Showing posts with label jakarta. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jakarta. Show all posts

Monday, February 5, 2018

Bali in Cali (World Festival of Sacred Music)

FestivalOfSacredMusic.org; Ashley Wells, Crystal Quintero, CC Liu, Wisdom Quarterly
Cundamani comes to Los Angeles and UC Berkeley (festivalofsacredmusic.org)


The music and dance of Bali: Çudamani brings the power and beauty of Balinese music and dance in "BHUMI: Mother Earth."
Internationally hailed as Bali’s most forward thinking ensemble, Cudamani is known for their exceptional creativity and superb artistry.

The company celebrates its 20th anniversary with Bhumi: Mother Earth, a visually stunning and profoundly moving production inspired by Nature.

Witness the vibrant synergy of the Gamelan orchestra and brilliance of dancers whose every movement, gesture, and musical note is executed with devotion and ecstasy.
 
From the village of Pengosekan, the 25-member company -- which the Los Angeles Times praised for its “brilliant performers, stunning cohesion, and superbly compelling [music]” -- conveys the importance of creating harmony between the three worlds: the divine, human, and natural.

Exquisite synthesis of sound and motion that captures the...creative life force of Bali.
 
Under the direction of Dewa Putu Berata, Bapak Nyoman Cerita, Emiko Saraswati Susilo, and Dewa Rai, BHUMI: Mother Nature exquisitely blends the ancient and the modern to present messages of global significance.

Come for an unforgettable journey to Bali with these extraordinary artists. More + TICKETS

Wednesday, May 21, 2014

Singapore haze; Indonesia forest slash-n-burn

Ashley Wells, Wisdom Quarterly; Rujun Shen from Singapore (Reuters.com, 5-21-14)
Smoke haze obscures building under construction, Singapore March 2014 (Tim Wimborne)
  
Singapore braces for worst smoke "haze" as Indonesia slashes-and-burns forests
Singapore is approaching its yearly "haze" [dense air pollution] season, when smoke from forest clearing in Indonesia chokes the air, with this year likely to be worse than 2013's record pollution thanks to lack of action in Jakarta and an expected El Nino weather pattern.

The prosperous city-state, which prides itself on its clean air, was shrouded in heavy smog from slash-and-burn clearances on the neighbouring Indonesian island of Sumatra last June which sent its air pollution index to a record high.

Is America better than Asia about polluting?
One year on, and an election-distracted government in Indonesia has still not ratified the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) 2002 Agreement on Transboundary Haze Pollution, and fires continue to burn in Sumatra.

That is despite outrage in Singapore as well as environmental groups putting pressure on Jakarta. Fires are used to clear land on plantations and can burn for weeks because of peat deposits below the surface.

There is also a growing likelihood of an El Nino weather pattern this year, meaning Singapore, as well as parts of Indonesia and Malaysia, could be set for months of intense haze with a knock-on effect on health and business, especially tourism. More

Friday, May 16, 2014

Balinese Buddhism in Bali, Indonesia

Ven. S. Dhammika (DM/BuddhaNet); Amber Larson, Dhr. Seven (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly
The spirituality and unique character of religions in Indonesia (destination-asia.com)

Pura Tanah Temple, Bali, Indonesia  (Jos Dielis/dielis/flickr.com)
 
Buddha, Bali (Robert Scales/flickr)
Much attention has been given to how far west Buddhism extended in ancient times. 
 
The most westerly Buddhist monument [not that that marks how far it got, only how far it made such an impression that monuments were erected to it] that can be is the foundations of a large stupa [Buddhist burial mound and sacred reliquary] in the south east corner of the ancient citadel of Khiva in Turkmenistan [Central Asia, formerly Russia].

Small communities of Buddhists may have existed beyond this. But if they did, they would have been insignificant [too insignificant to erect permanent stone religious structures], isolated, and exceptional. We can say therefore that the outer edge of [early] Buddhism in the west was what is now eastern Iran [the seat of the Solar Dynasty mentioned in Rhys Davids' translation in "The Story of the Lineage" from Buddhist Birth-Stories: Jataka].

Undersea Bali, Buddha statues in the coral reef, Indonesia (Robert Scales/flickr.com)
 
But how far to the east did Buddhism spread its gentle and civilizing influence? [Did it get] to the outer islands of Indonesia, to Australia, or perhaps beyond? 
 
The Buddhist hero Satusoma (buddhanet.net)
In the 1920's a superb bronze bust of the Buddha was found on Sulawesi, one of the larger islands that make up Indonesia [a massive stretch of islands between India and Australia]. This is the eastern most point that any Buddhist antiquity has ever been found. 
 
There is, though, no evidence of an enduring Buddhist presence either on Sulawesi or beyond it -- no ruined temples or monasteries [hidden in the dense jungles as keep being discovered in Cambodia], no inscriptions, or references to it in the historical records. 
 
However, only a few hundred miles southwest of Sulawesi is the small island of Bali, where archeological, epigraphical, and literary evidence shows that Buddhism existed alongside Hinduism for about 700 years.
 
Buddha under the sea, Bali, Indonesia (Robert Scales)
Indian merchants first arrived in Bali in about 200 BCE, and it was probably these people who introduced Buddhism and Hinduism.
 
A Balinese work of uncertain date called the Naga-rakrtagama by a Buddhist monk lists all of the Buddhist temples in Bali, 26 altogether, and mentions that in 1275 King Kretanagara underwent a Tantric Buddhist initiation to protect his kingdom from an expected invasion by Kublai Khan.

Kublai Khan conquers Asia and goes overseas to keep going (pic2fly.com)

 
Trade routes to Indonesia and back
The island's history is scant until 1343, when it was conquered by and absorbed into the Majapahit Empire of Java-Sumatra. Hinduism and Buddhism both received state patronage, although the type of Buddhism that prevailed gradually became indistinguishable from Hinduism [such is the case around the world for Mahayana Buddhism].

A Javanese Buddhist work from about the 12th century contains this telling verse: "The one substance is called two, that is, the Buddha and Shiva. [Tantra is a merging of Shakti and Shiva, conflating Hinduism and Mahayana Buddhism, particularly esoteric Vajrayana] They say they are different, but how can they be divided? Despite differences there is oneness."

Sanur, Bali (MickJim/flickr)
Clearly at the time these words were being composed, some Buddhists were struggling to maintain the uniqueness of the Dharma, while others were stressing its similarity with Hinduism [which metamorphosed to be much more similar to Buddhism under the Buddha's radical influence bringing the Vedas back to life and on the Brahmins of his day].

Eventually in both Java and Bali the integrators prevailed. Incidentally, the phrase "Despite differences there is oneness" (Bhineka tunggal ika) has been taken as the motto for the Republic of Indonesia. With the collapse of Mahapahit [Hindu empire] in 1515 and the ascendancy of Islam, Java's old intellectual and religious elite, including the last surviving Buddhist monastics and scholars, sought refuge in Bali.

My Trip to Bali
Traveling round the world (destination360.com)
In January 2004 I fulfilled a long-standing wish to visit the island that Nehru eulogized as "The Morning of the World." I planned to visit all the sights that other tourists like to see, but my main intention was to search out the traces of Buddhism and find out something about Bali's small [surviving] Buddhist community. My first stop was the Bali Museum in Dempasar, the capital of the island. More

Monday, January 23, 2012

Smallfoot? Extinct jungle primate discovered

Gallery: Undated photo released by Ethical Expeditions of a large primate species presumed to be extinct but found alive in Indonesian jungles where Asian Bigfoot(s) are also reported (Eric Fell/AP)

It is argued that Bigfoot could not exist even in remote places. The fact is, most of the vast animal world remains undiscovered. Bigfoot is not one of them. For they have been found and secretly documented. Why the information remains secret is up for debate. But in response to the argument that finding new large primate species is out of the question, as if we have found and made public all such beings, there comes this completely unexpected discovery.

JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) - Scientists working in the dense jungles of Indonesia have "rediscovered" a large, gray monkey so rare it was believed by many to be extinct. They were all the more baffled to find the Miller's Grizzled Langur -- its black face framed by a fluffy, Dracula-esque white collar -- in an area well outside its previously recorded home range. The team set up camera traps in the Wehea Forest on the eastern tip of Borneo Island in June, hoping to capture images of clouded leopards, orangutans, and other wildlife known to congregate at several mineral salt licks. The pictures that came back caught them all by surprise: groups of monkeys none had ever seen. More
Sony, Panasonic debt ratings cut on TV losses

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Tree-dwelling tribe discovered in Indonesia


Buddhism in Indonesia

JAKARTA (Reuters) - A tribe of hunter gatherers living in trees in the remote forests of Indonesia's easternmost Papua region has been discovered for the first time by the country's census, an official said on [June 24, 2010]. The nomadic tribe, called Koroway, numbers about 3,000 people speaking their own language and living off animals and plants in the forest, census officials found during the country's 2010 census survey. "Their houses are in trees, their life is stone age," said Suntono, head of Indonesia's statistics agency for the Papua region, adding the tribe built ladders to huts in tall trees. After receiving reports from missionaries, census officials needed to walk for up to two weeks to find the tribe, after travelling by boat from the nearest permanent villages, but still only reached the fringes of their territory. More>>

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Nuns step humbly through modernity

(Jakarta Post) Buddhist monastics living in Jakarta balance centuries-old religious rules with the realities of living in a consumer-driven, cosmopolitan society to maintain their spiritual piety.

“A long time ago, people had to stand at arm’s length from the monks, but we can’t expect our congregation to do that anymore,” said Bhiksuni (Buddhist nun) Ven. Virya Guna, a female monastic from the Avalokitesvara Vipassana Graha Buddhist Temple in Sunter, North Jakarta. Ven. Virya shares advice, short sermons, and hymns from YouTube via her Facebook profile.

“There’s no rule that bans technology, but it must be utilized for religious purposes,” she said. “My mobile phone, for example, is for congregation members to contact me when they need services for house blessings or funerals.”

While some aspects of Buddhism have been adapted to the realities of modern society, others traditions have been upheld because of their philosophical significance. Ven. Virya has a shaved head as Buddhist philosophy encourages cutting all ties to vanity and ego.

“I only have three sets of clothes that were given to me by congregation members,” Ven. Virya told The Jakarta Post. She wore a loose, brown, long sleeved tunic and loose, gray leggings tapered at the ankles.

The Mahayana Buddhist nun also divides donations from her congregation between the temple’s needs and the various charities the temple or vihara contributes to. Mahayana is one of the two main schools in Buddhism besides Theravada. Mahayana is popular in Northern Asia and the Far East, while the more traditional Theravada has a strong foothold in Southern Asia.... “My aim in this life is to sow good karma to reap later, with the hope of becoming a bodhisattva or small buddha, in the next life,” said Ven. Virya. More>>

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Buddhist leaders attend congress opening

(Jakarta Post) The opening ceremony of the Nahdlatul Ulama (NU) congress Tuesday represents the largest Islamic organization’s commitment to religious harmony. Wearing orange monk’s robes, two Buddhist leaders stole the spotlight.

They were among the thousands of NU members participating in the congress. One of the Buddhist leaders, Ven. Dhammasubho Mahathera, said his presence was a show of support for the NU. "Harmony can only happen in this country through communication among various religious groups," he said before entering the Celebes Convention Center for the opening ceremony.

The other Buddhist leader, Ven. Siriratanu, said Buddhists in the nation respected the NU as the biggest Muslim group in the country." We are here particularly to honor Gus Dur," he said, referring to the late former president and former NU chairman Abdurrahman Wahid, who was known as pluralism advocate. Source

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Powerful earthquake rattles Indonesia


A woman prays at a Buddhist temple to mark the Waisak (Vesak) festival in Denpasar on the resort island of Bali on May 20, 2008. Indonesian Buddhists celebrated Vesak on May 20 to commemorate the birth and enlightenment of the Buddha (Getty/AFP).

Niniek Karmini (AP, 9/10/08)

JAKARTA, Indonesia -- A powerful earthquake rattled northeastern Indonesia on Thursday, briefly triggering a tsunami alert and sending panicked residents fleeing from homes and buildings, officials said.

The quake had a preliminary magnitude 6.6 and struck 55 miles beneath the Molucca Sea, the U.S. Geological Survey.

Indonesia's seismological agency put the magnitude at 7.6 and immediately issued a tsunami alert over the radio and television. It was revoked one hour later after the threat had passed.

People in the Maluku capital of Ternate, which was closest to the epicenter, fled from houses and hotels as the earth rumbled beneath them.

"I ran out of the hotel with other guests and we fled to high ground," Benyamin Otte said. "I could see people on the beach, checking to see if the were any signs of a tsunami, but everything looked normal."

Jimmy Rimba Rogi, the mayor of Manado, a city on nearby Sulawesi island, said the quake caused panic there as well, but there were no immediate signs of casualties or damage.

Indonesia is prone to seismic upheaval due to its location on the so-called Pacific "Ring of Fire," an arc of volcanoes and fault lines encircling the Pacific Basin.

In Japan, a magnitude 7.0 quake hit off the coast of the northern island of Hokkaido early Thursday, triggering a small tsunami that apparently caused no injuries or damage, Japan's Meteorological Agency said.

(travellerspoint.com)

The quake struck at a depth of about 12 miles, and a 4-inch tsunami rippled at the shore about 35 minutes later.

"There was some light shaking, but it was nothing major," police spokesman Yukio Yoshida said in Hokkaido.

In December 2004, a massive earthquake off Indonesia's Sumatra island triggered a tsunami that battered much of the Indian Ocean coastline and killed more than 230,000 people — 131,000 of them in Indonesia's Aceh province alone.

A tsunami off Java island last year killed nearly 5,000.