BALI CULTURE
& BALI CUSTOM
Each
stage of Balinese life is marked by a series of ceremonies
and rituals known as Manusa Yadnya. They contribute to
the rich, varied and active life the average Balinese
leads.
Birth
The first ceremony of Balinese life takes place even before
birth. Another ceremony takes place soon after the birth,
during which the afterbirth is buried with appropriate
offerings. The first major ceremony takes place halfway
through the baby's first Balinese year of 210 days.
Names
Basically the Balinese only have four first names. The
first child is Wayan or Putu, the second child is Made
or Kadek, the third is Nyoman or Komang and the fourth
is Ketut. The fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth and ninth
will be another Wayan, Made, Nyoman, Ketut and Wayan again.
Childhood
The Balinese certainly love children and they have
plenty of them to prove it. Coping with a large family
is made much easier by the policy of putting younger children
in the care of older ones. After the ceremonies of babyhood
come ceremonies marking the stages of childhood and puberty,
including the important tooth-filing ceremony.
Marriage
Every Balinese expects to marry and raise a family,
and marriage takes places at a comparatively young age.
Marriages are not, in general, arranged as they are in
many other Asian communities although strict rules apply
to marriages between the castes. There are two basic forms
of marriage in Bali - mapadik and ngorod. The respectable
form, in which the family of the man visit the family
of the woman and politely propose that the marriage take
place, is mapadik. The Balinese, however, like their fun
and often prefer marriage by elopement (ngorod) as the
most exciting option. Of course, the Balinese are also
a practical people so nobody is too surprised when the
young man spirits away his bride-to-be, even if she loudly
protests about being kidnapped. The couple go into hiding
and somehow the girl's parents, no matter how assiduously
they search, never manage to find her. Eventually the
couple re-emerge, announce that it is too late to stop
them now, the marriage is officially recognized and everybody
has had a lot of fun and games. Marriage by elopement
has another advantage apart from being exciting and mildly
heroic-it's cheaper.
The
Household
Many modern Balinese houses, but there are still a
great number of traditional Balinese homes. The street
of Ubud; nearly every house will follow the same traditional
walled design.
Men
& Women
There are certain tasks clearly to be handled by women,
and others reserved for men. Social life in Bali is relatively
free and easy. In Balinese leisure activities the roles
are also sex differentiated. Both men and women dance
but only men play the gamelan. Today you do see some women
painters, sculptors, and woodcarvers.
Community
Life
Balinese have an amazingly active and organized village
life. You simply cannot be a faceless nonentity in Bali.
You can't help but get to know your neighbors as your
life is so entwined and interrelated with theirs.
Death
& Cremation
There are ceremonies for every stage of Balinese life
but often the last ceremony-cremation-is the biggest.
A Balinese cremation can be an amazing, spectacular, colorful,
noisy and exciting event. In fact it often takes so long
to organize a cremation that years have passed since the
death. During that time the body is temporarily buried.
Of course an auspicious day must be chosen for the cremation
and since a big cremation can be very expensive business
many less wealthy people may take the opportunity of joining
in at a larger cremation and sending their own dead on
their way at the same time. Brahmans, however, must be
cremated immediately. Apart from being yet another occasion
for Balinese noise and confusion it's a fine opportunity
to observe the incredible energy the Balinese put into
creating real works of art which are totally ephemeral.
A lot more than a body gets burnt at the cremation. The
body is carried from the burial ground (or from the deceased's
home if it's and 'immediate' cremation) to the cremation
ground in a high, multi-tiered tower made of bamboo, paper,
string, tinsel, silk, cloth, mirrors, flowers and anything
else bright and colorful you can think of. The tower is
carried on the shoulders of a group of men, the size of
the group depending on the importance of the deceased
and hence the size of the tower. The funeral of a former
rajah of high priest may require hundreds of men to tote
the tower.
A
long the way to the cremation ground certain precautions
must be taken to ensure that the deceased's spirit does
not find its way back home. Loose spirits around the house
can be a real nuisance. To ensure this doesn't happen
requires getting the spirits confused as to their whereabouts,
which you do by shaking the tower, running it around in
circles, spinning it around, throwing water at it, generally
making the trip to the cremation ground anything but a
stately funeral crawl. Meanwhile, there's likely to be
a priest halfway up to tower, hanging on grimly as it
sways back and forth, and doing his best to soak bystanders
with holy water. A gamelan sprints along behind, providing
a suitably exciting musical accompaniment. Camera-toting
tourists get all but run down and once again the Balinese
prove that ceremonies and religion are there to be enjoyed.
At the cremation ground the body is transferred to a funeral
sarcophagus-this should be in the shape of a bull for
a Brahmana, a winged lion for a Satria and a sort of elephant-fish
for a Sudra. These days, however, almost anybody from
the higher castes will use a bull. Finally up it all goes
in flames-funeral tower, sarcophagus, body, the lot. The
eldest son does his duty by poking through the ashes to
ensures that there are bits of body left unburned. And
where does your soul go after your cremation? Why, to
a heaven which is just like Bali!