THE
PEOPLE
LIKE
A CONTINUAL UNDER-SEA BALLET, the pulse of life in Bali moves
with a measured rhythm reminiscent of the sway of marine plants
and the flowing motion of octopus and jellyfish under the sweep
of a submarine current. There is a similar correlation of the
elegant and decorative people with the clear-cut, extravagant
vegetation; of their simple and sensitive temperament with the
fertile land.
No
other race gives the impression of living in such close touch
with nature, creates such a complete feeling of harmony between
the people and the surroundings. The slender Balinese bodies are
as much a part of the landscape as the palms and the breadfruit
trees, and their smooth skins have the same tone as the earth
and as the brown rivers where they bathe; a general colour scheme
of greens, grays, and ocher's, relieved here and there by bright-coloured
sashes and tropical flowers. The Balinese belong in their environment
in the same way that a bumming-bird or an orchid belongs in a
Central American jungle, or a steel-worker belongs in the grime
of Pittsburgh. It was depressing to watch our Balinese friends
transplanted to the Paris Fair. They were cold and miserable there
in the middle of the summer, shivering in heavy overcoats or wrapped
in blankets like red Indians, but they were transformed into normal,
beautiful Balinese as soon as they returned from their unhappy
experience.
Today the beauty of the Balinese has been exploited to exhaustion
in travelogues and by tourist agencies, but as far back as 1619
records mention that Balinese women were in great demand in the
slave markets of Bourbon (Reunion), where " they brought
as much as 150 florins." The traffic in Balinese slaves continued
until 1830, and today there is a colony of Balinese in Batavia,
the descendants of former slaves. Their reputation for beauty
is well justified: the majority of the population are handsome,
with splendid physique and with a dignified elegance of bearing,
in both men and women of all ages. From childhood the women walk
for miles carrying-heavy loads on their heads; this gives them
a great co-ordination of movement, a poised walk and bodily fitness.
Old women retain their strength and do not become bent hags. We
were astonished at times to discover that the slender, straight
silhouette we bad admired from a distance belonged to an old lady
with gray hair, walking with ease under forty or fifty pounds
of fruit or pottery. Unless physically disabled, elderly people
never admit that they are too old or too weak for activity; to
" give up " would be dangerous to physical and spiritual
health and would render a person vulnerable to attacks of a supernatural
character.
Ordinarily
free of excessive clothing, the Balinese have small but well-developed
bodies, with a peculiar anatomical structure of simple, solid
masses reminiscent of Egyptian and Mycenaean sculptures: wide
shoulders tapering down in unbroken lines to flexible waists and
narrow hips; strong backs, small heads, and firm full breasts.
Their slender arms and long legs end in delicate hands and feet,
kept skilful and alive by functional use and dance training. Their
faces have well-balanced - features, expressive The Beach in Sanur
eyes, small noses, and full mouths, and their hair is thick and
glossy. Because they are tanned by the sun, their golden-brown
skin appears generally darker than it really is, and when seen
at a distance, people bathing are considerably whiter around their
middles, where the skin is usually covered by clothes, giving
the impression that they wear light-coloured pants. Watching a
crowd of semi-nude Balinese of all ages, one cannot help wondering
what the comparison would be should men and women of our cities
suddenly appear in the streets nude above the waist.
Their character is easy, courteous, and gentle, but they can be
intense and can show strong temper if aroused. They are gay and
witty; there is nothing that a Balinese loves more than a good
joke, especially. if it is off-colour, and even children make
ribald puns that are applauded by grown-ups. It is perhaps in
their mad sense of humour, the spirit of Rabelaisian fun with
which they handle even such forbidding subjects as religion and
death, that lies the key to their character. The adjective "
childish " or 11 childlike," so often misapplied to
primitive peoples, does not suit the Balinese, because even the
children show a sophistication often lacking in more civilized
grown-ups. They are resourceful and intelligent, with acute senses
and quick minds. Once, when I mentioned the goodness of a very
short friend, the immediate reply was: " How could he be
otherwise, be is so small! " One day Spies's monkey got loose
and ran all over the house upsetting and breaking things.
All
the Balinese boys chased the monkey, but it let them come to within
a few feet of it and then leaped out of reach onto the roof or
a tree. The only one who did not join in the chase was Rapung,
our teacher of Balinese, because he was a newcomer to the household
and the monkey snarled and sprung at him every time Rapung passed
near where it was tied: they bated each other. When it became
plain that the monkey could not be captured so easily, one of
the boys had the bright idea of having everybody pretend to attack
Rapung, imitating the monkey, making faces, and squealing at him.
Soon the monkey forgot that be himself was persecuted and joined
in the attack, but when he was most aggressive someone grabbed
him.
The
pride of the Balinese has not permitted the development of one
of the great professions of the East: there are no beggars in
Bali. But tourists who lure boys and girls with dimes to take
their pictures now threaten this unique distinction, and lately,
in places frequented by tourists, people are beginning to ask
for money as a return for a service. Ordinarily even a child would
be scolded and shamed by anyone who heard him ask something from
a stranger. A gift must be reciprocated and we were often embarrassed
by the return presents of our poor neighbors. We gave Ketut Adi,
a little dancer of eight, a scarf of no great value; one day soon
after she came to us with a basket of rice, some eggs, and a live
chicken, carried by her mother because the load was too great
for her. Children of the neighborhood that Rose had treated for
infected wounds always came back with presents of fruit, cakes,
or rice which they handed casually to our house-boy, never mentioning
them to us, as if they wanted to avoid making a demonstration
of their generosity. Even children have a strong sense of pride.
The
aristocracy is despotic and arrogant, but the ordinary people,
although used to acknowledging the superiority of their masters,
are simple and natural in an unservile and unsubmissive way. By
the threat of passive disobedience and boycott they kept the princes
from overstepping their bounds. Europeans complain that the Balinese
make bad servants; they are too free, too frank, and do not respond
to the insolent manner that the white man has adopted as "
the only way to deal with natives." Their moral code consists
in maintaining their traditional behavior, observing their duties
towards their fellow villagers and paying due respect to the local
feudal princes. Among themselves they are kind and just, avoiding
unnecessary quarrels and solving their disputes by the simplest
and most direct methods. .1 The villages are organized into compact
boards or councils, independent of other villages. Every married
man - that is, every grown man - is a member of the council and
is morally and physically obliged to co-operate for the welfare
of the community.
A
man is assisted by his neighbors in every task he cannot perform
alone; they help him willingly and as a matter of duty, not expecting
any reward other than the knowledge that, were they in his case,
he would help in the same manner. In this way paid labors and
the relation of boss to coolie are reduced to a minimum in Bali.
Since the world of a Balinese is his community, be is anxious
to prove his worth, for his own welfare is in direct relation
to his social behaviors and his communal standing. Moral sanctions
are regarded 2S stronger than physical punishment, and no one
will risk the dreaded punishment of exile, from the village, when
a man is publicly declared " dead " to his community.
Once " thrown away," he cannot be admitted into another
of the co-operative villages, so no misfortune could be greater
to the Balinese than public disgrace. This makes of every village
a closely unified organism in which the communal policy is harmony
and co-operation - a system that works to every body's advantage.
By
their ingenuity and constant activity they have raised their main
occupation, the cultivation of rice, to levels unsurpassed by
other rice-growing nations. Being essentially agriculturists,
they are not interested in navigation and trade; living the easy
life of the tropics, they are satisfied and well fed. The majority
works the land for themselves, so they have not yet become wage
earners and have enough freedom and leisure left to dedicate to
spiritual relaxation. They are extraordinarily fond of music,
poetry, and dancing, which have produced a remarkable theatre.
Their culture, unlike that of their cultural ancestors, the Javanese,
is not yet in frank declin6. Even the common people are better
agriculturists, better craftsmen and artists than the average
Javanese. The Balinese are by no means a primitive people.
Moreover,
unlike the natives of the South Seas and similar races under white
domination, the Balinese are not a dying people; far from that,
in the last ten years a constant increase in the birth rate has
been recorded. The 1930 census gave the population of Bali as
1,148,000 people, or about 500 to the square mile, an enormous
figure when compared with the 41 per square mile of the United
States. This includes the foreign population: 7,1935 Chinese,
1,544 Arabs and other Mohammedans, and 411 Europeans, of which
only a small percentage are of pure European stock, the rest being
Eurasians and certain Balinese, Javanese, Chinese, and Japanese
who are given equal standing with Europeans by a decree making
them " Staatsblad European."
For
those interested in knowing something of the racial origins of
the Balinese, it may be added that they are by no means a pure
race, but a complicated mixture of the native aborigines, with
superimposed layers of higher cultures of various types.' The
Balinese are descendants of a pure " Indonesian " race
mixed with the Hindus of Central and East Java, who were them
selves Indonesians of Hindu culture, with Indian and Chinese blood.
To these mixtures are further added traces of the Polynesian and
Melanesian, the result being a picturesque variety of types among
the Balinese: from the noble Hindu and Northern Chinese, to the
Malay-Javanese, Polynesian, and even Papuan. While some have sleek
hair, high nose bridges, and cream-yellow skins, some are dark
and curly haired like South Sea Islanders. Some have large almond
eyes, often with the " Mongoloid fold, convex noses, and.
fine mouths; others have the concave, flat, broad
Noses, the squinty eyes, bulging foreheads, and prognathic. Jaws
of the more primitive Indonesians. Thus the Balinese of today
are the same people as the Hindu-Javanese of pre-Mohammedan Java,
in the sense that they both underwent the same racial and Cultural
influences.