I guess few people know (or
care) that Eskimoan language studies are in great turmoil. Angry and fur-clad
scientists have warmed-up their frosty environment with fiery debate about the
often-repeated cliché that Eskimo languages have a disproportionally large
number of words to describe “snow.”
The matter at hand is the
so-called “Great Eskimo Vocabulary Hoax.” Some have argued that the relatively
large number of words in Eskimo for falling snow, snow on the ground, drifting
snow, and others is evidence of the intimate relationship these northern people
have with the white stuff. Others disagree, claiming that English itself has as
many variations of snow-related words and that the whole issue is just a matter
of weird grammar.
Wondering how this is
relevant to Indonesia? Bear with me. No, I haven’t unearthed a new study
showing that Indonesia will soon be frozen over, and that Jakartans would be
better off investing in snow shovels — just imagine what a good snow pack would
do to the traffic here. Even former president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono said
that there is little that Indonesia can do directly to save the polar bear. But
who would have guessed that Indonesia has its own contributions to make to the
great science of environ-linguistics?
Here we have the urban-tropical
equivalent of the same language enrichment due to people’s relationship with
particular environmental conditions. I mean the rich vocabulary Indonesians
have developed for traffic jams — unusually but rather funnily translated by
Google Translate as — crowded smoothly (ramai lancar), solid (padat),
solid edging (padat merayap), severe misfire (macet parah),
total standstill (macet total), and not moving (tidak bergerak).
There are undoubtedly
more Indonesian words to express the severity of how stuck you are in traffic,
but the key idea is that Indonesians have adapted their language to their
changing environment, which reminds me of my current favorite Indonesian
neologism “tongsis,” short for tongkat narsis; the narcissistic
Indonesian invention of the “selfie” stick.
So what does a rich
traffic jam vocabulary tell us about Indonesia’s changing environment?
Obviously, Indonesians spend a lot of time in traffic jams, especially in
cities. According to World Bank data, Indonesia increasingly urbanizes. Between
1980 and 2014, the level of Indonesian urbanization increased from 22 percent
to 53 percent. At that rate, by 2040, three-quarters of all Indonesians will
live a long distance from nature in urban, busy, relatively polluted
environments.
How this will affect
Indonesian environmental awareness remains unclear. Some worry that the global
urbanization trend will result in more and more people who are entirely
ignorant of the natural world around them. Hooked to their televisions and
iPads, they have lost touch with the non-technological, non-urban reality.
Others, however, think
that urbanization is good for nature. For a start, the more people you
concentrate on a small piece of land, the less pressure there should be on the
rest of the world and thus more space for nature. Several studies have shown
that people in urban areas are actually more likely to support environmental
and biodiversity conservation than rural ones. People in American cities, by
and large, want wolves and bears to be protected. Yet, people in small towns
prefer them dead, and why this stark difference exists isn’t that clear. I
guess city folks are less likely to be eaten by big carnivores or have their
lambs and calves snacked on. And perhaps, urbanites enjoy better education and
greater welfare, giving them a chance to develop higher moral principles on the
environment.
Such processes also
seem to be at play in Europe. A recent study published in the journal
Science showed that several species of large carnivore in Europe are doing
remarkably well, considering how densely populated most of Europe is. Strong
policies and strict law enforcement, along with the loss of agricultural land
and its regeneration into more natural ecosystems have played a significant
role. And it appears that people increasingly like having wildlife around them.
It is now easy to see wild boars roaming through the suburbs of Berlin and
Barcelona. And a Romanian government official in charge of the country’s large
carnivore population recently told me that, yes, every year a few people were
killed by these animals, but that these death rates were nothing compared to
the lethal impacts of vodka or cars (or a combination of the two). Romanians
apparently consider the occasional death by wildlife as an acceptable societal
cost.
On the other hand,
people in Indonesia are far from accepting death or damage from wildlife. A
marauding elephant or tiger here is quickly caught or otherwise dispatched of.
But that doesn’t mean that things can’t change.
With more and more
Indonesians living in cities it is increasingly important to step up
environmental education in school and media. More Indonesians need to
understand why healthy environments are important for their own welfare and why
they should demand policies that facilitate these.
Returning to the
language debate, if the country’s environmental conditions continue to worsen,
future vocabularies may contain new words expressing the different shades of
air or water pollution or severity of flooding (knee height, up to your chin,
above the gable).
But maybe
environmental awareness here will grow and subtle variations articulating the
appreciation of nature will emerge. I would be very happy to find out that the
future Indonesian language contained, for example, several words to describe
the level of bird song in a forest.
And hopefully these
will not just include the words for lonely whistle trees, empty forest, or
silent shrub, but also comprise rich nuances for softly chattering bushes,
raucous rural dawn chorus, recovering warble land, and intensely hooting woods.
Indonesian
environmental awareness and morals have a long way to go. Think about that the
next time you find yourself “solidly edging” in a Jakarta traffic jam. What can
you do to make your fellow citizens, friends and family more aware of the
urgent need to save Indonesia’s sublime nature?
Erik Meijaard is a
Jakarta-based conservation scientist coordinating the Borneo Futures program.
Written with input from Azalea Roseli.
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