Abstract

In Bali and Lombok in Indonesia, processions—like similar events in many other parts of the world—are ritualized events breaking the normal flow of time. They are always temporally marked, and can be characterized as either religious and temple- or mosque-sponsored, or secular and state-sponsored. This article discusses religious processions generally on the neighbor islands of Bali and Lombok, and focuses on the processions of the spectacular Lingsar temple festival on Lombok. The festival conjoins the migrant Hindu Balinese and the local Muslim Sasak (the majority ethnic group) in ritual participation, but that participation differs in significant ways that are represented in the processions. For the Balinese, the festival is religious and tied to the original, divinely inspired mission from Bali to Lombok; for the Sasak, the festival is “cultural” and a memorial to a Muslim hero who introduced the religion and sacrificed himself to initiate rice field fertility for Sasak descendants. The festival requires an astounding 12 Sasak processions, seven Balinese processions and two mixed processions (some traverse between sacred points, others circumambulate). The music – primarily performed by gamelan ensembles – transforms the notion of time, calls forth the divine, announces the missions and narratives of the processions, and represents both the contestations between Sasak and Balinese over temple ownership and the eventual transcendence of that tension to interreligious unity. And, it is this unity that is the overarching goal of the festival.

Highlights

  • Follow this and additional works at: http://elischolar.library.yale.edu/yjmr Part of the Liturgy and Worship Commons, and the Pacific Islands Languages and Societies

  • Harnish In Bali and Lombok in Indonesia, processions—like similar events in many other parts of the world—are ritualized events breaking the normal flow of time

  • Pawe is the Indonesian word most often used for processions and parades, though these events are defined by words in the insider language, and many are attached to institutions with an assortment of distinct terms

Read more

Summary

Recommended Citation

David (2016) "Religious Processions in Indonesia: Cultural Identity and Politics on Bali and Lombok," Yale Journal of Music & Religion: Vol 2: No 2, Article 9. Once a bastion of pluralism and tolerance, Indonesia has attracted the attention of, and provided local recruits for, militant forms of Islam, often funded by Salafi leaders in Saudi Arabia. Followers of Indonesian leaders and institutions sometimes attack new reformist offices in an effort to maintain local authority over Islam; in Lombok, for instance, Salafi Islam offices have been destroyed shortly after being erected. In this context, it is not surprising that the cultural and political identity of Islam is at stake in Indonesia’s many religious and state processions. In addition to their aesthetic and transformational power, processions, both political and spiritual, are public barometers for measuring socio-religious and political change.[6]

Religious Practices and Musics in Processions in Bali
Cremation Ceremonies
Temple Festivals
Music in Processions in Lombok
Musics and Processions at the Lingsar Festival
The Opening of the Festival
The Second Day
The Third Day
Interpretations of the Lingsar Processions
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.