HOUSE OF TAGA
  • HOME
  • PRE-CONTACT PERIOD
  • COLONIAL PERIOD
  • WWII
  • CONTEMPORARY PERIOD
  • CONTACT
No Result
View All Result
HOUSE OF TAGA
  • HOME
  • PRE-CONTACT PERIOD
  • COLONIAL PERIOD
  • WWII
  • CONTEMPORARY PERIOD
  • CONTACT
No Result
View All Result
HOUSE OF TAGA
No Result
View All Result
An AI generated image of an archaeologist by the beach

“Omang”

by Lexi Zotomayor
1 year ago
in Colonial Period
0 0

Hans Hornbostel had been longing to satisfy his craving for an “omang.” Perhaps the perilous journey he had had crossing the Saipan Channel to Tinian on a canoe on a day when a storm was threatening to wallop the islands with massive winds and rains may have amplified his pining for it.  

“I will not soon forget the moment I jumped from the canoe into the shallow water and waded ashore and felt my feet on ‘terra firma’ again,” Hans wrote in his 10-part series, “Rota Days” in the Philippine Magazine in 1935.

He was surely relieved to have reached the shore and settled in the “palacio”—the official residence of the Spanish governors, later maintained by the Germans but fell into ruins under the Japanese. 

While on Tinian, Hans was assisted by a Carolinian guide, Tamanging, who neither spoke fluent Chamorro nor English. 

With his poor Chamorro, he tried to communicate to Tamanging to bring him “omang” that night. Looking befuddled, the Carolinian guide begrudgingly took the orders and left but Hans had sensed that Tamanging was a little disturbed. 

While waiting for his return, pangs of hunger were egging Hans to open a can of Alaskan salmon until an Okinawan fisherman arrived and gave him fresh fish pickled in native wild orange juice, with a sauce to boot for a sumptuous dinner. 

By nightfall, Tamanging came rather nervous as he approached the palacio, and Hans would find out how a simple wish for an “omang” ended up in a kettle of fish. 

Hans Hornbostel on a Japanese schooner

Tamanging, it turned out, had brought with him four women and much to Hans’ surprise how four women would be standing outside.

The Carolinian guide had honestly believed that the “omang” he had been asked to look for and to bring to Hans meant the English word, “woman”, and “omang” was how they pronounced it. Hans thought that his sign language did not help his cause and even made it worse: “stressing the act of pinching convinced him that women was what I had called for!” (Philippine Magazine, July 1936)

He realized that Hans was really asking for a hermit crab, which in Chamorro is called “omang” but Tamanging took it to mean the English word for a woman. 

And not for long, everyone was in stitches laughing at the misunderstanding.

Marveling at the hilarity of the communication breakdown, they all spent the evening peppering Hans with questions about his trip to Tinian, while sampling canned beans and American cigarettes.

Tags: CarolinianHans Hornbostelhermit crabTinian
ShareTweetPin
Previous Post

Supertyphoon Yutu banishes Japanese-era dwellings into oblivion

Next Post

Remembering Sam McPhetres

Lexi Zotomayor

Lexi Zotomayor

Related Posts

Well wishers
Colonial Period

How a Japanese governor forced his wife to convert to Catholicism in 1920s Saipan

by Lexi Zotomayor
February 27, 2025
An illustration of a plane crash landing in the water
Colonial Period

Still Finding Amelia

by Lexi Zotomayor
February 25, 2025
Colonial Period

Fr. Hezel: ‘Philippinization’ not Hispanization

by Lexi Zotomayor
March 28, 2024
Japanese-Period house on Saipan
Colonial Period

Supertyphoon Yutu banishes Japanese-era dwellings into oblivion

by Lexi Zotomayor
March 14, 2024
A family on a boat
Colonial Period

Prewar Japanese resident: Saipan’s my home

by Lexi Zotomayor
February 29, 2024
Garapan
Colonial Period

Pioneering Saipan establishment: Saipan kaku

by Lexi Zotomayor
February 20, 2024
Next Post

Remembering Sam McPhetres

US Marines make historic Tinian landing in 2012

Discussion about this post

HOUSE OF TAGA

© 2025 https://houseoftaga.com by Alexie Zotomayor

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact

Follow Us

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • About
  • Colonial Period
  • CONTACT
  • HOME
  • Sample Page

© 2025 https://houseoftaga.com by Alexie Zotomayor