First
and Third World in Tenganan
Colors
and Trees
In
the 1980s, Pak Sadra and the villagers of Tenganan started to
plant 17,000 trees on the denuded hills behind Candi Dasa, with
the help of the Gandhian Ashram and Quakers' donations. Their
dream is to be able to grow the mengkudu tree again, (Morinda
citrifolia or noni), whose roots give the red color of the geringsing
textiles. Used for ceremonies, these long scarves hold intricate
patterns with symbolic meanings, and are believed to have healing
and protective powers.

Building
Village Ecotourism
A
curse and a blessing, tourism has glued the people of Tenganan
together and encouraged them to revive their traditions. When
Candidasa boomed as a tourist destination in the 1980s, Tenganan
reoriented its economy towards the sale of handicrafts, such
as textiles, and baskets made of ata grass. But as traditions
had been lost, Tenganan was easily exploited by outsiders.
"With
the boom of travelling to Candidasa, or people started to
become tourism objects," explains Pak Sadra, a community
leader. Tour operators charging their clients hundreds of dollars
would leave less than US$20 to the village. Knowing nothing about
Tenganan, guides from outside fabricated stories. "They would
tell tourists that geringsing , our sacred cloth, used to be dyed
with human blood, or similar lies."
"In
1977," explains Sadra, "only five women of the
village could still weave the geringsing , or double ikat cloth,
which is unique to Tenganan." When people started to sell
their old pieces to tourists, Sadra encouraged more women to make
geringsing . "The main difficult was finding the red dye.
We had no more trees producing this ingredient, so we had to bring
tons of dye by boat from Nusa Penida before starting to plant
the trees again.”
The
next step was to motivate the young generation to revive traditions
and be able to explain them to visitors. Pak Sadra started
to challenge the village youth to continue local traditions by
talking to the elders. With support from the Village Ecotourism
Network of the Wisnu Foundation, he started to train young
guides, establishing trekking trips during which hikers can discover
Tenganan from the viewpoint of its people. This new generation
of local guides, like Nyoman, is able to paint an honest portrait
of their village. In many cases, he candidly admits that not everything
can be explained, and has to follow the advice of Pak Sandra:
“The meaning of old traditions is partially lost. It is for
us to find our own interpretations to keep them alive.”
walk
around village
many
marriage prohibitions
Used
for ceremonies