The descriptive phrase "malagene na iap"may be translated to English as
fire dance. No, in Tolai culture fire dance is not part of the types of dances. However, our neighbors the Bainings do perform fire dance as it is part of their culture. Recently I learnt that there is a type of Baining fire dance that is performed during the day. The other type that i had witnessed many times is the one performed at night over a big fire. And big fire means a fire of small size logs with flames higher than an adult height.
The fire dance that is performed during the day was recently performed at the Kenu and Kundu Festival in Alotau, Milne Bay Province. A photograph of it appeared in the Post Courier (7/11/2016, p.8). I posted this on Facebook in the New Guinea Islands Historical Society Group because i doubted that this was a Baining fire dance and sought help there. Indeed it was a Baining fire dance; the one that is performed during the day as confirmed by Gideon Kakabin in his description with photo:
These creatures do not jump into the fire. They dance around a small fire during the day. I photographed them dancing last month.
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Head dress
Photo credit: Angie Kolita-payne |
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Fire Dancer
Photo credit: Angie Kolita-payne |
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Members of the fire dance group.
Photo credit: Angie Kolita-payne |
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Fire dance performance.\
Photo credit: Angie Kolita-payne |
Acknowledgement
My gratitude to Gideon Kakabin (one photo and description) and Angie Kolita-payne (4 photos) for enabling me to do this post, Iau watang boina tuna.
Note: After about a month of this post the borrowed photos no longer appear due to "expiry of url" iki 13/9/2017