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Bangatowa, Patogu and Gaddhungan: Perceptions of the Tiger among the Madurese

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 April 2011

Abstract

This paper analyses the symbolic aspects of the tiger as perceived by the Madurese, both on Madura and in East Java. It focuses on people's relationship with the environment and the supernatural world as well as the way the tiger as symbol has adapted to both the progress of Islam and to the modern world in general.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The National University of Singapore 1994

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References

An earlier version of this paper was presented at the K.I.T.L.V. 6th International Workshop on Indonesian Studies, Madurese Culture and Society: Continuity and Change, Leiden 7–11 October 1991.1 would like to thank Mr. A. Latief Wiyata, Mr. Bambang Samsu, Mr. Budiyono, Mr. Dominikus Rato, Mr. Edy Sriono, Mrs. Herowati Poesoko, Mr. Kusnadi, Mr. Made Suryantara, Mr. Mahfudz Sidiq, Mr. Markus Apriono, Mr. Maulana Sk., Mr. Misrawi, and Mr. Sutjitro for the help they have given me in gathering some of the data for this paper and Dr. Huub de Jonge and Ms. Jet Bakels as well as an anonymous reader for their comments on the previous version.

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27 McNeeley and Wachtel, Soul, p. 195.

28 McNeeley and Wachtel, Soul, p. 328; Cf. Panwar, H.S., “What to do When You've Succeeded: Project Tiger Ten Years Later”, Ambio 11, no. 11 (1982): 332.Google Scholar

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39 Anonymous, “Robohnya”, p. 47.

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41 East Javanese Islamic sensibilities prevent me from telling this story in full detail. A very similar tale from the Gayo of North Sumatra tells how two newly-weds went to their field to plant rice. Being newlywed, however, they decided to make love in a little hut there. Suddenly they were disturbed by a noise and the bride exclaimed, “someone is coming”. The groom withdrew but could not stop from ejaculating. Some of his sperm fell to the floor and turned into a cat while the rest fell outside on the earth and became a tiger. The people and the cat then went into the kitchen, but the tiger was outside and thus went into the forest (R. Wessing, The Soul, p. 11). Martin van Bruinessen has pointed out to me that in Middle Eastern tradition Sayyidina Ali (Our Lord Ali) is associated with the lion (Ar. Asad). This lion symbol is transferred to Indonesia as a tiger and appears, e.g. as Macan Ali in both the flag and the coat of arms of Cirebon. Furthermore, in earlier tradition, both the tiger and the crocodile are manifestations of Siva, on land and in the water respectively (Skeat, W. W., Malay Magic. Being an Introduction to the Folklore and Popular Religion of the Malay Peninsula [New York: Benjamin Blom, 1972], p. 91). It is probable that this association was transferred to an important Islamic figure when Islam became the dominant religion in the area. The Prophet is furthermore said to have been fond of cats, which is why one should not hurt them. Calico cats (belong telori) are said to have magical and curative powers, and hurting them may bring rheumatism.Google Scholar

42 Wessing, The Soul.

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51 Cf. Hefner, R.W., Hindu Javanese. Tengger Tradition and Islam (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1985), pp. 5859.Google Scholar

52 Compare Syarifuddin, Ayiek, “Makam Jowongso tak Boleh Dibangun?”, Liberty 39, no. 1773 (1992): 2627.Google Scholar

53 Cf. Rato, Dominikus, Buju' dan Asta': Persepsi Masyarakat Madura Sumenep Terhadap Kuburan Keramat. Seri Kertas Kerja No. 18 (Jember: Bidang Kajian Madura, Universitas Jember, 1992), pp. 4952Google Scholar. See also Woodward, M.R., Islam in Java. Normative Piety and Mysticism in the Sultanate of Yogyakarta (Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 1989), p. 99.Google Scholar

54 This book is one among several books of Islamic magic the validity of the use of which is currently under dispute in Indonesian Islamic circles and which “may be of greater influence in shaping popular religious attitudes than … more serious [religious] works.…” The history of this particular one goes back to the twelfth or thirteenth century. van Bruinessen, M., “Kitab Kuning: Books in Arabic Script used in the Pesantren Milieu”, Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde 146, nos. 2–3 (1990): 226–69.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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57 Wessing, The Soul, pp. 63–74.

58 Compare McNeeley and Wachtel, Soul, p. 136.

59 Kartomi, “Tigers”, p. 13.

60 Wessing, The Soul; McNeeley and Wachtel, Soul, p. 138.

61 The spelling varies. Gaddhung: an intoxicating plant; Asis Safioedin, Kamus, p. 90. Penninga and Hendriks, Practicsh, p. 94 add cheated to the idea of intoxication. Gadung: to cheat, unreal, mock; Th. Pigeaud, Javaans-Nederlands Woordenboek ('s-Gravenhage: Martinus Nijhoff, 1982), p. 114. Macan gadung: disguised or mock tiger; Bezemer, T.J., Beknopte Encyclopaedie van Nederlandsch Indië ('s-Gravenhage: Martinus Nijhoff, 1921), pp. 609610.Google Scholar

62 Note the phonetic similarity between gaddhing and gaddhung. The cempaka flower (Michelia champak) is one of the flowers used in offerings and is further connected with ancestral spirits through the campaka kemboja (Plumaria acuminata), according to Dr. Mien Rifai a recent substitute for the nagasari (Mesuqferia ferrea), the kemboja tree that is often planted at graveyards (cf. Tim Penyusun Kamus, Kamus Besar, pp. 160, 415).

63 Wessing, The Soul, pp. 89–103.

64 This is in fact what happened to many of the supernatural entities. Cf. Saerozi, A., Harimau Hantu (Jakarta: Balai Pustaka, 1981), p. 49Google Scholar; Fathoni, “Takhayul dalam Budaya Jawa”, Liberty 37 no. 1710 (1989): 2829. A man in Puger pointed at the offshore island Nusabarongan and said, “that is where the spirits are now. It became too ramai (lively, noisy) around the villages. The notion of ramai includes noise, people, and civilization, and is something that people try to achieve. The forest on the other hand, with its magic and spirits, is sepih (quiet, lacking in ramai). The village is ramai and inimical to the tiger. H. Page Stephens of Cleveland Ohio notes in a letter that “Ghosts in an Eastern European village all disappeared after they put in lights and a highway. The explanation the local people gave was that the ghosts were run over by the cars.”Google Scholar

65 McNeeley and Wachtel, Soul, p. 193.

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68 O'Flaherty, Other Peoples' Myths, p. 16.

69 Wessing, “The Place”.

70 Cf. Dominikus Rato, Buju' dan Asta'

71 Schefold, “De wildernis”, p. 13.

72 Wessing, The Soul, pp. 111–16; cf. O'Flaherty, Other Peoples' Myths, p. 81.

73 O'Flaherty, Other Peoples' Myths, p. 35.

74 Panwar, “What to do”, p. 332.