The
Hidden Life of East Bali
Found
a definitive solution to the problem of kids like Mardu and Kacrut.
Indeed, a closer look is needed to understand the ties of culture,
politics, history, and economics that bind parents, children,
and employers in a system of child labour.
In
the modern West, children are considered to be fundamentally different
from adults, with special rights of their own. As beings who are
not yet fully formed, they must be protected until they reach
adulthood. In Bali , however, children live in closer contact
with the world of adults. If the West has over 18 - movies and
casinos, Bali has all – night, all – ages performances, rituals,
and cockfights at which entire villages gather. While most parents
will not make love in front of their children sharing sleeping
quarters mean that children grow up quickly understanding the
facts of life. Youth become full members of the village banjar
organization upon marriage, whether this happens at 14 or 40.

Likewise,
most Balinese don't draw a rigid line around “labour” as a category.
Children fly kites while watching the cows, hunt for frogs while
helping to plant the rice, or sing while searching for firewood,
just as adults gath er to gossip and joke while harvesting or
making offerings. There are no set “ working hours” and the daily
load is dependent on the vagaries of the weather and the harvest.
Finding
the Way Back to School
Back
in east Bali , Mardu, the quiet boy, missed his friend Kacrut.
He also missed school. “I liked it,” he says, “but there was no
money to pay for it. What else could I do?” To help his mother,
he began working in the village, sometimes as a construction coolie,
or taking care of this neighbours' cows and chickens. At the age
of ten, Mardu followed his older sister to the city of Denpasar
, and began working in the market as a carrier, hauling loads
of rice and other goods. Working ten hours a day, he could make
around Rp200,000 a mont h, sharing a room
few
were surprised
Competition
among handicraft
hunt
for frogs
started
skipping school