Hebe Jebes 2015 Issue JAN/FEB | Page 34

FEATURES warm and hospitable a truly Muslim community can be. The ambience is quite delightful—just grit your teeth through the 4.00am Mezzuin. True, fifteen years ago the Moluccas were racked by dreadful retaliatory cycles of violence between their Christian and Muslim communities, and there have been some subsequent outbreaks. But it is amazing how quickly those wounds have healed, and Moluccans now refer to this period as ‘the mistake’, stirred up by outsiders. There is still rivalry between the two communities, which now most noticeably take the form of amplified sound. In some locations you’re as likely to be woken by songs of joy as by calls to prayer. On a rally you will have lots of company, perhaps a surfeit of it. Although most rally members are thoroughly pleasant, the rallies do seem to attract a few misfits, who possess a rare flair for creating disharmony amongst fellow yachties and locals alike. Post-rally members we’ve met expend a lot of energy describing their antics in lavish detail. Whereas the independent yachties we’ve met tend to be, well—very independent, and often very admirable. Take Dutchman Aldert Hesseling on his expedition yacht Necton for example. (www. necton.nl) He’d just been round the Horn, done a side trip to Antarctica, and will head up to make an attempt on the NW passage next summer. Or Shane and Maggie Granger on their grand 120-year-old Norwegian-built H/V Vega (www.sailvega. com). Every year they do a circuit of the archipelago delivering up to 20 tonnes of donated tools and medical and educational supplies to some of the most isolated communities. Or the rather gorgeous looking young French Surilo family on Ilo 2 (www.levoyagedilo.com). The videos they’ve made along the way are both heart warming and thoroughly professional. They even have a