‘Our designs are stolen’: the fight to keep sacred tapa in the hands of PNG’s Oro people

Tapa, a tattooed fabric, has been worn in Papua New Guinea for centuries but there are concerns it has been commercialised

When Papua New Guinean fashion designer Yaku Ninich wanted to use tapa designs inspired by those of her grandmother, in her work, she first had to ask her mother for permission.

Ninich, who is based in the US, but has roots in both Oro and Morobe provinces says that not everyone respects the connection between these ancient designs and the Oro people.

“Tapa designs in the last three years have been commercialised uncontrollably,” said Ninich. “I feel like it should be appreciated and used ethically hence I only make small batches in each of my designs so it’s desirable by many.”

Tapa, a traditional tattooed fabric, is one of PNG’s most distinctive artefacts and is particularly important to Oro people with each local tribe having its own unique designs.

The cloth has been worn by men and women for centuries, used as traditional attire for dancing, for rituals, as valuable gifts for exchange in ceremonies and for everyday use, wrapped around themselves like skirts.

But Indigenous people are concerned that the fabrics have been increasingly appropriated by non-Oro designers.

“Our tapa and tattoo designs are now used everywhere,” said Frank Ginari, a chief from the village of Jebo in Tufi.

“People use money to come and buy here and go to other provinces or sell it to the world when tourists come. This should be restricted to the Northern Province. Just like Sepiks have their crocodile tattoos and the Eastern Highlands have their mud-men and these are restricted to these places. We from Oro cannot participate in those and so our tapa and tattoo should be the same. It should be illegal to take from us and use for financial gain.”

To make the cloth, the bark of the mulberry tree is extracted, beaten and soaked until soft and malleable. The beaten tapa is then dried and smoothed out. At this stage the material almost resembles parchment paper and this is when the tattooing process begins.

A paint-like substance is taken from the bark of a particular tree and is beaten until it is broken down to a chalk-like consistency. The colour depends on the age of the tree but typically varies from crimson red to earthy brown.

Each design represents the rich history of each tribe; each symbol and curve is significant and allows the history to be preserved for generations to come.

Over the years however, the designs have taken on newer variations to adapt to the modern world. “Traditionally, the corners of tapa designs are usually slanted or curved and or have round edges. Newer variations have sharper edges. These are popular with our customers so we make what they like,” says one stall owner at the craft market in Popondetta, the capital of Oro.

The popularity of the tapa and tattoo designs have led to all kinds of adaptations, printed on to modern shirts, bags and dresses; with the arrival of the pandemic they can even be found on face masks.

While there is no law that protects the traditional designs, it has long been a cause for concern for Oro’s governor, Gary Juffa.

“It is a question that many cultures and identities face. It is the cost of doing business. What we as a province need to do and what I am exploring, is how do we patent our unique Oro tapa and designs, so that it is specific to our province and those who wish to use that image or that design must fulfil a certain criteria.

“Even when you go back to the province, tribes and clans have their own specific designs which is never shared and if someone were to use another clan’s design without their permission, that is a big offence.”

Appreciating or being inspired by tapa cloth and designs is welcome and often encouraged, but it becomes an issue when the designs are taken and used by a person not originally from the tribe or clan for commercial purposes.

This is when appreciation turns into appropriation.

“The more our tapa and the designs are borrowed or stolen, the more its value is lost. Everyone will have it and it won’t be sacred or special to us,” Ginari said.

Interactive

He fears that the tapa could go the same way as the facial tattoos that are traditionally given to women when they reach marriageable age but which are now rare. “It is a rite of passage. The tattoo is taken from her clan or tribe’s distinctive design. So what you will see on their tapa, is what she will have on her face. Once she does the tattoo, when she comes out, she is ready to leave the home and go to her husband’s home, or she simply just has that freedom to get married,” Ginari said.

Dorah Misirit was initiated and had her face tattooed when she was just nine.

“I can remember the pain very well. When my mother used the siporo thorn [from a lemon tree] to tattoo my face.”

But though it had profound significance at the time, as she has moved away from Oro, she has found herself neglecting the tattoo and it has begun to fade.

“Our tradition is to apply coconut oil every day to keep the design clear so it doesn’t fade, but I moved to the town and I have done away with that so it is gradually fading,” she said.

Contributor

Leanne Jorari in Oro Province

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
PNG’s biggest drug bust: the plane crash, the dead man and the half tonne of cocaine
Five men have been charged in Australia and another man in Papua New Guinea after the bust

Dickson Sorariba in Port Moresby and Ben Doherty Pacific editor

01, Aug, 2020 @8:00 PM

Article image
‘It’s not a publicity stunt’: the push to elect female MPs to PNG’s men-only parliament
Four female candidates have been put forward by political heavyweight Sir Peter Ipatas for seats in upcoming election

Leanne Jorari in Port Moresby

18, Mar, 2022 @6:00 PM

Article image
Fighting off the bulldozers in the sacred kwila forests of Papua New Guinea
Villagers are pushing back against logging operations they say are encroaching on designated conservation areas

Jo Chandler in Madang

08, Oct, 2022 @6:00 PM

Article image
'We had no paper, no pens, but we had our bodies': the sacred and symbolic in Pasifika tattoos | Lagipoiva Cherelle
The New Zealand foreign minister’s moko has become international news, but beyond an identifier, our tatau are a link to ancestors, a vessel for our cultures’ stories, and a tribute to those who have gone before

Lagipoiva Cherelle Jackson

29, Jan, 2021 @8:00 PM

Article image
Pacific's fight against Covid-19 hamstrung by lack of clean water
Access to clean, safe drinking water across the Pacific is the lowest of any region in the world, raising fears for the rapid spread of coronavirus

Catherine Wilson

28, Aug, 2020 @8:00 PM

Article image
One-third of people in Pacific paid a bribe in the last year, says corruption report
Survey of more than 6,000 people by Transparency International is the most comprehensive look at corruption in the region to date

Joshua Mcdonald

17, Nov, 2021 @1:13 AM

Article image
‘A blatant lie’: China and Taiwan fight for credit over rescue of sailors lost at sea for 29 days
Both governments are claiming responsibility for rescue of nine Papua New Guinean nationals last month

Leanne Jorari in Port Moresby, Helen Livingstone and Kate Lyons

22, Mar, 2022 @4:30 PM

Article image
‘Enough is enough’: the fight to elect women to Papua New Guinea’s men-only parliament
In nearly 50 years, PNG has elected just seven female MPs. Money, culture and corruption are all working against the women trying to address the problem

Jo Chandler in Port Moresby and Madang

31, Jul, 2022 @8:00 PM

Article image
Fisheries plant on Australia's border could be used as cover for drugs, weapons and people smuggling, experts say
A $200m Chinese-built fish processing plant, proposed for the Papua New Guinean island of Daru, in the Torres Strait, brings risk of transnational crime

Joshua Mcdonald

10, Feb, 2021 @7:00 PM

Article image
'Designed to torture': asylum seeker chooses Iranian prison over PNG detention centre
Man who spent nine weeks locked up inside Australian-funded centre in Port Moresby describes hunger, isolation and lack of legal support

Jo Chandler in Port Moresby

10, Nov, 2019 @5:00 PM