The Jubilee Billboard That Honours a Nationโ€™s Leaders

James Yoka โ€” The Man Who Built a Monument of Gratitude to Honour a Nationโ€™s Leader.

A towering billboard now stands in Port Moresby โ€” not as an advertisement, but as a declaration of respect. It bears the faces of Papua New Guineaโ€™s eight Prime Ministers and other founding fathers like Sir Yano Belo, each framed under one manโ€™s vision of honour.

The Billboard is not for commerce or politics, but to honour. Its creator, James Yoka, did not build it for recognition or applause. He built it because, in his own words, โ€œIt was time to honour them.โ€ He enforced national gratitude.  His work caught my attention as we prepared to launch Trigger 555, a National Magazine that honours the eight Prime Ministers in Print.

JUBILLE BILLBOARD OF NATIONAL HONOUR โ€” A TRIBUTE TO PAPUA NEW GUINEAโ€™S EIGHT PRIME MINISTERS
It stands over Port Moresby like a declaration written in metal โ€” twenty metres wide, twelve metres high,
its base lifting five metres from the ground.
Eight faces stare out from its frame โ€” the eight Prime Ministers of Papua New Guinea, men who carried
the country from Independence in 1975 to the Golden Jubilee of 2025.
This is not an advertisement.
It is a nationโ€™s reflection.
A monument built not by power, but by conviction.
By one man โ€” James Yoka, a patriarch and entrepreneur from the Western Highlands Province.
He built it with his own hands, his own heart, his own resources.
No corporate help.
No political stamp.
No reward.
He calls it his Independence Gift โ€” a gift to his country, and a vow that the names of its leaders will never
fade from memory.
Raised in September 2025, it became the largest billboard in the city โ€” and the loudest voice without
sound.
People stopped.
They looked up.
They remembered.

In an age where many chase recognition, Yoka has chosen remembrance. His billboard stands as a lesson to young Papua New Guineans: that greatness begins with honour, and transformation begins with family.
Through vision, courage, and personal sacrifice, he reminds a nation that progress is not only about building cities โ€” but about building people who remember where they came from.

A Patriotic Vision Comes Alive

I met James Yoka  and his children this week (6th October 2025) at Airways Hotel alongside Kina Belo. His energy filled the room โ€” sharp, clear, passionate. A proud son of Papua New Guinea, Yoka is a businessman whose patriotism runs deeper than profit.

He spoke passionately about his dream to help change Papua New Guinea. His voice carried conviction โ€” not the language of politics or business, but of gratitude and purpose. He believes that honouring past legacies is essential to inspiring future generations.
โ€œEvery Prime Minister faced battles we will never see,โ€ he said. โ€œBut they stood for something โ€” and we must remember that.โ€

For Yoka, remembrance is not just reflection; it is a form of national reset โ€” a moral compass and foundation for the next generation.

The billboard, now an unmistakable sight in the nationโ€™s capital, is more than a display โ€” it is a national mirror. For James Yoka, it is his personal contribution to the 50-year Jubilee of independence โ€” a gesture of respect that links the past to the future.

The Heart of a Patriotic Entrepreneur

Born in Mt Hagen, Western Highlands Province, Yoka has built his brand through perseverance and community vision. He believes that true business success is measured not only by profit but by the impact one leaves on people and society. Known among peers as a community enforcer and bridge-builder, he advocates for safe, peaceful, and economically empowered communities. โ€œBusiness must serve people,โ€ he says. โ€œIf your success does not lift others, then it has failed its purpose.โ€

Building a Legacy of Empowerment and Generational Success

Sitting across from James, one senses that his dreams reach far beyond buildings or balance sheets. His vision is generational. โ€œOne of my greatest desires,โ€ he shared, โ€œis to transfer entrepreneurial knowledge and economic power to others โ€” to help them become independent, and it starts with your own children and family.  His teachings of success begin at home.

โ€œThe power to reset a nation,โ€ he said, โ€œmust start at home โ€” with your own children and family โ€” by empowering them to succeed alongside you.โ€


The Power Begins at Home

One of the most striking moments in our conversation came when he spoke about his family.

โ€œYou do that by starting off with your own children and family. And thatโ€™s what I have been doing,โ€ he said.

He introduced his children with visible pride, explaining how he mentors them in business and responsibility. For him, legacy is not about inheritance, but transfer of knowledge.
โ€œThe power to reset a nation,โ€ he said, โ€œmust start at home โ€” with your own children and family โ€” by empowering them to succeed alongside you.โ€

This is not theory for James Yoka. It is his daily practice โ€” teaching, guiding, and positioning his children to become contributors to the nationโ€™s economic and moral renewal.

A Patriotic Blueprint

Beyond business, Yoka is known as a community enforcer โ€” one who believes in safe, peaceful, and productive communities. He speaks openly about his commitment to help others build independence through hard work and entrepreneurial discipline.
His message is clear: build the next generation from the inside out. Start with family, empower communities, and honour those who laid the foundations.

The billboard in Port Moresby is not just a structure. It is a statement โ€” a reminder that gratitude and nation-building walk hand in hand.
Through it, Yoka has not only honoured the men who built the nation, but has challenged every Papua New Guinean to build something that outlives themselves.


The Yoka Belief System- success begins at home.

James Yoka believes that honouring the past is the key to empowering the future generation to believe in themselves. For him, every Prime Minister carried the nation on their shoulders, and their contribution must never be forgotten.

He is a successful businessman and a strong community enforcer who believes in safe, peaceful, and prosperous communities. His life reflects true patriotism โ€” the belief that a nation rises when its people rise together.

Sitting across from him, I realised that the heart of his message is simple yet powerful. He believes the transfer of knowledge and economic power must begin at home.

โ€œAnd you do that by starting off with your own children and family. And thatโ€™s what I have been doing,โ€ he said.

He introduced his children to us โ€” not as dependents, but as partners in vision. He demonstrated how important it is to teach and empower them early.

โ€œThe power to reset a nation must start at home, and with your own children and family โ€” by empowering them to succeed alongside you.โ€

Those words carried weight. In them, you hear not just a businessmanโ€™s success, but a fatherโ€™s conviction and a patriotโ€™s heart. For James Yoka, legacy is not built in speeches or profits โ€” it is built in people, beginning with your own household.


His words were not rehearsed; they came from a place of deep purpose.
He believes that honouring past legacies is not just about looking back, but about reminding the next generation that greatness already runs in their blood.

โ€œWe must show the youth that leadership is not easy,โ€ he said. โ€œBut itโ€™s worth it. They carried the country; now itโ€™s our turn to continue what they began.โ€

Yoka introduced his children to us and gave them a voice at the table to express their views. A powerful observation. On the left- Yoka sits in-between his children and engages them in conversations.

Business as a Platform for Change

James Yoka is a successful businessman and a respected community enforcer. His work is guided by a belief system that business must serve people โ€” that success means nothing if it doesnโ€™t help others rise. He is known for promoting safe, peaceful, and progressive communities. For him, being an entrepreneur is not about accumulation, but activation โ€” transferring knowledge and capacity to others.

โ€œOne of my greatest passions,โ€ he said, โ€œis to empower others to stand on their own feet โ€” to help families and communities become independent.โ€

โ€œThe power to reset a nation must start at home, and with your own children and family โ€” by empowering them to succeed alongside you.โ€

To Yoka, legacy is not something you leave behind โ€” itโ€™s something you live and teach daily. His children are learning not just how to succeed, but how to lead, give, and build themselves and others.

ENDS

About the Author: Christina Kewa- Swarbrick

Publisher- Christina Kewa-Swarbrick has over 20 years experience in the Media Industry and over 10 Years in Prophetic Engineering. She's a Holistic Life Solutions Coach, who combines her lived knowledge and experiences and her professional industry knowldege to help others. She's the founder of VISION4040 (PNG) and DBUM Bible Technology, a spiritual mapping system unlocking destiny blueprints . To engage her professional services go to this link: cks.vision4040.com