
disagreement,"said Ratu Isoa Tikoca, the high commissioner.Cannibalism was common in many parts of the South Pacific-Fiji was formerly known as the Cannibal Isles-and dozens of missionaries were killed by hostile islanders.Born at Barnard Castle, Durham, Rev Brown emigrated to New Zealand as a young man and served as a missionary in Samoa before moving with his wife and children to New Guinea.He was familiar with the cannibalistic traditions of the region and once described a visit to a village in which he counted 35 smoke-blackened human jaw bones dangling from the rafters of a hut."A human hand, smoke-dried, was hanging in the same house. And outside I counted 76 notches in a coconut tree, each notch of which, the natives told us, represented a human body which had been cooked and eaten there," he told the Royal Geographical Society.Even so, he was shocked when told that four of his staff had been cannibalised."They were killed simply because they were foreigners, and the natives who killed them did so for no other reason than their desire to eat them, and to get the little property they had with them," he wrote.He reluctantly agreed to launch a punitive expedition, ordering his men to burn down villages implicated in the murders and destroy wooden canoes.At least 10 tribe members blamed for the attack were killed in an area known as Blanche Bay. Rev Brown claimed the raids made the region safe for Europeans.In a letter to the general secretary of the London Missionary Society he wrote:"The natives respect us more than they did, and as they all acknowledge the justice of our cause they bear us no ill will."But the reprisals attracted fierce criticism from the press, particularly in Australia.The Australian newspaper said:"If missionary enterprise in such an island as this leads to wars of vengeance, which may readily develop into wars of extermination, the question may be raised whether it may not be better to withdraw the mission from savages who show so little appreciation of its benefits."However,an official investigation by British colonial authorities a year later exonerated Rev Brown.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/08/16/wpapua116.xml
As in the days of Noah...