http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/lifeandtimes/in-pursuit-of-the-dragons-of-alor/373491

May 06, 2010 
Tim Hannigan 

In Pursuit of the Dragons of Alor

In the fishing village of Lanleki on the island of Alor, I met an old man who 
had seen a dragon. His name was Achmad. Sitting in the narrow front room of his 
small house, he told me his story. Forty years ago, long before he made the 
hajj pilgrimage to Mecca, he was walking along a narrow path that leads to the 
village when the dragon emerged from the sea and chased him through the trees. 
It had horns like a buffalo and seven flickering tongues. 

The most easterly landfall in the island chain that stretches east of Java, 
Alor is a place of pale beaches and dark, myth-filled hills. Like many other 
regions of Indonesia, the island has undergone remarkable changes in the last 
century. In 1938, American anthropologist Cora Du Bois visited Alor and records 
she kept describe an island where people knew little of money and spoke no 
Indonesian. Though there was a long established halo of Islam around the coast, 
Protestant missionaries had little success spreading their religion in the 
hills and most people worshiped only the spirits of the countryside. Dutch 
colonialists claimed to have pacified the island at the turn of the 20th 
century, but clan warfare and headhunting were still practiced. 

Seventy years later, roads have snaked into the hills, whitewashed churches 
have sprouted in remote villages and most of the population has become 
nominally Christian. The island's capital, Kalabahi, has filled with buzzing 
motorbikes. There are daily flights from Kupang and even a nascent tourist 
industry. 

But, as I was to discover, Alor, part of East Nusa Tenggara province, is still 
a place where old beliefs and traditions hold strong, and where there is little 
distinction between history and myth. This is an island that could still be 
marked on the map with the words: Here be dragons... 

Alor is smaller than Bali and has a population of just 168,000. But it is 
perhaps the most linguistically diverse place in Indonesia; as many as 17 
languages and numerous dialects are spoken here. There is a similar diversity 
of culture, with the creation myths of one village often meaning nothing to the 
people of the next. But there are certain threads that run throughout the 
island. Dragons, for one, are a part of the folklore one hears from village to 
village. Only here they are spoken of not as mythological creatures, but as 
real entities. 

If I wanted to learn more about dragons, Achmad said, I should go to the 
village of Alor Kecil. A Muslim village with concrete houses and tin-roofed 
mosques shaded by huge banyan trees, Alor Kecil lies at the western tip of the 
rugged peninsula that bulges to the north of Kalabahi Bay. As I picked my way 
through the village I spotted dragon figures everywhere. There were dragons 
carved into door frames, dragons woven into pieces of local ikat cloth and 
dragon statues outside the community hall. 

Sitting outside the lineage house of the Suku Bao Raja, Alor Kecil's royal 
clan, I met a young man named Jason. I asked him about dragons. The naga, or 
dragon, he said, was the protector of the village. It had come originally from 
the ground in the hills to the north, but today it lived in the sea. I repeated 
Achmad's story and Jason was not surprised. 

"People do see the dragon, but not often. It's usually outsiders who see it, 
not locals," he said. 

He told me that all of the people of Alor Kecil and the surrounding settlements 
were descended from a man who rose from the earth in a place called Bampalola 
in the hills above the coast. Following his directions I traveled up a steep 
track that wound between the ridges. 

Bampalola is a modern village with a school and a mosque. One kilometer 
downhill through the maize fields, on a high promontory at the end of a 
razor-sharp ridge, stood the old village, Lakatuli. No one lived in Lakatuil 
now, but the place was still used for traditional ceremonies. Tall thatched 
roofs rose above bamboo-floored platforms. Elaborate carvings on beams and 
banisters were picked out in white and ochre, and dragons were chiseled into 
the woodwork. 

Looking at them I was reminded of a grainy black-and-white photo in Du Bois's 
1944 book, "The People of Alor." It was a picture of an ulenai, a carving 
representing the village guardian spirit. Though the ulenai lacked the 
stylistic touches clearly borrowed from Chinese art that I had seen on carvings 
in Alor Kecil and Bampalola, it was very obviously a dragon. 

Du Bois had written of ancestor myths and guardian spirits. "This whole concept 
will undoubtedly become the center of revivalistic cults when Alorese culture 
crumbles, as it inevitably will under the impact of foreign colonization," Du 
Bois wrote. But much of the island's ancient traditions appeared intact and it 
seemed the people's belief in the dragon as a powerful protector had never 
faded from village life here. 

>From Bampalola I returned to the coast and the hamlet of Alu Kai, just east of 
>Alor Kecil. In the front room of a clan house with a carved dragon in the 
>corner, two of the village elders, Pak Amir and Pak Mo, told me more about 
>dragons, referring to their stories as "history" rather than legend. They made 
>no distinction between the dragon tales and the stories of the arrival of 
>Islam from Ambon and Makassar. 

The dragon first appeared from the earth in Bampalola many centuries ago, 
before the birth of mankind, they said. The first man rose in the same place 
later and his descendants traveled downhill to the shore where the founder of 
Alu Kai hamlet, Jai Manu, married a princess of the mysterious Sea People named 
Eko Sari. While they talked, children gathered in the doorway, just as they had 
done in Lanleki. Pak Amir smiled. 

"It's important for old men to talk; if the old men just keep silent then how 
will the children know their own history?" he said. 

There was one more place to visit in my pursuit of Alor's dragons. I'd heard 
that at the tip of the headland beyond Alor Kecil was a shrine dedicated to the 
dragon. I picked my way through stony fields and thorny scrub. Insects buzzed 
in the undergrowth and I could hear the sea, hissing onto the rocks nearby. I 
met a tall, barefoot man named Haider who led me to the shrine. 

It was a small structure, a low tin roof sheltering two shelves painted with 
long, black dragons, and on the top level a heavier, cruder dragon carving. Old 
coconut husks were scattered on the ground. A bunch of dried goats' ears hung 
on a rusty nail. It felt like a place of dark magic. People often come here to 
make offerings to the dragon, Haider said. Chickens and goats are routinely 
tossed into the sea as offerings, not just by local villagers, but also police 
chiefs and politicians from Kalabahi seeking the protection of the mysterious 
beast, he said. The dried carcass of a chicken hung from a branch. It was a 
strange, faintly unsettling place. As the afternoon sun slanted away over the 
hills of Pantar, I peered down into the water, half-expecting to see a horned, 
seven-tongued serpent rise from the depths.


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