The Tongan culture has drastically changes
over the years. Before the European explorers arrived in the
late 1600s and early 1700s, the Tongans were already in
constant contact with their geographic neighbors, Samoa and
Fiji.
At the dawn of the 1800s, during the arrival of the Western
traders and missionaries, the Tongan culture changed a lot
as some of the old beliefs were thrown out as a number of
belief were adopted from other countries.
Contemporary Tongans frequently have strong ties overseas
lands. Some of them would opt to migrate in other countries
like Australia, New Zealand, and the United States. Thus,
Tongans are known to have been guilty of "diaspora".
Tongans often have to operate in two contexts, which they
refer to as the traditional Tongan way, and the Western way.
A culturally adept Tongan learns both sets of rules and when
to switch between them. Any description of Tongan culture
that confines itself to what Tongans see as anga fakatonga
would give a seriously fuzzy view of what people actually
do, in Tonga, or in diaspora, because accommodations are so
often made to anga fakapālangi. The following account tries
to give both the idealized and the on-the-ground versions of
Tongan culture.
All Polynesian cultures, including the Tongan culture are
strongly stratified. In the past, the king (tu'i) with the
royal family was on top of the stratification. Below him
were the high chiefs (hou'eiki), the estate holders and
warlords.
While below them the lower chiefs (fototehina). Below them
the working chiefs (matāpule), in fact attendants to the
chiefs to which they belonged, providing services to them,
like fishing, tax collection, kava mixing, undertaking and
protocol keeping. Below them the ordinary people (tu'a).
Below them, or maybe more or less on the same level, the
slaves, prisoners of war (popula).
On the other hand, in the contemporary context, the king is
still in this position and has the final implementation or
execution power. The high chiefs are now limited to 33
titles and called nobles (nopele), but some nobles carry
more than one title. They are still considered as estate
holders, but then, they are not the government.
The lower chiefs have disappeared (and the word fototehina
now means 'brothers'). The matāpule have also largely
disappeared except those who keep the protocol and serve as
official spokesmen for the king and nobles. And also the
royal undertaker, Lauaki. Tax collection is a task for the
central government only. Slavery is abolished, since the
emancipation of 1875, and all other people are just the
'commoners'.
The worldly power mentioned above can be referred to as
status. A Tongan gets or obtains his status from his father,
in some cases from his uncle. He inherits his (noble) title
from his father. The crown prince would then succeed his
father. Land ownership is only inherited through the father.
However, a status as such does not actually place in the
society. It the rank that would do so.
A Tongan could obtain his rank from his mother which also
determines his place in the social stratification. If within
the family, women are more revered thus they have a higher
rank than the men inside the family. Likewise the elder
sister of a king, if he has one, has a higher blood rank the
king himself. This was the so called Tamahā, holy child, in
pre-European times.
In practical terms, the high status and the high rank would
always go together because the society does not usually
allow a high ranking woman to marry a commoner. Likewise, no
high ranking man should marry a low ranking woman in the
society.
Rank and status are fixed since their birth. There is no way
in Tongan society to climb up in rank. A low ranking chief
would remain the lesser of a high ranking chief, even if his
lands may be greater and richer and so forth. But he can try
to marry a high ranking woman, for instance if she is
interested in his rich lands, and so increase the rank of
his children. Status on the other hand, can have some
vertical movement. The second son of a noble, normally not
in line for his father's title, may get it after all if his
older brother dies prematurely. In addition to this
sometimes, but very rarely, the king may elevate some person
to high status.
We offer this list of the three main regions
of Oceania:
Melanesia
Fiji
New Caledonia
New Guinea
Solomon Islands
Vanuatu
Micronesia
Federated States of Micronesia
Kiribati
Mariana Islands
Marshall Islands
Nauru
Palau
Polynesia
French Polynesia
Hawaii
Samoa
Tonga
Tuamotu Archipelago
Tubuai Islands
Tuvalu
It is here where kava is most prevalent, and where one needs
to look for the origins of this plant steeped in myth,
legend, and folklore.