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Manage No, Sortation, Country, Writer ,Date, Copyright Manage No SS00000165 Stakeholder Category Organization Country Vanuatu Name of Representative Marcelin Abong

Description | The principal role of the Vanuatu Cultural Centre since its establishment in the early 1960s has been to document and record the culture and cultural history of Vanuatu. This has been done by the Centre’s staff and a network of over one hundred volunteer fieldworkers. The documentation efforts focus on details of remembered histories and traditions; details of ritual practices, classification systems, and languages; details of cultural landscapes and particularly sites of cultural significance; and records of contemporary events of historical and cultural significance. The latter, which is essentially a history-in-the-making, is recorded on video as examples of material culture collected for museological display, but almost everything else is documented on audiotape. This is because our indigenous cultures are primarily oral, and therefore, all our cultural knowledge is retained and transmitted orally. This documented knowledge is held by the Centre and has been used as source material for the revival of certain traditional cultural practices no longer being practiced. | ||
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Phone(Office) | +678+22129 | ||
hmala@vanuatu.gov.v | Web Site | https://vanuatuculturalcentre.gov.vu/ | |
Address | Vanuatu Kaljoral Senta |
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DI00000112
FIELDWORKER NETWORK PROGRAM OF THE VANUATU CULTURAL CENTRE
The principal role of the Vanuatu Cultural Centre since its establishment in the early 1960s has been to document and record the culture and cultural history of Vanuatu. This has been done by the Centre’s staff and a network of over one hundred volunteer fieldworkers. The documentation efforts focus on details of remembered histories and traditions; details of ritual practices, classification systems, and languages; details of cultural landscapes and particularly sites of cultural significance; and records of contemporary events of historical and cultural significance. The latter, which is essentially a history-in-the-making, is recorded on video as examples of material culture collected for museological display, but almost everything else is documented on audiotape. This is because our indigenous cultures are primarily oral, and therefore, all our cultural knowledge is retained and transmitted orally. This documented knowledge is held by the Centre and has been used as source material for the revival of certain traditional cultural practices no longer being practiced.
Marcelin Abong Director, Vanuatu Cultural Centre & the Vanuatu National Cultural Council 2013 -
DI00000187
TRADITIONAL MARRIAGE PRACTICE IN PENTECOST ISLAND
Located Northern Vanuatu, Pentecost Island is home to a unique traditional marriage practice, different from practices on other outer islands of Vanuatu. Traditional marriage practices begin between families of future spouses with food gifts offered from the groom’s family to the bride’s family. If a marriage agreement is reached between the two families, the groom’s father will return later with mats for the future bride. Future gifts are exchange between the two families to prepare for the wedding ceremony, signaling respect and a sense of community between the families.
Evelyne Bulegih Woman Culture Program Coordinator, Vanuatu Cultural Centre 2015