Resilience of Small Fishermen in the Development of Tambak Lorok
Marine Tourism Village in Semarang City
Asma Luthfi
1
, Fadly Husain
1
, Kuncoro Bayu Prasetyo
1
, Muh. Sholehatul Mustofa
1
, and
Apik Budi Santoso
2
1
Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Universitas Negeri Semarang, Semarang, Indonesia
2
Department of Geography, Universitas Negeri Semarang, Semarang, Indonesia
Keywords: Marine Tourism Village, Resilience, Small Fishermen.
Abstract: Tambak Lorok is one of the fishing villages in Semarang that has experienced environmental degradation due
to coastal abrasion. This condition causes the Semarang City Government to develop a maritime tourism
village as a solution to minimize the impact of coastal abrasion as well as to organize a slum of fishermen
villages. However, this program raises new problems for the community, especially small fishermen in
Tambak Lorok because many of their housing land and places of business are being displaced and their fishing
grounds are becoming further away. This paper aims to explain the resilience of small fishermen in Tambak
Lorok in dealing with social, cultural and economic problems due to the development of the marine tourism
village program. By using qualitative research methods, this study seeks to explain data analytically. Data
collection is done by the method of observation, interviews, and document studies, while data processing is
done through the process of data inference, data reduction, data presentation, and drawing conclusions. The
results showed that social, cultural, and economic problems experienced by small fishermen due to the
development of their settlements to become maritime tourism villages can be overcome in various ways
namely diversification of livelihoods, utilization of local resources for marine tourism, and participation of
family members in meeting the needs of life. This research also underscores the resilience of small fish
farmers in Tambak Lorok which is a combination of the strengths of Javanese cultural values, Islamic spiritual
values, and the social institutions of small fishermen.
1 INTRODUCTION
Fishermen are one of the professions occupied by
many Indonesian people, especially those who live
along the coast. This is a logical consequence of
Indonesia's territory which is an archipelago with a
long coastline (Bailey, 1988; Duggan and Kochen,
2016). However, there are still many people who
work as fishermen on the poverty line with a low level
of welfare. Likewise, their living space and
residential environment seem dirty, dirty and untidy
which further degrades their quality of life (Béné &
Friend, 2011; Wekke and Cahaya, 2015).
Many efforts have been made by the government
to improve the quality of life of fishermen, both in the
form of empowering the fishing community, as well
as improving their environmental facilities and
infrastructure (Amiruddin, 2014; Darsono, 1999).
Empowering the fishing community in the form of
training in processing fish catches, improving the
quality of fishing products, increasing the business of
fishery products, providing educational assistance for
fishermen's children, and improving the quality of the
fishermen's human resources (Indarti and Wardana,
2013; Ratnawati and Sutopo, 2014; Samuel,
Martono, and Susanti, 2015). Meanwhile,
infrastructure improvements include the provision of
fishing gear assistance, drainage and latrine
improvements, construction of TPI and markets,
improvement of road access, and structuring of
fishing settlements (Habibah and Setyawan, 2017).
With these efforts, many fishing communities have
benefited to improve the quality of their lives, and
there are even some fishing villages that develop their
villages as tourist villages, especially those who live
near urban areas.
One of the fishing villages arranged and
developed as a marine tourism destination is Tambak
Lorok. This area is located at the mouth of the river
126
Luthfi, A., Husain, F., Prasetyo, K., Mustofa, M. and Santoso, A.
Resilience of Small Fishermen in the Development of Tambak Lorok Marine Tourism Village in Semarang City.
DOI: 10.5220/0010012701260131
In Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Social and Political Development (ICOSOP 3 2019) - Social Engineering Governance for the People, Technology and Infrastructure in
Revolution Industry 4.0, pages 126-131
ISBN: 978-989-758-472-5
Copyright
c
2020 by SCITEPRESS – Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
Banger, Semarang City, Central Java, which is
directly adjacent to the Java Sea to the north.
Previously, this area was an area of milkfish and
shrimp ponds, but since the 1950s the area was visited
by small fishermen who moored their boats at the
mouth of the Banger River and finally settled there.
This condition causes the Tambak Lorok region to
change its function to become a settlement.
Along with the development of the city of
Semarang, especially the construction of the port of
Tanjung Mas, this region is increasingly visited by
people to live there. Not only those who work as
fishermen, but also the wave of urbanization that
wants to find work in the city of Semarang with
various types of jobs. This resulted in the Tambak
Lorok area becoming increasingly crowded and dirty
(Kurniawati and Windraswara, 2017; Natalia and
Alie, 2014). The decrease in the carrying capacity of
the land and the increase in sea market waves has
caused the region to be affected by coastal abrasion
throughout the year. This condition has worsened the
quality of life of Tambak Lorok people. There are
many houses that are flooded with sea water so that
they can no longer be used (Dimitra and Yuliastuti,
2012; Mussadun and Nurpratiwi, 2016). But since
2016, Tambak Lorok has become one of the fishing
villages that get help from the Central Government
through the Ministry of PUPR. This area has been
reorganized by normalizing the river, constructing a
coastal belt, arranging riverbanks, structuring
residential settlements, and building infrastructure
that can support the activities of residents.
However, the development which is packed with
the concept of a marine tourism village has resulted
in the Tambak Lorok community having to improve
themselves and adapt to existing changes, including
small fishermen. Many of them had their homes and
business places displaced so they had to find a new
location. Meanwhile, those who still survive in
Tambak Lorok must prepare themselves to be the host
to welcome tourists who will visit Tambak Lorok. In
this regard, this paper will describe the resilience of
small fishermen in addressing social and cultural
changes due to the development of Tambak Lorok as
a marine tourism village.
2 METHOD
This paper is the result of research using qualitative
methods that base their explanations with analytic
descriptive (Moleong, 2005). The reason for the
qualitative method used in this study is to uncover in
depth and holistically the socio-cultural reality that
occurs in the fishing village of Tambak Lorok. The
depth of the data is also broken down using
ethnographic methods as a combination of qualitative
research. For this reason, data were collected using
participatory observation, in-depth interviews, and
document studies. After the data is collected, the next
step is data classification, data reduction, data
presentation, and conclusion drawing. The research
location was in the fishing village of Tambak Lorok,
Tanjung Mas Sub-district, North Semarang District,
Semarang City, Central Java Province. The research
subjects were small fishermen, while the supporting
informants were RT heads, RW heads, Village heads,
religious leaders and other general public. Data
validation is done by source triangulation techniques
and methods.
3 RESULT AND DISCUSSION
3.1 Tambak Lorok: From the
Fishermen's Village to the Marine
Tourism Village
Tambak Lorok is a fishing village located in the
northern part of Semarang City with an area of 45.29
Ha consisting of a pond area of 10.89 Ha and a
residential area of 34.4 Ha. Most of the residents earn
a living as small fishermen and the rest work in the
informal sector at the Port of Tanjung Mas and
companies in the city of Semarang (Fama, 2016).
This region is actually an arising land that used to be
a fish pond and tiger shrimp area. Along with sluggish
shrimp exports, many ponds are no longer in
operation and are eventually sold to migrants from
outside the city of Semarang. These migrants
generally come from Demak and other districts
around the city of Semarang who are looking for a
living in the city of Semarang. The former ponds that
they bought were later turned into residential land.
Until now, this settlement in Tambak Lorok has been
inhabited by a third generation of the early generation
who settled here.
The settlement pattern in Tambak Lorok consists
of several alleys with rows of houses that run from
East to West, and face each other. In each alley, which
consists of houses facing each other and separated by
a small road with a width of approximately 1 meter,
so that it can only be passed by motor vehicles only.
the main street of Kampung Tambak Lorok or in the
courtyard of a mosque, mosque or other public
facilities.
Resilience of Small Fishermen in the Development of Tambak Lorok Marine Tourism Village in Semarang City
127
Actually, The Tambak Lorok area exists in 2
(two) large villages, namely Tambak Rejo in the east
and Tambak Mulyo in the west. In general, these two
large villages have 5 RWs and 35 RTs, namely RW
12 with 4 RT, RW 13 with 10 RT, RW 14 with 6 RT,
RW 15 with 9 RT and RW 16 with 6 RT. Prior to
revitalization of river flows and settlements, the lorok
pond area was the area most frequently affected by
tidal floods. Almost every day people feel the flood
tidal flood, especially during the rainy season when
sea water becomes high tides and inundate people's
homes. For this reason, every five years Tambak
Lorok residents must enhance their homes to avoid
tidal flooding. For residents who do not have enough
money to enhance their homes, then they have to live
in moderation with flooded housing conditions. The
scenery also looks chaotic and dirty because there is
a lot of garbage inundated at several points, poor
drainage, which results in a decrease in the quality of
life of the community.
After revitalization, the river channel is
normalized, the beach belt is made, and the settlement
is reorganized. This condition caused around
hundreds of houses to be relocated to other places to
widen roads and access to Tambak Lorok. This
revitalization has been carried out since 2015 which
is a project and budget from the center managed by
the Ministry of Public Works and Pemali-Comal
River Basin Agency. This project has made Tambak
Lorok transformed into a Maritime Tourism Village
marked by a monument at the entrance of Tambak
Lorok. Several public facilities have been improved
and added, such as roads, markets and fish auctions,
fish landing places, floating houses, worship
facilities, waste management sites, pedestrian areas,
and children's playgrounds.
3.2 Problems Faced by Small
Fishermen Due to the Maritime
Tourism Village Program
The Tambak Lorok transformation from a
fishermanvillage that looked dirty and dirty to a
marine tourism village that was clean, healthy, and
neatly organized also influenced the lifestyle and
livelihood of small fishermen. The condition of the
villages that were clean with adequate facilities made
them begin to be aware of environmental
sustainability. However, this transformation raises
several problems for small fishermen such as
economic problems, social problems, and
environmental problems.
The economic problems faced by small fishermen
in Tambak Lorok are things related to their income.
As a segment of the community that is still highly
dependent on marine resources, these small fishermen
have a volatile, uncertain income and are dependent
on the weather and waves. But several informants
explained that their average income could reach
Rp.200,000 to Rp.500,000 in one day at a time. This
catch is still a gross income because it does not
include operating costs such as gasoline and their
food supplies at sea. Usually the fishermen go to look
for kijing (green kerrang) and shrimp in the morning
at 06:00 WIB until 10:00 WIB, while to find fish, they
leave in the afternoon from 17.00 WIB until 19.30
WIB. If they only rely on fish, their income cannot
cover the operational costs they incur because the
fishing distance is getting further and the number of
fish is getting smaller. Sometimes they only get 2 kg
of grouper and snapper in a day which they sell to
Tengkulak with a price range of IDR 40,000 to IDR
60,000. For this reason, they cultivate green shells by
making bamboo cages that they plug into the sea as
houses for green clam. The cost of making a cage is
around 2,000,000 rupiahs to 4,000,000 rupiahs which
must be repaired every two years. Yields from green
mussels that they harvest every day are the ones who
can add to their income and cover their operational
costs.
In the distribution of catches, small fishermen in
Tambak Lorok are still very tied to middlemen.
Giving capital and loans by middlemen makes them
seem dependent and cannot be separated from
middlemen. This results in small fishermen not being
able to control the price of their catch, because the
price has been decided by the middleman. With this
condition, small fishermen sometimes feel
disadvantaged but they cannot do much because of
economic and social dependence on middlemen. This
problem seems unable to be resolved because there is
no fishing cooperative in Tambak Lorok as an
institution that can guarantee the distribution of
catches of small fishermen more equitably.
The government's attention to the economic problems
faced by small fishermen in Tambak Lorok is quite
high with the help of fishing gear in the form of nets
and machines. With this help, they no longer have to
spend a budget on fishing gear. However, the
distribution of aid to fishing equipment is considered
not evenly distributed and wrong target. Many of the
small fishermen do not get fishing gear, while the
residents whose main job is not as fishermen are those
who get nets and machinery. These conditions make
small fishermen in Tambak Lorok not get a better
livelihood.
In addition to economic problems, fishermen in
Tambak Lorok also face social and environmental
ICOSOP 3 2019 - International Conference on Social Political Development (ICOSOP) 3
128
problems due to the existence of this maritime village
program. Social problems generally occur in
adolescents who are heavily involved in fights and
drinking. This is influenced by the level of adolescent
education in Tambak Lorok generally only up to
senior high school level. After graduating from high
school, many of them did not want to continue their
studies at the tertiary level due to the cost and access
to work. They prefer to find work in the Port of
Tanjung Mas or in companies in the city of Semarang.
This condition makes them very vulnerable to the
influence of social interaction that tends to unsettle
residents such as drinking and fighting.
On the environmental aspect, there are many Tambak
Lorok residents, including small fishermen who have
to experience relocation. The marine tourism village
development program that requires open land for
roads and other infrastructure has an impact on the
use of community-owned land. For people affected
by this route, their houses will be demolished and
moved to another place with replacement money
given by the government. Small fishermen whose
houses were affected by the relocation project had to
find a new residential location even though far from
the beach. This makes them have to adapt to a new
environment and look for other types of work.
Meanwhile, for small fishermen who remain in
Tambak Lorok, they also have to adjust their habits to
the environment that has been arranged and prepare
themselves to host marine tourism destinations in the
city of Semarang. Although many infrastructure
facilities have been built in Tambak Lorok, both as a
barrier to coastal abrasion and as a means of
supporting marine tourism, awareness of
environmental maintenance and sustainable
management has not yet become a collective
awareness of residents, especially small fishermen.
3.3 Resilience of Small Fishermen in
Facing the Maritime Tourism
Village Program
Resilience is the ability of a person or community to
adapt to the vulnerability of life and the
powerlessness that they experience. In resilience,
there is a complex and mutually influential
relationship between individuals and their
environment. to create a new system when the old
system which includes social, cultural, economic and
ecological is considered no longer sufficient to
empower them
In Tambak Lorok, environmental, social, cultural
and economic changes that occur along with the
development of the marine tourism village program
make small fishermen have to be able to adapt to the
new environment. This adaptation process involves
social systems that are owned by small fishermen,
such as cultural values, religious values, social
relations and kinship, social networks, and social
institutions. The social system works actively and
mobilizes small fishermen to be able to survive and
deal with various problems that arise as a result of
transformation in their village. In this case, the social
system that is very dominant in forming resilience of
small fishermen is Javanese cultural values, Islamic
spirituality, and social institutions.
As a community that lives on the north coast of
Java, small fishermen in Tambak Lorok are bound to
Javanese cultural values. Almost all residents in
Tambak Lorok are ethnic Javanese, especially
Javanese coastal. They actualize Javanese cultural
values in their daily lives and specifically deal with
changes in the physical and social environment in
their village. Some Javanese life attitudes that they
hold in dealing with this situation are kamunangsan
(a great sense of humanity), tepa slira (attitude to
understand the situation of others), mawas diri (self-
introspection), and budi luhur (good behavior)
(Marbangun, 1995). Actualization of the four
attitudes of life can be seen in the attitude they
showed when the river normalization and
revitalization of the marine tourism village began to
be announced until now. Kamanungsan's attitude
underlies the process of relocation of citizens where
the community gets good treatment from the
government and surrounding residents. Prioritizing
the sense of humanity shown by residents makes this
relocation process not cause fatal social turmoil.
In addition to the extinction, the attitude of tepa
slira is also shown by the residents, especially small
fishermen in facing any problems that occur due to
changes in their villages. Mutual understanding of the
conditions experienced by their neighbors causes
them to help each other to solve it. This attitude is
supported by mutual cooperation that they do for
community activities and personal activities. If there
are fishermen who are unable to carry out their
obligations because they have to go to sea, then the
residents take other measures so that the fishermen
can be involved without having to neglect their main
obligation in making a living. Their introspective
attitude is actualized by always doing self-
introspection when there are problems they face.
With this introspective attitude, they can find
solutions to these problems without emotion and
anger, so they can be resolved properly. Meanwhile,
their nobility is actualized with good behavior in
interacting with fellow human beings so that every
Resilience of Small Fishermen in the Development of Tambak Lorok Marine Tourism Village in Semarang City
129
program in the development of this maritime tourism
village can be implemented in harmony.
Besides being known by people who are still thick
with Javanese cultural values, small fishermen in
Tambak Lorok are also known as religious
communities. They have a strong Islamic belief
system of the existence of God as an almighty
substance and influence all their activities as
creatures. For small fishermen in Tambak Lorok,
every activity they do is always supervised by God. It
is this belief that underlies them to carry out a series
of religious services and rituals so that they will
receive strength, protection and salvation from the
Lord of the universe. These religious rituals are
personal and communal rituals. Personal rituals they
usually do in their homes such as prayer, dhikr, alms
and reading the Qur'an. They also do personal rituals
in the form of slametan when they acquire new items
such as new boats, new homes, and other objects. For
communal rituals, they usually do it in mosques, in
residents' homes, and in open spaces. This communal
ritual takes the form of recitation, yasinan (reading
the Qur’an Surah Yasin), and sea alms. In connection
with the changes in the physical and social
environment due to the development of this maritime
tourism village, religious rituals give them peace of
mind, certainty of life, and the strength of social
solidarity to deal with every problem that exists.
The next social system that makes small
fishermen in Tambak Lorok able to adapt and deal
with any changes that exist is the strong social
institutions they have. Their village is divided into
several RWs and RTs which in addition to regulating
population problems, also become a mediation for
residents in overcoming every problem they face. For
example, the waste problem that used to be a big
problem that cannot be resolved, can now be resolved
by the existence of a garbage bank that is coordinated
by PKK women in each RT. Likewise with mutual
cooperation and village security activities, it is also
coordinated by the heads of the local RT, so that when
there are teenage fights can be resolved with the
mediation of the RT heads and and the local
community. In addition, the kinship between citizens
also strengthens their social institutions.
4 CONCLUSIONS
Socio-cultural changes due to changes in the physical
environment experienced by small fishermen in
Tambak Lorok require them to be able to adapt to
existing conditions. The many socioeconomic
problems they faced when their fishing village was
changed to become a marine tourism village
demanded that they have to have a variety of ways to
solve it. The complexity of the problem is not only
related to the psychology of citizens personally, but
also the psychology of the community as a
community. The success of small fishermen in
Tambak Lorok in overcoming the problem is caused
by their resilience or survival skills. This resilience
utilizes social systems that exist in society such as the
actualization of local cultural values, the
externalization of religious spirituality, and the
strengthening of the social institutions they have.
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