The Return of Pua Kumbu: The Struggle of the Iban Traditional
Weaving in Kapuas Hulu, West Kalimantan, Indonesia
Semiarto A. Purwanto
1
, A. Cahyo Nugroho
2
and Nita Trismaya
3
1
Department of Anthropology, Universitas Indonesia
2
Semarak Cerlang Nusa Consultancy, Research and Education for Social Transformation, Jakarta, Indonesia
3
Sekolah Tinggi Desain Interstudi, Jakarta, Indonesia
Keywords: Pua Kumbu, Iban, Indonesia Conservation, Cultural Continuity, Adat
Abstract: The paper describes struggle of a local tradition to survive in a changing of complex and rapid social and
cultural context. Pua kumbu as part of the old Iban culture was overlooked, as was the case with the Iban
tribe who were regarded as underdeveloped. Despite of many changes, pua kumbu is still very popular and
widely spread in the Iban communities in Batang Lupar Sub-district, Kapuas Hulu District, West
Kalimantan, which became the site of our two months observation early in 2018. While many experts
believe that the growing contribution of local culture in current Indonesia was related to the launching of the
Law of Regional Autonomy Indonesia, we argue that the process is more complicated. Our research shows
that Iban weaving or pua kumbu was basically never completely disappeared from the life of Iban people. It
is last for centuries since the Iban still considers it as scared and a part of their custom-bound life. As there
also some NGO facilitations to conserve traditional weaving and the commersialization of them, we
conclude that the continuity of pua’ kumbu is contain with social and cultural narrative to include adat, close
interaction with development agents, and market.
1 INTRODUCTION
Although it had long been known as related to the
Chinese ancestors that arrived about 1500 BC (van
der Hoop 1949), Indonesia people have developed
their own unique weavings. From the basic pattern
of braiding a straight or vertical pattern with a
transverse or horizontal pattern (Kartiwa, 1987: 1), it
then became more complex with the decorative
motifs emerged along with the migration of
ancestors from Dongson (Indochina) and Annam
North about 700 years BC (Kartiwa, 2007; Van der
Hoop, 1949; Gillow, 1992).
The Iban of Kapuas Hulu district in West
Kalimantan is a community that has been using
traditional weavings for their daily use. Pua’ kumbu,
one of Iban's typical weaving types, has always been
an important part of Iban’s culture. But from time to
time, its existence rises and falls in accordance with
the socio-political conditions that take place. This
paper highlights the dynamics of the last ten years
when pua’ kumbu again attracted Iban people.
A study was conducted to explain the
revitalization of ethnic or local traditions in
Indonesia during the last 20 years have been related
to the changing of political systems (Aspinal, 2011).
Post-1998 reformation that followed by the
launching if the Law No. 22 of 1999 on Regional
Autonomyhad led to the rising of local sentiments in
a wider context, not only on the political setting. It
also triggered the return of adat (customary law) and
local leadership into the main discourse in the post-
Suharto era (Harvey & Davidson 2008, Duncan
2009). Along with the trend, efforts to rediscover
local identity for the local groups have also arisen
(Adams, 2003).
We see, however, that the case of the
revitalization of pua’ kumbuis not a merely political
but also a social and culturalprocess involving
various events and interest parties.The role of
external organizations, namely ASPPUK, in the
effort to revitalize pua’ kumbu in Kapuas Hulu
relatively large. In addition, the environment
movement to conserve Kalimantan forests has also
influenced the cultural conservation to include
traditional weavings.
Purwanto, S., Nugroho, A. and Trismaya, N.
The Return of Pua Kumbu: The Struggle of the Iban Traditional Weaving in Kapuas Hulu, West Kalimantan, Indonesia.
DOI: 10.5220/0009931115191525
In Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Recent Innovations (ICRI 2018), pages 1519-1525
ISBN: 978-989-758-458-9
Copyright
c
2020 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reser ved
1519
2 METHODS
Our research shows that Iban weaving or pua kumbu
which has been considered forgotten was basically
never completely disappeared from the life of Iban
people. Despite many changes, pua kumbu is still
very popular and widely spread in the Iban
communities in Batang Lupar Sub-district, Kapuas
Hulu District, West Kalimantan, which became the
site of our two months observation. Data collection
was conducted for six weeks from February to mid-
March 2018, using qualitative methods. Primary
data collection was conducted using in-depth
interview techniques to the heads of women's
weaving groups, weavers, and community leaders.
Interviews were also conducted to
tuayrumah(betang’s leader), village heads, hamlet
heads, and other informal leaders who mastered the
Iban Dayak customs and social issues by coming to
them in betang (Ibanese longhouse). The study area
covers 10 hamlets in 4 villages: Kampung Tekalong
(Lanjak Deras Village), Kampung Sawah, Sungai
Sedik, Sungai Long, Sungai Luar (Sungai Abau
Village), (Dusun Entebuluh, Enkadan, Keluin and
Dusun Kelawik (Mensiau Village), and Ngaung
Keruh (Labian Village).
3 RESULTS
3.1 The People of Villages Studied
The ten hamlets that become our research area are
settlements inhabited by the Batang Lupar Dayak
group which is an Iban Dayak sub-ethnic group.
However, due to migration and marriage with
outsiders, there are also residents in the hamlet who
come from Java, Malay, Ahe Dayak, Embaloh
Dayak and others. The Malay, Javanese, Minang,
Batak and Bugis are migrants who have existed
since the early 1960's and live in Lanjak, the capital
city of Batang Lupar subdistrict, to trade, serve as
teachers, civil servants, and the military or police
officers. While other parts of Dayak are people from
surrounding like Ahe, Embaloh, and Kayan.
According to Tumenggung Sumpit, head of the
Iban Dayak community in Batang Lupar Subdistrict,
naming the Batang Lupar Dayak was at the request
of King Brooke, the ruler of the British Borneo
region. Batang Lupar is the place where the Dayak
group originated before being classified as Iban.
King Brooke specifically asked the Dutch Borneo to
keep calling their citizens who moved around Lanjak
as the Dayak Batang Lupar.
The Dayak Batang Lupar naming continued until
the identity of the Dayak group changed to the Iban
Dayak in the 1930s. The word Iban itself is said to
have originated from the Dayak Kayan language
which means 'migrant' or another version means
'wanderer'. The Iban themselves do not agree on the
mention of Iban which comes from the Kayan’s term,
they claim that they have long used the name Iban.
Population settlements are in hilly areas and are
close to rivers that have long been the backbone of
people's lives. Access and road conditions to hamlets
differ from one another. The hamlets of Ngaung
Keruh, Sungai Sedik and Kampung Sawah are
located on the edge of a cross-provincial asphalt
road with good conditions. Road access to Tekalong
Village, Sungai Luar Village and Long River is still
in the form of land that is rather difficult to pass
when it rains. While the hamlets of Engkadan,
Kelawik, Entebuluh and Keluin can be accessed
from the same route, namely the Kelawik Ring Road
which is planned to be a cross-provincial road to
Central Kalimantan and towards the borderline with
Malaysia in Nanga Badau. The next hamlet of
Kelawik has the condition of a flat dirt road covered
by sand ready for paving, while the access road to
Entebuluh and Keluin is partly still in the form of
land and some are rocky which are rather difficult to
access under any conditions.
The hamlets in Batang Lupar Subdistrict,
especially those that are under study are located in
conservation areas such as protected forests and
national parks. Hamlets in the southern part such as
Tekalong, Luar River and Long River are adjacent to
Danau Sentarum National Park (DSNP). Whereas the
hamlets that are more to the north area such as the
hamlets in Mensiau Village, Ngaung Keruh Hamlet
and Kelayam Hamlet, are close to the Protected
Forest and Betung Kerihun National Park (BKNP).
3.2 The Dynamic of Iban Weavings in
Kapuas Hulu
We will begin our description by exposing the
trajectory of Iban weaving from time to time,
starting from colonization, post-independence, to the
recent days. The history of weaving, we believe, can
not be separated from the economic, social and
political dynamics that occur locally, nationally and
globally.
In this paper, the colonial period begins with the
Dutch colonial presence as a result of the London
Agreement of 1814 between England and the
Netherlands. In 1816 the area of West Kalimantan
which was originally occupied by the British handed
over to the Kingdom of the Netherlands. In the early
Dutch era, pua kumbu served as an important part of
the Iban rites. Kain tenunis present in every circle of
Iban people's life. Yet, one of pua kumbu’s
important role was taking part in the process of
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pengayauan (headhunting) that greatly disturbed the
rulers and the Christian missionaries at the time.
Both the Dutch rulers in Kapuas Hulu and British
ruling in Sarawak strive to eliminate the tradition.
In the head-hunting tradition, pua kumbu used to
cover the head of the headed enemy. Going forward
is a high achievement for Iban and his clan. The
attempt to eliminate headhunting was achieved in
1894, when the Dutch succeeded in gathering Dayak
chiefs and establishing a peace agreement called the
Tumbang Anoi Agreement. One of the key points
resulting from the treaty is to stop the tradition of
headhunting. After the peace agreement, the
headhunting practice disappeared, and this meant
that some of pua kumbu’s roles of the had
disappeared. From that moment on, the pua kumbu
was finally only kept as an heirloom and was
expelled at major events such as gawai.
When Japan came to Indonesia In 1942,
according to our informant namely Tumenggung
Sumpit, in Batang Lupar Sub-district, the
community experienced the most difficult period,
including in the clothing fulfillment. During those
days, the Malays used the burlap sack as clothing,
while the Iban people were still in a better condition
because they already had the knowledge and
technology to make woven fabrics. As a result, Iban
people are increasingly active in making woven
fabrics from cotton plants which they plant
themselves, and make it into clothing,
kelambik(shirts) and cawat(loincloths). After the
Japanese occupation ended in 1945, there was a
vacuum of power, including in Lanjak and
surrounding areas. Many Iban people went
forbajalai (wandering) to Malaysia for work or just
to visit their relatives. The Iban people began to
recognize the yarn came from the factory obtained
from Malaysia. They also could easily buy clothes.
Bajalai to Malaysia was often done and work
seemed to be easier to get, but getting cash money
was not easy. Many Iban workers were paid with
only rolls of yarn. The yarn was brought back to
their hometown for fabric material, during those
days yarn started to become an alternative to
substitute the home-made cotton yarns.
Access to the free borderline lasted about 17
years. In 1963, the Indonesian first president
Soekarno expressed his rejection and confrontation
towards the establishment of the Malaysian state.
This situation had an impact on the heating up of
relations between the two countries. The border area
became critical as army and militia posts
established. This unfavorable situations also affect
the mobility of Iban people to cross into Malaysia or
vice versa. As doingbajalaibecame more difficult,
purchase of yarn was also getting more difficult.
This impact on the decrease of the supply of the
factory-made yarn and the manufacture of the
weaving was again relying on the home-made cotton
yarns for its basic material.
When Soeharto became the second president in
1966, Indonesia's relationship with Malaysia
improved and the confrontation with Malaysia
subsided. The Indonesian army focuses on crushing
militia who are considered as communist, especially
on the border area. They interrogated and arrested all
the suspect. This situation made it difficult for the
Iban to live a normal life. The adult males were
afraid to go out to hunt or to the field while women
are afraid to do the weaving activities even in the
house terrace. Production of weaving materials
seemed to be stalled for a long time. Ten years after
Suharto's rule, the impact of the national
development began to be experienced in the region.
Educational programs, for example, albeit slowly,
began to influent people’s lives in the 1980s.
Children who previously had plenty of spare time to
make woven fabrics at a young age, 10-14 years old,
since then had become more school-oriented and
most of the time did schoolwork at home.
Furthermore, some people deliberately build houses
in Lanjak to bring children closer to school
buildings, which meant that they were away from
betang. Weaving became no longer attractive and
had been replaced by the modern clothes.
Suharto’s era ended with the beginning of a
national economic crisis of 1997, which made the
Iban people experienced the difficulty to earn money
and to supply yarn for weaving. The price of rubber
fell and, practically, only rice cultivation could
support their food security. While continuing to
farm, Iban people look for other economic
opportunities that can make money quickly,
including bakuli (work as blue-collar labor) to
Malaysia. But the most profitable is through illegal
logging that rampant in 2003-2005. Temporary
weaving activities stopped, all busy with logging
business. As purchasing power increases, sidan
woven from Malaysia is highly favored by Iban
youth because of its bright colors. In addition, the
motive is easy for young people to learn during
school time. After the illegal logging, life goes as
before again. Children were busy attending school
with interspersed parents to the fields, while
weaving is only partially cultivated by a small part
of parents who are generally included in their
grandmother's generation.
From 2008 to 2015, the yarn for weaving is hard
to come by. To overcome this situation, several
efforts were made by various parties including the
district government through the PKK program by
providing yarn assistance. However, this program
only runs for a moment, because the purpose of the
program is only to help women do weaving and not
The Return of Pua Kumbu: The Struggle of the Iban Traditional Weaving in Kapuas Hulu, West Kalimantan, Indonesia
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to be sold. In addition to the government, NGOs
were also assisting people to produce pua kumbu.
Beginning in 2010, WWF consistently helped to
revive the weaving activities through the program of
making natural dyes.Itmade people realize that in
addition to yarn, people also need dyes to make the
weaving materials colorful. They also train people to
market the Iban weaving.The other NGOsthat work
with the locals in Iban weaving is PRCF and
ASPPUK. They also concern with the yarn supply as
well as the marketingaspect of the weaving products.
3.2 Weaving: Rituals, Custom, and
Economic Value
In the past, weaving cannot be separated from the
tradition of headdressing. At that time adat gave
high appreciation to those who succeeded in getting
a number of enemy heads and made him a hero (PJ
Veth, 1856). Special woven fabrics are prepared to
welcome the enemy head and merge into the joy of
the victory party. Pua Kumbu used to receive
decapitated heads were made with certain motives,
which will have higher inheritance and high
sacredness when many heads have been received.
When the headhunting tradition is gone, the
heroic title in Iban life is even less important. Pua
Kumbu as the recipient of the head is finally only
stored as an inheritance and passed on to the next
generation as a family inheritance. In the end,
weaving heirlooms only limited to being a sign of
the greatness of his ancestors in the past. The high
social position of a family is measured by the
ownership of the weaving heirlooms.
Even so, until now the heirloom woven cloth still
has an important meaning because of its sacred value.
This is because sacred weaving still has a function in
traditional Iban ceremonies. Weaving together with
other heirlooms such as mandau, tajau, gong and
others, is often part of traditional rituals.
Heirloom weaving has motifs that are relatively
the same and not much developed anymore. Thus, to
be able to have this motive, other people must
borrow it through certain customary procedures,
namely hanyut teladan or pinjam motif (or
borrowing motives). In this context weaving
heirlooms are in a high position because the content
of the element of trust in the making and function of
the past which is still the same is believed and
carried out.
Weaving occupies a central position in Iban
culture. We examine that the roleof weaving can be
at least categorized into the three domains: (1) at the
momentum of the transition of the stage of human
life (2) the great feast of customs and the
instruments; and (3) the identity of kinship.
The transition of life stages occurs around the
momentum of the crisis of human life. Generally,
the local culture requires a series of ceremonies in
new stages of life, from birth, marriage, to death.
The weaving in the Iban life cycle does not merely
functionas an ornament and complement of the
ceremony, but rather, a vital element which takes the
individual from one stage to another in an unbroken
circle of life.Kain tenun is seen as an heirloom that
is able to provide protection from disturbance of
spirits at the time the baby is born. For the purpose
of baby protection, kain tenun is used for two
activities, the firstis asa protective shadewhen the
baby sleeps and the second is used for the first
bathingceremony. Weaving also plays an important
role during the wedding ceremony, especially at the
stage of pinah pinang. Couples who got married at
betanghome generally still follow the customary
ceremony of the Iban people. Kain tenunused as a
wedding curtain or part of the dowry.
In the final cycle of human life, weaving is
presently accompanying the dead to the grave. In
Ibantradition,kumbukumbu accompany the corpse
along with other custom items such as loincloth,
tajau,and others to the grave. At the ceremony of
death, pua’ kumbu is placed under the feet of the
corpse. Kain tenun used to accompany the corpse
along with other clothes. Without carrying weaving,
the funeral process is incomplete. Often the question
arises between them, “what did your mamak
(mother) bring when she died?.”
Another use of weavings is as a marker for
children or families, namely pamaik (inheritance
rights). If the Ibanese live far away and separated
from the parent, they must hold the inheritance
object so as not to get reprimanded from others
because it is deemed to have no identity and origin.
In this case, weaving can serve as a marker of the
origin of someone, betang origin, region, and family
background. Weaving is also used as a reminder for
their children and grandchildren later, hopefully, in
the future it can bring them back to the betang.
The decoration, color, and clothing design of the
weavings can symbolize the high-status of the owner
which can usually be seen at the event of a gawai.
At the gawai, the heirloom weavings that usually
used asa walldecoration or sandung(gravestone
made up of solid woods). The guests then can
estimate whether the host has met the completeness
of pedarak (offerings) for the ceremony. Pedarak
were prepared on a number of plates with pua’
kumbu as the tablecloth. The more dishes are served
the wider fabric is needed, and the higher respect
will be recaived by the host.
In recent years, weaving has attracted people for
its economic value. The position of the weaver
began to shift from the ability to make weaving
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through appropriate customs to the ability to produce
weaving at a certain the quantity, selling it, and
making it suitable to the market demands. Those
who are able to sell the kain tenunin a great number
will gain praise for the success of our fellow
weavers. With the high price,even when sold at
betang, then weaving becomes a commodity to get
cash money. One sheet of cloth for a 5 x 80-100 cm
scarf is priced up to IDR100,000; while for the size
of 25-30 x 120 cm it can reach the price of IDR 500-
800,000 per pieces. The highest price is for pua
kumbu, which is in the form of blanketora wall
decoration, measured around 120-160 x 200-220
cm, can reach up to 2-3 million Indonesian Rupiahs.
3.3 Some Initiative to Revive Pua’
Kumbu
The supply of yarn as a raw material of weaving is
the concern of many parties, among others is
Association of Small Business Women Assistance
(hereafter will be referred to as ASPPUK).
Pioneered since 1994, ASPPUK serves as an NGO
network that empowers women in small enterprises.
With 54 NGO members spread across 20 provinces
in Indonesia, ASPPUK is involved in business
development and critical awareness through
organizing, training, critical discussions, seminars,
technical assistance, development facilitation,and
product and market quality, etc.
(http://asppuk.or.id/).
Through funding from the TFCA-Yayasan
KEHATIASPPUK encourages the community,
especially the Iban Dayak weavers to re-utilize
NTFPs in the form of certain crops as raw materials
of woven dyes. To ensure sustainable plants for
natural dyes, weavers must not continuously take
crops from the forests where the plant grow, but
must also make conservation efforts for endangered
dye species. The use of NTFPs of dye crops will
encourage forest conservation and management.
The knowledge and utilization of plants for
natural dyes have been owned and recognized by
most communities living in and around forests for
generations, however, the community has not yet
had the ability to inventory and identify such
knowledge. Through the facilitation of ASPPUK,
residents in 5 villages and 10 hamlets in Batang
Lupar and Embaloh Hulu sub-districts begin to
identify and process natural dyes. Most of the
population in these two sub-districts are traditional
farmers with shifting cultivation systems. These
agricultural products include rice and vegetables that
are also the source of food. In addition, the
community also became farmers and rubber tappers.
Agricultural work is done by both men and women.
Outside of agricultural work, women do weaving
activities; weaving baskets from rattan and weaving
mats. These works are generally done on the
sidelines of agricultural work to add family income.
Income from agricultural products is very low,
hence, can only meet the needs of daily meals.
In terms of weaving, women specifically get
their own place in the Iban community. When
weaving is still a part of adat, women have a world
of self-respect for those who have expertise.
Appreciation is not only because of the
achievements they achieved but also the intelligence
they believe to come from panggau, the heavenly
creature.
Almost at every stage weaving the expertise of a
person gets his own designation or title. So many
titles are given to smart women who are able to
master weaving skills. Those who are expert in one
stage are usually called indu or mother in Iban
language, which is placed in front of the area of
expertise such as indu gar or ibu benang means she
is good at making yarn from cotton, indu nakar
which is a degree for those who are good at measure
the ingredients to color the thread.
The main program of ASPPUK is to raise the
role of women in small business. This has been
proven by the emergence of the interest in weaving
production in the assisted location. The number of
hamlets requested to be accompanied by ASPPUK
increased from 6 to 11 hamlets and villages. In 2017,
new opportunities from this weaving craft are well
responded by some village heads like Mensiau
Village and Sungai Abau Village. Some activities
concerning the empowerment of women in weaving
are included in the village program with the
allocation of the Dana Desa (village fund) budget.
Kain tenun are displayed in various expo events at
district, provincial and national levels with ASPPUK
facilitation.
To campaign for the environmentally friendly
weaving skills of Iban women, ASPPUK helps
promote by opening local, national, regional markets
at the ASEAN and global level through exhibitions,
fashion shows and workshops. Two of the events to
promote Iban weavings facilitated by ASPPUK were
New York Fashion Week and the Jakarta Fashion
Week in 2017. The market is very enthusiastic,
welcoming the products of the Iban women, an
extraordinary appreciation. Certainly, this
appreciation must give simoulateous effects at the
grassroots level, to the weaving women. Assistance
and empowerment efforts are still being carried out,
strategies must be expanded by involving other
stakeholders with the same long-term goals.
The Return of Pua Kumbu: The Struggle of the Iban Traditional Weaving in Kapuas Hulu, West Kalimantan, Indonesia
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Awareness of the importance of maintaining
knowledge, skills and expertise is positively
correlated with the wishes of Iban Dayak women to
improve family welfare. The assistence of ASPPUK
inspired Iban Dayak women to conserve natural
coloring plants, because weaving is a life for them.
The knowledge and skills of the Iban to produce
natural color have been documented in a catalog of
colors. This catalog is an oral knowledge which is
outlined in practice, and with assistence of
ASPPUK, is compiled together in writing
documents. The catalog is now displayed on the
betang houses. It is hope that it can be learned by
children, women and men, who live in betang.
3.4 Competition with Malaysian Iban
For Iban people in Malaysia and in Indonesia,
weaving has become an inseparable part in all kinds
of socio-cultural activities of the people. Weaving
has become a part of everyday life which has many
uses from only clothes, decorations, to being a
substantive part of the traditional celebrations and
great celebrations of the Iban people. Comparing
different characteristics between Iban Malaysia and
Indonesia is not easy, especially for those who are
laymen and do not understand the woven fabric in
depth. We think that there is a kind of competition
betwe the Indonesian and Malaysian Iban in
weavings.
Unlike the dynamics that occur in Indonesia,
Malaysian weavers are arguably rarely having
difficulty in supplying yarn and factory dyes for a
long time. Even around the 1940s in Malaysia there
was an abundance of thread stock which was
abundant where thread had become a means of wage
for Indonesian workers who bakuli there. The
stability of the economic situation in Malaysia
makes the tradition of weaving with manufacturer
(synthetic) dyes consistently maintained until now.
Our informant from Betang Tekalong explained that
Malaysian woven fabrics rarely use natural colors
but chemical dyes or wantex even though they know
natural dyes from the same ancestors.
Another difference between Malaysian and
Indonesian Iban woven fabrics is in visual
appearance. Visual display is a variety of colors that
exist in woven fabric products that can be observed.
In addition to color, another visual appearance is the
structure of the constituent yarn. Our informant from
Betang Kelawik said that the most easily seen
difference was the shape of the motif where
Malaysian woven cloth had a large motif while
Indonesian woven cloth was smaller. Indonesian
Iban motifs are thought to be neater while Malaysian
motifs look thicker and bigger so that they look less
neat.
Weavers in Malaysia, according to our
informants, prefer to use new motifs and do not want
to use old motifs from ancestors because they still
believe in the taboo. New motifs for woven fabric
can easily be made into finished products, such as
clothes or skirts. While the old motifs, like the
motives of humans, crocodiles and all other living
things, should not be cut. While the price of
Malaysian products is generally perceived as higher,
the Indonesia Iban told us that their natural colored
weavings are priced cheaper by Malaysian buyers.
The product are thougt as too dull as they prefer the
brighter ones.
From the competition with the Malaysian
weavings, the Indonesia Iban in the research areas
believe that their weaving are much more authentic
than the Malaysian. We are not in the position of
judging which one is true, but that perception has in
practice made the Indonesia become more proud to
their weavings.
4 DISCUSSION
Natural dye materials promoted by ASPPUK is
expected to answer the issue of availability of dye.
In addition to cheaper, natural dye materials are also
in line with market trends that give more
appreciation for natural products. Our research
shows that the Dayak community in Batang Lupar
Sub-district extractnatural dye in three ways: (1)
direct picking from nature, from plants and minerals
in the forest, (2) taking from plants originating
around the village or cultivationand 3) taking from
the remain of the unused timber or logs.
Nevertheless, they take more raw materials directly
from the forest. As we show in Table 1, natural dye
appears to have the potential to interfere with the
survival of the plant. The main ingredient is in the
form of leaves often must be taken in large
quantities which can damage the plant. There is even
a material taken from its roots, which of course turns
the plant to die. On the other hand, there are plants
that have become increasingly difficult to find, such
as engkerebai, which is also sought by the local
people as ingredients for traditional medicine.
It is fortunate that the Iban people, for example,
the community live in Sungai Long, still live in
groups and uphold adat (the customs) by always
putting harmony with nature. They always start the
activities of extracting nature ingredients by
performing rituals and in accordance withadat rules.
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For example, until now they still divide the land for
farming activities on the basis of ancestry and
kinship ties in the betang.
From several discussions with the Sungai Long
community on the program of non-timber forest
product identification which is done together with
ASPPUK, the community is greatly helped by the
knowledge of natural dyes. They realize and know
the potential of natural dye plants that are located in
the betang vicinity and that are in their customary
gardens and forests. Natural dyes are mostly
obtained from plants in forests which is used
according to betang institutions. When ASPPUK
introduces a program to produce natural dyes, the
local people look at their forest potential and see
how it relates to strengthening the role of betang in
protecting forests.
Interestingly, the program initially initiated by
ASPPUK for the enhancement of the role of women
entrepreneurs ultimately establishes cultural
conservation through the strengthening of
knowledge and practice of weaving. While the
choice to focus on the use of natural dyes, not
primarily on motives and weaving skills, ultimately
brings this ASPPUK program to the issue of natural
resource conservation. When the research was
carried out, the weaving business began to
conductedin betang again to help people to get cash
money. Some NGO activists who come to do their
jobs in the villages often buy kain tenun; in addition,
they also help to market Iban weaving in exhibition
events at district and provincial levels. ASPPUK
even once brought Iban weaving products in the
event of a national clothing festival in Jakarta.
5 CONCLUSION
Our research has shown how the facilitation process
by an NGO based on women's empowerment, in
practice, has led to a variety of effects. The case of
ASPPUK's local economic strengthening program in
Kapuas Hulu through pua kumbu production and
sales, provides an overview of the increasing
appreciation of the pua kumbu. In addition, the use
of natural dyes also resulted in the intensification of
certain crop cultivation in the forest, which in turn
led to conservation awareness of forests and nature.
As a product of cultural processes, the survival
of the Ibanpua’ kumbuis colored by and related to
many factors and interests. Some scholars have
pointed out that the policy of regional autonomy
launched in 1999 has a lot of influence on the
increasing role of the local government and
community. At the same times, they also notice that
the policy also push some local authorities to
revitalize their old tradition to show their uniqueness
compare to others. Pua kumbu, that its popularity
was up and down through history, gets its
momentum in this period. However, since cultural
processes are always fluid and in the making, we can
only judge the increasing of communities’
appreciation ofpua kumbuby describing the context
first. In the case in Kapuas Hulu, it is more due to
the NGO’s activism. We have already pointed out
that the type of activism associated with this rise in
appreciation is not simply because the program is
linked to economic benefits alone, but there are also
aspects of gender, cultural conservation, and nature
conservat
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The paper is based on a research funded by Yayasan
KEHATI. We would like to thank ASPPUK that
allowed us to access their data and programs in
Kapuas Hulu. Specifically, we really appreciate the
initiative of Hamda Khairuzain (TFCA Kalimantan-
KEHATI), the assistance of Mia Ariyana, Darmanto,
Risma (ASPPUK), and the accompany of
ASPPUK’s field officers in Kapuas Hulu during our
stay. An earlier version, with a different angle, will
be presented in the 14th International Borneo
Research Council Conference, in Kuching,
Malaysia, on 6-8 Agustus 2018.
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