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Discovering Kolunon: Personalism in Dayak Uud Danum’s Book of Adat Law (Part II)




Rambang Ngawan, OP


Discovering the Person of Dayak Uud Danum’s Traditional Law/Adat Law
            The attempt to discover the culturally based meaning of person in Dayak Uud Danum’s point of view is, in our mind, a harmonious agreement between a truthful idea on the level of abstraction and a truthful reality, considering the concreteness of the object studied i.e. the individual Dayak, as a clear and careful study of the reality of the Dayak people who in their lives and traditions have made an eternally unbreakable tie with God, nature and fellow human beings. Thus, in relation to this, what will be discussed in the succeeding pages are unspotted reflections of the long-standing cultural treasure of the Dayak people, a worth studying legacy that will place the person of the Dayaks, particularly Dayak Uud Danum at the central stage of this study.
            Admittedly, Dayak’s culture and tradition are diverse, meaning to say that though we can still find major similarities among all the Dayak ethnics around Borneo Island, there are distinct divergences among these cultures as they stand as unique and incomparable traditions on their own. In this respect, Dayak Uud Danum has something to share to the cultural and philosophical study of person. This article itself, however, is attempting to discover the philosophical and cultural understanding of person available both in written materials (squeezing out the concept of person in the written traditional law and other literary works) and verbal materials (through the ordinarily used term in conversations that depicts the meaning of person). Knowing that this article in its novelty is attempting to discover the meaning of person in Dayak Uud Danum’s point of view by means of philosophical conceptualization, in the process this article will as much as possible be faithful to the truest meaning of person as understood by Dayak Uud Danum’s tradition. And in order to get the total understanding of Dayak worldview, we shall start off with the fundamental elements that constitute the foundation of the Dayaks as persons.  

a)      The Literary and Historical Origin of the Traditional Law/Adat Law[1]
In this part, we shall give more attention to how Dayak Uud Danum people perceive man’s actions under the lenses of ethics. Ethics play a central part in the lives of all the sub-ethnics of Dayak people. The traditional law can be perceived as the safeguard for the people to deal with their fellow Dayaks and nature. The traditional law will assure the Dayaks that their conducts should never harm any member of the community and bring harmony to the whole elements of nature. First and foremost we must consider the historical and literary views of the origin of the traditional law. Dayak Uud Danum community is enriched with many kinds of literatures.
In Dayak Uud Danum society, there are quite many verbal literatures which we can still observe. Generally, these verbal literatures can be grouped mainly into three: Kolimoi, Tahtum, and Kesah. Kolimoi is a verbal literature that tells about the stories of Uud Danum people in the heavens. The main characters are Oling, Songalang, Sohavung, Songumang, Uhko’, Komandai, Timbang, and Jambang for the male, then Pongota’, Bura’, Uhit Miou, Tipung, and Selung for the female. Kolimoi is the second era in the history of verbal literatures. There are hundreds of stories in this Kolimoi era.
Tahtum is an epoch of heroic stories like that of Mahabrata or Ramayana in the Hindu tradition. The main characters in these stories are Tambun, Bungai, Sangen, Bitih, and Shepung for the male, then Karing, Bulou, and Tobala’ for the female. In one of the episodes of Tahtum it is told that a King’s son from Majapahit Empire[2] came to propose a Uud Danum princess. There are also hundreds of stories found in this third era of Dayak Uud Danum’s history of verbal literatures. Tahtum era lasted until the time of Majapahit Empire.
The third era is Kesah which is the fourth era in the history of Uud Danum people. The era of Kesah started after Tahtum and approximately until the colonization of the Dutch and the Japanese. Kesah is the youngest era among the three. In this Kesah era, there are thousands of stories that can be found. According to the elder people, the characters during these three eras were once living with Dayak Uud Danum people. In order for the stories of their lives and their heroic conducts to be always remembered by their descendants, these aforementioned characters then ask other people who are good at literatures to tell stories about them. These literati then tell the stories about them with their own versions. Consequently, there are various stories with the same characters that tell about their lives. Especially for Tahtum, the traces of it can still be found until now and we can still see them. But unfortunately, many of this remaining historical legacies have been destroyed by the tractors of logging companies.
With regards to the origin of the traditional law, the legend tells us that during the era of Kesah it is told how Sohavung frequently visits the earth. He uses Polaka’ Bulou to transport from heaven to the earth. This Polaka’ Bulou is a squared vessel made of pure gold. This vessel is tied with a rope made of gold as well which is elongated to earth. Accordingly, at that time the distance between heaven and earth is not that far. The Uud Danum people who are living in the world can still climb up to reach heaven. However, at a certain period, the people of heaven decide to keep a distance from the earth worrying that bad influences will infect them. Furthermore, it is recorded that Sohavung has visited the earth for seven times at the same respect. It is said that he has the power to divide himself into many and be present in different places at the same time. When he is on earth, he marries people of the earth. Uniquely, the girls to whom he is married are not always from Dayak Uud Danum communities but also from other Dayak sub-ethnics. His mission on earth is to stop the conflicts among Anak Danum Kolunon or among human beings who at that time frighten each other with headhunting activities. Sohavung also constitutes traditional laws for several groups of people whom he meets.
All of the stories above used to be told orally by the elders to the young in the Rumah Betang (long stage house). A Rumah Betang or long house is the traditional house of the Dayaks which can rarely be found nowadays due to the modern reorganization of residences.  There are only few Rumah Betang left in Kalimantan. Rumah Betang is made of private houses or rooms which are connectedly built. Its construction is made of kayu belian (iron woods). Each family lives in one of these rooms. The number of the rooms can be more than 50 and so there can be more than 200 people living in this Rumah Betang. The occupants of this Rumah Betang are related by blood and this Rumah Betang can form one village with their educational, religious, political and social systems. That is why during the olden times, Rumah Betang was so central in the lives of the Dayaks. The transfer of knowledge from the elders to the younger generation was done effectively in this Rumah Betang.
During the olden times, the Dayaks still lived in the long houses. All the intellectual and cultural riches that they had were generated to their descendants by means of oral transmission. The activity of passing down of these cultural and intellectual heritage was done mostly inside these long houses by the elderly members of the communities. But when time changed especially when modernity was slowly introduced to the Dayaks, there was also a perceptual change of living in communities. The Dayaks started to abandon their traditional way of living in Rumah Betang, and moving out of these long houses, they formed new communities which were not anymore based on these long houses. Modern houses were also introduced to the Dayak communities which are basically independently detached from one another. The Dayaks do not anymore live as one big clan inside the long house, but instead they form villages whereby their close relatives become their neighbors. In order to preserve the cultural and intellectual riches that have become their daily basis of living, the Dayaks must have initiated that these riches, specially the customary law, to be documented or written on papers. By the time that the customary law became a written or documented law, most of the Dayaks must have acquired certain levels of education.  
 In doing their routine, the Dayak people will never lose sight of their traditional religious practices and beliefs which have been continually handed down from their ancestors, especially in their interaction with their surroundings. They believe that in their strife to attain goods for their physical nourishment, health and safety, they must not only depend on their own efforts but also rely on the intervention of “what” they believe. In other words, their religious tradition teaches them that everything they acquire in their lives -whether good or bad- there will always be interventions coming from other elements beyond human world. Some people would use the term religions of the Dayaks to address these traditional religious practices and beliefs.
The term religion in this context includes the understanding of existing religious practices and are still observed but not fully by the Dayak horticultural societies. This religion is a tradition that is handed down from generation to generation which later called as religious tradition or in Dayak languages is called Adat[4]. In this Adat (religious tradition) is found all the rules, norms and the ethics that govern the correlations between man and man, man and all non-human elements (nature and super-nature) in this life system. This religious tradition differs in all Dayak ethnics as it is noticeable in the forms of prayers, food offerings, kinds of rites, and mystical sites of every region.
Adat or Adat Istiadat (traditional religious beliefs and practices) and Hukum Adat (traditional law) are the Dayaks’ cultural outputs that come from accumulated experiences of their adaptive strategy in life towards environment for the purpose of keeping the harmony in nature/Alam and also a guiding principle in the society. Adat influences and forms the characters and the behaviors of the Dayak society in interacting with their fellow Dayaks and the supernatural world. This then leads to the Dayaks’ mode of looking at nature/Alam with so much respect. Adat as a rule functions to control the attitudes and behaviors of the Dayaks and possesses an authoritative power both spiritually and socially. When a Dayak man is doing the right thing for the benefits of the others, his fellow human beings and his surroundings, the Dayak man will be rewarded with spiritual and social benefits. Any wrongs that man performs can endanger the harmonious and balanced relation in the life system of the Dayaks.[5]
In addition, all the religious traditions, norms, and ethics have a significant role in preserving the environmental system of the Dayaks. The environmental ethics that is contained in the Adat and then confirmed through cosmological and mythical views of the society has created a continuous life process which makes the relation between men and the world harmonious and balanced. As the result, the environment is well preserved and orderly as in the original form.                
    

b)     The Person/Kolunon as Mirrored in the Traditional Law
In order to be able to define the concept of person in the Dayak Uud Danum’s worldview, the term Kolunon will be used. The word Kolunon is always used in ordinary conversations of the speakers of Uud Danum language and it can take two forms in its definitions.
First, Kolunon in its usage can be understood as the physical man or suppositum, the substance that has its existence and is capable of motion, relation and interaction. The first sense of Kolunon speaks of a person in his pure physicality. Some expressions in Dayak Uud Danum language that use the term Kolunon can be seen in the following sentences:

First sentence:

Kolunon erih yam taai buso ngorih boram.” Which is translated as:

“That person cannot be drunk when drinking tuak[6] (traditional alcoholic beverage).”


Second sentence:

“Kolunon erih was jadi kolunon.” Which is translated as:

“That person has become a person.”

The second meaning of Kolunon, as in the second sentence, often takes a more abstract form and can be understood as the ideal person of Dayak Uud Danum. For the sake of conceptualization, indeed, the word Kolunon is existing as a word. But a word is just a simple word if we do not put meaning in it. It is man at first who defines a word not the other way around. And for this very reason, we will try to find out what meaning have the people of Dayak Uud Danum given to the word Kolunon.  
We admit that the limitation of the attempt to define Kolunon aided by the written traditional law will give limitations to the definition of the word as well. As the matter of fact, the definition of Kolunon can be built up after extracting the very core value of the Dayak Uud Danum’s view of person from the abstract level of understanding of the people of Dayak Uud Danum. This of course would be possible we believe if the scope of the article will be focusing on the definition of the word Kolunon per se and the researches to support the study are done extensively. However, at this point in time, what interests us is to look a bit closer to one dimension that contributes to the definition of Kolunon and in this case it derives part and parcel from the traditional law. Although, we agree that the written traditional law cannot fully provide the complete understanding of Kolunon, the philosophical analysis that we attempt to make may still be beneficial as a first step towards the study of person of Dayak Uud Danum in particular.
Moreover, we are always keeping in mind that Kolunon is not a result of abstraction thus reducing the person of the Dayak as a mere object of the intellect. However, Kolunon as a concept has been practiced and lived out by every Dayak Uud Danum individual who finds his existence in the universe as a true model of a person who lives by Dayak Uud Danum’s cultural values.   
                And now, let us first look closely at the traces of the person of Dayak Uud Danum as ideally mirrored in the Hukum Adat (traditional law). We will only pick some important sentences that wisely picture out the concept of person of Dayak Uud Danum as it is written in the book of Hukum Adat Suku Dayak Uud Danum Kecamatan Serawai dan Ambalau, Kabupaten Sintang (2002). We will put this into categories:  
                                             
On Birth
                Dayak Uud Danum society understands very well the meaning and the value of human life. The importance given on life can be seen in the following sentences as written in the book of Hukum Adat (traditional law): 

Translation:
Pregnancy is by nature belongs to women, and it is imaginably perilous for a woman to be in the period of pregnancy as her life is prone to danger and this can be likened to an egg placed on top of a horn, where at any moment her soul is at risk; preventing herself from eating the food that can harm the health of the mother and the child, expecting the care from her husband with sincerity. For this reason, Dayak Uud Danum society since the ancient time has understood this thing with its totality that this thing cannot be without the consideration of hukum adat (traditional law).     



[1] Most of the discussion in this sub-title on “The Literary and Historical Origin of the Traditional Law” derives from Cf. Kec. Serawai (blog). http://kecserawai.blogspot.com/2011/05/uud-danum.html (accessed on December 22, 2013). The original text can be seen in the Appendix pages 72-84.
[2] The Majapahit Empire, based on the island of Java in what is now Indonesia, was a wealthy trading state that controlled one of the key choke-points along the Indian Ocean trade routes, the Straits of Malacca. It lasted from 1293 to 1527. At its height, the Majapahit Empire ruled most of maritime Southeast Asia, from Sumatra in the west to New Guinea in the east, and also including areas that now make up Singapore, Brunei, East Timor, the southern Philippines, Malaysia, and southern Thailand. http://asianhistory.about.com/od/glossaryko/g/Majapahit-Empire.htm (accessed on December 17, 2013).


[4] Odop and Lakon, Dayak Menggugat, 4.
[5] Cf. Ibid. 7.
[6] Tuak is fermented traditional alcoholic beverage of the Dayaks which is made of glutinous rice. Tuak is an important element in all the religious rites and cultural celebrations of the Dayaks.

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