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| Cruising Fiji's Islands |
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| Written by Russell Johnson & Pat Meier-Johnson | ||||
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The Doctor & The Boilermaker He was a Herr Doktor, a demanding, pompous man shaped like a pork sausage. By the second night aboard our Fiji Cruise he was the victim of mass-avoidance. Like Mark Twain's "Old Traveler" he boasted about where he had been, about his prominence as a surgeon, how he was traveling the world while his wife, also a surgeon, stayed at home, tending to the sutures and clamps. But Jack was a different type. Everybody took to him immediately. Jack was a big Samoan, a boilermaker by trade who was taking his wife on her first vacation without the kids in 20 years. Jack became our official chief, our Ratu, in Fijian tribal parlance, and he didn't let go until he broke Herr Doktor. Jack: "You ought to come to Samoa. We would make you chief." Herr Doktor: "Ja?" Jack: "And the women would fall all over you." Herr Doktor: "But aren't there dogs in Samoa? I don't like dogs." Jack: "Oh yes, there are lots of dogs but they won't touch you. They don't like white meat." Herr Doktor blushed, then smiled, finally realizing the put-on. After that exchange, he understood. On a cruise like this through islands like these, taking one's self seriously is worthy of severe punishment...perhaps some gentle stroking with a wet palm frond. And Herr Doktor wasn't the only one to lighten up. The climax took place in the famed Saw-i-Lau Blue Lagoon after we boarded small boats for a leisurely sightsee. Jack and Herr Doktor were in one boat, with about ten others, and I was in the other. A beach umbrella got caught by the wind and blew off their boat. We maneuvered to pick it up, but couldn't grab hold. Then Ratu Jack screamed Bula!, the Fijian greeting, and dived into the shallow water. I turned on my video camera as everybody except Herr Doktor followed: diving, belly-flopping, flailing their arms and legs in the air before before going kerplunk, screaming Bula and laughing. The panicked look on Herr Doktor's face changed to a grin. He jumped up into the bow, nodded for me to take a picture, shouted "Bula" and, fully clothed, performed what must have a painful belly flop. In all of my years of travel I never witnessed such an exuberant moment. As our boat drifted away, the gleeful bunch had lined up and were marching through the lagoon like a scene from a Fellini movie... led by a big red an white umbrella.
The ship carries a maximum of 120 passengers allowing for a family-like atmosphere that is not at all cloying, partially because except for the Captain, the Hotel Manager/Cruise Director and the Chief Engineer, the crew is entirely Fijian. On my first trip to Fiji I suffered a bit of culture shock at being served by big, gentle men and women with flowers in their hair who always looked you straight in the eye. Family and tribe are powerful bonds in Fiji. Indeed there are power structures within tribes and some protest (we saw one baggy-pants "gangsta" adolescent on one of the islands) and some people do brand their "free village" chickens, but, for the most part, Fiji culture means sharing everything. That shows in a crew which sings together, serves not with an attitude of servitude but pride, people whom after a few days you just want to spontaneously hug.
Yangona, or kava as it is called on other Pacific islands, is both ritual and habit in Fiji. It is a pepper root, ceremoniously squeezed in water to create a drink that looks and tastes like spent dishwater. You are almost always welcomed to a village with a yangonna ceremony where you must share the stuff. Villages talk out their problems over the kava bowl. It is a mild stimulant that makes your lips tingle that some Fijians use as aperitif for marijuana.
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Each day the ship stopped at a different island, took us ashore to a village, to a beach or to a reef for snorkeling. I got a chance to swim on by back in a sea cave and sing an old aria that I learned when I studied opera. It sounded much better here than it ever did in the shower.