Death
And Cremation
THE SACRIFICE OF WIDOWS
Cremation
rites have remained practically unchanged for the last
three hundred years, except perhaps for the suppression
of the notorious Indian custom of suttee, the sacrifice
of widows of deceased notables, burned alive on their
husband's pyre. This custorn seems to have enjoyed great
popularity at one time among the Balinese aristocracy,
although today it has become Merely a legend. A hundred
years ago the pioneer historian of the Malay Archipelago,
John Crawfurd, gave us the first English account of
a widow-burning that took place in 1633, when the Dutch
sent a mission to Bali to gain the prince of Gelgel,
then sole sovereign, as their ally against the Sultan
of Mataram, who was driving attacks on Batavia. The
Dutch found the Balinese king making preparations for
the cremation of his wife and his two eldest sons. The
manuscript account of the mission was translated by
a Monsieur Prevost and published in an early histoire
des Voyages. Among the passages of the Dutch narrative
quoted by Crawfurd are the following:
...
About noon, the queen's body was burnt without the city
with twenty-two of her female slaves. . . . The body
was drawn out of a large aperture made in the wall to
the right side of the door, in the absurd opinion of
cheating the devil. . . . The female slaves destined
to accompany the dead went before, according to their
ranks . . . each supported behind by an old woman, and
carried on a Badi (tower), skillfully constructed of
bamboos, and decked all over with flowers. Before them
were placed a roast pig, some rice, betel and other
fruits as an offering to their gods, and these unhappy
victims of the most direful idolatry are thus carried
in triumph, to the sound of different instruments, to
the place where they are to be poignarded and consumed
by fire. There, each found a particular scaffold prepared
for her, in the form of a trough, raised on four short
posts and edged on two sides with planks. . . . Some
of the attendants let loose a pigeon or a fowl, to mark
that their soul was on the point of taking its flight
to the mansions of the blessed. . . . They were divested
of all their garments, except their sashes, and four
of the men, seizing the victim, two by the arms, which
they held extended, and two by the feet, the victim
standing, the fifth prepared himself for the execution,
the whole being done without covering the eyes. . .
.
"
Some of the most courageous demanded the poignard themselves,
which they received in the right hand, passing it to
the left, after respectfully kissing the weapon. They
wounded their right arms, sucked the blood which flowed
from the wound, and stained their lips with it, making
a bloody mark on the forehead with the point of the
finger. Then returning the dagger to their executioners,
they received a first stab between the false ribs, and
a second under the shoulder blade, the weapon being
thrust up to the hilt towards the heart. As soon as
the horrors of death were visible in the countenance,
without a complaint escaping them, they were permitted
to fall on the ground . . . and were stripped of their
last remnant of dress, so that they were left in a state
of perfect nakedness. The executioners receive as their
reward two hundred and fifty, pieces of copper money
of about the value of five sols each, The ' nearest
relations, if they be present, or persons hired for
the occa. sion . . . wash the bloody bodies . . . covering
them with wood in such manner that only the head is
visible, and, having applied fire, they are consumed
to ashes. . . .
"
The women were already poignarded and the greater number
of them in flames, before the dead body of the queen
arrived, borne on a superb Badi of pyramidal form, consisting
of eleven steps, supported by a number of persons proportioned
to the rank of the deceased. . . . Two priests preceded
the Badi in vehicles of particular form, each holding
in one hand a cord attached to the Badi, as if giving
to understand that they led the deceased to heaven,
and with the other ringing a little bell, while such
a noise of gongs, tambours, flutes and other instruments
is made, that the whole ceremony has less the air of
a funeral procession than of a joyous village~fcstival.
. . . The dead body was placed on its own funeral pile
which was forthwith lighted. The assistants then regaled
them selves with a faast while the musicians, without
cessation, struck the car with a tumultous melody, not
unpleasing. . . .
"
At the funeral of the King's two sons a short time before,
42 woman of the one, and 34 of the other, were poignarded
and burnt in the manner above described; but on such
occasions the princesses of royal blood themselves leap
at once into the flames . . . because they would look
upon themselves as dishonoured by anyone's laying hands
on their persons. For this purpose a kind of bridge
is erected over a burning pile, which they mount, holding
a paper close to their foreheads, and having their robe
tucked under their arm. As soon as they feel the beat,
they precipitate themselves into the burning pile. .
. . In case firmness should abandon them . . . a brother,
or another near relative, is at hand to push them in,
and render them, out of affection, that cruel office.
. . .
when
a prince or princess of the royal family dies, their
women Or slaves run around the body, tittering cries
. . . and all crazily solicit to die for their master
or mistress. The King, on the following day, designates
those of whom lie makes choice. From that moment to
the last of their lives, they are daily conducted at
an early 11our, each in her vehicle, to the sound of
musical instruments . . . to perform their devotions,
having their feet wrapped in white linen, for it is
no more permitted them to touch the bare earth, because
they are considered as consecrated. The young women,
little skilled
in these religious exercises, are instructed by the
aged women who accompany them. . . . Those who have
devoted themselves, are made to pass the night in continual
dancing and rejoicing. . . . All pains are taken to
give them whatever tends to the gratification of their
senses, and from the quantity of wine which they take,
few objects are capable of terrifying their imaginations.
. . . No woman or slave, however, is obliged to follow
this barbarous custom. . . ."
The
remainder of the narrative proceeds like any other of
the great cremations that are held today. Another interesting
account of widow-burning is given us by an eyewitness,
the scholar Friederich, of the cremation of the Dewa
Manggis, Radja of Gianyar, which took place in that
town on December 22, 1847:
"
The corpse was followed by the three wives who became
Belas. A procession went before them, as before the
body. . . . They were seated in the highest storeys
of the Bades. . . . After the body of the prince had
arrived at the place of cremation, the three Belas in
their Bades, each preceded by the bearer of the offerings
destined for her, with armed men and bands of music,
were conducted to the three fires
" Their Bades were turned around three times and
were carried around the whole place of cremation. The
women were then car. ried down steps from the Bades
and up the steps of the places erected for their cremation.
These consisted of squares of masonry three feet high
filled with combustibles which had been burning since
morning and threw out a glowing heat; the persons appointed
to watch them fed the fire, and at the moment when the
women leaped down, poured upon it a quantity of oil
and arrak, so that it flared up to a height of eight
feet and must have suffocated the victims at once. Behind
this furnace stood in erection of bamboo in' the form
of a bridge, of the same width as the square of masonry
about forty feet long and from sixteen to eighteen feet
high; steps of bamboo led up to it in the rear. In the
centre there is a smaall house, affording a last resting-place
to the victim, in which she waits till the ceremonies
for her husband are finished and his body hasbegun to
burn.
The
side of the bamboo scaffold nearest the fire it protected
by a wall of wet Pisang (banana) steins. Upon the bridge
lies a plank smeared with oil, which is pushed out a
little over the fire as soon as the time for the leap
draws near. There is a door at the end of the bridge
that is not removed until the last minute. the victim
sits in the house on the bridge, accompanied by a female
priest and by her relatives. . . . Then she makes her
toilet; her hair especially is combed, the mirror used,
and her garments newly arranged; in short, she arrays
herself exactly as she would for a feast. Her dress
is white, her breasts are covered with a ,white Slendang
(scarf); she wears no ornaments, and after the preparations
to which she has been subjected, her hair at the last
moment hangs loose.
When
the corpse of the prince was almost consumed, the three
Belas got ready; they glanced one towards another to
convince themselves that all was prepared; but this
was not a glance of fear, but of impatience, and it
seemed to express a wish that they might leap at the
same moment. When the door opened and the plank smeared
with oil was pushed out, each took her place on the
plank, made three Sembahs (reverences) by joining her
hands above her head, and one of the bystanders placed
a small dove upon her head. When the dove flies away
the soul is considered to escape. They immediately leaped
down. There was no cry in leaping, no cry from the
fire; they must have suffocated at once. One of the
Europeans present succeeded in pushing through the crowd
to the fire and in seeing the body some seconds after
the leap - it was dead and its move merits were caused
merely by the combustion of the materials cast upon
the flames. On other occasions, however, Europeans have
heard cries uttered in leaping and in the first moments,
afterwards. . . .
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"
During the whole time from the burning of the prince
till the leap of the victims, the air resounded with
the clangour of numerous bands of music; small cannon
were discharged and the soldiers had drawn up outside
the fire and contributed to the noise by firing off
their muskets. There was not one of the 50,000 Balinese
present who did not show a merry face; no one was filled
wit], repugance and disgust except a few Europeans whose
only desire was to see the end of such barbarities."
It
was only the wives of princes that were thus sacrificed;
the Brahmanas did not consider it necessary for the
redemption of their wives, and tile common people were
not interested in a practice that was foreign to them.
There were two sorts of widow-sacrifice: one reserved
for noblewomen, the mesatia (" truth," "
fidelity "), in which the noble widows stabbed
them. selves as they jumped into the same fire with
their dead hus. bands; the other, for the prince's low-caste
wives and concubines, the mabela (" to die together
with the master ") , the one described by Friederich,
which consisted in jumping into another fire apart to
be burned alive. A woman who died in mesatia became
a Satiawati, " The True One," a deity.
From
the time their decision was made, the widows were regarded
as already dead and deified. They lived a life of constant
pleasures, exempt from all duties and constantly attended
by the other wives. Their feet were not supposed to
touch the impure ground and, like goddesses, they were
carried everywhere, lavishly dressed and half-entranced.
A Brahmanic priestess was constantly at their side,
encouraging them to their sacrifice with flowery descriptions
of the beauties of life among the gods. Friederich tells
that when tile time came, they were so thoroughly hypnotized
that " they jumped into the fire as if it were
a bath."
However
shocking this practice may seem to us, it is not difficult
to understand why it was acceptable to die Balinese;
the scriptures not only sanctioned it, but even encouraged
the sacrifices, and to the victims it was a short cut
to attain the higher spiritual state ever so much more
important than their insignificant physical life on
this earth. Both the early Dutch narrative and Friederich
make it clear that no compulsion was used and that the
women to be sacrificed had to make their decision by
the eighth day after their husband's death. They could,,
neither withdraw nor volunteer later.
The
Dutch did all that was in their power to stamp out this
practice and set a strict prohibition on widow-sacrifices.
The last, official cremation in which a woman was burned
took place just after the conquest of South Bali; we
were present, however, at a cremation in Sukawati at
which we were told by a reliable in former that the
noble wife of the deceased prince had died conveniently
in a mysterious manner three days before the cremation
in order to be burned together with her husband. Despite
the Dutch claim of having suppressed widow-sacrifices,
it seems that the custom was already dying out, like
many other extravagant practices that became too costly.
Nearly one hundred years ago, during two years' residence
in the island, Friederich witnessed only one case of
widow-burning, that which he describes.
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