26/01/2023
Meet the presenters:
The second half of Day 1 of the Te Ara Vaka Moana Conference will be dedicated to Taumako and the Santa Cruz Islands.
Marianne 'Mimi' George, Ph.D, (Kauaʻi Island, Hawai'i), is a cultural anthropologist and sailor who supports training youth to apply ancestral voyaging knowledge to current problems, including unemployment, biodiversity loss and climate change. Mimi has responded to requests to help document voyaging traditions of Austronesian people of New Ireland Province, Papua New Guinea; a small, a mixed-gender crew wintering a sailboat in Antarctic sea-ice: networks of sea-hunters and reindeer herders across Bering Straits, and Polynesian people of Taumako, SE Solomon Islands who train youth to build vessels and navigate by ancient designs, materials, and methods, including weather modification and calling for ancestral lights that show the way to land. In papers, presentations, and books, Mimi describes prominent roles of women and children in voyaging cultures, and how revival of ancestral voyaging networks revives implementation of ancient knowledge, relationships, and protocols, which create sustainable and resilient lifeways by communities that live by monitoring and protectively managing the plants, creatures, and other ancestral phenomena of Oceania. Mimi is director of the Vaka Taumako Project of the Pacific Traditions Society.
Please make sure to check out the Vaka Taumako Project on facebook: https://www.facebook.com/VakaTaumako