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There is probably no group in Indonesia more aware of its own ethnic identity
than the nearly 2.5 million Balinese. Inhabitants of the islands of Bali
and Lombok and the western half of Sumbawa, Balinese are often portrayed
as a graceful, poised, and aesthetically inclined people. Although such
descriptions date back six centuries or more and are at least partially
based on legend, this characterization is also partly based on events in
contemporary Indonesia.Virtually
no part of Bali escaped the watchful gaze of tourists who came in
increasing numbers each year to enjoy the island's beautiful beaches and
stately temples, and to seek out an "authentic" experience of
this perceived "traditional" culture.The market for traditional carvings, dance
performances, and paintings boomed, and many Balinese
successfully reinvested their earnings in further development of these
highly profitable art forms.
Balinese have a long history of contrasting themselves profitably with outsiders.
Although Hinduism had already established a foothold on Bali, the
contemporary distinctive Hindu religious practices of the Balinese date
back at least to the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, when Javanese
princes from Majapahit fled the advances of Islam and sought refuge in
Bali, where they were absorbed into the local culture.
Since that time, Balinese, with the exception of a minority of Muslims
in the north, have maintained a generally anti-Islamic political stance,
preserving a great pride in their own culture. Indeed, segregation
between themselves and outsiders has been an organizing factor in
Balinese culture.
Like the Javanese, Balinese
society is stratified. It possesses the small hereditary Brahman class,
as well as small groups of Vaishya and Kshatriya classes that draw on
Indian caste terminology. However, the Balinese caste system involves no
occupational specializations or ideas about ritual contaminations
between the ranks. It does not prohibit marriage between ranks, but does
forbid women to marry beneath their class. The vast majority of
Balinese, including many wealthy entrepreneurs and prominent politicians,
belong to the Shudra (commoner-servant) class.
Unlike most Javanese, Balinese
participate enthusiastically in several interlocking corporate groups
beyond the immediate family. One of the most important of these is the dadia,
or patrilineal descent group.
This is a group of people who claim
descent through the male line from a common ancestor. The group
maintains a temple to that ancestor, a treasury to support rituals
associated with it, and certain chosen leaders. The prestige of a dadia
depends in part on how widespread and powerful its members are. However,
most of these organized groups tend to be localized, because it is
easier to maintain local support for its activities and its temple.
Balinese prefer to draw spouses from within this group. These corporate
kin groups can also be the basis for organizing important economic
activities, such as carving cooperatives, gold and silverworking
cooperatives, painting studios, and dance troupes.
In addition, Balinese are members
of a banjar, or village compound, which overlaps with, but is
not identical to, the dadia. The social groups share
responsibility for security, economic cooperation in the tourist trade,
and the formation of intervillage alliances. The banjar is a
council of household heads and is responsible for marriage, divorce, and
inheritance transactions. In addition, it is the unit for mobilizing
resources and labor for the spectacular cremations for which Bali has
become increasingly well known. Each banjar may have individual
orchestra, dance, and weaving clubs.
Yet another important corporate
group is the agricultural society, or subak, each of which
corresponds to a section of wet-rice paddies. Each subak is not
only a congregation of members who are jointly responsible for
sacrificing at a temple placed in the center of this group of rice
paddies, but also a unit that organizes the flow of water, planting, and
harvesting. Since fifty or more societies sometimes tap into a common
stream of water for the irrigation of their land, complex coordination
of planting and harvesting schedules is required. This complexity arises
because each subak has become independent of all the others.
Although the government has attempted periodically to take control of
the irrigation schedule, these efforts have produced mixed results,
leading to a movement in the early 1990s to return the authority for the
agricultural schedule to the traditional and highly successful
interlocking subak arrangement.
The very complexity of Balinese
social organization has provided it with the flexibility to adapt to the
pressures of modern life and its requirements for the accumulation,
distribution, and mobilization of capital and technological resources.
Although the Balinese remain self-consciously "traditional,"
they have been neither rigid in that tradition nor resistant to change.
Written by The Library of Congress - Country Studies
Data as of November 1992
Find your accomodation in Indonesia by checking our hotel recommendations. You might get additional information on culture and attractions of Indonesia by trying on of the suggested books and guides. If you have special questions on a particular tour or trip, don't hesitate to contact one of the tour operators. We wish you a pleasant stay on our site, and maybe we once meet in Indonesia: the land of natural attractions and cultural diversity.
