
In ancient times,
this small group of indigenous islanders navigated across the Pacific Ocean
in outrigger canoes. In the 1800s, guided by their knowledge of the stars
and the ocean swells, they left their typhoon- and earthquake-devastated
atolls in the Caroline Islands. When they arrived in the Mariana Islands
to the north, they found themselves at the mercy of Spanish colonialists.
Later, they lived under German and Japanese rule. In 1986, along with the
Chamorro people, the Refalawasch became naturalized U.S. citizens. Today
the Refalawasch are struggling with rapid development, an influx of foreign
workers, and the erosion of their language and culture.
In LIEWEILA, the Refalawasch come together to tell their story for the first time. Narrator Cinta Matagolai Kaipat recounts her early childhood on the remote island of Pagan, where radio contact was the only means of communication, and her family's move to the capital island of Saipan. Through wonderful old photographs, lithographs, and lush contemporary images, accompany these Pacific Islanders as they explore the past and imagine the future. Learn about their traditional navigation, dance, singing, weaving, storytelling, and many other practices dating long before outsiders arrived from beyond the horizon.
LIEWEILA
is perfect for classroom use: history, anthropology, human rights, ethnographic
studies, native religion and spiritism, international development, women
of the world, colonialism studies, and Pacific Island studies.
"Fantastic photography and wonderful archival footage."
- Jeff Marck, Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, Australian
National University
Link to Eric Metzgar's documentary film Spirits of the Voyage:
http://www.tritonfilms.com/spiritsofthevoyage.htm