'Maasina Ruru' was an
emancipation movement for
self-government and
self-determination during and after
World War II, 1945-1950, credited with creating the movement towards independence for the
Solomon Islands. The name is from the
'Are'are language meaning the Rule of "relationship of siblings together" and is often corrupted to "Marching Rule" , "Marxist Rule", or "Rule of Brotherhood".
Foundation and influences
The movement was created after
Nori Nono'oohimae,
Aliki Nono'oohimae and
Jonathan Fiifii'i worked together in the
Solomon Islands Labour Corps during World War II. One of the influences is said to have been the
African-American soldiers whose humane treatment of the fellow workers was markedly different from the
plantation owners. They spread a message of independence amongst the
Malaitan soldiers who began a campaign of
non-compliance and
civil disobedience.
They were also influenced by other revolutionary or anti-government movements, progressive missionaries such as Rev.
Richard Fallowes and
apocalyptic movements such as that of the priest
Noto'i. During 1939 in
Uogwari and
Atobala he had been a
prophet of the ancestor
La'aka and channeled that
Tulagi would be destroyed and the government would be thrown into the sea. His followers were arrested by the government but in 1946, the capital moved from
Tulagi to
Honiara. Noto'i joined the Maasina Ruru movement as did people from all over the islands.
Operation DeLouse and Operation Jericho
In 1947, the British government launched Operation De-Louse to arrest the leaders of the movement. The nine main chiefs or Alaha were also arrested and charged under the ''
Sedition Act'' for organising secret meetings. This despite the fact that Maasina Ruru meetings were mass meetings of thousands of people at a time. They were mostly sentenced, including Fifi'i, Nonoohimae and Aliki, to six and a half years hard labour.
While the leaders were in jail the campaign of civil disobedience continued with villages refusing to pay taxes ''en masse''. While many villages were also barricaded against the British, the government launched Operation Jericho. Two thousand arrests were made in
Malaita alone and yet the resistance continued.
In 1951 the British government held meetings with the imprisoned leadership and brokered a deal for self-government in the form of the
Malaitan Congress. The prisoners were released and demands were met towards the end of 1951.
Sources
★
Fifi'i, Jonathan; ''From pig-theft to parliament: My life between two worlds'', translated and edited by
Roger Keesing.
Suva, Fiji : Institute of Pacific Studies ; Solomon Islands College of Higher Education, 1989.