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MALAY Archipelago lies directly on the volcanic belt of the world.
Like the backbone of some restless, formidable antediluvian monster,
more than three hundred volcanoes rise from The sea in a great chain
of islands - perhaps all that remains of A continent broken up in
prehistoric cataclysms - forming a continuous land bridge that links
Asia with Australia. Because of its peculiar and fantastic nature,
its complex variety of peoples, and its fabulous richness, the archipelago
is one of the most fascinating regions of the earth. It includes
famous islands like Java, Borneo, Sumatra, New Guinea, the Philippines,
and the hysterical. Island-volcano of Krakatao. Such freaks of nature
as the giant " dragon " lizards of Komodo, the coloured
lakes of Flores, the orangutans, the rafflesia (a flower over three
feet in diameter), and the birds of paradise, are to be found nowhere
else, The population of the islands ranges from such forms of primitive
humanity as the Negritos, the Papuans, the Kubus, who seem only
a few steps away in the evolutionary scale from the orangutan, to
the super civilized Hindu-Javanese, who over six hundred years ago
built monuments like Borobudur and Prambanan, jewels of Eastern
art.
Through the centuries, civilization upon civilization from all
directions has settled on the islands over the ancient megalithic
cultures of the aborigines, until each island has developed an individual
character, with a colorful culture, according to whether Chinese,
Hindu, Malay, Polynesian, Mohammedan, or European influence has
prevailed. Despite the mental isolation these differences have created,
even the natives believe that the islands once formed a unified
land. Raffles, in his History of lava, mentions a Javanese legend
that says, " the continent was split into nine parts, but when
three thousand rainy seasons will have elapsed, the Eastern Islands
shall again be reunited and the power of the white man shall end."
One of the smallest, but perhaps the most extraordinary, of the
islands, is the recently famous Bali - a cluster of high volcanoes,
their craters studded with serene lakes set in dark forests filled
with screaming monkeys. The long green slopes of the volcanoes,
deeply furrowed by ravines washed out by rushing rivers full of
rapids and waterfalls, drop steadily to the sea without forming
lowlands. just eight degrees south of the Equator, Bali has over
two thousand square miles of extravagantly fertile lands, most of
which are beautifully cultivated. Only a narrow strait, hardly two
miles across, separates Bali from Java; here again the idea that
the two islands were once joined and then separated is sustained
by the legend of the great Javanese king who was obliged to banish
his good-for-nothing son to Bali, then united to Java by a very
narrow isthmus. The king accompanied his son to the narrowest point
of the tongue of land; when the young prince had disappeared from
sight, to further emphasize the separation, he drew a line with
his finger across the sands. The waters met and Bali became an island.
The dangers lurking in the waters around the island suggest a possible
reason why Bali remained obscure and unconquered until 1908. Besides
the strong tidal currents and the great depths of the straits, the
coasts are little indented and are constantly exposed to the full
force of the monsoons; where they are not bordered by dangerous
coral banks, they rise from the sea in steep cliffs. Anchorage is
thus out of the question except far out to sea, and the Dutch have
bad to build an artificial port in Benoa to afford a berth for small
vessels.
The beginning there was nothing, all was emptiness; there was
only space. Before there were the heavens, there was no earth, and
when there was no earth, there was no sky. Through meditation, the
world serpent Antaboga created the turtle Bedawang, on whom lie
coiled two snakes as the foundation of the World. On the world turtle
rests a lid, the Black Stone. There is no sun, there is no moon,
there is no night in the cave below (the underside of the stone);
this is the underworld, whose gods are the male Batara Kala and
the female Setesuyara. There lives also the great serpent Basuki."
Kala created the light and Mother Earth, over which extends a layer
of water. Over this again are consecutive domes or skies, high and
low; one of mud (which dried to become the earth and the mountains);
then the 'empty' middle sky (the atmosphere), where Iswara dwells;
above this is the floating sky, the clouds, where Semara sits, the
god of love. Beyond that follows the 'dark' (blue) sky with the
sun and the moon, the home of Surya; this is why they are above
the clouds. Next is the Perfumed Sky beautiful and full of rare
flowers where live the bird Tiak, whose face is like a human face,
the serpent Taksaka, who has legs and wings, and the awan snakes,
the falling stars. Still higher in the sky gringsing wayang, the'
flaming heaven of the ancestors! And over all the skies live the
great gods who keep watch over the heavenly nymphs." Thus we
have it that the island rests on the turtle, which floats on the
ocean.
As the last Asiatic outpost to the east, Bali is interesting to
the naturalist as an illustration of the theory of evolution. In
1869 Alfred Russell Wallace discovered that the fauna and flora
typical of Asia end in Bali, while the earlier, more primitive biologi.
cal forms found in Australia begin to appear in the neighboring
island of Lombok, just east of Bali.
This is from the Catur Yoga, a popular manuscript which translated
for the sake of practice on the language. It consists of ideas on
cosmogony, mythology, legends of the creation of man, etc., ending
in a confused set of rules for crema tion and Balinese genealogies.
(Banteng), Monkeys, woodpeckers, pythons, etc., of Asia are not
to be found farther east, and the cockatoos, parrots, and giant
lizards predominate. Bali has the luxuriant vegetation of tropical
Asia, while Lombok is and and thorny, like Australia. Wallace drew
a line across the narrow straits between Bali and Lombok, the deepest
waters in the archipelago, to divide Asia from Oceania.' Today,
however, scientists are more inclined to regard the islands as a
transitional region.
As in all countries near the Equator, Bali has an eternal summer
with even, warm weather, high humidity, and a regular variation
of winds, but the unbearable heat of lands similarly situated is
greatly relieved by sea breezes that blow constantly over the descending
slopes of the four volcanoes that form the island. The seasons are
not distinguished as hot and cold, but as wet and dry. It is pleasantly
cool and dry during our summer months, when the southeasterly winds
blow, but in November the north-west monsoon ushers in six months
of a rainy season so violent that it makes everything rot away,
growing green whiskers of mould on shoes that are not shined every
day. Then the atmosphere becomes hot and sticky and the torrential
rains that lash the island cause landslides that often carry enormous
trees into the deep ravines cut into the soft volcanic ash by the
rivers, themselves red with earth washed from the mountain. Brooks
and rivers swell into huge torrents (banjir) that rise unexpectedly
with a deafening roar, in front of one's eyes, carrying away earth,
plants, and occasional drowned pigs, destroying bridges and irrigation
works. It is not unusual for a careless bather to be surprised by
a sudden banjir and to be carried away in the muddy stream.
It is only natural that in a land of steep mountains, with such
abundant rains, crossed in all directions by streams and great rivers,
on a soil impregnated with volcanic ash, the earth should attain
great richness and fertility. The burning tropical sun shining on
the saturated earth produces a steaming, electric, hot. house atmosphere
that gives birth to the dripping jungles that cover the slopes of
the. Volcanoes with prehistoric tree-ferns, pandanus, and palms,
strangled in a mesh of creepers of all sorts, their trunks smothered
with orchids and alive with leeches, fantastic butterflies, birds,
and screeching wild monkeys. This exuberance extends to the cultivated
parts of the island, where-the rice fields that cover this over-populated
land produce every year, and without great effort, two crops of
the finest rice in the Indies.
Despite the enormous population, the lack of running water has
kept the western part of the island uninhabited and wild. The few
remaining tigers, and the deer, wild bog, crocodiles, great lizards,
jungle cocks, etc., are the sole dwellers in this and hilly country
covered with a dusty, low brush. Curiously enough, the Balinese
regard this deserted land (Pulaki) as their place of origin. They
explain in an old legend that a great city, which still exists,
once flourished there, but has been made invisible to human eyes
by Wahu Rahu, the greatest Brahmana from Java, who was forced to
flee from the capital, Gelgel, to save his beautiful daughter from
the king (by caste his inferior) and who found refuge in Pulaki
by making the city invisible to the wicked king and his followers.
Another and region in contrast with the extravagant fertility of
the island is the peninsula of limestone called Tafelhoek (Bukit
to the Balinese) which rises to a height of 700 feet above the sea.
This curious tableland, which shows every indication of having once
been at the bottom of the ocean, is joined to the mainland by 2
low, narrow isthmus, but its sides rise almost vertically from the
sea, and on the extremity of a long narrow rock, with a straight
drop Of 250 feet, is the fantastically situated temple of Uluwatu,
one of the holiest in Bali. This projecting rock is believed to
be the ship, turned to stone, of Dewi Danu, the goddess of waters.
The mountains with their likes and rivers are the home of the gods
and the sources of the land's fertility, and they stand for everything
that is holy and healthy. To the Balinese everything that is high
is good and powerful, so it is natural that the sea, lower than
the lowest point of land, with the sharks and barracuda that infest
the waters, and the deadly sea-snakes and poisonous fish that live
among the treacherous coral reefs, should be considered as tenget,
magically dangerous, the home of the evil spirits. Few Balinese
know how to Swim and they rarely venture into the sea except to
bathe near the shallow beaches, and then they go only a few feet
from the shore. There are small settlements of fishermen who brave
the malarial coasts of Kuta, Sanur, Benua, and Ketewel, but in general
fishing is done on a small scale, either with casting-nets, or in
beautiful prows shaped like fantastic.
Elephant-fish " (gajah-mina) with elegant stylized trunks,
and eyes to see at night. With their triangular sails apex downward,
they go far out to sea at sunset to procure the giant sea-turtles
required at the frequent banquets of this feast-loving people. Most
Balinese seldom eat fish and remain essentially a rice-eating race.
Their repugnance for the sea may be due to the same religious fear
of the supernatural that prevents them from climbing to the summit
of the great mountains. The Balinese feel that the heights are for
the gods, the middle world for humans, and the depths and low points
for the spirits of the underworld. They dread the unholy loneliness
of the beaches haunted by demons and they believe that the coastline
is under the influence of Jero Gede Mecaling, the Fanged Giant,
who lives on the barren island of Nusa Penida. They are one of the
rare island peoples in the world who turn their eyes not outward
to the waters, but upward to the mountain tops.
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