Pak Dhe, kalau baca artikel berikut, katanya di Pontianak masih merayakan
Cap Go Meh juga lho. Di foto yang disertakan ada gambar arak-arakan naga
tanggal 9 Februari kemarin.

Salam,
Hendy Lie


http://www.ucanews.com/2009/02/16/chinese-indonesians-resume-cap-go-meh-celebration/

INDONESIA  Chinese-Indonesians resume Cap Go Meh Celebration February 16,
2009  |  IJ06676.1537  |  488 words

PONTIANAK, Indonesia (UCAN) -- Chinese-Indonesians in Pontianak, banned from
celebrating the Lunar New Year last year, thronged the streets recently to
mark the last day of festivities for the Year of the Ox.
  [image: 7061_1.jpg]

Spectators in Pontianak watching a dragon dance

*"I am so glad that I can now see dragon dances again in Pontianak," said
Vivi, a Chinese girl*. She was among thousands of spectators watching eight
20-meter-long colorful dragon figures,carried on poles, prance down
Gajahmada Street on Feb. 9 in the provincial capital of West Kalimantan.

"It is a sign that the local government and public recognize and respect
different cultures," she said. The Cap Go Meh celebration, held on the 15th
day of the Lunar New Year, marks the final day of New Year festivities.

"The Chinese community here has longed for this celebration," another
Chinese spectator commented. He explained that last year, the Pontianak
mayor banned Lunar New Year celebrations because of protests by local Muslim
Malays. "The new mayor lifted the ban, so this year the Chinese community
can organize these festivities publicly."

Deputy Mayor Paryadi, in his address before launching the Cap Go Meh
celebration, said the festivity is part of West Kalimantan's cultural
heritage. "I hope this celebration strengthens harmony among the people of
Pontianak," he said to the crowd that comprised mostly Chinese-Indonesians
but also included local Dayaks and Malays as well as migrants from Java and
Madura.

The celebration started with a ritual to open the eyes of the dragons and
invite the guardian spirit of the universe to enter the figures. The dragons
were then taken in a procession around the city to expel evil spirits and
diseases, and to bring good fortune to the people.

During the procession, several performers, called *tatung*, were supposedly
possessed by spirits and entered into a trance. They stepped on blades and
pierced their lips, noses and cheeks with skewers.

The celebration ended with the burning of the dragon figures as a symbol of
the casting out of evil spirits and diseases from the area.

Chinese Catholics in the crowd said they did not participate in the
religious rituals. "I am Chinese, but I am also Catholic. So I just watched
the dragon procession but did not take part in the rituals," said Steven, a
parishioner of St. Joseph Cathedral Church.

Father Antonius Sutadi, head of Pastor Bonus (Good Shepherd) School of
Theology of Pontianak, said Catholics are not prohibited from celebrating
Cap Go Meh. "But they may not take part in the rituals and activities to
worship gods. Catholics are also prohibited to perform as *tatung*," he
said.

Cap Go Meh was also celebrated in Singkawang, also in West Kalimantan, in
Jakarta, and other Indonesian cities and towns.

The late President Soeharto banned public expression of Chinese culture and
beliefs, as well as Chinese festivals and celebrations, in 1967. In 1999,
President Abdurrahman Wahid annulled the ban, and his successor, Megawati
Soekarnoputri, declared the Lunar New Year a national holiday in 2002.

END


2009/2/12 Hidayat Boesran <[email protected]>

>
> Perayaan CGM di Pontianak tidak dilarang . . .
> Namun memang sengaja tidak dilaksanakan . . .
>

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