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John Frum

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Figure associated with cargo cults on the island of Tanna in Vanuatu
A John Frum gathering area
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John Frum (also calledJon Frum,[1]John Brum,[2] andJohn Prum[3]) is a figure associated withcargo cults on the island ofTanna inVanuatu (formerly theNew Hebrides). He is often depicted as anAmericanWorld War II serviceman who will bring wealth and prosperity to the people if they follow him. In a 1960BBC documentary, British broadcasterDavid Attenborough asked the locals what Frum looked like and was told"'E look like you. 'E got white face. 'E tall man. 'E live 'long South America."[4]

In the 1990s, there were still reportedly over 5,000 members of the John Frum movement. However, belief in John Frum is in decline; as of 2022, there are fewer than 500 practitioners. Currently, only the village of Lamakara is faithful to the John Frum faith on the island of Tanna. The rest of the island has been mostly converted by Christian missionaries based inSulphur Bay.[5][better source needed]

History

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A ceremonial cross of the John Frumcargo cult,Tanna,New Hebrides (nowVanuatu), 1967
A John Frum cargo cult ceremonial flag-raising

The religion centering on John Frum arose no later than the late 1930s, whenVanuatu was known as theNew Hebrides. The religion may have originated as early as the 1910s, according to a claim in 1949.[2] The movement was influenced by existing religious practice in theSulphur Bay area ofTanna, particularly the worship of Keraperamun, a god associated withMount Tukosmera.[6]

In one analysis of the cult, the figure was first known as John Broom, who was believed by followers to one day return from a distant land to sweep away the White colonials and return riches to the islands.[7] In some versions of the story, a native man named Manehivi, using the alias "John Frum", began appearing among the native people of Tanna dressed in a Western-style coat, assuring the people he would bring them houses, clothes, food, and transport.[2][8]

Others contend that John Frum was aspirit vision induced bykava, a plant with mild psychoactive properties.[9] Said to be a manifestation of Keraperamun, this John Frum promised the dawn of a new age in which all White people, including missionaries, would depart the New Hebrides, leaving behind their goods and property for the nativeMelanesians. For this to happen, however, the people of Tanna had to reject all aspects of European society includingmoney, Western education,Christianity and work oncopra plantations, and they had to return to traditionalkastom (theBislama language word forcustoms).

In 1941, followers of John Frum rid themselves of their money in a frenzy of spending, left the missionary churches, schools, villages andplantations, and moved inland to participate in traditional feasts, dances and rituals. Most followers had come from the Presbyterian church.[10] European colonial authorities sought to suppress the movement, at one point arresting a Tannese man calling himself John Frum, humiliating him publicly, imprisoning and ultimately exiling him along with other leaders of the cult to another island in thearchipelago.[11][12][13]

Despite this effort, the movement gained popularity in the early 1940s after 50,000 American troops were stationed in Vanuatu duringWorld War II, bringing with them an enormous amount of supplies (or "cargo").[14] During the war, approximately 10,000Ni-Vanuatu men served in theVanuatu Labor Corps, alabor battalion of theUnited States Armed Forces. They providedlogistical support to the Allied war effort during theGuadalcanal campaign. The mass participation of Ni-Vanuatu men in the Labor Corps had a significant effect on the John Frum movement, giving it the characteristics of a cargo cult.[15]

After the war and the departure of the Americans, followers of John Frum builtsymbolic landing strips to encourage American airplanes to land and bring them "cargo". Versions of the cult emphasizing the American connection interpret "John Frum" as a corruption of "John from (America)" (although it could mean "John from" anywhere not of Vanuatan origin).

In 1957, a leader of the John Frum movement, Nakomaha, created the "Tanna Army", anon-violent ritualistic society that organised military-style parades of men with faces painted in ritual colours and wearing white T-shirts with the letters "T-A USA" (Tanna Army USA). This parade takes place every year on February 15, the date on which followers believe John Frum will return, and which is observed as "John Frum Day" in Vanuatu.

In the late 1970s, John Frum followers opposed the imminent creation of an independent united nation of Vanuatu. They objected to acentralised government they feared would favor Westernmodernity and Christianity that would be detrimental to local customs. The John Frum movement has its ownpolitical party,Nagriamel, led by Song Keaspai. The party celebrated its 50th anniversary on February 15, 2007. Chief Isaak Wan Nikiau, its leader, was quoted by theBBC from years past as saying that John Frum was "our God, our Jesus" and would eventually return.[16]

In December 2011, the president of the John Frum movement (and jointly of Nagriamel) wasThitam Goiset, a woman of Vietnamese origin and sister of businessmanDinh Van Than, despite the leadership of these movements having been "previously [...] held by high ranking male chiefs".[17] In 2013, Thitam Goiset was removed from her role as Vanuatu's ambassador to Russia amid evidence of corrupt activities.[18][19]

Followers of the movement continue to celebrate John Frum Day each year in February. Europeans who have made claims of being the leader mentioned in the prophecy—such as Claude-Philippe Berger (d. July 2021), who styled himself the "traditional king ofTanna"—have gained status in Vanuatuan communities by promising to bring development and investment to the communities.[7]

See also

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References

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  1. ^"Jon Frum".jonfrumartfoundation.com. Archived fromthe original on 21 December 2016. Retrieved23 June 2017.
  2. ^abcGuiart, Jean (March 1952)."John Frum Movement in Tanna"(PDF).Oceania.22 (3):165–177.doi:10.1002/j.1834-4461.1952.tb00558.x. Retrieved2020-03-07.
  3. ^BBC (1991)."The Fantastic Invasion". Event occurs at 34:25. Retrieved25 July 2020.
  4. ^Attenborough, David (1960).People of Paradise. New York: Harper & Brothers.
  5. ^Waiting for John Frum: Cargo Cult of the South Pacific | When God is An American Soldier Documentary, 3 May 2021, retrieved2023-02-07
  6. ^Worsley, Peter (1957).The Trumpet Shall Sound: A study of 'cargo' cults in Melanesia. London: MacGibbon & Kee. p. 154.
  7. ^abLord, Christopher. Photography: Jon Tonks (28 November 2021)."'There was a prophecy I would come': the western men who think they are South Pacific kings".The Guardian. Retrieved28 November 2021.
  8. ^Worsley,The Trumpet Shall Sound, pp. 153–9.
  9. ^Tabani, Marc, Une pirogue pour le Paradis : le culte de John Frum à Tanna (Vanuatu). Paris : Editions de la Maison des Sciences de l'Homme, 2008.
  10. ^Zocca, Franco (2007).Melanesia and Its Churches: Past and Present. Melanesian Institute.ISBN 9789980650078.
  11. ^Geoffrey Hurd et al.,Human Societies: An Introduction to Sociology (Boston: Routledge, 1986) p. 74.
  12. ^Peter Worsley,From Primitives to Zen,Mircea Eliade ed. (New York: Harper & Row, 1977) p. 415.
  13. ^Lamont Lindstrom inCargo Cults and Millenarian Movements: Transoceanic Comparisons of New Religious Movements G. W. Trompf ed. (New York: Mouton de Gruyter, 1990) p. 244
  14. ^Western Oceanian Religions: Jon Frum MovementArchived 2003-10-16 at theWayback Machine University of Cumbria
  15. ^Lindstrom 1991, pp. 49–53.
  16. ^"Vanuatu cargo cult marks 50 years". BBC News. 2007-02-15. Retrieved2007-02-15.
  17. ^"Vanuatu appoints ambassador to Russia", Radio New Zealand International, 5 December 2011
  18. ^"Vanuatu's ambassador to Russia sacked", ABC News Australia, 23 April 2013.
  19. ^"Vanuatu anti-corruption lobby: Russia ambassador a business deal",Radio New Zealand, 16 January 2012.

Bibliography

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  • Lindstrom, Lamont (1991). "Remembering the Pacific War".Occasional Papers of the Center for Pacific Islands Studies. Center for Pacific Studies:47–59.ISSN 0897-8905.[dead link]
  • Joël Bonnemaison, « Tanna : les hommes lieux (livre 2) » dans Les fondements d'une identité : territoire, histoire et société dans l'archipel de Vanuatu (Mélanésie) : essai de géographie culturelle, ORSTOM Paris, 1988, [lire en ligne [archive]]
  • Tabani, Marc. 2008. Une pirogue pour le Paradis : le culte de John Frum à Tanna (Vanuatu) [archive], Paris : Éditions de la Maison des Sciences de l'Homme, 2008.
  • Tabani, Marc. 2010. Le culte de John Frum et la tragédie du nouveau millénaire à Tanna (Vanuatu) [archive]. In Douaire-Marsaudon F. et Weichart G. (eds.), Pacific Religiosities. Marseille : Pacific-Credo Publications, 145–172.
  • Tabani Marc, Marcellin Abong. 2013. Kago, Kastom, Kalja: the study of indigenous movements in Melanesia today [archive], Marseille, Pacific Credo Publications.

Filmography

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  • God Is American, feature documentary (2007, 52 min), by Richard Martin-Jordan, on Frum's cult at Tanna
  • The Fantastic Invasion, documentary (1991, 59min) byNigel Randell Evans for the BBC
  • Into the Inferno, feature documentary (2016, 107 min), by Werner Herzog, on Tanna's active volcano

Further reading

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External links

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