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Jan - Mar 2001
Living with tigers in South Aceh
John McCarthy
In January 1999, a local newspaper described the fear
gripping villages around Labuan Haji, a township
located on the western coast of southern Aceh. A tiger
had attacked a schoolboy picking nutmeg in a forest
garden near Hulu Pisang village, close to Mount Leuser.
The tiger pounced, mauled, and finally killed the
youth. Over the next few days, the tiger stalked the
area, leaving footprints in the surrounds. Farmers
abandoned their gardens for some days. Villagers
wanted to poison the tiger, but the local authorities
and the village heads sought the help of a traditional
tiger expert a pawang.
During 1996-9, just before the latest conflict broke
out in Aceh, I spent twelve months in villages around
Tapaktuan, the capital of South Aceh. People often
discussed the tiger. This dangerous animal clearly
preoccupied villagers. Older villagers described how
tigers were once common. People walking through the
village at night sometimes met tigers sitting by the
side of a path. Tiger attacks were always unusual, but
they did occur. As villagers farming nutmeg in
hillside gardens feared the tiger, they would go into
the hills with three or more friends.
In South Aceh, villagers farming in the hills belong
to an association of farmers working gardens within
the same hillside territory. It is known as a
seuneubok. Each seuneubok chooses a person respected
for their forest skills to act as the customary head.
When possible, farmers prefer to have a pawang work in
this capacity a person with special esoteric
knowledge. Village lore holds that pawang can contact
the guardian spirits of the forest, the aulia, who
appears in dreams. With the help of the aulia, pawang
can call tigers.
In his book, Indonesian Eden: Aceh's rainforest, Mike
Griffiths described how villagers believed dreams
worked as a medium for communication. 'Years ago, a
lady had a dream in which two orphaned kittens
approached her and begged for food. She consented and
the kittens expressed their gratitude. The next day
while working in her ladang [fields], she saw two
tigers at the forest's edge. Recognising the
significance of her dream, she prepared food and left
it at the place where she saw the tigers, whistling as
she left. After that she continued to leave food out,
and periodically the tigers came to eat perhaps
learning to associate her call and whistle with the
opportunity for easy food.'
Agreement
By tradition, each seuneubok has an understanding with
one or more tigers known as seuneubok tigers, tigers
that spend part of each year in the seuneubok. Older
villagers recall that once there were up to three
tigers in any seuneubok. Nowadays a seuneubok is lucky
to have one. According to a tacit agreement between
seuneubok members and the tiger, the resident tiger
hunts pigs and other pests while leaving human beings
alone. Villagers report that this tiger will also warn
of the presence of 'strange' tigers from outside the
area by leaving distinctive claw marks on the main
path. When villagers see these marks, they understand
that there are wild tigers in the seuneubok, and they
will not go to their forest gardens that day.
In return for the tiger's benevolence, villagers
provide for it. For instance, even to this day, custom
requires that during the durian harvest farmers leave
five durian fruit from each tree for the seuneubok
tiger. Once a year, at the time the forest flowers,
the seuneubok holds a feast, and villagers always
think of resident tigers. At this time, seuneubok
heads able to act as pawang call the tiger and provide
rice, meat and vegetables. In the course of their
duties, a seuneubok head able to act as a pawang
becomes familiar and even befriends the seuneubok
tiger, often meeting them in their forest gardens. At
the time of the annual feast (kenduri), resident
tigers have been known to seek out the pawang to
remind him of the feast, leaving signs in the dirt,
calling out, or even sleeping under a pawang's forest
hut.
The customary rules relating to the seuneubok have a
sacral element, and these are binding for humans and
tigers alike. Villagers understand that tigers, being
under the command of the aulia guardian spirit,
enforce the customary laws. Any villagers attacked by
tigers are held to be evil people who have broken
Islamic precepts. A seuneubok head explained to me
that the resident tiger 'is on duty there. If there is
someone who steals from the village and takes it to
the mountain, he will be disturbed by the tiger.'
However, the pawang will hunt a tiger that violates
the tacit seuneubok covenant. If a tiger attacks and
kills someone, the pawang sets out to trap it.
A local forestry official told me that tigers tend to
come down into the village areas during the western
monsoon. Females bring their cubs down to avoid older
males who can attack cubs, while older, tired tigers
also descend out of the hills at this time.
To deal with tiger attacks, the forestry department
regularly uses the skills of the pawang. 'We used to
have a pawang on our staff,' the official said. But
most pawang are now over fifty, and young people are
no longer training to become pawang. Like the tiger
itself, the pawang are becoming increasingly rare.
Since the departmental pawang died, the forestry
department has had to hire pawang to help track errant
tigers. According to the forester, pawang 'say that a
tiger won't want to enter a trap if he is not in the
wrong.'
Poachers
The Sumatran tiger is highly endangered. According to
one estimate, less than four hundred still survive in
Sumatra's shrinking forests. Nonetheless, in some
villages in South Aceh villagers often see them.
'People say the tigers are going extinct,' an older
villager said to me, 'but those people haven't been
here.' A forester confirmed this: 'We don't know the
number of tigers,' he said, 'but there are lots of
tigers in some places, and here tigers often disturb
the villages.'
As the forestry
department wants to conserve tiger numbers, they even
try to safeguard man-eating tigers. While villagers
wish to catch a killer tiger, if possible foresters
will drive the tiger back into the jungle. 'We have to
be very sensitive handling these cases', he said.
Over 1998-9, the World Wide Fund for Nature found 66
Sumatran tigers ready for illegal sale in the markets
of Sumatra. Traders sell tiger products such as skin,
teeth, claws and whiskers, mostly as ingredients in
traditional Chinese medicines. The Jakarta Post
reported recently that traders can earn between Rp
300,000 to Rp 500,000 per tooth. Poachers who catch
tigers use poison or snares, but these are not pawang.
'We haven't seen this [ie. pawang poaching tigers for
gain] ourselves', the forestry field officer noted,
'although there are storiesA pawang is generally angry
if people catch tigers. This is because he considers
the tiger as part of his happiness'.
When a villager was killed near Tapaktuan in the mid
1990s, a pawang caught the errant tiger. Before the
forestry department took it away, the local forestry
office put the caged animal on exhibition for a week.
Later, foresters released this representative of a
highly endangered species near the regional centre of
Tapaktuan. But villagers were disappointed. The tiger
had killed someone, and they felt it wasn't right to
return his freedom.

John McCarthy (J.McCarthy@murdoch.edu.au)
is a researcher at the Asia Research Centre, Murdoch
University, Perth, Western Australia. |