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In the
southeastern part of Maluku Province lived more than 60,000 residents of
the Tanimbar archipelago in the early 1990s. They resided in villages
ranging in size from 150 to 2,500 inhabitants, but most villages
numbered from 300 to 1,000. Nearly all residents spoke one of four
related, but mutually unintelligible, languages. Because of an extended
dry season, the forests were much less luxuriant than in some of the
more northerly Maluku Islands, and the effects of over-intensive swidden
cultivation of rice, cassava, and other root crops were visible in the
interior. Many Tanimbarese also engaged in reef and deep-sea fishing and
wild boar hunting.
Unlike
the Weyewa, Toraja, or Dayak, the Tanimbarese do not maintain an
opposition between their native culture and an officially recognized
Christian culture. Following a Dutch military expedition in 1912,
Catholic and Protestant missionaries converted all residents of their
archipelago by the 1920s. However, the Tanimbarese tradition is
preserved through intervillage and interhousehold marriage alliances.
Tanimbarese orient themselves socially toward their villages and their
houses.
The unity of the village is represented as a stone
boat. In
ceremonial settings, such as indigenous dance, the rankings and statuses
within the village are spoken of as a seating arrangement within this
symbolic boat. Intervillage and interhouse rivalry, no longer expressed
through headhunting and warfare, continue to be represented through
complex ritual exchanges of valuables, marriage alliances, and
competitive relations between the Catholic and Protestant churches (one
or the other of which counts each Tanimbarese as a member).
Tanimbarese are affiliated with rahan (houses) that are
important corporate units, responsible for making offerings to the
ancestors, whose skulls were traditionally placed inside. Rahan
are also responsible for the maintenance and distribution of heirloom
property consisting of valuables and forest estates. Since Tanimbarese
recognize a system of patrilineal descent, when a child is born they
customarily ask: "Stranger or house master"? Since a male is
destined to "sit" or "stay" in the house of his
father, he is a "master of his house." If the baby is a girl,
the child is destined to move between houses, and thus is a "stranger."
The question of which house the girl moves to, and what obligations and
rights will go along with the move, is one of the most important
questions in Tanimbarese society. There are certain "pathways"
of marriage that young women from certain houses are expected to follow,
particularly if these interclan alliances have lasted more than three
generations. Only if certain valuables are properly received by her
natal family, however, is a young woman fully incorporated into her
husband's home. Otherwise, her children are regarded as a branch of her
brother's lineage.
The Tanimbarese traditionally engaged in
both a local system of ceremonial exchange and, for centuries, in a
broader Indonesian commerce in which they traded copra, trepang,
tortoise shell, and shark fins for gold, elephant tusks, textiles, and
other valuables. In the twentieth century, however, Tanimbarese began to
exchange their local products for more prosaic items such as tobacco,
coffee, sugar, metal cooking pots, needles, clothing, and other
domestic-use items. In the 1970s and 1980s, Chinese merchants thoroughly
dominated this trade and consequently gained great influence in the
local village economy.
Written by The Library of Congress - Country Studies
Data as of November 1992
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