Tuvalu is a magical place. It’s like I’m smitten. But it’s an
ambivalent relationship. Love the place but can’t wait to leave. Happily
cruising back to Suva on a Pacific Thursday afternoon and feeling content to be
going home to Elizabeth and safety. The remote location and the isolation that
comes with it is hard adjust to. But I’m filled with visions of classic
tropical enchantment. It reminded me of Kuta, Bali in 1973. Narrow roads
through vegetation hiding houses and families and yards. The laughter and noise
of family life wafts through to the road and leaves you with a half sketched
out idea of what life might be like back in there.
But what you can see is an eclectic mix. And not everyone is
going to come to the same conclusion. I see beauty, intrigue, relics,
mysterious pathways that the children disappear into. You can see wrecks of
cars and boats, piles of leftover building materials, empty squashed plastic
bottles, rickety wooden platforms, assorted litter and a general inattention to
tidiness. Basically it’s beauty or mess – both are there in abundance and it’s
your call. You see what you’re looking for.
There’s barely a house on Funafuti that wouldn’t be
classified as a slum or ruin in suburban Australia. Banged together collections
of wood, plastic, corrugated iron, and always with a 4 poster covered wooden platform
in the yard for families to hang out on in fresh air, in the shade, or out of
the rain. Life is essentially held outdoors. There are some proper houses –
wooden boards, louvres, a tin roof perhaps – but they too have the family platform,
the litter, and the rambling dirt tracks winding back from the main drags. And
everything ends at the sea.
On average, Funafuti (Tuvalu’s main island) is about 100
metres wide so you can always hear the sea. The coast too is either a sad
affair littered with ex-engines, left behind thongs or items of clothing on a
charming foreshore that leads to a calm lagoon that is often glass like smooth.
At dusk some make it a ritual to bathe, or in the case of young boys, jump
around like monkeys off the sandbag groyne that’s there to help reclaim land.
Pure unadulterated children in paradise stuff. A joy to behold. And they
happily share it with you the stranger – showing off their best moves and
flashing full faced smiles.
About 100 metres away, just short of the other – ocean –
coast, the 15-40 year olds gather on the town’s runway for the daily sport
carnival of rugby, volleyball and soccer. Barefoot they bound around the warm
tarmac throwing themselves at various balls. All again with copious dollops of
laughter – a signature of Tuvalu. A true tropical paradise.
2 comments:
Michael, thanks you for transporting me to place I doubt I'll ever visit...
My pleasure Delia :) (Hope all is well with you.)
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