Photo: RNZ Pacific/Scott Waide

First Person - What's in a bilum? The string bag carrying Papua New Guinea's names, rules, and memory

In Papua New Guinea, the bilum is among the most familiar objects of daily life.

It is carried through markets and villages, classrooms and hospitals, offices and homes - holding food, clothes, books, and babies. Its presence is so constant it is often taken for granted.

Yet the bilum is more than a container.

Across the country's hundreds of cultures and language groups, it functions as a system of knowledge - conveying social roles, responsibility, and belonging through form, name, and use.

Understanding a bilum means understanding how it should be carried, what it should contain, and who is entitled to use it.

Photo: RNZ Pacific / Scott Waide

Naming as knowledge

Throughout Papua New Guinea, bilums are named according to purpose, life stage, and social expectation.

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