] In modern times, the main island is often called Wale ("Home"). [3]

Pukapuka has been given various names by European explorers. Pedro Fernandes de Queirós sighted an island in 1595, likely Pukapuka, and called this San Bernardo. [3] On 21 June 1665 John Byron sighted Pukapuka, calling it Islands of Danger, as he was unable to land due to high surf. [4] [1] A version of this name, Danger Island, became common use in English. [1] French captain Pierre François Péron named the atoll Îles de la Loutre ("Islands of the Otter") when he visited on 3 April 1796. [3]

Geography

Pukapuka is shaped like a three-bladed fan. There are three islets on the roughly triangular reef, with a total land area of approximately 3 square kilometres (1.2 sq mi). Motu Kō, the biggest island, is to the southeast; Motu Kotawa (Frigatebird Island) is to the southwest; and the main island Wale is to the north. Toka sand cay is to the west of the atoll, separated from Motu Kotawa by a reef. Kō and Motu Kotawa are uninhabited food reserves, with taro and pulaka gardens and coconut plantations. Pukapuka Airport (ICAO airport code: NCPK) is on Kō.

The three villages are located on the crescent-shaped bay of the northernmost islet of the atoll: Yātō (West), Loto (Central) and Ngake (East). Loto (Roto on most maps) is host to the Island Administration. The traditional names for these villages are Takanumi, Kotipolo and Te Lāngaikula. In daily life, the islanders frequently call them Tiapani (Japan), Malike or Amelika (United States) and Ōlani (Holland) respectively. In sports competitions between the villages, the villagers use the names and flags of these countries.

The submerged Tima Reef is situated 23 km southeast of Pukapuka. About 60 km away is Nassau (Cook Islands) which is owned by the people of Pukapuka and considered part of it for administrative purposes. Since the 1950s it has been governed by the Council of Chiefs of Pukapuka. The Nassau Island Committee advises the Pukapuka Island Committee on matters relating to its own island.

History

Human settlement of Pukapuka can be dated back about 1,000 years, after the sea level stabilised to its present height. [5] According to oral tradition the island was discovered by Tamayei, a god from Tonga, and settled by ancestors from Tonga. [3] The atoll served as a connecting hub between West and East Polynesia – a role that is reflected in Pukapukan material culture, and language, which is Samoic with a Tokelauan influence. Pukapukan traditions speak of frequent passages to Tuvalu, Tokelau, Niue, Tonga, Rarotonga and Tahiti, and basalt used for many of their adze blades can be geochemically traced to a quarry on Tutuila (Samoa). Tahitians are known to have passed through Pukapuka en route to islands in Samoa and Tonga.

The original population is likely to have numbered 1000 or more, but has recovered from extremely low numbers more than once. Oral traditions refer to at least two episodes of civil war, and inundation of the atoll from a major tsunami or cyclone, in which only two women and 15 men survived. [3]

The island was first discovered by Europeans in 1595, when the Spanish explorer Álvaro de Mendaña saw it on the feast day of Saint Bernard and named it San Bernardo. [3] [6] It was sighted again in 1765 by a British Naval expedition under Commodore John Byron, who named it the "Islands of Danger" because of the reefs and the high surf that made it too dangerous to land. [3] The name "Danger Island" still appears on some maps. According to oral tradition, an unknown ship called at Pukapuka in the mid 18th century, and when the Yalongo lineage chief Tāwaki boldly took the captain's pipe out of his mouth, he was shot.

Thirty years later, Pukapuka was given the name "Isles de la Loutre" (Isles of the Otter) by Pierre François Péron, a French adventurer who was acting as first mate on board the American merchant ship Otter (Captain Ebenezer Dorr) after it was sighted on 3 April 1796. The following day, Péron, Thomas Muir of Huntershill (1765–1799), and a small party landed ashore but the inhabitants would not allow them to inspect the island. Trading later took place near the ship, when adzes, mats and other artifacts were exchanged for knives and European goods. [7]

Thomas Muir Thomas Muir - schottischer Volksfreund.jpg
Thomas Muir

"Everything united to convince us that we had the right to attribute to ourselves the honour of having discovered three new islands; and with this conviction I gave them the name 'Isles of the Otter' ('Isles de la Loutre') which was the name of our vessel. In order to distinguish them, we named the eastern one 'Peron and Muir' [Motu Kō], the one to the north 'Dorr' [Pukapuka], and the name of 'Brown' was given to the third [Motu Kotawa], after one of our officers." [7] Péron believed that they were the first to discover the island, mostly because the people were so afraid of them. The Pukapukans' fear of the visitors was because Tāwaki had been killed during the ship visit about 30 years previously.

Because of Pukapuka's isolation, few vessels visited before 1857 when the London Missionary Society landed teachers from Aitutaki and Rarotonga. Luka Manuae of Aitutaki later wrote an extended account of the first days of contact 58 December 1857: No te taeanga o te tuatua a te Atua ki Pukapuka ("The arrival of the Word of God at Pukapuka", dated August 1869). [8] Some lineages wanted to kill the newcomers in revenge for an incident that had happened a month earlier, but Vakaawi, chief of Yālongo lineage, protected them. In the following days, the island accepted Luka's Christian message, largely because of an encounter when two dead people were apparently raised back to life.

In 1862 Rev. William Wyatt Gill found most of the people on the island converted to Christianity. A raid in 1863 by Peruvian slave traders took 145 men and women, [9] of whom only two returned, Kolia and Pilato (Malowutia). The London Missionary Society barque John Williams was wrecked on the western side in May 1864. [2] :150 In 1868 the buccaneer Bully Hayes took about 40 people to go on a labour scheme, but none of them returned home.

Pukapuka was proclaimed a British protectorate in 1892 and was included in the Cook Islands boundaries under the control of New Zealand in 1901.

World War II

Three U.S. Navy fliers from the USS Enterprise arrived on Pukapuka in February 1942. [10] Harold Dixon, Gene Aldrich, and Tony Pastula survived 34 days on the open ocean in a tiny 4 by 8 foot (1.2 by 2.4 m) raft, beginning their odyssey with no food or water stores and very few tools. They were found by Teleuka Iotua huddled in a hut belonging to Lakulaku Tutala on Loto Village's reserve, where he gave them coconuts to drink. He then went and got more help. Shortly after their arrival a cyclone struck the island and caused widespread damage. Their story was told in the book The Raft by Robert Trumbull, published by Henry Holt and Co. in 1942, and released as a motion picture Against the Sun [11] in 2014.

Historical population
YearPop.±%
1906 435    
1916 474+9.0%
1926 526+11.0%
1936 651+23.8%
1945 662+1.7%
1951 559−15.6%
1961 718+28.4%
1966 684−4.7%
1971 732+7.0%
1976 785+7.2%
1981 797+1.5%
1986 761−4.5%
1996 779+2.4%
2001 664−14.8%
2006 507−23.6%
2011 451−11.0%
2016 444−1.6%
Source: [12]

Post World War II

Pukapuka was hit by Cyclone Percy in February 2005 — a Category Five cyclone that destroyed the taro gardens, brought down thousands of trees, and damaged three-quarters of the houses.

Treaty

From 1856 to 1980, the United States claimed sovereignty over the island under the Guano Islands Act. On 11 June 1980, in connection with establishing the maritime boundary between the Cook Islands and American Samoa, the United States signed the Cook Islands – United States Maritime Boundary Treaty acknowledging that Pukapuka was under Cook Islands' sovereignty. [13] [14]

Economy

Although the island has a well-maintained airstrip, flights from Rarotonga are very infrequent. The five-hour flight from Rarotonga via Air Rarotonga now operates when there is a Government charter once every six weeks or so. The island is closer to Samoa than to the rest of the Cook Islands and transport via Samoa is becoming a preferred option for Pukapukans visiting in organised groups (tele parties) from New Zealand and Australia.

Culture

Pukapuka has its own language and customs that are different from those of the rest of the Cook Islands.

The entire population is said to be descended from seventeen men, two women and an unknown number of children who survived a catastrophic storm and tsunami in the 17th century. [15] A new estimate of the date of the calamity based on oral histories suggests that it happened about 1590. [16] Following blackbirding raids, by 1870 the population of the atoll was reduced to 340 people. [17]

The island had a population of 664 at the 2001 census, but since 2005 the population has declined to less than 500.

The American writer Robert Dean Frisbie settled on Pukapuka in 1924, married a native woman, and raised his family on the island. He wrote several books about his experiences on Pukapuka and surrounding islands. He said at the time he was looking for a place beyond the reach of "the faintest echo from the noisy clamour of the civilised world". Frisbee’s daughter Johnny and her return to Pukapuka is featured in the 2021 documentary The Island in Me.

Pukapuka served as the namesake for the tribe of Asian-Americans in Survivor: Cook Islands, the 13th season of the U.S. reality show in which initial tribes were divided by race.

See also

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References

  1. 1 2 3 Borofsky, Robert; Howard, Alan (1987). Making History: Pukapukan and Anthropological Constructions of Knowledge. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 5.
  2. 1 2 Beaglehole, Ernest; Beaglehole, Pearl (1938). Ethnology of Pukapuka. Honolulu: The Museum.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Kloosterman, Alphons M.J. (1976). Discoverers of the Cook Islands and the Names they Gave. Cook Islands Library and Museum via NZETC.
  4. Hiroa, Te Rangi (1945). An Introduction to Polynesian Anthropology. Honolulu: Bernice P. Bishop Museum.
  5. Chikamori, Masashi (1996). "Development of coral reefs and human settlement: Archaeological research in the Northern Cook Islands and Rarotonga". Bulletin of the Indo-Pacific Prehistory Association. 15: 45–52. doi:10.7152/bippa.v15i0.11533 . Retrieved 21 August 2020.
  6. Sharp, Andrew, The discovery of the Pacific Islands, Oxford 1960 p.52,53
  7. 1 2 Pierre François PÉRON (1824). Mémoires du Capitaine Péron, sur ses Voyages aux Côtes d'Afrique, en Arabie, a l'Île d'Amsterdam, aux Îles d'Anjouan et de Mayotte, aux Côtes Nord-Oeust del'Amérique, aux Îles Sandwich, a la Chine, etc. Paris: Brissot-Thivars. ISBN   9781146434904 . Retrieved 31 July 2010.
  8. Luka Manuae, (2012) "The arrival of the word of God at Pukapuka", Journal of Pacific History, Dec.
  9. Rachel Yates (4 August 2017). "Language, culture, and the impact of 'Slavers in Paradise'". Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa. Retrieved 21 August 2020.
  10. "Where are they now?" Newsweek Magazine. 8 February 1954.
  11. "Against the Sun". 23 January 2015. Retrieved 2 May 2017 via IMDb.
  12. "Cook Islands 2016 Census Main Report" (PDF). Cook Islands Statistical Office. 2018. Archived from the original (PDF) on 31 October 2020. Retrieved 19 August 2020.
  13. Dod, Karl C. (1987). The Corps Of Engineers: The War Against Japan. United States Army In World War II. Washington, DC: Center Of Military History, United States Army. pp. 169, 171, 233. LCCN   66060004.
  14. Office of The Geographer, Bureau of Intelligence and Research (2013). "Limits In The Seas No. 100; Maritime Boundaries: United States—Cook Islands and United States—New Zealand (Tokelau)" (PDF). Retrieved 29 August 2013.
  15. Beaglehole and Beaglehole (1938).
  16. Fes A. de Scally (October 2008). "Historical Tropical Cyclone Activity and Impacts in the Cook Islands" (PDF). Pacific Science. 62 (4): 443–459. doi:10.2984/1534-6188(2008)62[443:HTCAAI]2.0.CO;2. hdl: 10125/22721 . S2CID   198148871. Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 August 2021. Retrieved 19 August 2020.
  17. Norma McArthur (1967). Island Populations of the Pacific (PDF). Canberra: ANU Press. p. 188. Retrieved 2 September 2020.

10°53′S165°51′W / 10.883°S 165.850°W / -10.883; -165.850