Bangkok Post

HEALTHY TRADITION

Sumatran forest people adapt ancient health rules to keep pandemic at bay.

- By Harry Jacques in Denpasar, Indonesia Thomson Reuters Foundation

Jangat Pico was reluctant to say the name of the new coronaviru­s when he heard it for the first time.

“In Orang Rimba custom, the name of a disease cannot be said aloud,” Pico, 24, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by video call. “If we say (it), then that disease will come to us.”

Superstiti­ons around illness are embedded in a belief system practised by Pico and about 5,000 other Orang Rimba indigenous people who live on Sumatra island.

“Fever” and “cough” are considered curse words.

To avoid saying “corona”, the Orang Rimba have begun using “cororoit” — an alternativ­e now used conversati­onally by a few hundred people, according to Pico.

Born in Bukit Duabelas national park, Pico teaches advocacy and other skills to young people in his community, and moves between the forest and nearby urban areas.

His parents and four siblings practise a semi-nomadic way of life inside the park, regulated by customary laws handed down through generation­s.

Under these traditions, a relationsh­ip with the forest endures from cradle to grave. When an Orang Rimba baby is born, the umbilical cord linking mother and child is buried beneath a newly planted tree.

When a tribe member dies, the community moves to a fresh area of forest, a nomadic tradition called melangun.

“The Orang Rimba connection with the forest seems to me particular­ly close,” said Sophie Grig, a researcher at London-based Survival Internatio­nal, a group that campaigns for the protection of tribal peoples.

Fear of disease is also well establishe­d in a community where infections can spread rapidly.

Long before the Covid-19 pandemic, anyone returning from outside the forest had to spend at least 24 hours in quarantine under customary health rules called besasandin­gon.

They stay in an isolated area downstream due to a belief that disease flows down watercours­es.

When the Orang Rimba first heard of a new infectious disease spreading across much of the world in March, elders immediatel­y tightened their existing quarantine rules.

Now Pico must walk for six hours to visit his family, who have retreated deeper into the forest. He last saw his parents about a month ago.

“We have to abide by besasandin­gon,” he said. “That means we have to stay 20 or 30 metres away.”

Unlike Brazil and India, Indonesia lacks a dedicated government department overseeing indigenous affairs.

In 2015, President Joko Widodo became the first Indonesian leader to visit the Orang Rimba and has vowed to return 12.7 million hectares of land to indigenous and rural communitie­s.

Indigenous peoples have for decades been locked in conflicts sparked by expansion of the mining, palm oil and timber industries on their customary lands.

“Indigenous groups are the most vulnerable people in Indonesia,” said Andre Barahamin of the Indigenous Peoples’ Alliance of the Archipelag­o (Aman).

“But, as long as we have sovereignt­y over our ancestral domain, we will be fine — we can save ourselves.”

Three months ago, Aman wrote to its 2,371 member communitie­s recommendi­ng they stockpile food and initiate strict social distancing measures in response to the coronaviru­s threat.

Just over half the indigenous groups Aman represents enacted some form of lockdown, with most doing so before the central government introduced restrictio­ns in April.

Indonesia has registered about 57,000 cases of Covid-19 since the start of the pandemic and about 2,900 deaths but low levels of testing — especially in remote areas — mean it is unclear to what extent indigenous groups may have been affected.

More than 2,500 Orang Rimba have lost their traditiona­l land to oil-palm plantation firms, according to KKI Warsi, a Sumatra-based environmen­tal group that carried out interviews in the local language with tribe members for the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Some live on the fringes of plantation­s, while the poorest beg along the highway linking the east and west of the island.

Robert Aritonang, an anthropolo­gist with KKI Warsi, said the lives of those who had lost their land are “very marginal”. “If they take palm oil, they are perceived as thieves,” he said. Thirteen Orang Rimba had been killed since 1997 in conflicts with outside communitie­s and loggers, he noted.

Orang Rimba members in self-imposed isolation in the forest today said coronaviru­s is reinforcin­g a customary way of life that had waned due to contact with outside settlement­s.

Neliti, 45, who lives in the forest and goes by one name, said trade with neighbouri­ng villages had declined due to falling prices for rubber and fruit, while Orang Rimba are also afraid to visit nearby settlement­s due to the virus.

Tribal elder Tumenggung Nyenong, 57, said the retreat further into the national park was driving his people closer to the forest. “Hopefully the customs will be preserved,” he said in an interview conducted by KKI Warsi.

Teacher Pico can still visit his parents but, due to his frequent outside contacts, will not be permitted to rejoin the forest community until elders deem the pandemic to have passed.

“For the Orang Rimba, 10 years from now in Bukit Duabelas (national park), I feel it will be like it always was,” he said. “There will still be a forest and a way of life in the forest.”

In Orang Rimba custom, the name of a disease cannot be said aloud

JANGAT PICO

 ??  ?? Orang Rimba elder Tumenggung Nyenong (red shirt) is pictured in the forest of Bukit Duabelas national park on Sumatra with other tribe members.
Orang Rimba elder Tumenggung Nyenong (red shirt) is pictured in the forest of Bukit Duabelas national park on Sumatra with other tribe members.

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