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Overview
Tabua are pierced and braided whales' teeth, originally taken from the lower jaw of sperm whales found stranded on Fijian beaches. Because whale strandings are relatively rare in Fiji, whale teeth are highly valued.
Significance
In Pacific Island societies, some objects have a cultural value that far outweighs their market value. In Fijian society, tabua are examples of this kind of object. Fijians consider tabua to be kavakaturanga (chiefly items). They are not worn, but are presented at important ceremonies, including weddings, births, and funerals. Tabua used to be the most effective way to give weight to an apology or atonement. The occasion that tabua are presented at also determines their spiritual value.
Construction
To make tabua, the whale teeth are polished and sometimes rubbed with coconut oil and turmeric to darken them. In some cases, the teeth are smoked in a small tent-like structure covered in barkcloth in order to turn them a rich tobacco colour. Ceremonial tabua have holes drilled through the tip and the butt, and a braided sennit (coconut husk fibre) cord is attached.
This tabua has been decorated at the root and the tip of the tooth with silver plating. To these plated ends a short length of silver chain has been attached. A small silver engraved plaque is attached to central part of the whales tooth. The inscription reads "presented to P.S.S. Fiji Island to Mrs and Mrs Taylor."
Whale teeth
While tabua are a uniquely Fijian object, whale teeth are also important in other societies. Fijians traded with Tongans for whale teeth and when European whalers arrived in the region they introduced greater numbers of whale teeth into the local economy. European sailors used to carve and colour whale teeth in their spare time (this was called scrimshaw).
Whale teeth were shaped into necklaces and other ornaments in many parts of the Pacific, including Samoa, Tonga, Tahiti, Hawai'i, and the Marquesas Islands. Māori also used whale teeth to make rei niho (whale tooth pendants), which were worn by people of high rank.
Acquisition History
In the mid 1920s, Fiji was involved in a formal scheme of cooperation with the New Zealand school system. This scheme saw New Zealand trained teachers actively recruited to Fijian schools. This tabua was presented to Mr Ben Taylor in the early 1940s when he was headmaster of the Taveuni school in the Taveuni region in northeastern Fiji. Mr Taylor was in Fiji with his wife Mina Taylor. This tabua was offered to Te Papa in 2006 by Mr H.and Mrs J. Matthews who were given it by the Taylors.