The
black and white checkered cloth standard of Bali's netherworld
is nowhere more aptly hung than on the ancient coral statues
and shrines of Bali's largest traditional village: Sanur.
This was Bali's first beach resort a place of remarkable contrasts.
Sanur today is a golden
mile of Baliesque hotels that has attracted millions of paradise
seeking globetrotters. And yet, within the very grounds of
the 11-story The Grand Bali Beach Hotel, a war-reparation
gift from the Japanese, nestles the sacred and spiky temple
of Ratu Ayu of Singgi, the much feared spirit consort of Sanur's
fabled Black Barong.
Sanur is famous throughout
Bali for its sorcery. Black and white magic pervades the coconut
groves of the resort hotels like an invisible chess game.
And yet the community is modern and prosperous.
Sanur is one of the few
remaining brahman kuasa villages in Bali controlled by members
of the priestly caste - and boasts among its charms some of
the handsomest processions on the island, Bali's only all
female keris dance, the island's oldest stone inscription,
and the hotel world's most beautiful tropical garden. Even
the souvenirs sold on the beach - beautifully crafted kites
and toy outriggers are a cut above those found on the rest
of the island.
Traditional Sanur
Just a stone's throw
from any of Sanur's beachside hotels lies one of a string
of very ancient temples. Characterized by low coral walled
enclosures sheltering platform altars, this style of temple
is peculiar to the white sand stretch of Sanur coast, from
Sanur harbor in the north to Mertasari Beach in the south.
Inside, they are decorated with fanciful fans of coral and
rough-hewn statuary, often ghoulishly painted but always wrapped
in checkered sarong.
The rites performed at
the anniversary celebrations of these temples are both weir
and wonderful the celebrants often dancing with effigies strapped
to their hips, while the priests are prone to wild outbursts
launching themselves spread-eagled onto platform of offerings
and racing entrance pell-mell into the sea.
The Sanur area, with
traditional Intaran at its heart, has evidently been settled
since ancient times. The Prasasti Belanjong, inscribed pillar
here dated A.D. 913, is Bali' earliest dated artifact now
kept in a temple. in Belanjong village in the south of Sanur.
It tells of King Sri Kesari Warmadewa of the Sailendra Dynasty
in Java, who came to Bali to teach Mahayana Buddhism and the
founded a monastery here. One may presume that a fairly civilized
community then existed the Sailendra kings having built Borobudur
in Central Java at about this time.
It is interesting that
the village square of Intaran is almost identical to that
of Songan village on the crater lake of Mt. Batur - particularly
the location and size of the bale, agung, the wantilan community
hall and associated buildings. The priests of Sanur-Intaran
are often mentioned in historical chronicles dating from Bali's
"Golden Age" the 13th to the 16th centuries. It
was not until the early 19th century, however, that the king
of the Pemecutan court in Denpasar saw fit to place his satriya
prince lings outside the village's medieval core.
Before that, Sanur consisted
of Brahman griya (mansions) in Intaran and several attendant
communities the brahman banjar of Anggarkasih, the fishing
village of Belong (which still holds a yearly baris gede warrior
dance at the Pura Dalem Kedewatan temple near the Grand Bali
Beach Hotel), and the village of Taman, whose Brahmans have
traditionally served as the region's chief administrator or
perbekel. Taman is also home to an electric barong troupe
complete with an impish telek escort, a pas de deux by the
freaky jauk brothers and a spine-tingling last act featuring
the evil witch Rangda all amidst fluttering poleng checkered
banners.
Westerners in Sanur
It was in the mid-19th
century that Sanur was first recorded by Europeans as more
than just a dot on the map. Mads Lange, a Kuta based Danish
trader, at this time mentions the special relationship that
the perbekel of Sanur enjoyed with his great friend the king
of Kesiman, Cokorda Sakti.
In a less flattering
light, it was also a perbekel of Sanur who turned a blind
eye to the landing of Dutch troops here in 1906 on their way
to the massacre of the royal house of Pemecutan - one of the
most ignoble days in Dutch colonial history. The full story
has been immortalized by 1930s Sanur habitu6e Vicki Baum in
her book, A Tale of Bali.
The BBC has a film of
a Sanur trance medium "possessed" by the spirit
of a beer swilling English sea captain (possibly from one
of the merchant vessels which foundered on Sanur's coral reefs)
- to whose semi-divine memory a trance baris, called Ratu
Tuan, is performed by the Semawang Banjar. The costume: Chinese
kung-fu pajamas of black and white checkered cloth.
The first half of the
20th century also saw Sanur's emergence as prime real estate
for the Bali-besotted. Beach bungalows in what Miguel Covarrubias
referred to as, "the malarial swamps of Sanur,"
were built by, among others, Dr. Jack Mershon and his choreographer
wife Katharane (inventor, with Walter Spies, of the very checkered
kekak dance), writer Vicki Baum, anthropologist Jane Belo
(author of Trance in Bali); and art-collector Neuhaus, who
was killed by a stray bullet during a skirmish between local
guerillas and Japanese occupation forces in 1943, while playing
bridge on the verandah of his home - site of the present-day
Hotel Sindhu Beach.
These early "Baliphiles"
hosted a steady stream of celebrity visitors to the island
during the 1930s, including Charlie Chaplin, Barbara Hutton,
Doris Duke and Harold Nicholson. It was probably more from
the travel reports of these sophisticates than from the movie
with a sarong-draped Dorothy Lamour that Bali traces its fame
abroad.
Bali's most famous expatriate
of this era, artist-writer-musician Walter Spies, was a frequent
visitor to the shores of Sanur, but it is to one particular
visit that we may trace his aversion for coastal Bali. It
was the day of a lunar eclipse and the birthday of Spies young
nephew who was visiting him in Bali. A Balinese soothsayer
warned the boy not to go near the water that day, but he defied
the warning and swam in Sanur, where he was taken by a shark.
A weird coincidence: the Balinese symbol for an eclipse is
the giant toothed mouth of the demon spirit Kala Rauh devouring
the moon goddess.
Modern times
Not long after Indonesia
proclaimed independence in 1945, Sanur witnessed the beginnings
of an expatriate building boom led by Belgian painter Le Mayeur,
whose former studio home on the beach north of the Grand Bali
Beach Hotel is now a museum. Le Mayeur's heavenly courtyard
was the inspiration for his breast, nymph-filled paintings.
Australian artists Ian
Fair-weather and Donald Friend, whose marvelous books and
paintings have inspired a generation of Australians, also
chose picturesque Sanur for their Bali retreats. Donald Friend
lived here in imperial splendor with an in-house gamelan and
Bali's finest art collection within the grounds of the dream
he founded Batu jimbar Estates - now home to the world weary
and the grand.
Sanur designs its
future
At about the same time,
two Sanur brahmans were leaving their mark on the community
The first, high priest Pedanda Gede Sidemen was entering the
twilight of a prolific career which spanned 70 years as south
Bali's most significant temple architect, healer and classical
scholar. His life, and the pride he brought to his native
Sanur, were to inspire a generation of Sanur brahmans who
may otherwise have contemplated abandoning their Vedic scriptures
for a life on the juice blender.
The second, Ida Bagus
Berata nephew of Pedanda Sidemen insisted his tenure as mayor
of Sanur from 1968 to 1986 that the area should be economically
as well as culturally autonomous. To that end, Ratu Perbekel,
as he was affectionately know established a village-run cooperative
that to this day operates a beach market, a restaurant, a
car-wash and service station, and owns land in Kuta and Denpasar.
This strident new economic approach provided a friendly environment
for the establishment of many other Sanur-based tourist businesses.
By the 1980s the writing was on the wall Sanur's bread and
butter (but not its lifeblood, its culture) was mass tourism.
The brahmans of Intaran are now hotel-owners their "serfs"
are building contractors and room boys, and the farmers of
the area have become taxi drivers and art shop owners Beachside
there is no land left, and the ribbon of "Bali Baroque"
palace development thickens along the highway. Sanur's brahman
priests are met at dawn by convoys of limousines their schedules
of incantations and blessings as busy as those of any senior
statesman or tycoon. The mega-Tuans of yesterday are gone
and forgotten; the new generation of rich and famous are obsessed
more with diet and the rag trade than with skull drudgery
and gamelan galas. But late at night when the cash-registers
are asleep under their batik cosies and the beepers are turned
off, Ratu Ayu steals from her throne into the night, to a
temple near you ... Sanur's checkered ness is not a thing
of the past.