- Tabua
A tabua is a polished
tooth of asperm whale that is an important cultural item inFiji an society. They were traditionally given as gifts foratonement or esteem (called "sevusevu"), and were important in negotiations between rival chiefs. The dead men would be buried with their tabua, along with war clubs and even their strangled wives, to help them in theafterlife . Originally they were very rare items, available only frombeached whale s and from trade from neighbouringTonga (where the practice may have originated from), but when the market became known in the early 1800s thousands of teeth, and fake teeth made fromivory andwalrus tusks entered the market. This trade led to the development of theEurope an art ofscrimshaw .Today the tabua remains an important item in Fijian life. They are not sold but traded regularly as gifts in weddings, birthdays, and at funerals. The tabua is also increasingly used in advertising as a trusted
symbol orbrand , for exampleAir Pacific has a Tabua Club (frequent flyer ) and a Tabua Class forbusiness class . They also feature on the Fijian 20 cent piece. The removal of tabua from Fiji is highly restricted, permits from theMinistry of Fijian Affairs , the Fijian Department of Environment, andCITES are required, as they are regulated both as an endangered species and a cultural item.References
*Arno A. (2005). "Cobo and tabua in Fiji: Two forms of cultural currency in an economy of sentiment". "American Ethnologist", 32(1): 46 – 62 [http://cat.inist.fr/?aModele=afficheN&cpsidt=16581746 Abstract]
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