Abstract
The Dutch colonial state categorized animists and ancestor-worshippers and inscribed them into written records in ways that have had long-term effects. The immediate post-independence period in Maluku, despite early political turmoil, settled down to a kind of stability under the New Order, the paradoxical outcome of which was both gradual integration of Nuaulu into a wider political and cultural consensus and conditions favouring economic change that undermined that consensus. The new policies of reformasi after 1998 presented further opportunities for Nuaulu to engage with the state in ways that promoted their interests. The opportunities were short-lived, however, given the implosive events of the communal unrest that lasted until 2001. This paper illustrates how this history has influenced Nuaulu self-perceptions and conceptualization of themselves as a separate people with a "religion" that goes beyond simply adherence to adat, and how this process has been partly driven by demography and a desire for pragmatic accommodation.
References
Acciaioli, Greg. 1985. “Culture as art; From practice to spectacle in Indonesia”, Canberra Anthropology 8(1-2): 148-172.
Appadurai, Arjun. 1996. Modernity at large; Cultural dimensions of globalization. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
Atkinson, Jane Monnig. 1987. “Religions in dialogue; The construction of an Indonesian minority religion”, in: Rita Smith Kipp and Susan Rodgers (eds), Indonesian religions in transition, pp. 171-186. Tucson: University of Arizona Press.
Atlas bahasa tanah Maluku. 1996. Atlas bahasa tanah Maluku. Ambon: Pusat pengkajian dan pengembangan Maluku, Universitas Pattimura and Summer Institute of Linguistics.
Bartels, Dieter. 1977. Guarding the invisible mountain; Intervillage alliances, religious syncretism, and ethnic identity among Ambonese Christians and Moslems in the Moluccas. PhD thesis, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York.
Bartels, Dieter. 1978. “Religious syncretism, semantic depletion, and secondary interpretation in Ambonese Islam and Christianity in the Moluccas”, Kabar Seberang 4: 49-56.
Bartels, Dieter. 1979. “Magicians and politicians; Power, adaptive strategies, and syncretism in the central Moluccas”, in: Gloria Davis (ed.), What is modern Indonesian culture?, pp. 282-299. Athens: Ohio University Center for International Studies.
Bartels, Dieter. 2003. “Your God is no longer mine; Moslem-Christian fratricide in the Central Moluccas (Indonesia) after a half-millennium of tolerant co-existence and ethnic unity”, in: Sandra Pannell (ed.), A state of emergency; Violence, society, and the state in eastern Indonesia, pp. 128-153. Darwin: Northern Territory University Press.
Bleeker, P. 1856. Reis door de Minahassa en de Molukschen archipel; Gedaan in de maanden september en oktober 1855 in het gevolg van den Gouverneur Generaal Mr. A.J. Duymaer van Twist. Batavia: Lange.
Bouman, J.C. et al. 1960. The South Moluccas; Rebellious province or occupied state. Leiden: Sythoff.
Chauvel, Richard. 1990. Nationalists, soldiers, and separatists; The Ambonese Islands from colonialism to revolt, 1880-1950. Leiden: KITLV Press.
Collins, James T. 1982. “Linguistic research in Maluku; A report on recent fieldwork”, Oceanic Linguistics 21: 73-146.
Deninger, Karl. 1914. “Morphologische Uebersicht der Insel Seran”, Petermanns Mitteilungen 60: 16-18.
Donahue, B. and J.O. Habeck (eds). 2011. Reconstructing the house of culture; Community, self, and the makings of culture in Russia and beyond. Oxford: Berghahn.
Ellen, R.F. 1988a. “Social theory, ethnography, and the understanding of practical Islam in South-East Asia”, in: M.B. Hooker (ed.), Islam in SouthEast Asia, pp. 50-91. Leiden: E.J. Brill.
Ellen, R.F. 1988b. “Ritual, identity, and the management of inter-ethnic relations on Seram”, in: Henri J.M. Claessen and David S. Moyer (eds), Time past, time present, time future: Perspectives on Indonesian culture; Essays in honour of Professor P.E. de Josselin de Jong, pp. 117-135. Dordrecht/ Providence: Foris. [KITLV Verhandelingen 131.]
Ellen, R.F. 1999. “Forest knowledge, forest transformation; Political contingency, historical ecology, and the renegotiation of nature in central Seram”, in: Tania Li (ed.), Transforming the Indonesian uplands; Marginality, power, and production, pp. 131-157. Amsterdam/Harwood. [Studies in Environmental Anthropology 4.]
Ellen, R.F. 2002. “Nuaulu head-taking; Negotiating the twin dangers of presentist and essentialist reconstructions”, Social Anthropology 10(3): 281-301.
Ellen, R.F. 2003. On the edge of the Banda zone; Past and present in the social organization of a Moluccan trading network. Honolulu: University of Hawai’i Press.
Ellen, R.F. 2004. “Escalating socio-environmental stress and the preconditions for political instability in south Seram; The very special case of the Nuaulu”, Cakalele; Maluku Research Journal 11: 41-64.
Ellen, R.F. 2012. Nuaulu religious practices; The frequency and reproduction of rituals in a Moluccan society. Leiden: KITLV Press. [KITLV Verhandelingen 283.]
Fraassen, C. F. van. 1983. “Historical introduction”, in: Polman, K. (ed.), The Central Moluccas; An annotated bibliography, pp. 1-59. Dordrecht: Foris. [KITLV Bibliographical Series 12.]
Galvão, António. 1971. A treatise on the Moluccas (c.1544); Probably the preliminary version of António Galvão’s lost História das Moluccas. Edited, annotated, and translated by H. Th. Th. M. Jacobs. Rome: Jesuit Historical Institute. [First published 1544.]
Geertz, Clifford. 1964. “’Internal conversion’ in contemporary Bali”, in: J. Bastin and R. Roolvink (eds), Malayan and Indonesian studies presented to Sir Richard Winstedt, pp. 282-302. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Geertz, Clifford. 1972. “Religious change and social order in Suharto’s Indonesia”, Asia 27 (Autumn): 62-84.
Gladney, D.C. 2003. Dislocating China; Muslims, minorities, and other subaltern subjects. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Grzimek, B.R.O. 1991. Social change on Seram; A study of ideologies of development in eastern Indonesia. PhD thesis, London School of Economics and Political Science, University of London.
Haar, B. ter. 1948. Adat law in Indonesia. New York: Institute of Pacific Relations. [Translated from the Dutch and edited by E. Adamson Hoebel and A. Arthur Schiller.]
Hasan, N. 2002. “Faith and politics; The rise of the Laskar Jihad in the era of transition in Indonesia”, Indonesia 73: 145-169.
Hefner, Robert. 1993. “Introduction; World building and the rationality of conversion”, in: Robert Hefner (ed.), Conversion to Christianity; Historical and anthropological perspectives on a great transformation, pp. 3-44. Berkeley: University of California Press.
Henley, D. and J.S. Davidson 2007. “Introduction; Radical conservatism – the protean politics of adat”, in: J. S. Davidson and D. Henley (eds), The revival of tradition in Indonesian politics; The deployment of adat from colonialism to indigenism, pp. 1-49. Routledge: London.
Hoëvell, G.W.W.C van. 1896. “Bijschrift bij de kaarten van Seran (vulgo Ceram)”, Tijdschrift van het Koninklijk Nederlandsch Aardrijkskundig Genootschap 13: 508-532.
Holleman, J. F. (ed.) 1981. Van Vollenhoven on Indonesian adat law. Martinus Nijhoff: The Hague. [KITLV Translation Series 20.]
Hoskins, Janet. 1987. “Entering the bitter house; spirit worship and conversion in West Sumba”, in: Rita Smith Kipp and Susan Rodgers (eds), Indonesian religions in transition, pp. 136-160. Tucson: University of Arizona Press.
Intan, B.F. 2006. “Public religion” and the Pancasila-based state of Indonesia; An ethical and sociological analysis. New York: Peter Lang. [American University Studies. Series VII. Theology and Religion.]
Kaam, B. van. 1977. The South Moluccans; Background to the train hijackings. London: Hurst.
Kantor Wilayah Kecamatan Seram Selatan. 1993. Statistik tahunan Seram Selatan. Amahai: Kantor Wilayah Kecamatan Seram Selatan.
Keane, W. 1995. “Religious change and historical reflection in Anakalang, West Sumba, Indonesia”, Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 26: 289-306.
Kelling, J. 1888. “Brief van J. Kelling uit Amahei”, Orgaan Nederlandsche Zendingsvereeniging 28: 181-186, 30: 134-139.
Kennedy, R. 1955. Field notes on Indonesia: South Celebes, 1949-1950, Harold C. Conklin (ed.), New Haven: Human Relations Area Files.
Kipp, Rita Smith and Susan Rodgers. 1987. “Introduction; Indonesian religions in society”, in: Rita Smith Kipp and Susan Rodgers (eds), Indonesian religions in transition, pp. 1-29. Tucson: University of Arizona Press.
Klinken, G. van. 2001. “The Maluku wars; Bringing society back in”, Indonesia 71: 1-26.
Knaap, G.J. 1991. “A city of migrants; Kota Ambon at the end of the seventeenth century”, Indonesia 51: 105-128.
Koentjaraningrat. 1967. “The village in Indonesia today”, in: Koentjaraningrat (ed.), Villages in Indonesia, pp. 386-405. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.
Krayer van Aalst, H. 1911. “Warasiwa”, De Macedoniër 15: 225-233.
Kruisheer, A. 1928. “Over West-Seram en over het verzet der Makahalastammen in 1914-1915”, De Indische Gids 50(1): 233-252.
Langenberg, M. van. 1990. “New order state; Language, ideology, hegemony”, in: A. Budiman (ed.), State and civil society in Indonesia, pp. 121-150. Melbourne: Monash Asia Institute.
Li, T. 2007. “Adat in Central Sulawesi; Contemporary deployments”, in: J.S. Davidson and D. Henley (eds.), The revival of tradition in Indonesian politics; The deployment of adat from colonialism to indigenism, pp. 337-370. London: Routledge.
Moniaga, S. 2007. “From bumiputera to masyarakat adat; A long and confusing journey”, in: J. S. Davidson and D. Henley (eds), The revival of tradition in Indonesian politics; The deployment of adat from colonialism to indigenism, pp. 275-294. London: Routledge.
Nader, L. 1991. “Harmony models and the construction of law”, in: K. Avruch, P.W. Black, and J.A. Scimecca (eds), Conflict resolution; Cross-cultural perspectives, pp 41-59. New York: Greenwood Press.
Polman, K. 1982. The Central Moluccas; An annotated bibliography. Dordrecht: Foris. [KITLV Bibliographical Series 12.]
Rees, W.A. van. 1863. “De krijgstocht op Ceram in 1860”, Koloniale Jaarboeken 3: 65-86, 129-163.
Rumphius, G. 1910 (1687). “De Ambonsche Historie”, Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde 64(1, 2). The Hague: Nijhoff.
Sachse, F.J.P. 1907. Het eiland Seran en zijne bewoners. Leiden: Brill.
Schulte Nordholt, H. 2002. “A genealogy of violence”, in: F. Colombijn and J. Thomas Lindblad (eds), Roots of violence in Indonesia; Contemporary violence in historical perspective, pp. 33-61. Leiden: KITLV Press. [KITLV Verhandelingen 194.]
Schurhammer, G. 1963. Franz Xavier, sein Leben und seine Zeit, II. Bd. Asien (1541-1552), I. Halbb. Indien und Indonesien, 1541-1547. Freiburg-BaselWein.
Schurhammer, G. 1980. Francis Xavier; His life, his times, Volume III, Indonesia and India, 1545-1549. Rome: Jesuit Historical Institute.
Scott. M. 2011. “The Makiran Underground Army; Kastom mysticism and ontology politics in South-east Solomon Islands”, in: Edvard Hviding and Knut M. Rio (eds), Made in Oceania; Social movements, cultural heritage, and the state in the Pacific, pp. 195-222. Wantage: Sean Kingston Publishing.
Sebag-Montefiore, S. 2000. Prince of princes; The life of Potemkin. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson.
Shay, A. 2002. Choreographic politics; State folk dance companies, representation and power. Middletown: Wesleyan University Press.
Smith, Douglas, (ed. and trans.). 2005. Love and conquest; Personal correspondence of Catherine the Great and Prince Grigory Potemkin. DeKalb: Northern Illinois University Press.
Soselisa, H.L. 2004. “Sagu salempeng tapata dua; Conflict and resource management in central Maluku”, Cakalele 11: 65-80.
Spyer, P. 1996. “Serial conversion: religion, state, and number in Aru, eastern Indonesia”, in: P. van der Veer (ed.), Conversion to modernities; The globalization of Christianity, pp. 171-98. New York, London: Routledge.
Spyer, P. 2000. The memory of trade; Modernity’s entanglements on an eastern Indonesian island. Durham and London: Duke University Press.
Spyer, P. 2002. “Fire without smoke and other phantoms of Ambon’s violence; Media effects, agency, and the work of imagination”, Indonesia 74 (October): 21-36.
Tichelman, G.L. 1925. “De onderafdeeling Amahei, Seran”, Tijdschrift van het Koniklijk Nederlandsch Aardrijkskundig Genootschap 42: 653-724.
Tichelman, G.L. 1960. “Anthropological aspects”, in: J.C. Bouman et al., The South Moluccas; Rebellious province or occupied state, pp. 173-96. Leiden: Sythoff.
Tsing, A.T. 1987. “A rhetoric of centers in a religion of the periphery”, in: Rita Smith Kipp and Susan Rodgers (eds), Indonesian religions in transition, pp. 187-210. Tucson: University of Arizona Press.
Tunny, M. Azis. 2010. “Noaulu people seek fair treatment”, The Jakarta Post 05 November. [Http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2010/11/05/ noaulu-peop, accessed 8-11-2010.]
Turner, K. 2003. “Myths and moral authority in Maluku: the case of Ambon”, Asian Ethnicity 4(2): 241-263.
Valeri, V. 1980. “Notes on the meaning of marriage prestations among the Huaulu of Seram”, in: J.J. Fox (ed.), The flow of life; Essays on eastern Indonesia, pp. 178-192. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
Valeri, V. 1989. “Reciprocal centers; the Siwa-Lima system in the central Moluccas”, in: D. Maybury-Lewis and U. Almagor (eds), The attraction of opposites, pp. 117-141. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
Vries, S.J. de. 1875. “Kerkelijk rapport van den zendelingleeraar de Vries te Amahai (Ceram)”, Tijdschrift voor Indische Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde 22: 220-253.
Webb, R.A.F. 1986. “The sickle and the cross; Christians and communists in Bali, Flores, Sumba, and Timor, 1965-67”, Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 17(1): 94-112.
Zerner, C. 1994. “Through a green lens; The construction of customary environmental law and community in Indonesia’s Maluku Islands”, Law and Society Review 28(5): 1079–1122.
Recommended Citation
Ellen, Roy
(2014)
"Pragmatism, identity, and the state; How the Nuaulu of Seram have reinvented their beliefs and practices as "religion","
Wacana, Journal of the Humanities of Indonesia: Vol. 15:
No.
2, Article 3.
DOI: 10.17510/wacana.v15i2.403
Available at:
https://scholarhub.ui.ac.id/wacana/vol15/iss2/3