|
This website was last updated on Monday January 30th 2012
The Gender Centre is a Proud Member of The World Professional Association for Transgender Health
Keep up to the minute with Gender Centre news on Twitter and Facebook!
The Gender Centre is proudly supported by the following organisations:
|
|
Like A Lady in Polynesia
by Roberta Perkins
(The Gender Centre advise that this article may not be current and as such certain content, including
but not limited to persons, contact details and dates may not apply. Where legal authority or medical related matters are
cited, responsibility lies with the reader to obtain the most current relevant legal authority and/or medical
publication.)
... the condoned social condition of males living as women existed right across the many islands of Polynesia,
from Hawaii to New Zealand and from Tonga to Easter Island.
Tahiti has long had a romantic reputation for sexual permissiveness. Indeed, young people were
encouraged to freely engage in sex and experiment with various sexual behaviours with many partners as a precondition of later satisfactory
marriage. And, as 18th and 19th century seafarers discovered, Europeans were considered most desirable by Tahitian girls because their
white skins indicated they were gods and nothing could be better than giving birth to a demigod.
The early Europeans visitors to the Society Islands (of which the island of Tahiti is one) were also amazed to find Tahitian males who
lived as women and were totally accepted in this role by the island community. They were soon to discover that the condoned social
condition of males living as women existed right across the many islands of Polynesia, from Hawaii to New Zealand and from Tonga to Easter
Island.
There is an amusing tale about a sailor aboard the British frigate Mercury in 1789 who on making a short stop at Tahiti was smitten by a
beautiful dancing girl. He gave gifts of beads, combs and other knick-knacks in the hope of pleasing her and then persuading her to go with
him on board the ship. She consented, but to his surprise (perhaps shock) when she removed her lap-lap the body of a young male stood
before him. The Tahitians showed their obvious enjoyment of the episode by laughing aloud on the beach at the sailor's embarrassment. Such
was often the way Englishmen were introduced to the mahu of Tahiti, the fa'a fafine in Samoa, the fakaleiti in Tonga, or other terms for
them on the other islands, which was often followed by much mirth on the part of the islanders. Perhaps the nearest interpretation to these
terms is that given by Samoans when asked about the fa'a fafine, which is like a lady, you know 50/50. So, in traditional Polynesian
societies male-to-female transgenders were not seen as women, but as something in between. Nevertheless, they were widely accepted by the
Polynesians. King Kamehameha I of Hawaii even had them dwell near his house because he considered
them lucky, and in Tahiti every village had one mahu because it was thought to be fortunate for the village.
The universal incidence of transgenders across Polynesia is a remarkable phenomenon, especially when in neighbouring Melanesia (New
Guinea, the Solomons, New Caledonia, Fiji etc) individuals changing gender were almost unknown in pre-European days (although ceremonial
transvestism, homosexuality and male pederasty was prevalent and widespread), Perhaps, the concept of gender crossing had not occurred to
the older island settlers of Melanesia, whereas, the newer Polynesians, who arrived in the Pacific only about 500 years ago, may have
brought the idea with them from South East Asia, where gender crossing has been an important function in traditional societies there for
many millennia.
For the English, French and Dutch seafarers who visited the South Pacific Islands in the 18th century, confronting the Polynesian
transgenders was a mixture of shock, fascination and repulsion. The best reports of these early contacts come from the
H.M.S. Bounty expedition to Tahiti (1789 - 91) under Captain William Bligh. One of his
officers, Lt. Morrison, wrote: "They have a set of men called mahu. These men are in some
respects like the eunuchs of India but they are not castrated. They never cohabit with women but live as they do. They pick their beards
out and dress as women, dance and sing with them and are as effeminate in their voice. They are generally excellent hands at making and
painting of cloth, making mats and every other woman's employment" Being a thorough gentleman who considered it his duty to
investigate everything, Captain Bligh's curiosity got the better of him "I found with her a person, who although I was certain was a
man, had great marks of effeminacy about him and created in me certain notions which I wished to find out ... The effeminacy of this
persons speech induced me to think he had suffered castration ... Here the young man took his mantle off which he had about him to show me
the connection. He had the appearance of a woman, his yard and testicles being so drawn in under him, having the art from custom of
keeping them in this position ... On examining his privacies I found them both very small and the testicles remarkable so, being not larger
than a boy's five or six years old, and very soft as if in a state of decay or a total incapacity of being larger, so that in either case
he appeared to me as effectually a Eunuch as if the stones were away." One can imagine old stiff and proper Captain Bligh in full
dress uniform fingering the mahu's genitals with his starchy white gloved hands.
An unexplained phenomenon on Tahiti was that just one, and only one, mahu resided in each village at any one time. As one Tahitian
pointed out: "When one dies then another substitutes ... God arranges it like that ... It isn't allowed ... two mahusin one place.
I've travelled around Huahine (the Society or Tahitian Islands) and I haven't seen two mahus in one place. I never saw it." How this
phenomenon worked is still a mystery, but obviously some sociological mechanism must have been at work in each village to ensure that not
more than one mahu lived there at a time. Since, as we know the desire to change gender is spontaneous and not an orderly event, how then
did such precision occur on cue? Perhaps a young mahu growing up in a village which already had an established older mahu may have been
forced to seek a village where none existed. Another suggestion is that a mahu was made by the community, who selected a boy to be raised
as a girl to replace the established mahu when she passed on. The question remains, though, what criteria was used for this selection?
However it was achieved, mahus were accorded great respect and dignity.
... The women treat him (mahu) as one of their sex, and he observed every restriction that they do, and is
equally respected and esteemed.
Bligh observed: "The women treat him (mahu) as one of their sex, and he observed every restriction that they do, and is equally
respected and esteemed." Anthropologist Robert Suggs reported a similar attitude towards mahus on the Marquesas Islands, while another
ethnographer, Donald Marshall, said much the same for Cook Islanders, and by all accounts it was similar on Hawaii. On Mangaia, the mahus
were not only well regarded by the rest of the population, but they excelled at women's tasks, sang in an excellent high pitch falsetto and
were better dancers than all other women. Anthropologist Robert Levy claimed that the mahus on Tahiti served as an object lesson for
demarcating the sexes. Since the sex roles were similar in many respects and some tasks were performed equally by men and women, the mahu
was pointed to as neither wholly man nor wholly woman. However, this does not explain the presence of mahus in more warlike societies such
as the Marquesans, the Hawaiians or the Maoris, where the sexes were clearly defined by the warrior status of men.
According to Captain Bligh: "These people (mahus), says Tynah, are particularly selected when boys and kept with the women solely
for the caresses of the men ... Those who he connected with him have their beastly pleasures satisfied between his thighs, but they are no
farther sodomites as they all positively deny the crime." Indeed, it seems that anal sex, even in heterosexual relations was not
practiced in Tahiti. The mahu then was a diversion for oral sex, since many Tahitian men claimed that it's just like doing it with a woman,
but his (mahu) way of doing it is better than with a woman ... When you go to a woman it is not always satisfactory. When you go to the
mahu it's more satisfactory. The sexual pleasure is very great." However, fellatio was not reciprocal, as one Tahitian explained:
"I was "done" by a mahu ... He "ate" my penis. He asked me to suck his. I did not suck it ... He offered me money.
I said I would hit him. I did not want that sort of thing, it is disgusting." Despite this, there was a Tahitian belief that semen is
like a vitamin supplement. "(Mahus) really believe that (semen) is first class food for them," said one Tahitian man.
"Because of that mahu are strong and powerful. The seminal fluid goes throughout his body ... I've seen many mahu and I've seen that
they are very strong." Sodomy was also denied by other islanders. The mangaians, for example, thought anal sex ridiculous, yet were
quick to point out that it took place on the other Cook Islands. It is possible, of course, that the Polynesians were quick to realise the
disgust with which white men regarded sodomy, and in their eagerness to accommodate them as trading partners flatly denied any such
behaviour in their community. So, Europeans began to view mahus not as substitute women, nor as sodomites, but as an alternative sexual
arrangement for the sole gratification of men.
As for the incidence of female-to-male transgenders across Polynesia, it seems to have been unknown, or, at least, rare, for
anthropologist Donald Marshall was told of the existence of women who insisted on doing men's work (though not cross-dressed), on Mangaia,
though he had never seen one.
The mahu tradition continues today on Tahiti, Samoa, Tonga and the other islands, but due to the intrusions of white missionaries to
Polynesia in the 19th century it is much modified from its pre-European development. Mahus no longer have the respect of their communities
and many have migrated to such cities as Papeete, Fagatongo, Nukualofa, Auckland and Honolulu, where transgender subcultures similar to
those in Australian cities have formed. But the western cultural influence in these cities has resulted in the derogatory image of
"drag queen" and the kind of persecutions that we transgenders in Australia are familiar with. As a consequence, some mahus have
returned to their traditional communities where, in spite of a predominance of judgmental Christian dogma, at least the extremes of western
oppression do not exist.
Polare is published in Australia by The Gender Centre
Inc. which is funded by the Department of Community Services under the
S.A.A.P. Program and supported by the
N.S.W. Health Department through the
AIDS and Infectious Diseases Branch. Polare provides a
forum for discussion and debate on gender issues. Advertisers are advised that all advertising is their responsibility under
the Trade Practices Act. Unsolicited contributions are welcome, though no guarantee is made by the Editor that they will be
published, nor any discussion entered into. The editor reserves the right to edit such contributions without notification.
Any submission which appears in Polare may be published on our internet site. Opinions expressed in this publication do not
necessarily reflect those of the Editor, The Gender Centre Inc.I, the
Department of Community Services or the N.S.W. Department of Health.
|