Showing posts with label Kalimantan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kalimantan. Show all posts

Saturday, August 13, 2011

Crafting a new future for the Dayak and Bajau people

Jakarta Globe, AdeMardiyati, August 13, 2011         

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As theInternational Day of the World’s Indigenous People was celebrated this week,the United Nations called on all countries to recognize the rights ofindigenous peoples through this year’s theme, “Indigenous designs: celebratingstories and cultures, crafting our own future.”

Handbags and textiles made by Kalimantan
people. (JG Photo: Courtesy of Ng Swan Ti)  
Indigenouspeoples are defined by the United Nations as nondominant ethnic groups with aclaim to historical continuity in their ancestral lands, who often sufferdiscrimination and marginalization by groups who have occupied their landsthrough invasion, colonial rule or political dominance.

There arearound 5,000 recognized indigenous groups around the world, whose members makeup around 5 percent of the world’s population.

InIndonesia, the Dayak and Bajau peoples of Kalimantan are included under thisdefinition.

“[Indigenouspeoples] have their land but are often displaced. They end up at the verybottom of society without any skills,” Michele Zaccheo, director of the UnitedNations Information Center in Jakarta, said at a video screening and discussionat the Goethe-Institut on Tuesday.

Zaccheoshared a message from UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon at the event, sayingthat indigenous peoples “face many challenges in maintaining their identity,traditions and customs, and their cultural contributions are at times exploitedand commercialized, with little or no recognition.”

“We mustwork harder to recognize and strengthen their right to control theirintellectual property, and help them to protect, develop and be compensatedfairly for the cultural heritage and traditional knowledge that is ultimatelyof benefit to us all,” the secretary general’s message read.

A 30-minutedocumentary called “Kalimantan’s Craft: Harmony of Culture and Nature,” byfilmmaker Nanang Sujana, was screened at the UN headquarters in New York and inall member countries around the world to mark the international day ofrecognition.

The filmshows the life of the indigenous Dayak people in Kalimantan, who depend on thenatural resources around them for their livelihoods. With skills that have beenpassed down from generation to generation, the Dayak people produce artisticcrafts including woven baskets, handbags and textiles, all using naturalmaterials.

AgusSardjono, an expert on intellectual property from the University of Indonesia,said a community’s rights to its own creative products should be recognized.

“Whencreating a product, indigenous people in villages don’t actually think aboutintellectual property. But when other people run a business selling similarproducts using their designs and make a profit, that’s when they begin to thinkabout it,” Agus said.

Often, he added,people outside the community care more about this problem than the indigenouspeople.

“It’speople in general, like us, who are very concerned when we see certain peopletake advantage of a culture’s creativity, but without sharing the benefits,” Agussaid.

YayasanDian Tama, a West Kalimantan-based foundation, has been working with theindigenous Dayak people since 1994 to help make sure they benefit financiallyfrom the products of their labor.

“Basicallythey have the skills. So what we do is provide them with training on how tomake better products, set up standards to meet the demands of the market, andalso help maintain quality control,” said Tri “Alty” Renya Altaria Siswanto, anadviser for the foundation. “At the same time, we also teach them how topreserve the natural sources from which they take the materials.”

Alty saidthe organization employed a “punishment and reward” system to encourage theDayak people to create high-quality products. This, she said, is a way toappreciate the knowledge and skills of the indigenous people themselves.

“We toldthem that the better the quality, the better the prices, and vice versa,” shesaid. “And they are now able to produce high-quality products, sold under thebrand Borneo Chic. We are also currently participating in an exhibition atHarrods [department store] in the UK.”

Alty said,however, that the production of better-quality products had not changed thepeople’s economic situation, because they still needed to improve theirmarketing.

“But wehave achieved a very important thing, which is getting [the Dayak people’s]traditional knowledge and creative rights recognized by people outside theircommunity,” she said.


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Monday, February 7, 2011

Along Sega, Eco Warrior and Tribal Chief, Dies in Borneo

Jakarta Globe, February 07, 2011

Along Sega, one of the last nomadic tribesmen of Borneo who won fame for his battle to save the forests and traditional lifestyle of his Penan people, has died aged in his 70s.

Along Sega, a nomadic tribesmen of Borneo who won
 fame for his battle to save the forests and traditional lifestyle
 of his Penan people dies at 70. ( AFP Photo/ Bruno
 Manser Fund)
Jailed twice for his struggle against the logging companies that devastated ancestral lands in Sarawak on Malaysian Borneo, he was also a mentor to Swiss activist Bruno Manser who brought the outside world's attention to the plight of the Penan.

"When I die, they will continue our struggle because I asked them not to give up," he said in a 2005 interview, according to the Bruno Manser Fund which continues to campaign for the people of the Borneo rainforests.

Along Sega died in hospital in Sarawak last Wednesday, according to the Fund which said the cause of death was unknown, as was his exact age.

"He was really an inspiration to us. He was courageous and was determined to defend the lifestyle of Penans," Harrison Ngau, a lawyer and native rights advocate in Sarawak told AFP Monday.

A leader of one of the last nomadic Penan groups, Along Sega was bitterly disappointed in broken promises by the Sarawak government to create a protected forest reserve which he said had turned out to be "all lies" and "nonsense".

In the 1980s logging companies entered the Penan forest homeland, tearing out the valuable timber and decimating the wildlife, fish and rainforest products like rattan that had long sustained the local people.

The Penan began building roadblocks against the logging companies, filed lawsuits, and lobbied fearlessly to save their traditional territory in a losing battle which continues to this day.

"We want our forest to remain untouched. Because only then we can go hunting," Along Sega said in the 2005 interview.

"When I was young, no one disturbed the animals. The forest was good and we could go hunting close to where we lived," said the tribesman, who sported the traditional Penan fringed haircut, beaded necklaces and loincloth.

"The women could easily catch the fish and get their food. Nowadays, life has become very difficult because of the logging in our area."

Along Sega, a nomadic tribesmen of Borneo who won
 fame for his battle to save the forests and traditional lifestyle
 of his Penan people dies at 70. ( AFP Photo/ Bruno
 Manser Fund)
With much of Sarawak's timber now cut and sold, the Penan face a new threat as the logging firms clear-fell the degraded forest and turn it into palm oil plantations, in what activists say could be the final blow.

The plight of the Penan was made famous in the 1990s by Manser, who waged a crusade to protect their way of life and fend off the loggers, before vanishing in Sarawak in mysterious circumstances in 2000. Many suspect foul play.

The Penan of Sarawak are estimated to number around 10,000, with only about 300-400 thought to still be nomadic. Most settled in villages by the 1970s under the influence of Christian missionaries.

The Bruno Manser Fund said Along Sega himself decided to settle in a village in the early 2000s, mostly because of the depletion of the forests.

Even the settled Penan still retain a deep connection to the jungle, foraging for rattan, medicinal plants, fruits, and sago palm, a starchy staple. Wild game are hunted with finely crafted blowpipes and poison darts. 

AFP

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