The Baining people are among the earliest and original inhabitants of the Gazelle Peninsula of East New Britain, Papua New Guinea. They currently inhabit the Baining Mountains into where they are thought to have been driven by the Tolai
tribes who migrated to the coastal areas in comparatively recent times.
Another factor that might have influenced their migration inland was
major volcanic activity that took place over centuries.The Baining people's artworks are usually produced for limited uses
only. The masks are laboriously made from bark cloth, bamboo and leaves
and used just once for the firedance ceremony before being thrown away
or destroyed.
The origin of these firedance ceremonies was to celebrate the birth
of new children; the commencement of harvests and also a way of
remembering the dead. The Baining firedance is also a rite of passage
for initiating young men into adulthood. The fire dance is a men-only
event and traditionally the Baining women and children neither partake
nor watch.
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