THE ROCK of LUMUSA Part II
The muddy road to Lumusa is long and precariously winding. The scenery is beautiful and breathtaking and diminishes the bone jarring drive up steep mountain paths.
Deep gorges where the Baiyer River winds
its way to join the raging Lai River in neighbouring Enga separate high
mountain ranges with rainforests teeming with exotic wildlife, a natural
paradise in one of the remotest corners of Western Highlands of Papua New
Guinea.
At a time when the Western Highlands
Government of Paias Wingti is opening up its border outposts with an upgrading
of its long and winding road, the construction crew has unearthed something
ancient and mysterious.
At a narrow bend in the road, the crew
found their part blocked by this monolith behemoth, a rectangular piece of rock
that is too heavy to push aside.
They have left it there, peeking out of the
soft muddy earth, a perfectly shaped pillar, imposing and too heavy to handle.
This is in itself an enigma for the locals,
a riddle worth sharing, a puzzle for the students of the new Lumusa Baptist
High School to solve.
Lumusa Baptist High is one of the 19 new
schools completed under Governor Wingti's green revolution policy - Free Land,
Free Timber and Free Labour - a partnership with locals to deliver high schools
across WHP.
In our quest to resolve the origin of the
rock, we reached out to local expert Dr Joe Ketan of the University of PNG.
Dr Ketan, a Kawelka elite from the World
Heritage listed Kuk area, had this to stay: "The story behind other
similar stone tablets are that they were used by ancestors to mark out
territories.
"One tall stone tablet at Kuk was put
there by an ancestor called Koi about 250 years ago.
"When my people, the Kawelka were
routed in warfare by an alliance of Hagen tribes, the Mokei and Jika in the
1920s, my great-grandfather told my grandfather about the stone, so my
grandfather, after becoming the first LLG Councillor for my tribe, came back to
Kuk and located the stone and reclaimed all the Kawelka territories at Kuk where
we now live."
Dr Ketan said similar stones were later
found in 1980s and two were placed in front of the Lutheran Church at Kuk-Bagla.
These were photographed by Professor John
Burton of ANU, while others were given to the Nengka people of Mul to put up in
their ceremonial grounds.
So the challenge for the new grade nines of
Lumusa high is to find out whose 'masta mak' stone lies on the side of their
road!
Words & Picture by BIG PAT