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BAJAWA PLACE TO INTEREST.
Bajawa
is located on the altitude of 1.100 meter above sea level and
surrounded by volcano. This town is cool and clean. Each house
always has colorful garden. Bajawa is also the center for Ngada
people, one of the most traditional ethnic groups in Flores. Many
people still live in their traditional houses. Traditional villages
in Bajawa scatter through to the mountain.
The significant symbols of tradition
amongst Ngada people
are
the pairs of ngadhu and haga. The ngadhu is male with parasol-like
structure about 3 meters high with a man look on top having machete
and spear on both of his hands. While bhaga is female with a
hut-like. Both ngadhu and bhaga symbolized the continuing presence
of ancestors.
Going to see the traditional villages in
Bajawa area is fun, but for a real challenge, you should try and
climb Gunung Inerie. It's tough and a little technical, but
stunningly beautiful and you can do it in a (pretty intense) half
day. That climb alone is worth the trip to Flores.
Although the vast majority of Flores is
Catholic, many people still follow their old ways, by living in
traditional villages and placing food offerings on megalithic
stones, to appease their ancestor.
In the
mountains, around Baja wa,
the Ngada people still follow the law laid down by their ancestors.
The Ngadanese are divided into set, clans, that have head chiefs and
elders who decide over matters such as land-rights, funerals,
marriages and other ceremonies.
PLACE TO VISIT
:
In the district of Ngada the traditional
habits have been kept better than in any other place in Flores. The
residents are almost all Catholic, but they keep adding meaning to
the megalith stones. They also maintain the ngadhu, a pawl
which is seen as masculine which forms a couple with the bhaga,
an ancestral little house which is considered female.
Only a few travelers seem to know about the rich culture of the
capital of the district, Bajawa and surrounding villages. Most drive
through it on their way to Ende, or only spend a night there.
Whoever is interested in religion and culture should certainly spend
a few days here.
Langa: ritual shrines
Near to
Bajawa are two traditional villages: Langa and Bena. You can walk to
them in one day. Try to get up early, because the summit of the
impressive, but not active volcano Inerie is often obscured by
clouds after 10 in the morning. Take the road to the south in Bajawa
and turn left towards Ende on the main road. After a few kilometers
there is a paved road on your right hand, which brings you to Langa
in 2.5 kilometers.
In Langa,
you can find a row of five ngadhu and four bhaga on
the central square. The ngadhu, which symbolizes the male
ancestors of a clan, looks like a beach sunscreen with a diameter of
about three meters. With a roof of alang-alang (grass) and ijuk
(fibers of a palm tree); the forked, thick stem of a tree, decorated
with woodcarvings, is the supporting pillar. The shrine is crowned
by a human figure, which holds a parang (harvesting knife) in
one hand and a javelin in the other. Every shrine is surrounded by a
stone circle. The Bhaga, a small hit with a roof of grass, is
sometimes decorated with woodcarvings: under the entrance of the
door, around the lower boarding and inside.
At different
occasions the members of the clan - as a proof of honor to important
persons - hold rituals to the right ngadhu and bhaga
temples. They demand the sacrifice of a water buffalo, tied up to a
stone pillar (peo). In the past dozens of water buffalo's
were slaughtered, nowadays just one. The background of this
limitation is a governmental decree which wants the population to be
protected from bad economics.
At other occasions which demand ancestral help demand the slaughter
of a pig and a sacrifice to the ancestors of the clan in the form of
food and pinang nuts. In Langa, the yearly, six-day ritual reba,
starts on 15th January with a Misa Kudus ('Holy Mass'), followed by
dances and rituals in traditional clothing.
Bena: cult-structures
An
unpaved road of about 10 kilometers runs from Langa around the foot
of Gunung Inerie. It descends towards Bena and offers a panoramic
view over the cult-structures ngadhu, bhaga and peo.
Bena is the center of the traditional religion of the area. There
are no metal roofs here. Visitors still have to report in the
visitor log.
The yearly reba-cycle starts in Bena on 26 December and then
continues to other villages. Other rituals in connection to the
agricultural cycle are held
as well: the zoa-planting ritual in September or October, and
the keti kua ritual in April or May. Another event, the
uma moni or ana koka, is an honor to the ancestors which
planted here first. At this event, a water buffalo is sacrificed.
The traditional houses of the Bena
have steep, high roofs of grass. Some are crowned with the image of
a warrior with a javelin and a parang, which looks like the one on
the ngadhu; others with miniature houses which look like the
bhaga. There are also several
megalithic
stones, sacrificing-or meeting places where the village elderly make
their decisions which have anything to do with the relations with
the supernatural.
At the end of the village you can
find a shrine to Maria on a small hill, under a huge tree. There you
can overview the Savu Sea. Near the entrance to the village a
pension was built not too long ago. It should be a cheap place to
sleep and eat.
Old Wogo: megaliths
From Bena,
there is an unpaved road, a little better than the road between
Langa and Bena, to the village of Mangulewa along the main road from
Ende to Ruteng, about ten kilometers from Bena. A little to the east
lies Mataloko, directly along the road. Here, an unpaved road takes
you to the south towards Wogo, where you can find one of the best
collections of ngadhu and bhaga of the district.
About one kilometer down the road you can follow the 200 meter long
path towards Wogo Tua, 'Old Wogo', the original location of the
village. The residents of Wogo have left here in the 1970's. You can
find big megalithic stones, some hidden in the high grass, hard to
find. The stones look mysterious and sad in the fog which is common
here.
Soa: traditional boxing and Natural Hot Spring
Northeast of Bajawa,
a
road runs to Soa (22 kilometers) and Natarandong, 18 kilometers
ahead. This road runs along Poma and becomes very bad beyond Wangka,
about 40 kilometers ahead. From Wangka, it's still about 20
kilometers to the village of Mobras, which is located along the road
which follows the northern shore of Flores. Mobras is located about
seven kilometers east of Riung. During the dry season you can rent a
jeep for the entire trip.
Soa, a gr oup
of villages in the environment of the district airport, has hot
sources where you can bathe. There is regular traffic between Bajawa
and Soa, especially trucks on Sunday evenings and Monday mornings,
market day. A restaurant behind the market serves dog, locally named
'R-W'. This euphemism is bases on the Indonesian first characters of
'thin haired'. Not bad.
The area around Soa is reasonably traditional, but the ritual
schedule is totally different than that of the villages around Gunung Inerie. The
rori witu, the ritual hunt, lasts for a month, from about
mid-October until mid-November. This deer hunt is an important event
in the annual cycle; men on horse hunt down the animals with their
javelins, women wash their hands in deer blood to raise their
fertility.

The annual sagi-cycle, the
traditional boxing, takes place in the first half of the year in
several different villages. Human blood is always shed here. This
form of fighting is also practiced in Boawae, 41 kilometers from
Bajawa, along the main road to Ende. The boxing is held mid-June
every year and is called etu.
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