MODERN
BALI & THE FUTURE
ISN'T BALI
SPOILED? " is invariably the question that greets the returned
traveller from Bali - meaning, is the island overrun by tourists,
and are the Balinese all wearing shirts? The questioners are visibly
disappointed to bear of big hotels, fine roads, and motor-cars;
there is still enough of the Robinson Crusoe in travellers to make
each one of them want to be the " only " white man among
picturesque semi-naked, dark-skinned savages, although they would
preferably see them from a motor-car a hotel veranda.
Bali was only
conquered by the Dutch in 19o8, but long before that the libraries
of Holland bad been filling slowly with scholarly volumes on the
literature, the archmology, and the religion of Bali. However, the
remote little island only became news to the rest of the Western
world with the advent, a few years ago, of a series of documentary
films of Bali with a strong emphasis on sex appeal. These films
were a revelation and now everybody knows that Balinese girls have
beautiful bodies and that the islanders lead a musical-comedy sort
of life full of weird, Picturesque rites. The title of one of these
films, Goona-goona, the Balinese term for magic," became at
the time Newyorkese for sex allure.
The newly discovered
" last paradise " became the contempo. rary substitute
for the nineteenth-century romantic conception of primitive Utopia,
until then the exclusive monopoly of Tahiti and other South Sea
Islands. And lately travel agencies have used the alluring name
of Bali to attract hordes of tourists for their round-the-world
cruises that make a one-day stop on the island. On this day the
tourists are herded to the hotel in Den Pasar to cat their lunch,
buy curios, and watch hurried perform. ances by bored " temple
dancers " - ordinary village actors who hate to play in the
midday heat. The show over, the tourists are rushed back to their
ships in numbered cars, satisfied to have seen Bali. An average
of five or six such cruises unload every winter some fifteen hundred
round-the-world tourists that leave the Balinese puzzled as to why
all these madmen come from so far for only a day. They would never
willingly leave their island, and once an old woman remarked that
surely the foreigners must have done something at home that forced
them to leave their own lands.
The.great cruise
ships come with twice as many visitors as can be taken care of by
the island's limited supply of motor-cars, and half the tourists
have to remain on board ship until the others return. On one occasion
it was planned to send a troupe of dancers and musicians to entertain
those who had to remain on board, but the ship's officers objected;
" they could not allow natives to overrun the ship; something
might be stolen." They were persuaded that the Balinese were
an honest people and they let them come to play and dance for the
tourists, but when the show was over and the Balinese started packing
to leave, one of their large bronze gongs in a carved wood frame
was missing The gong was never found.
Besides the cruises,
every week two K.P.M. boats bring handful of more enterprising visitors
that stay for three days or even for a week or two. They land in
the northern port of Buleleng, which has been under direct Dutch
control for nearly a
hundred years. There all the houses and all the temples have tin
roofs and all the women wear soiled blouses, " signs of civilization,"
both supposedly made compulsory by official decree - to the joy
of the importers of foreign cloth and of galvanized tin. After the
Dutch occupation of Buleleng in 1848, someone decided that the morals
of the Dutch soldiers needed protection, and a law was passed requiring
the women to wear blouses. Tin roofs also, it is rumoured, were
ordered to replace the thatched ones because an official became
deeply concerned about the possibility of fires caused by "
exploding automobiles." Only three years ago the women of Den
Pasar went to market proudly uncovered to the waist, but the princes'
wives wore the ugly blouses and soon they became the dictate of
fashion. In Den Pasar they now regard those who go habitually with
uncovered breasts as " crude mountain people." Young men
are growing contemptuous of the simple batik kain and headcloth
of their forefathers. After dark, in Buleleng and Den Pasar, the
equipment of the smart young man-about-town consists of a set of
striped pyjamas, a Mohammedan skull-cap, sandals, a bicycle, and
a flashlight, although be may still wear flowers behind his car
to stroll on the main street among the food-vendors, the flourishing
prostitutes and procurors that haunt the streets around the hotels.
Undoubtedly Bali
will soon enough be " spoiled " for those fastidious travellers
who abhor all that which they bring with them. No longer will the
curious Balinese of the remote mountain villages, still unaccustomed
to the sight of whites, crowd around their cars to stare silently
at the " exotic " long-nosed, yellow-haired foreigners
in their midst. But even when all the Balinese will have learned
to wear shirts, to beg, lie, steal, and prostitute themselves to
satisfy new needs, the tourists will continue to come to Bali to
see the sights, snapping pictures frantically, dashing from temple
to temple, back to the hotel for meals, and on to watch rites and
dances staged for them. The Balinese will
be, to the tourists, guides, chauffeurs, and bellboys to be tipped,
dancers on salary, curio-dealers, and tropical beauties to be photographed
blouseless for a fee.
The younger generation
is rapidly being cut off from a cultural environment which they
have learned to regard as below them, considering their parents,
formerly their models of behaviour, as rude peasants who have not
gone to school. This, however, is not the fault of Hollywood. To
Bali goes the distinction of being totally uninterested in the movies.
Over a decade ago an enterprising Armenian brought the first movies
to the island. At first he cleaned up, all the Balinese had to see
the miracle; but, not used to paying for entertainment, they soon
grew bored with something they could not understand and the movies
were a failure. Today there are two small primitive movie houses,
one in Buleleng and one in Den Pasar, that give Sunday shows of
films often twenty-five years old, patronized chiefly by the foreign
population. Chaplin may be a favourite of even the Eskimos but to
the Balinese who saw him in the flesh be was simply the funny man
who came to Bali with his brother and who, after watching a Balinese
play, took the stage and performed for them a hilarious parody of
their dances.
In Bali the exalted
title of Teacher, Guru', is the name of one of their highest gods
and is the most respectful way of addressing one's father. The old-fashioned
teachers were the reservoirs of the science and poetry of Balinese
culture, but those young Balinese who have gone to Java to become
teachers for the Western-style Government schools have returned
convinced that what they learned in Java is the essence of knowledge
and progress. They have become conscious of the contempt of Europeans
for the native cultures and have been influenced to believe that
philosophy, arts and habits of their country are signs of peasant
backwardness.
The young gurus
look upon the graceful and healthful costume of the island, so well
suited to the climate, as indecent and primitive and demand that
their little pupils wear shirts in school. a little girl once told
me her teacher said it was improper to show one's breasts. In at
least one case the result has been tragic; in the little mountain
village of Kayubihi a child was shamed by his teacher because he
did not wear a shirt, but his father, who had never owned one (nor
had any of his ancestors) , refused to buy it for him. He felt so
thoroughly disgraced that one night he hanged himself from the tree
in front of the schoolhouse.
The teacher forces
his half-digested jumble of European ideas on the little pupils,
who from the beginning of their education learn to look down on
everything Balinese. They are taught about what a European child
learns in primary school; they learn to speak and write in Malay,
a language foreign to Bali, which most often their parents ignore,
and sonic even have a smattering of Dutch, so when they come out
of school they make good, cheap clerks, totally uninterested in
their own Culture. Most speak better Malay than Balinese and feel
above the everyday requirements of Balinese life. Since there are
so few jobs available on the island in which such education would
be required, making clerks of the Balinese seems to make European
education have a negative and even detrimental effect. Typical was
the case of Rapung, the young school-teacher out of work who gave
me lessons in Balinese; lie was intelligent and rather well informed,
yet lie wanted to learn to cook or to serve at table or become a
houseboy. Of course agriculture was much below him.
It seems too
bad that modern education, at least in Bali, where the entire life
of the island is so dependent on its traditions, tends to disinherit
the future generation from their culture, simply because it is snubbed
in the educational program of the schools. It is true that many
young Balinese are still taught at home the rudiments of the native
education, often by, old-fashioned gurus, but what is not officially
recognized by their teachers will soon become discredited. 'there
are, however, encouraging rumours that the government plans a revision
of the system.
THE MISSIONARIES
During the past
century all efforts to Christianize the Balinese have failed, and
the story of Nicodemus, the first Balinese convert, is already well
known. Nicodemus was the servant and pupil of the first missionary
who came to Bali. I le allowed himself to be baptized after some
years in the service of the missionary, but time went by and no
other converts could be made, so the missionary began to bring pressure
upon Nicodemus to baptize others. The poor boy, already mentally
tortured because his community had expelled him, declaring him morally
" dead," unable to stand the situation any longer, killed
his master, renounced his new faith, and delivered himself to be
executed according to Balinese law. The scandal aroused in Holland
brought about a regulation discouraging missionary activities in
Bali.
This, however,
did not stop the missionaries; permits were granted to them in i8gi,
again in 1920, and in 1924, when Roman Catholics requested special
concessions, but waves of opposition from the Balinese thwarted
these attempts. Meetings were held among Balinese leaders to "stop
the catastrophe," and the permits were revoked.
But towards the
end of 1930 the American missionaries again succeeded in securing
an entr6e, supposedly only to care for souls already saved and not
to seek new converts. But quietly and unostentatiously they began
to work among the lowest classes of the Balinese, The more sincere
of the early missionaries bad aimed at obtaining converts of conviction
and consequently had failed, but these later missionaries wanted
quicker results and followed more effective methods. Taking advantage
of the economic crisis that was already making itself felt in Bali,
they managed to give their practically destitute candidates for
Christianity the idea that a change of faith would release them
from all financial obligations to the community - all they had to
do was to pronounce the formula: " Saja pertjaja lesoes Kristos
- I believe in Jesus Christ." If the man who was induced to
pronounce the magic words was the head of a household, the missionaries
claimed every member of the family as Christians and soon they could
boast about three hundred converts. Soon enough the new Christians
discovered they had been
misled; they
bad to pay taxes just the same, had become undesirable to their
communities, and were being boycotted. In Mengwi : where the missionaries
had their greatest success, the authorities refused to release converts
from their duties, bringing endless conflict with the village and
water-distribution boards; lawsuits developed and trouble began.
In many villages regulations were written into the local laws to
the effect that those who were unfaithful to the Balinese religion
were to be declared " dead "; meetings were held to discuss
the possibility of banishing the converts to remote places like
Djimbrana, together with other criminals." The Christians had
also become deeply concerned when they found out that they could
not dispose of their dead, because they were not permitted to bury
them in the village cemeteries and all the other available lands
were either ricefields or wild places. At times the situation became
tense and nearriots took place. The alarmed village beads reasoned
with some converts and succeeded in bringing back a number of them
to the old faith.
Typical is the
story of Pan Luting, a convert village headman who bad helped the
missionaries to increase their fold. He repented, claiming be had
been deceived, and being a topeng actor of repute, in his performances
of masked dramas be now never misses an opportunity to poke fun
at the missionaries and to express his joy at not being a Christian
any longer. Another soul was lost to the missionaries when a young
convert discovered that the venereal disease be suffered from did
not disappear when he pronounced the magic formula: " I believe
in Jesus Christ," as be had thought it would.
Again, a convert
who felt himself at the point of death quickly renounced his new
faith when the village medicine-man refused to treat him, claiming
that his magic would be of no avail to a Christian. he recovered
and it is needless to say that lie held a great offering feast of
thanksgiving. Stories such as these are repeated endlessly in Bali,
but perhaps the best illustration of the superficiality of the convictions
of the new Christians is the following conversation between a young
convert and an enlightened official:
Why did you renounce
your religion? Because I believe!
Believe what?
"
I believe in
Jesus Christ." Who is lie? "
"That Tuan
(European) with the black coat that comes often from Lombok."
'
Eventually the
disturbances became too noticeable and the American missionaries
had to leave. Until then the Dutch missions had restrained themselves
from further activity in Bali, but when the news came that rival
missionaries bad succeeded in making a few converts, they went up
in the air and are now pulling every rope to have the law modified.
Bitter controversy flared up in the papers in Holland and Java;
the missionaries claimed that the Balinese were finally ripe for
conversion because their religious feeling was, at last, breaking
down. A Dr. Kraemer, head of a Protestant missionary sect, went
to Bali to investigate and ' after a stay in the island of a little
over a month, wrote a thick volume in which lie aimed to prove the
failings of the Balinese religion, and the idea that the Balinese
really wished to become Christians, but were opposed by European
intellectuals living on the island. This argument was quickly answered
by Tjokorde Cede' Rake Soekawati, the Balinese representative in
the Volksraad, the " People's Court," in Batavia. Dr.
Kraemer's prejudiced " findings " were entirely wiped
out by answers and an analysis of his arguments by the real students
of Bali, men like Bosch, Goris, Korn, Haga, Lekkerkerker, De Bruyn
Kops, and
Darnste. Dr.
Goris has pointed out that the view of the missionaries is based
on the principle that all peoples are by nature " no good "
and in a hopeless " soul-conflict " that can only be reMedied
by the peculiar brand of religion the missionaries preach. Finding
little evidence of this " soul-conflict " in the Balinese,
the missionaries encourage it or try to create it by stirring up
the natural animosity of the lower classes against the high castes
and by playing on their poverty, thus encouraging the caste struggle
rather than abolishing it, as was their claim. Curiously enough,
the same missionaries who accuse the Balinese of religious superficiality
approve of the converts made under false pretences who know nothing
of Christianity except rubber-stamp Malay phraseology.
In the meantime,
while the controversy rages on, the shrewd missionaries are steadily
gaining ground. At present a Catbolic priest arid a Protestant missionary
are stationed in Den Pasar, and another missionary, a Catholic,
is stationed in buleleng, all three undoubtedly discreet but tireless
in their efforts to " save the Balinese.
But Bali is certainly
not the place where missionaries could improve in any way the moral
and physical standards of the people and it is hard to believe,
knowing the Balinese character, that they will succeed. Religion
is to the Balinese more than spectacular ceremonies with music,
dancing, and a touch of drama f or virility; it is their law, the
force that holds the community together. It is the greatest stimulus
of their lives because it has given them their ethics, culture,
wisdom, and joy of living by providing the exuberant festivity they
love. More than a religion, it is a moral philosophy of high spiritual
value, gay and free of fanaticism, which explains to them the mysterious
forces of nature. It is difficult to imagine that it will ever be
supplanted by a bleak escapist faith devoid of beautiful and dramatic
ritual.
The little island
of Bali, now famous for the beauty of its people, its intense religious
life, and its colourful arts, music, and theatre, is still one of
those amazing nations that we shall never know again, one of the
so-called primitive countries. It is obvious that the Balinese are
by no means a primitive people, although we use the term to differentiate
our own material civili. zation from the native cultures in which
the daily life, society, arts, and religion form a united whole
that cannot be separated into its component parts without disrupting
it; the cultures where spiritual values dictate the mode of living.
Perhaps of even
greater importance than the fascinating artistic development, and,
in all probability, the factor that motivated the artistic impulse
of the population, is the unique manner in which they have solved
their social and economic problems. Bali presents the amazing spectacle
of a compact nation of over one million bard-working, cultured people
living in a deeplyrooted, well-co-ordinated form of agrarian socialism,
that has, perhaps because of its elemental directness, until recently,
minimized the social and economic evils that today afflict the less
fortunate Test of the world. The primitive Balinese socialism flourished
parallel to mediaeval feudalism despite five centuries of domination
by an aristocracy that with all its ruthlessness could not break
down the inherent unity and co-operativism of the Balinese communities.
The nobility
met with insurmountable passive resistance to any encroachments
upon the autonomy of the villages and had finally to content themselves
with the collection of tribute from their " vassals."
The common people tolerated the princes, but even today they consider
them as total outsiders and in most social and administrative matters
the villages remain entrenched against all interference from the
noble landlords, now appointed as go-betweens between the people
and the Dutch Government mainly to the same office to which the
threat of boycott reduced them in the past - the collection of taxes.
We have seen
that the Balinese are fanatics about organization. From childhood
to old age a Balinese joins all sorts of societies, from the clubs
of " virgin " boys and girls, of actors, musicians, and
even squirrel-chasers, to the great agricultural, fishing, village,
and ward associations that control the internal government of the
communities. Every one of their activities is managed, not individually,
but communally, with every active member having a vote and a voice
in every enterprise. Naturally, individualism did not develop in
the strict communalistic society; individual names are hardly ever
used and they call one another " brother ... .. father,"
" teacher," or " grandfather." All art is anonymous
and only recently have painters begun to sign their works, owing
entirely to the influence of Europeans. This, however, did not kill
individuality of expression; it is easy to detect the authorship
of a certain painting or a sculpture if one is familiar with the
author'swork, every notable actor or dancer has his own unmistakable
way of performing standard dances or improvising lines for a play,
and no two orchestras play alike.
In the larger
towns and in the districts where the princes held sway, landownership
became more individualistic, but elsewhere the right of landed property
is not recognized as absolute and an undesirable member of the community
cannot hold property given to him or to his ancestors against the
will of the village council. A landowner cannot sell his property
within the jurisdiction of the village without authorization from
the council and it can be confiscated if be misuses it or if he
abuses his privileges.
Instead of the
familiar exploitation, enslavement, and economic inequality imposed
on the population by a ruling class of aristocrats or bureaucrats
so often found in countries where the government is centralized
in individuals, in Bali we find an economically independent majority
that is truly democratic because every representative villager,
regardless of his caste or his wealth,
is an active
member of the village council with an equal voice in village affairs
and with equal duties to perform. The government of the villages
remained impersonal and with a minimum evidence of even its existence,
because power was equally divided among the members of the various
councils, and the executive officials, such as kliangs, council
beads, treasurers, and so forth, and theatre, is still one of those
amazing nations that we shall never know again, one of the so-called
primitive countries. It is obvious that the Balinese are by no means
a primitive people, although we use the term to differentiate our
own material civili. zation from the native cultures in which the
daily life, society, arts, and religion form a united whole that
cannot be separated into its omcponent parts without disrupting
it; the cultures where spiritual values dictate the mode of living.
Perhaps of even
greater importance than the fascinating artistic development, and,
in all robability, the factor that motivated the artistic impulse
of the population, is the unique manner in which they have solved
their social and economic problems. Bali presents the amazing spectacle
of a compact nation of over one million bard-working, cultured people
living in a deeplyrooted, well coordinated form of agrarian socialism,
that has, perhaps because of its elemental directness, until recently,
minimized the social and economic evils that today afflict the less
fortunate Test of the world. The primitive Balinese socialism flourished
parallel to mediaeval feudalism despite five centuries of domination
by an aristocracy that with all its ruthlessness could not break
down the inherent unity and co-operativism of the Balinese communities.
The nobility
met with insurmountable passive resistance to any encroachments
upon the autonomy of the villages and had finally to content themselves
with the collection of tribute from their " vassals."
The common people tolerated the princes, but even today they consider
them as total outsiders and in most social and administrative matters
the villages remain entrenched against all interference from the
noble landlords, now appointed as go-betweens between the people
and the Dutch Government mainly to the same office to which the
threat of boycott reduced them in the past - the collection of taxes.
We have seen
that the Balinese are fanatics about organization. From childhood
to old age a Balinese joins all sorts of societies, from the clubs
of " virgin " boys and girls, of actors, musicians, and
even squirrel-chasers, to the great agricultural, fishing, village,
and ward associations that control the internal government of the
communities. Every one of their activities is managed, not individually,
but communally, with every active member having a vote and a voice
in every enterprise. Naturally, individualism did not develop in
the strict communalistic society; individual names are hardly ever
used and they call one another " brother ... .. father,"
" teacher," or " grandfather." All art is anonymous
and only recently have painters begun to sign their works, owing
entirely to the influence of Europeans. This, however, did not kill
individuality of expression; it is easy to detect the authorship
of a certain painting or a sculpture if one is familiar with the
author'swork, every notable actor or dancer has his own unmistakable
way of performing standard dances or improvising lines for a play,
and no two orchestras play alike.
In the larger
towns and in the districts where the princes held sway, landownership
became more individualistic, but elsewhere the right of landed property
is not recognized as absolute and an undesirable member of the community
cannot hold property given to him or to his ancestors against the
will of the village council. A landowner cannot sell his property
within the jurisdiction of the village without authorization from
the council and it can be confiscated if be misuses it or if he
abuses his privileges.
Instead of the
familiar exploitation, enslavement, and economic inequality imposed
on the population by a ruling class of aristocrats or bureaucrats
so often found in countries where the government is centralized
in individuals, in Bali we find an economically independent majority
that is truly democratic because every representative villager,
regardless of his caste or his wealth, is an active member of the
village council with an equal voice in village affairs and with
equal duties to perform. The government of the villages remained
impersonal and with a minimum evidence of even its existence, because
power was equally divided among the members of the various ouncils,
and the executive officials, such as kliangs, council beads, treasurers,
and so forth, ment of the people than most imperialistic colonizers
and in many cases have sided with the people against the princes
despite the fact that the old system of government of the Radjas
was preserved. No more can the despotic princes enslave or exploit
their helpless subjects, or as in old times kill or punish savagely
someone for such offences as disrespect or disobedience. Only two
of the former Radjas, those of Gianyar and Karangasem, because of
" loyalty " to the Government, retain their feudal rights
- in a considerably limited way, however - while the others are
rulers only in name. The Dutch have also stopped the bloody wars
between petty chieftains, and widows no longer kill themselves at
the pyre of their noble masters. Taxation still burdens the habitually
penniless peasants, although now at least they receive certain returns
for their money in the form of protection, health services, roads,
and so forth. Dr. Korn (Adatrecht van Bali) has already pointed
out that the problem confronting the Dutch in regard to Bali is
the gradual incorporation of the Balinese into modern life from
mediawal isolation through a better understanding of their institutions.
Fifty years ago, when Liefrink took charge of the administration
of North Bali, be understood that it was best to leave things more
or less as they Nvere. But in South Bali the change came more suddenly;
the ruling houses collapsed overnight and the Dutch bad to reorganize
the government of their new conquest hastily and without a thorough
knowledge of the island's laws and customs.
In late years
the Government of the Netherlands has commissioned scholars like
Doctors Korn, Coris, and Stutterbeim to make studies for a better
understanding of the law, the religion, and the history of Bali.
Perhaps through these studies those in charge of the colonial policy
of the Netherlands will realize, in the first place, that the Balinese
have a great culture that cannot be saved by the admiration of the
outside world, but only by commanding the respect and appreciation
of the Balinese themselves; that the native arts need no encouragement,
simply because they are still vividly alive, but that they do need
official recognition in the educational program of the schools that
are now turning out hybrid Balinese with contempt for whatever does
not come from the outside world. Second, that the Balinese are agriculturists
living in small communities in which clerks and middlemen have no
place. Third, that their social organization not only is the best
suited, but is essential to their manner of living. And last but
not least, that their whole life, society, arts, ethics - in short,
their entire culture - cannot, without disrupting the entire system,
be separated from the set of rules which are called the Balinese
religion. If this principle is disturbed, the foundation will be
knocked from under the structure upon which the culture, the law
and order of the Balinese are based, and social and economic chaos
will eventually descend upon the happy and peaceful island of Bali.
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