KORERI MESSIANIC MOVEMENTS IN THE BIAK-NUMFOR CULTURE AREA

Similar documents
TBE DVTCB EA.ST INDIA COMPA.NY A.ND MYSOllE

International Institute of Philosophy Institut International de Philo sophie

HUME'S THEORY OF IMAGINATION

THE LOGIC OF INVARIABLE CONCOMITANCE IN THE TATTVACINTĀMANI

SOVIET RUSSIAN DIALECTICAL MA TERIALISM [DIAMAT]

AN IDEALISTIC PRAGMATISM

The Bibliotheca Indonesica is a series published by the Koninklijk Instituut voor Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde (Royal Netherlands Institute of

The Challenge of Religious Discrimination at the. Dawn of the New Millennium

TSERETELI - A DEMOCRAT IN THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION

PETER THE GREAT AND MARLBOROUGH

THE PEASANTS' REVOLT OF BANTEN IN 1888

Warfare and Politics in Medieval Germany, ca. 1000

IMAGINATION AND REFLECTION: INTERSUBJECTIVITY FICHTE'S: GRUNDLAGE OF 1794

STUDIES IN ANALOGY. University oj Notre Dame THE HAGUE MARTINUS NIJHOFF RALPH MCINERNY

MORAVIA'S HISTORY RECONSIDERED A REINTERPRETATION OF MEDIEVAL SOURCES

LANGUAGE AND ILLUMINATION

The Soviet Union and the Origins of the Second World War

ADAM SMITH'S THEORY OF VALUE AND DISTRIBUTION

STUDIES IN PHILOSOPHY AND RELIGION

UNITED NATIONS CONVENTION ON THE LAW OF THE SEA 1982 A COMMENTARY

COMPARATIVE STUDIES IN PHENOMENOLOGY

CHARTISM AND THE CHARTISTS IN MANCHESTER AND SALFORD

POSITIVISM AND CHRISTIANITY A STUDY OF THEISM AND VERIFIABILITY

Neurotechnologies of the Self

ARISTOTLE'S THEORY OF PRACTICAL COGNITION

CRUSADE AGAINST DRINK IN VICTORIAN ENGLAND

This page intentionally left blank

Evil and International Relations

Shelley's Poetic Thoughts

Wittgenstein and Buddhism

TABLE OF CONTENTS CHAPTER ONE A PROPOSAL... 1

HABIB BOURGUIBA OF TUNISIA

JUST1FICATION IN EARLIER MEDIEVAL THEOLOGY

THE CLASSICAL MARXIST CRITIQUES OF RELIGION: MARX, ENGELS, LENIN, KAUTSKY

Contents. List of figures, maps and tables Acknowledgements A note on spelling, pronunciation and names Chronology

PHENOMENOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF WITTGENSTEIN'S PHILOSOPHY

MORALITY AND SOVEREIGNTY IN THE PHILOSOPHY OF HOBBES

DECLARATION OF ACADEMIC INTEGRITY. I declare that THE CONQUEST LEGEND: INSPIRATION FOR THE JOSHUA. is my own work and that all the sources that I have

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The writer wants to express his gratitude to: Jesus Christ. Thank You for Your Guidance and blessings during the writing process of t

MONTESQUIEU AND THE PHILOSOPHY OF NATURAL LAW

RADICAL ENLIGHTENMENT

CGSC 281/PHIL 181: Phil&Sci Human Nature Gendler/Yale University, Spring Reading Guide The Ring of Gyges: Morality and Hypocrisy

Ephesians. An Exegetical Commentary. Harold W. Hoehner

Blake and the Methodists

"",hi'" . -= ::-~,~-:::=- ...,.,.. ::;- -.--

THE APOLOGETIC VALUE OF HUMAN HOLINESS

Developing Christian Servant Leadership

THE KING JAMES BIBLE

THE ROYAL NAVY. The Cambridge Manuals of Science and Literature

PRIMARY AND SECONDARY PRECEPTS IN THOMISTIC NATURAL LAW TEACHING

MORALITY IN EVOLUTION. The Moral Philosophy of Henri Bergson

GUIDE TO THE WRITINGS OF HERMAN BAVINCK

THE JEWISH INTELLIGENTSIA AND RUSSIAN MARXISM

Faith, Philosophy and the Reflective Muslim

THESIS THE RECEPTION OF AL-MASHLAHAT AL-MURSALAH WITHIN LOCAL REGULATION OF PROBOLINGGO CITY NUM. 2 YEAR 2009 ABOUT OLD AGE PROSPERITY

GOD-RELATIONSHIPS WITH AND WITHOUT GOD

acting on principle onora o neill has written extensively on ethics and political philosophy

Northern Thai Stone Inscriptions (14 th 17 th Centuries)

PRACTICE ANO REALIZATION

A RUSSIAN PHILOSOPHE ALEXANDER RADISHCHEV

Could There Have Been Nothing?

Marxism and the Leninist Revolutionary Model

THE GREATER- GOOD DEFENCE

HENRY E. KYBURG, JR. & ISAAC LEVI

IDEOLOGY AND SOCIAL SCIENCE

THE RETURN MOVEMENT OF JEWS TO AUSTRIA AFTER THE SECOND WORLD WAR

The Impact of African Traditional Religious Beliefs and Cultural Values on Christian- Muslim Relations in Ghana from 1920 through the Present:

Violence and Social Justice

COMPLAINT RESPONSES USED BY INDONESIAN EFL LEARNERS

DOI: / The Veil in Kuwait

A PRAGMATIC ANALYSIS OF SLOGAN USED IN MOBILE PHONE BRAND

The Afterlife of Idealism

KUKI IDENTITY, LAND-USE, AUTHORITY, AND ETHNIC- NATIONALISM IN MANIPUR, INDIA

THE STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY OF MISSOURI RESEARCH CENTER-KANSAS CITY

he Economy of Late Achaemenid and Seleucid Babylonia

MEASURING THE TOTAL QUALITY MANAGEMENT IN THE INDONESIAN UNIVERSITIES: FROM THE PERSPECTIVES OF FACULTY MEMBERS THESIS

PROFILES EDITORS EDITORIAL BOARD. RADU J. BOGDAN, Tulane University ILKKA NIINILUOTO, University of Helsinki VOLUME 4

(jfra^lmogy & CMoTM YOUNG OON KIM REVISED EDITION. 4 West 43rd Street New York, New York, 10036

Muslim and Christian Understanding. Theory and Application of A Common Word

INDONESIAN LEARNING MANAGEMENT BASED UASBN (A Site Study at SDN Jurangombo 4 th Magelang) THESIS. Addressed to:

Biblical School of World Evangelism. Milford, Ohio SYLLABUS. Chronological Bible. Spring 2014 BI 106 (Catalog Number) David L.

Paul s First Epistle

History and Causality

GANDHI'S SIGNIFICANCE FOR TODAY

ISLAMIC FUNDAMENTALISM IN EGYPTIAN POLITICS

NATIONAL BIBLE COLLEGE SYLLABUS NEW TESTAMENT SURVEY BI 111

THE POSSIBILITY OF AN ALL-KNOWING GOD

A Critical Study of Hans Küng s Ecclesiology

General Editor: D.Z. Phillips, Professor of Philosophy, University College of Swansea

Contents. 2 Justification: The Biblical Basis and Its Relevance for Contemporary Evangelicalism (1980) 21 Introduction: The Shape of the Doctrine 21

Managing Editor: Editors:

JEWISH-CHRISTIAN RELATIONS IN THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY

Kant s Practical Philosophy

ARGUMENTS IN HISTORY. Britain in the Nineteenth Century

Political Islam in Turkey

Christian-Muslim Relationships in Medan. and Dalihan na tolu. A Social Capital Study. of The Batak Cultural Values

CONFLICT AND CONTROL: LAW AND ORDER IN NINETEENTH CENTURY ITALY

Political Writings of Friedrich Nietzsche

Intimacy, Transcendence, and Psychology

PHENOMENOLOGICAL METHOD: THEORY AND PRACTICE

Transcription:

KORERI MESSIANIC MOVEMENTS IN THE BIAK-NUMFOR CULTURE AREA

To the memory of Frans Johannes Frederik van Hasselt (1894-1931 missionary in New Guinea)

I. Rodjau Obinaru from Warda, the informant in 1952 with the original Kanken (Kedwai) Koreri shield (ef. pp. VI, 126-127,260).

3. Pamai Jacadewa, visionary of Ormu in 1962 (c/. pp. 283, 284 and 295). 2. Konoor Warbesren Rumbewas in prison (1934) (c/. pp. 150ff.). 1965 t.

KONINKLIJK INSTlTUUT VOOR TAAL., LAND.. EN VOLKENKUNDE TRANSLATION SERIES 15 FREERK CR. KAMMA KORERI MESSIANIC MOVEMENTS IN THE BIAK NUMFOR CULTURE AREA THE HAGUE MARTINUS NIJHOFF. 1972

This book is published under а grant from the Netherlands Ministry of Education and Sciences The original title was: DE MESSIAANSE KORERI-BEWEGINGEN IN НЕТ BIAKS-NOEMFOORSE си LTUU RGEBIED (First ed. J. N. Voorhoeve, The Hague [1954]) The English translation was made Ьу Mrs. М. J. уan de Vathorst-Smit The manuscript was edited Ьу Mrs. W. Е. Haver Droeze-Hulswit ISBN 978-94-015-0230-6 DOI ОOII0.I007/978-94-015-0742-4 10.1007/978-94-015-0742-4 ISBN 978-94-015-0742-4 (ebook) Softcover reprint of the hardcover 1 st edition 1972

PREFACE This study developed out of the personal experience of daily life that I and my family had in the years 1932-1942 among the Biakspeaking people of the Radja Ampat area (Sorong), West New Guinea. Our family had become integrated into the community as far as possible, and we used the Biak language every day. Three of the movements described in this book took place in that area, so that I was able to study them under the favorable conditions of direct participation and observation. The first edition of the book in 1954 (in Dutch) was the writer's doctoral thesis (Ph. D.), written under the guidance of the late Professor J. P. B. de Josselin de Jong. I am very grateful to the Royal Institute of Linguistics and Anthropology, Leiden, for publishing the revised English edition in its Translation Series. The Biak material deserves more readers than the Dutch edition was able to reach. Except for this Preface, the Song of Manarmakdi and the conclusions and summary, the translation was made by Mrs. M. J. van de Vathorst Smit. To make easy reading of the old-fashioned archive-language was not an easy task. I offer her my sincere thanks. Mrs. W. E. Haver Droeze Hulswit undertook the tedious work of comparing the quotations with the bibliography, checking the often incomplete names and titles of the latter, and preparing the whole revised edition for the printer, complete with indexes. Any degree of accuracy that the book may possess is largely due to her painstaking efforts, for which I am deeply grateful. Mr. S. O. Robson M.A. was always willing to help disentangle knots, for example in some footnotes, the Song of Manarmakdi, and some additions which had to be made. I am also grateful for the help I received from Dr. J. C. Anceaux, who checked the spelling of geographical names and the spelling rules for Indonesian and indigenous New Guinea languages. Dr. R. Roolvink assisted with the nomenclature of governmental officials. I would also like to express my gratitude to Professor Dr. F. J. Ormeling, Director of the International Institute for Aerial Survey and Earth

VI PREFACE Sciences (I.T.C.) in Enschede, who was so kind as to provide me with new drawings for the maps. To the many Biak informants, especially the Rodjau Obinaru and the Mananir of the village of Wardo, whose knowledge has been extremely valuable in the formulation of this study of the Koreri Movements, my heartfelt thanks. The extent to which I am indebted for the material that my friends and colleagues put at my disposal will be discovered in the following pages. I mention here only the late Revs. I. S. Kijne, H. J. Agter, and F. J. S. Rumainum, as well as Messrs. M. W. Kaisjepo a,nd Kumense Mandof and Rev. J. Bijkerk. This study is dedicated to the memory of my late colleague F. J. F. van Hasselt, as a token of my admiration. For 36 years he worked in New Guinea and taught us missionaries that a deep love of people is the only condition for a real knowledge of their way of life. After I obtained access to old German periodicals some additions turned out to be necessary, and the total number of Koreri Movements has therefore risen to 45. In a supplement (Chapter X) the reader will find some discussions of publications on the general topic which have appeared since 1954, and in the Appendix it will be seen that the list of similar movements in West New Guinea has risen from 13 in 1954 to 26. In Chapter IV the Song of the "Messiah" figure has been added. I am aware that many more movements have occurred and are still occurring, especially in times of political unrest and socio-economic uncertainty. For a variety of reasons pseudonyms have sometimes been used instead of the real names of clans and persons. Some comment on the bibliography, quotations and oral sources must now be made: 1. Some quotations have been abbreviated, in order to avoid the longwinded, old-fashioned style of the original, but the reader can rest assured that the original meaning remains. 2. The numbers following quotations indicate the number in the bibliography; when a year is mentioned periodicals are intended. The last number always indicates the page on which one can find the quotation or the explanation. 3. The spelling of Indonesi~ words. and names follows the rules. fox: Bahasa Indonesia. For words and names in indigenous languages the rule is that consonants have English value and vowels continental value.

PREFACE VII 4. The italicization of words and passages has mostly been done by the present author. 5. In the General Index persons' names have generally been listed under the first name. For example, Kumense Mandof is to be found under K. 6. In various places in this book there is reference to texts which are in the possession of the author and will be published at a later date. 7. Two maps show the places and areas where movements occurred; in the Legend of one of the maps some comments are given. The small map shows similar movements which occurred in other parts of West New Guinea (Irian Barat).

CONTENTS PREFACE INTRODUCTION. v 1 I. THE SETTING a. Geographical and historical background. b. Plans of houses and villages. c. Social organization d. Religion........ II. THE MYTH OF MANARMAKERI Names.... Prehistory...... Genealogy of Manarmakeri On the heights of Yamnaibori. Prologue... THE MYTH a. Introduction b. The story. III. THE RETURN OF MANSEREN MANGGUNDI AND THE CONCLUSION OF THE MYTH. a. The return....... b. The conclusion of the myth. 5 5 10 11 14 17 17 20 22 23 23 25 25 26 37 37 40 IV. THE MEANING OF THE DIFFERENCES IN THE VARIANTS OF THE MYTH.... The poetical text of the myth... The Song (Beyuser) of Manarmakdi. (a. Introduction). :...... (b. The song (monologue of the Old Man)) 50 58 59 59 59

x CONTENTS ( c. Intermezzo)..... 60 (d. Continuing the narrative) 61 V. THE CONNECTION WITH BIAK MYTHOLOGY 64 1. The disguised figures, rejected or accepted. 68 2. The contact with the ancestors and the land of souls 73 3. The meaning of the coconut palm.....,. 77 4. The voyage from west to east, and the role of the generation groups......... 81 5. The moon, the sun, and the Morning Star.... 82 6. The animals in the myths......... 85 7. Acts of creation by the principal personages in the myths 86 8. The function of the clan sanctuary as the center of mythical power and the moveability of this center. 87 VI. THE ADVENT NIGHTS............. 97 VII. HISTORY OF THE MOVEMENTS 1855-1967 102 Introduction 102 The Movements... 105 Japen and Kurudu.. 142 The Radja Ampat area. 145 Koreri movements after World War II. 153 VIII. THE MOVEMENTS OF 1938-1943 IN BIAK, NUMFOR AND JAPEN............. 157 1. The beginning of the Movement in Supiori.. 157 2. 1942, the New Leader, Stephanus Simopyaref.. 168 3. Considerations...... 173 4. Further Developments;.'.... ~... 175 5. The Development in Numfor....... 179 6. Different Trends within - and in connection with ~ the Movement.... 183 I. Koreri followers., II. The external Koreri followers. III. The anti-koreri groups.,. 183 185 186

CONTENTS XI 7. Reorganization after the Imprisonment of -Stephanui! - Ronsumbre.......... 187 8. Stephen Wanda in Numfor......-. _.... 190 9. Birmori (Korinus) Sasiaber or Bosren...... 192 10. Chronological Outline of the Events after November 1942 195 11. Koreri Symbolism in Numfor (c. 194-3-4-4-) 202 12. The Great Movement in Japen.... 204-13. The Final Phase of the Great Movement 209 IX_ THE HISTORICAL FACTORS AND THE INFLUENCE OF. THE CONTACT-SITUATIONS ON THE MOVEMENTS 214-1. Mutual rivalry. 214-2. The raids 214-3. The Subjection to Tidore. 215 4-. Contacts with Europeans. 216 5. The Mission 217 6. The Government. 218 7. Attitude towards strangers. 221 8. The Problem of Acculturation in the Geelvink Bay. 225 X. CLOSING REMARKS ON THE MOVEMENTS AS A PROBLEM 231 1. The Position of the Problem (in general). 231 2. Supplement......... 239 3. Missionary views of the Movements 262 4-. The Manseren Movements of Biak. 271 XI. SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION. 274- Summary. 274- Conclusion 278 APPENDIX: Similar Movements in other parts of West New Guinea (West Irian)............ 283