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Sunday, June 10, 2007 | Reason : Science of Religion | print version Print | Comments

Document Is Prince Philip an island god?

by Nick Squires, BBC

Thanks to Simon O'Neill for the link.

Reposted from:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/from_our_own_correspondent/6734469.stm

Britain's Duke of Edinburgh may be planning a quiet birthday celebration at home this weekend, but there will be feasting and flag-waving in an isolated jungle village in the South Pacific nation of Vanuatu, where he is worshipped as a god.

village1
The islanders associate Prince Philip with a mountain spirit

The Land Cruiser ground up the rough dirt track, pitching and rolling like a boat. The trail was so severely eroded that it was more like a river bed, with miniature canyons gouged out by the monsoon rains.

I had been drawn to this poor excuse for a road by a story so unlikely that it sounded barely credible.

It was one I had wanted to investigate for years.

Legend had it that there was a clutch of villages on the island of Tanna in Vanuatu which - as bizarre as it may seem - worshipped Prince Philip as a god.

How and why they had chosen the Duke of Edinburgh, I had no idea. I fully expected the story to be either false, or wildly exaggerated.

Distant adoration

After an hour's drive we pulled into a jungle clearing shaded by giant banyan trees.

A short walk led to the village of Yaohnanen, a collection of sagging thatched huts, banana trees and snotty-nosed little kids.

With the help of my driver-cum-interpreter, Lui, I was introduced to the chief of the village. Jack Naiva was a bright-eyed old man of about 80, with grey hair and a faded sarong wrapped around his wiry body.

I felt deeply foolish telling him I had come to his village to ask if he worshipped the Queen's husband.

I wondered if it was all some sort of elaborate joke.

villager
Jack Naiva, chief of the village, has an official portrait of the Prince

But the look on Chief Jack's face told me it was not. He dispatched one of the villagers and a few minutes later the man returned from a hut with three framed pictures.

They were all official portraits of the Prince.

The first, in black and white, looked like it was taken in the early 1960s.

The second was dated 1980 and showed the Prince holding a traditional pig-killing club - a present from the islanders.

The most recent was from seven years ago.

They had all been sent from London with the discreet permission of Prince Philip, who is apparently well aware that he is the subject of such distant adoration.

Ancient legend

Chief Jack squatted on the ground as he told me how the Prince Philip cult had come about.

It seems that it emerged some time in the 1960s, when Vanuatu was an Anglo-French colony known as the New Hebrides.

For centuries, perhaps millennia, villagers had believed in an ancient story about the son of a mountain spirit venturing across the seas to look for a powerful woman to marry.

They believed that unlike them, this spirit had pale skin.

Somehow the legend gradually became associated with Prince Philip, who had indeed married a rich and powerful lady.

Villagers would have seen his portrait - and that of the Queen - in government outposts and police stations run by British colonial officials.

Their beliefs were bolstered in 1974, when the Queen and Prince Philip made an official visit to the New Hebrides. Here was their ancestral spirit, resplendent in a white naval officer's uniform, come back to show off his bride.

"He's a god, not a man," the chief told me emphatically, pointing at the portraits.

Response to colonialism

None of the cult followers can read or write.

villager2
Prince Philip gave permission for portraits to be sent from London

They told me - somewhat amazingly - that it was only this year that they learnt the date of the Prince's birthday - 10 June.

As Philip turns 86 and they are planning to mark the occasion with a feast and ceremonial drinking of kava, an intoxicating brew made from the roots of a pepper tree which makes your mouth go numb.

They have even acquired a large Union flag which they are going to run up a bamboo flag pole.

It is easy to see all this as so much South Seas mumbo jumbo.

But that would be a grave mistake, anthropologists told me.

Millennial movements like this were a highly sophisticated response by islanders in the South Pacific to the arrival of colonialism and Christianity.

By combining the fundamentals of their ancient beliefs with new elements gleaned from their contact with the West, they were able to preserve their culture.

There is, of course, a delicious irony in all this.

Prince Philip, after all, is a man who has a reputation for making politically incorrect gaffes, often about foreigners.

He once advised British students not to stay too long in China for fear of becoming "slitty-eyed".

And he asked a group of stunned aborigines if they still threw spears at each other.

The villagers of Tanna may live a life far removed from the splendour of Buckingham Palace and Balmoral in far away Britain. But they are as firm in their beliefs as Prince Philip is in his.

I suspect that if they were ever to meet, they would get along rather well.

Comments 1 - 11 of 11 |

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1. Comment #49131 by BeauHMcLendon on June 10, 2007 at 2:45 pm

...John Frum.

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2. Comment #49135 by Nails on June 10, 2007 at 2:50 pm

 avatari can't think of a better deity, I've always been a fan of the Duke.
Shoots from the hip, yet his humour has never been given the praise that it deserves. Political Correctness? That's for the namby-pamby polititions.
At least he hasn't ordered them to destroy their neighbours or cut off part of their bodies....
he is also a consort and is effectively the Queen's number 2.
I do however suppose it is regretable that he has cooperated with these events but there is the posibility that they would simply choose a worse role model... like Bill Clinton.
That's not the point I know.
It's wrong but it is highly amusing

Other Comments by Nails

3. Comment #49228 by kieron on June 11, 2007 at 4:28 am

I find this really rather sad.

May be there is no harm in letting these people believe in Prince Philip, but they should be told... he really doesn't exist.

Ahem. I think Prince Philip should at least make an attempt to tell these people of his (ever so obvious, even being a human) non-deity status. It can only come from him. Maybe he has, but I can't imagine sending them photographs, etc., helps.

I think Prince Philip has (as always) been rather irresponsible in letting the lie go on as long as it has. He should have cut it off as soon as he heard about it. I believe that to be the most responsible thing to do.

Of course, there is the question, if these are fundermental beliefs, which do no harm (I guess?), could it be harmful to these people to try to make them understand? Would they need something else in its place?

What a horrible man to choose as your deity... Hey, I see a pattern emerging!

Other Comments by kieron

4. Comment #49234 by Horwood Beer-Master on June 11, 2007 at 5:16 am

 avatarA new religion stating because a tribe thinks someone vaguely fits the profile of a prophecy from their existing religion, even though they know practically no real details of his life? who'd have thought THAT could happen?

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5. Comment #49279 by GordonHide on June 11, 2007 at 10:29 am

At least Prince Philip exists. And judging by some of the things he says, probably in a different plain from the rest of us. So, in fact, this religion seems more rational than most of the others.

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6. Comment #49281 by ghostbuster on June 11, 2007 at 10:43 am

Gee, I hope they don't read any of David Icke's books; he, in fact, considers the royal family as lizard aliens in human rubber suits eating up missing children. Sort of makes the Islanders' beliefs rather mundane, doesn't it? (PS) David Icke has a large following. No surprise.

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7. Comment #49302 by RabbitDynamite on June 11, 2007 at 12:35 pm

My fellow Britons, before we're inclined to laugh at these silly, backward islanders, think of all the people you know of who are incredibly obsessed with Princess Diana, and get incredibly tetchy if she is slighted in any way (the entire editorial team of the Daily Express, for a start). Maybe the silly, backward island faiths are closer than we think :)

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8. Comment #49346 by Tymethief on June 11, 2007 at 3:03 pm

I guess the only major question I actually have about this article is; What will happen when he dies?

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9. Comment #50041 by nancy2001 on June 14, 2007 at 4:53 pm

This reminds me of an old Bob Hope-Bing Crosby road picture. Only this time in the last reel, Prince Philip has to be rescued by Dorothy Lamour just before the locals try to boil him alive in a giant cauldron. Sometimes truth is as strange as fiction.

Other Comments by nancy2001

10. Comment #50239 by jonjermey on June 16, 2007 at 1:21 am

It's the part about 'preserving their culture' that I don't get. How can a culture that didn't have any reference to Prince Philip be 'preserved' by getting one? Or do they mean that it's part of their culture to worship something stupid and arbitrary, no matter what? And if so, then what's the good of preserving it?

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11. Comment #197535 by paulchina on June 22, 2008 at 9:52 am

Er, hang on a minute. Does Prince Philip not hold an elevated position in British society? We have had him as a 'prince' and 'ruler' for a lot longer than they have. Maybe it is us British 'subjects' of Prince Philip who are the really deluded ones. Maybe someone should tell us "it's all a falsehood".

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