Pacific

Marshall Islands celebrate first coronation of paramount chief in 50 years

08:28 am on 23 July 2022

Thousands of Marshall Islanders converged on Ebeye Island this week for the first coronation ceremony of a paramount chief in half a century.

Iroojlaplap (paramount chief) Michael Kabua walks through an honour guard of spear-holding warriors representing the 12 atolls and single islands in his domain at the start of a gala coronation ceremony in the Marshall Islands Thursday night. Photo: Chewy Lin

The gala coronation for Iroojlaplap (paramount chief) Michael Kabua featured dozens of islanders wearing traditional headdress and finely woven mat clothing unique to the Marshall Islands.

There were spear-carrying warriors representing the 12 atolls and single islands in the chiefly domain of the Ralik Chain, a traditional dance presentation rarely seen, and conch shell blowing to greet each stage of the event.

The ceremony underscored the vitality and power of the customary system in the Marshall Islands, which remains a significant force in the modern western system of governance established here by constitution in 1979.

Thousands of people gathered on the small island of Ebeye in Kwajalein Atoll, which hosts the US Army's Reagan Test Site missile testing facility, to witness the first coronation for the Kabua royal family since Kabua's cousin, Iroojlaplap Joba Kabua, ascended to the throne in the 1970s.

The Kabua family is the leading royal family in the Marshall Islands and Michael's cousin, Amata Kabua, was both iroojlaplap and the founding father of the modern Marshall Islands as its first president for 17 years.

The Army command at the base rolled out the red carpet for the event, providing housing to accommodate dozens of people who flew into Kwajalein for the special occasion.

The base operates one of the US's most sophisticated missile and anti-missile defence testing ranges at Kwajalein through a long-term agreement with the Marshall Islands that currently pays landowners, including Kabua, over $US20 million a year for use rights.

Numerous Air Marshall Islands flights, ships and boats brought thousands of people - from President David Kabua and members of his cabinet and all four resident ambassadors in the Marshall Islands to clan heads and rank and file islanders - to Ebeye for Thursday night's celebration that went until the early morning hours Friday.

Iroojlaplap Michael Kabua on his throne at the conclusion of the coronation ceremony on Ebeye Island Thursday night. Photo: Chewy Lin

It was held in the elaborately decorated Jabro Memorial Gymnasium, named after Michael's older brother Imata Kabua, who was also president of the Marshall Islands. Photographs of Kabua family ancestors and finely woven mats dating to the 19th century adorned the walls of the gymnasium.

After the official coronation ceremony was finished, the entire island took a break to join in a dinner feast. Thousands lined up to get plates filled with island delicacies.

Kabua said after the ceremony that the rare performance of his group of jobwa dancers from Ujae Atoll was the fifth generation of dancers he has mentored and developed to carry on a uniquely traditional style of stick dancing in the face of the increasing westernization of the Marshall Islands.

Following the dinner, dozens of other dance groups representing different islands in the chiefly domain performed.

The coronation is known as "kailoojoj" in Marshallese language and is a ceremony held only for paramount chiefs.

Kabua assumed the mantle of paramount chief for Kwajalein Atoll and other islands in the Ralik Chain following the death of his older brother, the late Iroojlaplap (and former president) Imata Kabua, in 2019.

The event cost several hundred thousand dollars to host, according to organisers.