Malolo Lailai Island Fiji
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Photo panoramique par
Jan Dunlop
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Malolo Lailai Island FijiThe World > Les Iles de l'Océan Pacifique > Mélanesie |
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View from one of the hills on the island of Malolo Lailai located in the Mamanuca Group, Fiji.
View from the hills of Malolo Lailai Island, located in the Mamanuca Group in Fiji.
Plantation Island Resort is located on the Island of Malolo Lailai in the Mamanuca Group in Fiji.
The beach at Lomani Island Resort in the Mamanuca Group, Fiji.
A stunning morning on the beach at the Sheraton Fiji Resort on Denarau Island.
The view through the lobby at the Sheraton Fiji Resort.
The port on Denarau Island is where most of the ferries leave from to get to the outer island resorts...
The sunset bar at Vuda Point Marina in the Fiji Islands is a great place to relax at the end of a day...
While in Fiji last month, I got to go hot air ballooning with Adrenalin Fiji - an awesome experience!...
This was a great view from the ridge above the village of Yalobi on the island of Waya. Waya is in th...
This was taken at Navutu Stars Resort which is located in the Yasawa Island Group of the Fiji Islands...
Melanesia is a term describing Pacific islands inhabited by black skinned people. It includes the islands of the Torres Straits, Papua New Guinea, the Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, New Caledonia and Fiji. The long chain of islands is highly volcanic and is also known as the "ring of fire".
The people who inhabited these rugged volcanic islands thousands of years ago established small isolated village communities that persist to this day.The communities are genetically and linguistically diverse, with over 400 languages, often as different from one another as French is from Russian. People sharing the same language are known as "one talks" and are considered extended family (which they are).
Although culturally and linguistically diverse, Melanesian people share a common bond in a sense of identity with their island. The people of the island of Tikopea, for example, speak of themselves as "we the Tikopea" a term that encompasses the people, island, trees, gardens, and coral reefs as one living entity. Melanesians are masters at social harmony. You can understand why they have to be when you consider that 90 percent of them live in small, very isolated villages that have been in exactly the same location for thousands of years. Melanesians tend to stay where they were born until they die - generation after generation. If they failed to achieve social harmony they would not survive long. A person unable to "adapt" was (and still can be) banished from the village. Until the mid 1900's this usually was a death sentence as the concept of social harmony generally extended just to the boundary of the tribal lands and inter-tribal warfare and cannibalism was common.
Melanesia is one of the few places on our planet where one can see truly ancient custom dances and rituals performed with utter sincerity and cultural importance. Almost all of the Melanesian people are Christians but there are many who are Muslims and still a few who cling to their custom religions. But even dressed up in Christian clothes, their spirits remain one with their ancestors and their land. It is a fascinating part of our world, rich in powerful images.