Support ASCC   Campus Directory   Campus Map   Employment Opportunities   Contact ASCC  
American Samoa Community College Logo        

Home | Student Services | Academics | Online Resources | Special Programs | About ASCC

PRESS RELEASE - January 28, 2019

SSI Book Pulbishing ceremony.
ASCC Samoan Studies Institute Director Okenaisa Fauolo-Manila (third left) receives congratulations from ASCC President Dr. Rosevonne Pato (far right) and First Lady Cynthia Malala Moliga (second right) and other dignitaries during the book launching ceremony last week for three new works promoting Samoan language and culture. (Photo: J. Kneubuhl)

SSI Book Pulbishing ceremony.
ASCC Samoan Studies Institute Director Okenaisa Fauolo-Manila (third left) receives congratulations from ASCC President Dr. Rosevonne Pato (far right) and First Lady Cynthia Malala Moliga (second right) and other dignitaries during the book launching ceremony last week for three new works promoting Samoan language and culture. (Photo: J. Kneubuhl)

ASCC-SSI Launches Three New Books

January 28, 2019

By James Kneubuhl, ASCC Press Officer

The Samoan Studies Institute (SSI) at the American Samoa Community College (ASCC) held a book launching ceremony on Friday, January 25th, to celebrate the publication of three new works produced in collaboration with the community. First Lady Cynthia Malala Moliga gave the keynote address at the event, which was also attended by members of the ASCC administration, faculty and students, as well as a number of guests from the public and private sector.

For all three of the new publications, editorship was overseen by SSI Director Okenaisa Fauolo-Manila. The first, “Ua Tālā le Ta’ui 3,” is a bilingual book of 15 indigenous narratives/folklores from selected villages of Tutuila, and the third volume of the SSI’s Tala le Ta’ui series. The book also offers explanations of literary terms, old adages as well as new proverbial sayings at the end of each narrative. The stories were collected by Tofa Teleiai Christian Ausage, assisted by Mago Maseuli Faleosalafai Tipa, and translated by Tipa and Tupaisiva Tamari Mulitalo-Cheung, with layout and graphics by Patrick Mafo’e and Hannacho Sione, and photographs by Vincent Tofilau.  

Director Fauolo-Manila acknowledged with great gratitude the role the storytellers or the gatekeepers from the community play in preserving and transmitting knowledge. “Some of those stories were particular to their individual families, but they were so gracious and supportive of passing indigenous narratives along, especially so our youth would be aware of why some things were seen the way they are.” At the book launching ceremony, the men and women from various Tutuila villages who had lent their input to the SSI publications were seated as guests of honor alongside the First Lady at the front of the College’s Multi-Purpose Center auditorium. The event included a cultural performance by the Student Association for Faasamoa (SAFF) members, using the traditional sula (praise), which emphasized the high regard the SSI holds for the unconditional sharing of knowledge.

The second new work, “Enugagana,” is a bilingual glossary compiling terms from over 20 disciplines (Agriculture, Math, English, etc) collated from resources both local and international. Some terms were transliterated, and others created from existing concepts and words by SSI faculty and staff. “Eugagana” attempts to meet a need for general translations by researchers, students, and the general public who often call the SSI office with their translation requests. For this project, the SSI faculty and staff worked together with neighboring Samoa and other scholars off island, according to Director Fauolo-Manila.

The third of the new works is “Pi faitau - Samoan Alphabet”, a volume based on the work of the LMS missionaries who pioneered written Samoan Language. SSI Researcher and Language Interpreter Mulitalo-Cheung noted that the “Pi faitau – Samoan Alphabet” took less than a year to complete, while the other two books required considerably longer. “‘Tala le Ta’ui’ took us three years,” she recalled, “and we worked on ‘Eugagana’, for more than five years, adding terms from additional disciplines as we went along. We’ve learned that among the entities who do these kinds of projects, language translations typically require a lot of time. For instance, during our meeting with the Academie of Tahiti several years ago, they shared that two of their dictionary projects took them eight years for one and a decade for another. “

While the SSI offers a full range of classes on Samoan language and culture, the Institute has concurrently made producing books a high priority. “Part of the mission of ASCC is to promote awareness of Samoa and the Pacific,” said the Director. “In effect, this means placing great value on cultural heritage and language, among other areas. Researching, collecting and publishing indigenous narratives add to the pool of resources Samoans and other interested persons everywhere can use. There is a continuous need to standardize, add, revise and create more glossaries and local material. More foreign terms need translation and explaining as the world becomes more connected and advanced.”

In all of its book projects, the SSI has gone beyond the ASCC campus to seek input from community members recognized for their knowledge in the language and culture of Samoa. “This is a collective work that will always need the input of all stakeholders, students, researchers, community leaders, families, government, and churches,” said Fauolo-Manila. “From our end of it, regardless of the struggles, the God of languages always provides. So we consider ourselves blessed to be part of the awareness campaign to promote and perpetuate who we are in a constantly changing world.”

In her keynote address, the First Lady related the experience of many ethnic Samoans growing up overseas. The parents of the First Lady and the other girls and boys in Hawaii’s small Samoan community faced a challenge to instill a sense of cultural heritage in them, while also trying to ensure they would succeed in their immediate surroundings. “I admire how the Japanese community addressed this same situation,” reflected the First Lady. “Their boys and girls would learn proper English all day in school, then spend several more hours afterwards in Japanese school learning their own language and culture. I wish we’d had something similar for the Samoan community, but there were so few of us then. However, in these times the number of Samoans overseas trying to stay connected to their roots has increased substantially, which makes it important for them to have access to resources like the kind being created by the SSI.”

At the conclusion of the ceremony, the First Lady and the guests of honor all received copies of the new publications and other works produced by the SSI. For interested members of the public, most of the SSI books are available in the ASCC Le Bookstore. For more information on the SSI, visit the ASCC website at www.amsamoa.edu.