SERANGAN
ISLAND
Important
Temple on 'Turtle Island'
Serangan
is a small island lying just off Bali's southern coast near
Sanur. It has an area of only 180 acres and a population
of about 2,500, and is known principally for its turtles
and its important Sakenan Temple.
Serangan
is too dry for wet rice farming, but its residents grow
corn, maize, peanuts and beans. Some islanders earn a living
making shell trinkets to sell to the tourists who come here
in ever increasing numbers. But the trade in another distinctive
item is even more crucial to the local economy.
The sea
turtles which give Serangan its popular name are not found
swimming picture squely under ocean cliffs - here they are
caught and sold as food. People in the Denpasar area are
fond of turtle meat, especially on festival days. Serangan
residents make a living capturing and wholesaling the creatures,
also buying them from Muslim fishermen from islands to the
east.
The turtles
are kept live in bamboo sheds on the sandy beach around
Dukuh, the island's main village on the north coast. Here
they are fed with fresh leaves and sold to buyers from Denpasar,
who will eventually prepare the turtle meat in dishes like
sate and lawar, a kind of tartare or raw meat dish.
There
is also a turtle-egg hatchery on the island. The most popular
edible species is the green turtle (Chelonia mydas), which
swims ashore to lay eggs in a shallow pit in the sand before
returning to the sea. It is at this moment that villagers
catch the turtles effortlessly and in large numbers, just
by turning them on their backs. The eggs are considered
a great delicacy, and are dug up immediately. Not surprisingly,
the green turtle is now threatened with extinction and the
World Wide Fund for Nature has consequently appealed to
the government to put a stop to the slaughter.
Manis
Kuningan festival
The best
day to visit Serangan is on the holy day Manis Kuningan
in the 210-day Balinese calendar. On this day, the famous
Sakenan Temple celebrates the anniversary of its founding
by Mpu Kuturan, which according to the Prasasti Belanjong
inscription occurred during the 10th century. The Sakenan
complex consists of two pura on the north coast of the island
just west of Dukuh.
The festival
lasts for two days, beginning on the last day of Kuningan
wuku or week and ending on the first day of Langkir wuku.
The ferry from Suwung, normally serving the odd tourist
or a few villagers coming from Serangan to do their marketing,
is at this time chock-a-block with thousands of worshippers
in all their colorful finery. They queue up on the dike
of a canal meandering through the mangroves to board a ferry
which takes them straight to the temple.
Inside
the first pura there is only a single shrine, in the form
of a tugu or obelisk. This is the seat of Cri Cedana or
Dewi Sri, the goddess of prosperity and welfare. In the
second and larger part of Pura Sakenan there are typical
Balinese-style shrines for the prasanak, relatives of Sri
who come to visit the temple on its anniversary day.
On arrival,
worshippers pray at the shrine of Dewi Sri to ask her for
a prosperous year in the fields or in business. But it is
obvious that this day is most prosperous for the ferrymen,
who earn a lot more money than usual.