KARLO MILA is a performance poet of Tongan, Palangi and Samoan descent
who was recently described as one of this country’s most original
young writers. She was born in Rotorua, grew up in Palmerston North
and now lives and works in Auckland.
Karlo attended Massey University where she completed a BA in Sociology
and Social Anthropology and a Masters in Social Work (Applied). In addition,
during this time she completed Auckland University’s Creative
Writing course taught by Albert Wendt. Karlo also worked for three years
as the Pacific Health Research Manager for the Health Research Council.
She says that she has been writing poetry since she was in standard
three.
She currently holds a scholarship to do her PhD which will examine
policy and planning for the New Zealand born Pacific population.
Mila’s poetry has been published in Best New Zealand Poems
2003, Short Fuse: The Global Anthology of Fusion Poetry,
The New Zealand Listener and Coffee and Coconuts.
Several of her poems also feature in the 2004 Montana New Zealand Book
Award-winning anthology Whetu Moana. Dream Fish Floating
is her first published collection.
‘Like other Pacific authors Karlo draws wisdom and compassion
from her
ancestral cultures but is not constrained by them. Honest and unafraid,
she has spread her net wide in order to capture the many concerns that
many people are grappling with as they face the realities of a
globalised and impersonal world.’
– Professor Konai Helu Therman, University of the South Pacific
Mila comments: ‘This poem was inspired by a friend of mine, Teresa
Brown and her circle of friends. They break all the “fobby”
stereotypes of what Pacific people in this country are supposed to be
like. They don’t wear mumus or tupenu to their ankles. They are
extremely well educated, ultra-urban, with sophisticated palates, good
politics and basically they’re downright fabulous. They’re
not afraid of who they are and they’re not having cultural identity
crises even though they don’t fit the traditional Pacific “mould”…
One of Teresa’s friends, Victor Rodger, is a Pacific writer breaking
down the stereotypes of who we Pacific people are supposed to be and what
kind of box we are supposed to fit into to. I do have some concern about
our art-forms sometimes, in that they (subconsciously or super-consciously)
embellish the stereotypes that abound. Such as bunging a tapa pattern
on a canvas or making references to hibiscus in a poem and somehow considering
that to be “Pacific”…
But essentially what this poem is also about – and what concerns
me more – is the practice of deciding “what is not Pacific”.
I have come across so many cultural gatekeepers who try and control who
we collectively are (e.g. Pacific academics, the highly visible community
leaders and professionals etc). They often seem to have a very conservative
and limited sense of “what” you must be and “how”
you must be to be a “real” Tongan or Samoan etc. It is a bit
of an “in” and “out” game, as subjective as those
“what’s hot” and “what’s not” lists
you see in magazines – except these are cultural scripts and tick-boxes.
There is often such a disempowering sense of disapproval associated with
“changing” and deviating from the imagined and “authentic”
pathways of Polynesian identity and representation. Sadly for all us,
these ideas of what constitutes authenticity can be far from actual Pacific
realities in New Zealand. This poem was written as an in-your-face rant,
basically… A bit of a backlash about these mean-spirited things
we do to ourselves as a community.
Fob: Fresh Off the Boat
Poem: Sacred Pulu
|