After World War II, veterans returning from the Pacific all
had stories to tell, not only about the war, but also about experiences
with other cultures. There were tales of mysterious customs, strange
lifestyles, and curious ceremonies. Of all the experiences, however,
few were like the encounters with a number of bizarre--to Americans,
at least--religious groups: the cargo cults.
"Cargoism" was, and is, a widespread religious movement
among natives of the islands of Melanesia in the South Pacific.
The theology and practice of the cult centers on the worship of
cargo.
In simplest terms, followers of cargoism believe in the imminence
of a new age of blessing which, they believe, will be heralded
and fulfilled by the arrival of special cargo sent to them by
supernatural powers. This belief existed long before the appearance
in the Pacific of Western troops.
Western sociologists specializing in Melanesian religions say
all the cargo cults are based on a curious mixture of native and
Christian beliefs and rituals. The cultists believe their deities
will send them ready-made goods just like those used by the military
forces that came from far away. In their estimation, the goods
will come from heaven, thought by some to be in Australia or,
alternatively, in the sky immediately above it.
Those who hold to the latter view of paradise believe that
Heaven is joined to Earth by a ladder, down which ancestral spirits
carry the goods, packed in crates addressed to specific individuals.
They expect that the precious cargo will come to them by ship,
airplane, or truck, depending on where they live.
The Millennium at Hand
When soldiers and airmen from the United States and other allied
countries arrived in the islands with huge war cargoes, it was
for the worshipers proof that those who followed the beliefs of
a cargo cult were to be rewarded for their faith. Though the natives
did not benefit directly from the appearance on their islands
of those types of cargo, the cultists believed that their predictions
were confirmed and that the cargo-millennium was at hand. A time
of plenty had arrived. There was no longer a need to work. Money
was unnecessary. Crops could be, and were, neglected. Pigs were
randomly slaughtered for feasts. It was a time to celebrate, and
the cultists lived it up.
Things didn't turn out as the cultists expected, but few lost
the faith. When goods fail to appear, as in the postwar period,
the followers usually assume it is because they have not yet performed
the correct ritual, because foreigners have schemed against them,
or because the cultists have neglected the gods.
Although the worship of cargo is basic, there are slight variations
in theology among the approximately seventy cargo cults that are
known to have existed. There are fewer now, and those remaining
seem to be waning in religious fervor. However, world religion
scholars say interest fluctuates and is revived by forceful, persuasive
leaders who appear from time to time.
Typically, all cargo cults begin when someone claims that,
through a dream or vision, supernatural powers have told him or
her that a messiah and the ancestors or spirits of the dead will
soon return bringing huge supplies of manufactured goods. Their
arrival will usher in a wonderful new era when the believers will
have their identity, dignity, and honor restored. Inequality,
suffering, and death will cease. The riches of those they think
have so far monopolized wealth and defrauded them of their share
will then belong to the cultists.
The cargo cult members do not know how the goods of foreigners
are made. They believe that the arrival of cargo must be stimulated
by some kind of religious ritual, because the gods will respond
only to correctly performed ceremonies. Cult leaders and sometimes
whole native communities demonstrate that they have received news
about the coming of cargo by falling into ecstatic states.
Typical of cargo dogma is a belief adopted by three groups
in Vanuatu (formerly the New Hebrides). They worship a god named
John Frum, king of America, who is said to have arrived in the
islands before the appearance there of Christian missionaries
in the mid-1800s. John Frum also is expected to return.
The cultists embrace the deity of Frum because he promised
them a life untroubled by economic strife and the demanding ways
of foreigners, especially Europeans. Although Frum hasn't shown
up, Frum followers saw great significance in the arrival of cargo-rich
foreign troops on the island Tana in the New Hebrides during World
War II. Cargo cult believers on other islands of Melanesia were
likewise convinced that the cargoes they saw being unloaded were
heaven-sent and that a god or messiah would soon follow.
Worshiping George V
In Papua New Guinea, cargo cults are numerous. The first to
be discovered were the Baigona, reported by researchers in 1912,
and the Vailala, first described by sociologists in 1919. Researchers
found that cultists often were seized by mass hysteria that led
to violent shaking fits and ecstatic trances. The Marching Rule
movement is popular in the Solomon Islands. Another cult worships
a faded portrait of King George V of England, declaring that it
is the picture of Ihova, also known as God.
Some cult members believe they must imitate the foreigners.
They even drill with wooden rifles and hold flag-raising ceremonies.
They adopt Western dress and imitate Western behavior. They have
built wharves, storehouses, airfields, "radio masts,"
and lookout towers in anticipation of the arrival of good fortune.
Cult leaders make contact with the deities by using "wireless
telephones," often nothing more than wooden posts or carved
totem poles.
Cargo is expected to appear in local cemeteries, on altars,
or in other places they consider holy and where the deity is expected
to emerge. Cultists of Vanuatu have not lost faith in the long-absent
John Frum; believers still await his return.
If someone tells you that he has seen natives of the South
Pacific building airstrips and piers to prepare for the return
of vast cargoes, don't pass it off as just another tall war story.
There are still hundreds of cargo cultists out there, patiently
awaiting the day when their lookouts will spot a great armada
on the horizon and a string of giant aircraft lined up on final
approach to their airstrips.
C. V Glines is a regular contributor to this
magazine. A retired Air Force colonel, he is a free-lance writer
and the author of many books. His most recent article for AIR
FORCE Magazine was "The Visions of Hector Bywater,"
which appeared in the December 1990 issue.