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[PCUSANEWS] 'Enduring and inviolable brotherhood'


From PCUSA NEWS <PCUSA.NEWS@ECUNET.ORG>
Date Thu, 15 Jul 2004 06:33:57 -0500

Note #8429 from PCUSA NEWS to PRESBYNEWS:

04312
July 14, 2004

'Enduring and inviolable brotherhood'

21st-century violence overwhelms ancient peace-keeping system

by John Filiatreau

AMBON, Indonesia - The Moluccan region of eastern Indonesia, where
Christian-Muslim violence has resulted in more than 10,000 deaths in the past
five years, was long considered one of Indonesia's proudest examples of
religious tolerance.

	For centuries, the people of the Spice Islands maintained peace
through an ancient social system known as pela, whose purpose was to enable
the residents of neighboring villages to settle disputes without going to
war.

	For more than two centuries, pela was the glue that bound Christians
and Muslims together and prevented violence over religious differences.

	The custom usually cited as an illustration of pela is one that
obliges Christians to help Muslims build mosques, and Muslims to help
Christians build churches.

	According to the Rev. I.W.J. Hendriks, the chairman of the Moluccan
Protestant Church (GPM) Synod, the topmost minaret of a mosque must be placed
in position by a representative of the Muslims' (Christian) pela partner.
Because of the violence of recent years, he says, "several" places of worship
in Ambon "have never really been finished," and many have been destroyed
before they were completed.

	Hendriks, and many other Moluccans, both Christian and Muslim,
consider ancient pela relationships between Moluccan villages to be still in
effect, although they worry that it may be irretrievably broken.

	According to the International Crisis Group (ICG), a non-profit
organization that tries to prevent and resolve deadly conflicts around the
world, pela was successful because it "stressed ethnic similarities over
religious differences" and "was anchored in mystical beliefs shared by both
communities."

	Pela pacts were concluded through a powerful oath, backed up with a
terrible curse on any transgressor. A cocktail of palm wine mixed with blood
drawn from the village chiefs was prepared. Weapons were immersed in the
potion, with warnings that they would turn against and kill anyone who broke
the oath; and then people from both villages drank the mixture. The
brotherhood was sealed by this exchange of blood.

	Historically, pela was rooted in head-hunting. Villages and clans
made the alliances to protect themselves from raiders and to strengthen
themselves for attacks on others. Sometimes such pacts were made to end a
prolonged period of feuding.

	Anthropological researcher Dieter Bartels, of Cornell University,
wrote in 1977 that pela was "an enduring and inviolable brotherhood between
all peoples of the partner villages," built on four main ideas:

	The villages help each other in times of trouble (wars, natural
disaster, etc.); when asked, one village must assist the other in the
undertaking of large community projects (like the construction of a church or
mosque); any visitor from a partner village cannot be denied food (indeed, a
visitor can take any crops or livestock he comes across, without asking
permission); and all residents of partner villages are considered to be of
one blood, meaning that inter-marriage is considered incestuous.

	The latter point was crucial, Bartels wrote, because "pela eliminated
head-hunting between the allies, while marriage ties across village lines did
not seem to prevent such attacks."

	Muslims arrived in the Moluccas in the 12th century. About 400 years
later, when Portuguese mariners came to the Moluccas for its precious spices,
they found the Muslims and non-Muslims engaged in a deadly struggle. The
non-Muslims turned to the Portuguese for aid and were converted en masse to
Catholicism. Just after 1600, the Dutch wrested power away from the
Portuguese and converted the Catholics en masse to Calvinist Protestantism.
Pela was thereafter used, according to Bartels, to join Muslims and
Christians in "countless, if futile, uprisings against both colonial powers."

	According to Bartels, pela was a key element in "a common Ambonese
ethnic religion" that transcended Islam and Christianity and formed the basis
of a common identity. The core elements of the ethnic religion were these: 1)
Islam and Christianity are equally valid and truthful; they are alternative
paths to God, who is one and the same; 2) customary law, known as adat,
created and is still guarded by the ancient Ambonese "ancestors," is the same
for Muslims and Christians and governs interaction between them; and 3) All
Ambonese were created at a Christian mountain, Mount Nunusaku, on the island
of Seram.

	Many modern adherents of the pela system dismiss its mythical
aspects.

	Pela is a system of "mutual insurance" that can be tapped "when one
of the partner villages needs a relatively large capital investment," Bartels
wrote, and the ban on inter-marriage "makes it possible to transfer the idiom
of kinship to the alliance system and use the strongest possible ties between
human beings (those of kinship) as the basis of the pela system."

	"If marriage were allowed ... (it) would lead to a series of
mini-alliances of the intermarrying clans, which would undermine the overall
bond between the villages."

	The strength of pela was illustrated in one notable case in the
1940s, when Christian guerrillas fighting for South Moluccan independence
defended the mosque in their partner village against fellow Christian
militias that wanted to burn it in retaliation for the Muslims' alleged
support of Indonesian troops.

	One can also see the power of the custom in its treatment of mixed
marriages. When a Christian and a Muslim married, one or the other simply
converted, and the couple lived in the village of their now common faith,
with no social sanction or punishment. But when a man and woman from pela
partner villages married, they were ostracized from both villages and could
expect punishment from God and the ancestors, who would send barrenness,
illness or death to the miscreants and/or their descendants. If they dared to
set foot in the home village of either partner, they would be paraded around
the village clad only in coconut leaves and made to confess their sin
publicly while being mocked and ridiculed by the whole village.

	There is a Moluccan folk song whose title, Satu hati satu gandong,
means "one heart, one womb.

Brothers, let me carry you on my back,
I will carry you on my back,
We are both from one root, one heart, one soul.

	The pela system, which depended on relations between village chiefs
and councils of elders, was weakened after Indonesia's 1949 independence from
the Dutch, when the government took steps to undermine the authority of
village chiefs. It was all but destroyed in the 1990s by transmigration,
which brought in hundreds of thousands of people from other parts of
Indonesia who had never been part of pela and didn't understand it.

	"The denial of pela," Bartels wrote, "is tantamount to a denial of
the existence of a separate and unique Ambonese culture and identity."

	That's what the Jakarta government had in mind when it launched its
campaign of nationalization.

	 "Without pela ... Ambonese ethnic religion would lose its
foundation, and (its) collapse would be a serious threat to Ambonese unity,"
Bartels wrote prophetically 30 years ago. "Islam and Christianity are now
subordinated to the goals of ethnic religion, but if the latter crumbles, the
buffer between the two will be removed, leading to a direct confrontation.
... Ambonese Moslems and Ambonese Christians would then deal with one another
not primarily as Ambonese, but as Moslems and Christians first and as
Ambonese second."

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