Te Po o Tefolaha
Te Po o Tefolaha, also known as the Golden Jubilee, or Aso Pati to the church, is a regional holiday celebrated annually by the people of Nanumea, Tuvalu, on January 8. To the Nanumeans, its significance rivals that of Christmas. It is a part of Po Lahi, the Nanumean holiday season.
History
Origins
Te Po o Tefolaha is celebrated on the day that Nanumeans were converted to Christianity by Samoan pastors from the London Missionary Society, an Evangelical church. The holiday started in 1922, the 50th anniversary of Christianity being brought to Nanumea. The pastor, Peniata, wanted this day to be an island-wide occasion. To realize this plan, the Christian Nanumeans, including Peniata, went from door to door singing hymns in a bid to convince those who still worshiped Tefolaha and the old Tuvaluan gods. The elder, Peni, headed one of the non-Christian families, and was so moved by the hymns, as well as the collaboration between the Nanumean Christians, that he accepted Christianity. Peni's relatives wept but accepted his decision and with that almost all of Nanumea was Christian. In celebration of this, there was a feast and dancing in the ahiga, and a cement monument was erected near the ahiga. In the 1930s, the Nanumean church, Loto Lelei, was constructed from stone and limestone cement. It was called Te Po o Tefolaha because he founded Nanumea and they had once worshiped Tefolaha as their god.More than 20 years later, the pastor, Iosefa, declared the holiday's name should be changed to Aso Pati, or Pati Day. It means the Day of the Pentecost of the Children of Tefolaha for Jesus.
When the federal government requested that each district select a national holiday, Nanumea chose Te Po o Tefolaha.