AGRICULTURE
Rice Culture:
Nourishing Body and Soul
Nature
has endowed Bali with ideal conditions for the development of agriculture.
The divine volcanoes, still frequently active, provide the soils
with great fertility. Copious rainfall and numerous mountain springs
supply many areas of the island with ample water year-round. And
a long dry season, brought on by the southeasterly monsoon, brings
plentiful sunshine for many months of the year. Bali is, as a result,
one of the most productive traditional agricultural areas on earth,
which has in turn made possible the development of a highly intricate
civilization on the island since very early times.
Rice as the
staff of life
Wet-rice cultivation
is the key to this agricultural bounty. 'Me greatest concentration
of irrigated rice fields is found in southern-central Bali, where
water is readily available from spring-fed streams. Here, and in
other well-watered areas where wet-rice culture predominates, rice
is planted in rotation with so-called palawija cash crops such as
soybeans, peanuts, onions, chili peppers and other vegetables. In
the drier regions corn, taro, tapioca and beets are cultivated.
Rice is, and
has always been, the staff of life for the Balinese. As in other
Southeast Asian languages, rice is synonymous here with food and
eating. Personified as the "divine nutrition" in the form
of the goddess Bhatari Sri, rice is seen by the Balinese to be part
of an all-compassing life force of which humans partake.
Rice is also
an important social force. 'Me phases of rice cultivation determine
the seasonal rhythm of work as well as the division of labor between
men and women within the community. Balinese respect for their native
rice varieties is expressed in countless myths and in colorful rituals
in which the life cycle of the female rice divinity are portrayed
from the planting of the seed to the harvesting of the grain. Rice
thus represents "culture" to the Balinese in the dual
sense of cultura and cultus - cultivation and worship.
Irrigation
cooperatives (subak)
Historical
evidence indicates that since the 11th century, all peasants whose
fields were fed by the same water course have belonged to a single
subak or irrigation cooperative. This is a traditional institution
which regulates the construction and maintenance of waterworks,
and the distribution of life-giving water that they supply. Such
regulation is essential to efficient wet-rice cultivation on Bali,
where water travels through very deep ravines and across countless
terraces in its journey from the mountains to the sea.
The subak is
responsible for coordinating the planting of seeds and the transplanting
of seedlings so as to achieve optimal growing conditions, as well
as for organizing ritual offerings and festivals at the subak temple.
All members are called upon to participate in these activities,
especially at feasts honoring the rice goddess Sri.
Subak cooperatives
exist entirely apart from normal Balinese village institutions,
and a single village's rice fields may fall under the jurisdiction
of more than one subak, depending on local drainage patterns. The
most important technical duties undertaken by the subak are the
construction and maintenance of canals, tunnels, aqueducts, dams
and water locks.
Other crops
One
often gets the impression that nothing but wet-rice is grown on
Bali, because of the unobstructed vistas offered by extensive irrigated
rice fields between villages. This is not so. Out of a total of
563,286 hectares of arable land on Bali, just 108,200 hectares or
about 19 percent is irrigated rice fields (sawah). Another 157,209
hectares are non-irrigated dry fields (tegalan) producing one rain-fed
crop per year. A further 134,419 hectares are forested lands mostly
belonging to the state, and 99,151 hectares are devoted to cash
crop gardens (kebun) with tree and bush culture. Compared with the
figures for 1980, a gradual decrease in the total area under cultivation
may be noted, resulting mainly from population pressures and tourism
development. This includes a real estate and building boom in the
coastal resort areas and tourist handicraft villages such as Celuk
and Ubud.
Other crops include
Balinese coffee, famous the world over for its delicate aroma and
still an important export commodity. Lately, the production of cloves,
vanilla and tobacco has also stepped up, and in mountainous regions
such as Bedugul, new vegetable varieties are under intensive cultivation
to supply the tourist trade. Other export commodities include copra
and related products of the coconut palm.
For subsistence
cultivators, the coconut palm in fact remains, as before, a "tree
of life" that can be utilized from the root right up to the
tip. It provides building materials (the wood, leaves and leaf ribs),
fuel (the leaves and dried husks), kitchen and household items (shells
and fibers for utensils), as well as food and ritual objects (vessels,
offerings, plaited objects, food and drink).
The 'green
revolution'
Recent changes
in Balinese agricultural practices have brought about fundamental
changes in the relationship of the Balinese to their staple crop.
Rice production can no longer be expanded by bringing new lands
under cultivation. Nor is mechanization a desirable alternative,
given the current surplus of labor on the island. For these reasons,
the official agricultural policy since the mid1970s has been to
improve crop yields on existing fields through biological and chemical
means.
The
cultivation of new, fast-growing, high yielding rice varieties,
in concert with the application of chemical fertilizer, herbicides
and pesticides, lies at the core of the government's agricultural
development program (Bimas). Further aims are to improve methods
of soil utilization and irrigation, and to set up new forms of cooperatives
to provide credit and market surplus harvests. Over 80 percent of
Bali's wet-rice fields are now subject to these intensification
steps.
Since 1984, Indonesia
has been able to meet most of its own rice needs, thus relieving
some of the pressures responsible for the original "green revolution."
As a result, an ecologically more meaningful "green evolution"
is now possible, and rice varieties better suited to local conditions
and better able to find an anchor in the traditional system of faith
are being introduced to the island.
Since 1988, many
fields now display new altars for Sri, and the hope is that her
rice cult one of the basic elements of Balinese civilization and
culture - will remain strong well into the future.
|