Barangkali tertarik pada sejarah kelenteng tersebut, di bawah ini
artikelnya.

Salam,
Ida Khouw

--------
Chinese temples boast distinct local flavor

By Ida Indawati Khouw  

   Jakarta is home to 70 Chinese temples, some of them dating back to
the 1650s and declared protected buildings. Da bo gong and Jin de yuan
are the two oldest extant temples. This is the 24th article in a
series, published every Saturday, on Jakarta's historical sites and
buildings.  

   JAKARTA (JP): Many assume that Chinese temples are the exclusive
domain of the ethnic minority population. But a temple in North
Jakarta is unique because Muslims, including native Indonesians, also
visit there.  
   
Although the building is large, it is quite difficult to find the
Taoist temple, which is situated in a remote area near the Ancol
recreational park in North Jakarta and encircled by exclusive housing
complexes.  
   
The temple, whose official name is Da bo gong Miao, was built when the
area was dotted with sprawling mansions with spacious grounds.  
"But they were abandoned because the whole area became heavily
infested with malaria," said historian Adolf Heuken in his book
Historical Sites of Jakarta.  

Historians Denys Lombard and Claudine Salmon described Ancol in the
past as "an area far from the city's wall (present downtown Kota area
in West Jakarta, the center of the Dutch colonial government) with no
inhabitants".  

Quoting A. Teisseire who wrote about the temple in an essay on Batavia
published in 1792, Heuken said it was the oldest Chinese temple in the
city and erected in about 1650.  

The building has been restored several times, with the current
structure dating from around the 18th century, he added.  

It is little different in physical appearance from others, with
several altars, statues and a place for the ritual burning of offerings.  

The difference is in the names engraved beneath the statues of the
temple's deities.  
The names are not Chinese, as one might expect, but Indonesian    Ibu
Sitiwati, Ibu Enneng, Ibu Mone and Embah Said Areli Dato Kembang.  

Statues of the female figures are dressed in outfits befitting Chinese
goddesses but Embah Said is part of an Islamic style tomb bearing an
Arab inscription.  

More surprising still is that worshipers are not allowed to bring
offerings of pork, a favorite food in the Chinese community, jengkol
(a large type of bean with a pungent odor) or petai, a smaller but
equally strong smelling bean.  

Temple official Suryanto said that anybody who broke the rule would
suffer a stomach ache.  
"To this day, we still maintain the rule," he said.  

How did this apparent harmonious mixing of religions and culture occur?  
Heuken wrote that both Muslims and Chinese people visited the temple
because "it is a Chinese klenteng (temple) but at the same time a
kramat (sacred) place to Muslims"  

Documents show the temple was built by Kong Toe Tjoe Seng under the
order of a Chinese helmsman, identified as Sampo Soeisoe.  

But before the temple was completed, the helmsman and his wife
Sitiwati    a Muslim Sundanese ronggeng dancer    died and were buried
together with the wife's younger sister Ibu Mone, Heuken said.  

Before their wedding, the couple had vowed that they would never eat
pork because it was forbidden for Muslims, or jengkol and petai, which
the totok (Chinese born migrants) detested because of the smell.  

"That's why the deities become angry if somebody brings those kinds of
food into the compounds," Heuken wrote.  

He added the temple's builder, Kong Toe Tjoe Seng, changed into a Toa
pekong or Da bo gong, an incarnation of the "God of the Earth", the
main deity of the Ancol temple.  

The tomb of Embah Said with his wife Ibu Enneng is situated behind the
main sanctuary. They are believed to have been the parents of Sitiwati
and Mone.  

Although this temple's mixing of cultures is unique in Jakarta,
similar ones are the Sampo Kong temple in Semarang, Central Java, and
one found on Kemarau island of Palembang, South Sumatra.  

An expert on Chinese architecture, Edison Yulius, said the phenomenon
should not be considered unusual.  

"Anybody's name can be inscribed in temples because those are
constructed out of respect for generous people or those considered to
have rendered the community many services. Such people were then
believed to have turned into deities," said the lecturer from
privately owned Tarumanagara University.  

The people were believed to be closer to God, and thus wishes could be
delivered through the deities.  

"That's why sick people went for cures to the temple when standard
medicine had yet to be discovered, while others hoped they would find
marriage partners," he said.  

Experts said that besides Ancol, there were four other temples in the
city dating back to the 17th century, but two of them have been
demolished.  

One of those which survived is Jin de yuan temple, now Wihara Dharma
Bhakti, considered the largest temple in the city and located on Jl.
Petak Sembilan in West Jakarta.  

The temple was built in the center of the Chinese community at about
the same time Da bo gong was constructed.  

The Buddhist temple was the "chief temple" in the city, according to
Lombard and Salmon, and was believed to have been built by a Chinese
official. With a name meaning "Temple of Golden Virtue", it was built
in 1755 by a Chinese kapitein, a Dutch term for captain given to
Chinese leaders in the Dutch East Indies.  

There are few records regarding the temple's history. Heuken only
noted that the Petak Sembilan temple was used for the Chinese New Year
festival and pudu (the festival in the middle of the seventh month of
the Chinese calendar), which were sometimes marked with Chinese puppets.  

Distortion  

Edison said the word for Chinese temple originated from the word miao,
which means to worship in the morning. However, the use of temples was
misinterpreted by lay people.  

He said Chinese migrants to Indonesia came from the southern part of
China, including areas like Guangdong, Fujian and Hakka, which was far
from the center of the kingdom where intellectuals and rulers lived.  

"There is a different understanding of religion between lay people and
the intellectuals. Lay people, like those residing in southern China,
had their own interpretation of worshiping in temples in which
mystical factors also played a role."  

Edison said the distorted concept was brought to Indonesia "so it is
not surprising if the Chinese temple is now full of superstition."  

He said there were three kinds of temples    Buddhist, Confucianist
and Taoist.  

"Taoist temples have the biggest number of deities, or 70, compared to
others." He said the Buddhist temple had 16 deities and the
Confucianist only one.

THE JAKARTA POST    SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2000    PAGE 6



--- In budaya_tionghua@yahoogroups.com, "Eddy Tlessh" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> wah thanks banget
> buat caroline dan kowajong
> bisa tahu detailnya, untuk mencapai daerah itu?
> soalnya rada buta untuk daerah ancol.
> 
> btw saran lain tetap terbuka untuk diterima ya...
> siapa tahu thread ini dibutuhkan juga untuk yg lain.
> 
> On 12/1/06, J H <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> >   Mungkin yg dimaksud caroline itu kelenteng yg di ancol.
> > Kelenteng tua ini adanya di dalam kompleks perumahan pasir putih -
ancol,
> > letaknya ada di ujung pinggir laut dan deket dgn kuburan belanda.
> > utk jelasnya bisa tanya ke satpam di kompleks pasir putih.
> >
> > On 01/12/06, [EMAIL PROTECTED]<Caroline.Wiriady%40honeylady.com><
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED] <Caroline.Wiriady%40honeylady.com>>
> >
> > wrote:
> > >
> > > Wihara yang di ancol itu sering dipake orang2 untuk foto pre-wed...
> > > Karena masih kental arsitektur tionghoanya..
> > > Tapi alamatnya saya kurang tau..maaf yach..


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