Search Results - Kasaipwalova, John, 1949-
John Kasaipwalova

While in Australia, he became deeply involved in radical Catholicism and leftist student movements, protesting the Vietnam War and engaging in anti-imperialist activism. He began his literary work during this period. As a member of the Socialist Revolutionary Students’ Alliance, he lost his scholarship and visa and was forced to return home. Though he never formally completed his degree, his influence on Papua New Guinea’s literature and political thought was significant.
In 1972, at the age of 23, he founded the Kabisawali movement upon returning to Kiriwina. The movement, inspired by indigenous systems of reciprocity such as the Kula exchange and Sagali festivals, sought to liberate the island from colonial structures and build an autonomous, cooperative economy. His group won local council elections in 1973 and immediately dissolved the official structures, replacing them with their own: independent courts, administration, cooperatives, a local bank, and a plan for a traditional-style hotel.
For several years, Kiriwina functioned as a de facto autonomous republic. The experiment collapsed after police intervention and financial accusations (from which he was ultimately acquitted), but the movement remains a unique example of postcolonial self-determination rooted in indigenous culture.
After his time at the University of Papua New Guinea (UPNG), where he gained a reputation as an anti-colonial radical, he moved into various business ventures and served on public boards including the National Cultural Commission. He was also on the Council of UPNG for 8 years. In local government, he worked with the Milne Bay Area Authority and the Kiriwina LLG. Since 1995, he was one of the 12 members of the Kiriwina Council of Chiefs. After the death of his uncle, he became the chief of Yalumgwa but chose to live on the outskirts of the village in a house meant to bridge tradition and modernity.
He had three wives: a Papuan, a Chinese woman named Mary, and Vana, a Trobriand Islander. Until the end of his life, he continued writing poetry, experimenting with farming, and seeking reconciliation between the Gospel and local beliefs, between revolution and tradition. He died on 2 May 2023 at Port Moresby General Hospital, leaving behind a powerful literary legacy and an enduring vision of a free and self-sufficient Kiriwina. His final reflections were recorded in a video interview published six months before his death. Provided by Wikipedia