CHRISTMAS, EAST
CAPE, PAPUA, CIRCA 1947
by Valerie Allan (Grant). Published Una Voce September 2002, page
24.
I have just been sitting during my ‘quiet time’, remembering.
My life in Papua began as a baby at Bwaruada in 1937. My parents had
first arrived there in 1930 as their initial posting to Papua for
the then Methodist Overseas Mission. With the imminent arrival of
the Japanese during WWII, my mother and my two sisters Rosemary and
Pamela and myself were loaded on board the Neptuna via the ship’s
cargo nets in mid-stream in Samarai ‘harbour’. My father stayed
behind and eventually made his way via a small launch to Thursday
Island then on to Australia where he rejoined the family. My parents
returned to Papua in early 1947 whilst my sister Rosemary and I were
left behind at MLC Burwood, Sydney.
For the first few years we only saw Mum and Dad when we returned
home to East Cape for the Christmas break. Our travel to and from
Australia was by Burns Philp vessels such as the Malaita and Bulolo
with other children such as Bob Rich, Margaret Gavin and the Cowley
children. These were fun voyages particularly when we were going
home for Christmas. Poor Captain (Coconut Bill) Wilding, however did
he put up with all these rampaging children!!
This story is about a Christmas Eve and Day spent at East Cape in an
era which has long gone and will never be repeated. We were the only
Europeans on the Station, but this did not matter at all as we made
our own fun and had many Papuan girl friends to go swimming and
walking with as well as talking and giggling with. As I cast my mind
back I realise now that those Christmases were very special times in
my life, for it was a time to leave the strictures and at times
loneliness of boarding school and have time as a family, even if
only for a few weeks. It was a very happy time, simple in that we
had to make our own fun, play together, talk together, go for a swim
together and every afternoon go for a walk with Mum and a couple of
the Station girls.
We would invariably sit on the ‘beach’ (if one could call the
foreshore composed of coral a beach), or wander round to the point
(the most easterly point of Milne Bay) looking for shells, whistle
hermit crabs to come out from hiding in their shells, gather little
red berry type seeds, touch a sensitive plant and watch it close up,
or watch a native canoe glide past. Such simple pleasures but oh, so
wonderful! There were no outside influences to spoil the peace and
tranquillity - just us, magical.
The days before Christmas were exciting ... the house had to be
decorated with coloured streamers comprising, in the main, of yards
and yards of paper daisy chains and big paper bells that opened up.
We all believed, or said we did, in Santa Claus - never mind that we
looked in every cupboard to try and find presents! Late afternoon on
Christmas Eve saw us hang up our pillow cases at the end of our
beds. I recall trying hard to stay awake to see Santa ... a couple
of times I did see ‘him’ but in a funny way I still believed - I
guess I didn’t want to break the spell.
Late Christmas Eve the student boys and girls would stand on the
coral path and serenade us with Christmas carols until Mum would
call out, ‘That’s enough, thank you’. A few hours sleep interrupted
by the occasional feel of the pillow case to see what Santa had left
for me ... sometimes being told it was too early and to go back to
sleep.
Morning would eventually arrive and after an initial inspection of
the contents of my pillow case, we would all take our goodies to
show Mum and Dad what Santa had brought us. Beautiful moments and
memories. Every year the bottom of the pillow case would have a two
shilling piece, some nuts, dried fruit and best of all a block of
chocolate. Other goodies included slate pencils, a torch and clothes
(mostly ones Mum had made for us to take back to school). Most times
the clothes fitted - how she knew what our sizes would be when we
returned home after eleven months at boarding school was always a
mystery to me.
Following the initial excitement the next event was to get dressed
in our good clothes and go to Church. Cane chairs that Dad had made
would be carried from the house to the big oval-shaped church
constructed of native materials. Mats would be placed on the crushed
coral floor and the native men and boys would sit on one side of the
church and the women and children on the other. The men and boys
mainly wore lap laps, the Station girls crisp white dresses that
they had made themselves. Mum had taught them how to use patterns
and how to sew which they did sitting on the floor using a
hand-operated sewing machine. The village women and girls wore
beautiful grass skirts that swished as they walked.
We sat at the front of the congregation on the cane chairs while Dad
preached the ‘good word’ in the local dialect. During the service,
Isobel, our head kitchen girl would disappear in order to check on
the progress of our Christmas lunch, which was always a roast. I
used to wonder how Mum provided such wonderful meals, as one could
not always rely on the delivery of supplies from Samarai.
A Christmas pudding was the order of the day - how DID all those
threepenny pieces get into the pudding! A jug of freshly picked and
squeezed mango or orange juice always graced the table. The ice
cream, made from Sunshine Powdered Milk, was always a special treat,
but even better was the tin of condensed milk that had been boiled
until it turned into caramel ... Yum!
Very early in the morning the Station girls decorated the house,
downstairs, beautifully - big branches of what we called Christmas
Tree were tied to the concrete pillars. Beautiful sprays of orchids
and frangipani were threaded on dry ribs of coconut fronds, along
with hibiscus. It was a happy day. Presents, wrapped in newspaper
and tied with string, were given to the student girls, boys and
their teachers. The presents included such items as cakes of soap,
laces, cottons, ribbons, pencils, exercise books, a dress or a lap
lap length of material. Our job was to help wrap all these parcels
and then hand them out to everyone. I loved doing this.
Once the excitement of the morning, Church and Christmas dinner was
over it was time for the customary midday siesta, followed by
‘shower time’. The bucket shower was almost over before you knew it
had begun. One had to be undressed and ready under the shower before
turning the rose on, as a bucketful did not go very far. Hot water
was supplied from the big black cast iron cauldron that was a
permanent fixture on top of the wood stove, along with large kettles
and pots - this was our hot water system.
Afternoon tea was served sitting at the table - beautiful home-made
cakes, biscuits, etc. Mum, a very good cook, provided almost instant
meals for scheduled and unscheduled callers who stopped off at East
Cape. Afternoon tea over, we were given some boiled lollies from a
big tin in the pantry supplied by Hobart Spiller from Baniara.
Christmas night would see us sitting around the dining table
listening to Christmas music coming from our battery operated
Philips radio. Lighting came from a Tilly pressure lamp suspended
above the dining table.
Upstairs the mosquito nets had been drawn over the beds, the water
jugs filled, the personal hurricane lanterns lit and most
importantly, the chamber pots placed under the beds (necessary as it
was a long walk down to the toilets constructed out over the sea).
I hope that those who read this and who grew up in Papua in the
pre-war and early postwar days will reflect on how they spent their
Christmas Days and, as I have, enjoy many happy memories.
-ooOoo-