Indonesia's Orang Rimba: Forced to renounce their faith
Indonesia's Orang Rimba: Forced to renounce their faith
The Sumatran rainforests of Indonesia are home to the
Orang Rimba - the people of the jungle. Their faith and nomadic way of life are
not recognised by the state and, as their forests are destroyed to make way for
palm oil plantations, many are being forced to convert to Islam to survive.
In a wooden hut on stilts, a group of children dressed in
white sit on the floor. They sing "I will protect Islam till I die"
and shout "There is no god but Allah", in unison.
Three months ago, the 58 families that make up the
Celitai tribe of Orang Rimba converted to Islam. They were picked up and bussed
into Jambi, the nearest city, and given clothes and prayer mats.ago
The Islamic Defenders Front - a vigilante group whose
leader is facing charges of inciting religious violence - helped facilitate the
conversion.
Ustad Reyhan, from the Islamic missionary group
Hidayatullah, has stayed to make sure the new faith is practised.
"For now we are focusing on the children. It's
easier to convert them - their mind isn't filled with other things. With the
older ones it's harder," he says.
"Before Islam they just believed in spirits, gods
and goddesses, not the supreme god Allah.
"When someone died, they didn't even bury the dead,
they just would leave the body in the forest. Now their life has meaning and
direction.
Outsiders are the "people of the light",
because they live in open areas and are often in the sun, unlike the people of
the jungle.
The surrounding majority Muslim population calls the
Orang Rimba "Kubu".
"It means that they are very dirty, they are
garbage, you can't even look because it is so disgusting," explains
anthropologist Butet Manurung, who has lived with the Orang Rimba for many
years.
"It also means primitive, stupid, bad smelling -
basically pre-human. People say their evolution is not complete."
It's thought there are about 3,000 Orang Rimba living in
central Sumatra.
"If you came before, you would have seen our forest.
It was pristine, with huge trees," says Yusuf
Now there are seemly endless ghostly white burnt-out
sticks in one direction, and palm oil trees in neat rows in the other.
The absence of any natural sounds is eerie.
"It's all gone. It happened just in the last few
years. The palm plantations came in, and then the forest started to burn,"
adds Yusuf, referring to 2015's devastating fires,
which burnt more than 21,000 sq km of forest and peat land.
The streams in the plantation are polluted with pesticide
and his family is getting stomach problems drinking from it.
"There is no forest for them to hunt in, the water
they fished in and drank from is polluted, and so is the air," says social
affairs minister Khofifah Parawansa, matter-of-factly. "So we are giving
them houses, villages to live in."
The government - working with plantation companies - has
built a number of housing estates for the Orang Rimba.
Last year, President Joko Widodo announced more new
housing and some land for them, following a meeting with tribal leaders - the
first organised by an Indonesian head of state.
Minister Khofifah says faith is part of this process.
"On the identity card, they have to state what
religion they have. There are those that have become Muslims, some who have
become Christians. So now they are getting to know God."
But many of the housing estates have failed and are
effectively ghost towns.
Without work or a way to feed their family, many Orang Rimba who lived in
them briefly went back to the traces of jungle that are left.
"What we want is for them to stop taking away our
forest. We don't want houses like the outsiders," says Ngantap, one of the
elders of an Orang Rimba tribe.
"I am at peace and happy in the forest, I am a
person of the jungle."
Ngantap wears the traditional loincloth of the Rimba
people, with a bag of cigarettes hanging from the side.
Unmarried women traditionally wear simple sarongs
covering the breasts. Once married, the sarong is tied around the waist leaving
breasts open for feeding babies. Many now wear clothes from the outside.
But Ngantap insists they are holding on to their faith.
"If
our belief system is lost, and the gods and goddess have no forest home,
disaster will reign."
Ngantap's wife Ngerung tell me they are connected to the
trees from birth.
"After a baby is born, three trees must be planted,
one for the placenta, one for the baby, one for the name. They can never be cut
down or hurt. When we walk through our forest we remind people of this."
to
the forest begins at birth
Mr Manurung explains: "Orang Rimba worship many
gods, the tiger [being] one of the most powerful.
"They have a god of bees, a god of hornbill birds,
gods and goddesses of many trees. They also worship a god of water springs.
They will never go to the toilet or put soap in the river, so you can drink it
directly."
Sacrifice
Miyak, my guide, converted to Islam so he can travel and
fight to try and protect his family's forest.
They are trying to register the forest as their ancestral
land, following a landmark 2013 court ruling which said indigenous people have
rights over forests they have lived in for centuries.
is
fighting for legal recognition for its ancestral forest
He can take part in meetings but not in religious
ceremonies or rituals. As he now uses soap to wash himself and eats chicken and
cows, he can't enter his family home.
"When I got educated in the outsiders' ways, there
were many things that I had to sacrifice.
"But I accept that, because I am a messenger and
bridge for many people here with the outside world and the government, about
our forest and rights."
He still fears the gods and goddesses of the old
religion.
"It's the sacred people - our women shamans - [that]
I fear. They can communicate and see the gods and goddesses.
"The shaman can become a tiger, can become an
elephant if the gods are very angry, and attack people. I am scared of that. I
worry about breaking the rules."
But Miyak's greatest fear is that is his people's way of
life will disappear forever.
“Rockefeller and the Demise of Ibu Pertiwi” Stealing sovereignty from the West Papuan people Demands for West Papuan independence gains momentum and Australia is again drawn into military conflict with the Indonesian Motherland, “Ibu Pertiwi”. In Europe, there is growing support for the international community to revisit the flawed 1969 West New Guinea plebiscite.
Should the United Nations support a call for a new plebiscite to be held in West Papua, such action would undoubtedly become the genesis of any future confrontation between Australia and Indonesia – fertile ground, indeed, for the growing number of militant religious groups (both Christian and Moslem) that fester throughout the great archipelago that is Indonesia, referred to lovingly as “Ibu Pertiwi”. eBook: Amazon US – https://www.amazon.com/dp/B075J8H47W
ReplyDelete“Rockefeller and the Demise of Ibu Pertiwi” Stealing sovereignty from the West Papuan people
Demands for West Papuan independence gains momentum and Australia is again drawn into military conflict with the Indonesian Motherland, “Ibu Pertiwi”.
In Europe, there is growing support for the international community to revisit the flawed 1969 West New Guinea plebiscite.
Should the United Nations support a call for a new plebiscite to be held in West Papua, such action would undoubtedly become the genesis of any future confrontation between Australia and Indonesia – fertile ground, indeed, for the growing number of militant religious groups (both Christian and Moslem) that fester throughout the great archipelago that is Indonesia, referred to lovingly as “Ibu Pertiwi”.
eBook:
Amazon US – https://www.amazon.com/dp/B075J8H47W