RITES
AND FESTIVALS
RELIGIONS
WERE BORN OF MAN'S DESIRE to understand and control the mysterious
process of nature. Fear of the eerie, unseen forces that cause
birth, reproduction, and death, awe before the power of fire,
wind, and water, made him worship the elements of the teeming
world in which he lived. Only by the existence of psychic forces
and powerful spirits could he explain the perpetual motion of
the sun and the moon, the roll of the sea, and the movements of
the clouds, the wind that shakes the trees, lightning, thunder,
and rain. Health, fertility, and success he attributed to his
magic harmony with these forces, while for earthquakes, volcanic
disturbances, epidemics, and the loss of crops he blamed the anger
of spirits whom he had failed to propitiate.
Eager to place his fate
in the hands of superior beings who would take care of his needs
and on whom he could place the responsibility for his failures,
man created a pantheon of supernatural beings - protective gods
and adverse evil spirits - whose goodwill be aimed to gain by
rites, offerings, and sacrifices. Unconsciously, by elaboration
and by the adoption of new elements into the pantheon, he ended
by developing an elaborate system of ritual and magic acts. Thus
the primitive Balinese made of their island a magic world populated
by gods, human beings, and demons. each occupying a level allotted
by rank: the deified spirits of their ancestors dwelling in the
summits of the volcanoes that form the island; ordinary human
beings living in the middle world, the land that lies between
the mountain tops and the sea, which is the home of devils and
fanged giants, the enemies of mankind.
Placed between these two
poles from which emanate opposing forces (the positive from the
mountains and the negative from the underworld), the entire life
of the calm and sensitive Balinese - their daily routine, social
organization, their ethics, manners, art; in short, the total
culture of the island - is moulded by a system of traditional
rules subordinated to religious beliefs. By this system they regulate
every act of their lives so that it shall be in harmony with the
natural forces, which they divide eternally -into pairs: male
and female - the creative principle; right and left; high and
low - the principles of place, direction, and rank; strong and
weak, or healthy and sick, clean and unclean; sacred and powerful
or unholy and dangerous; in general: Good and Evil, Life and Death.