11Story
The World of the Dead |
To understand Batak art and society requires leaving aside Western concepts of interpretations, in order to approach a mental universe fundamentally different from ours. The World of the Dead is a case in point. Before his/her birth a Batak person receives from the supreme divinity Mula Jadi Na Bolon a tondi – spiritual and life force – which will determine the course of his/her life. Plants, animals and certain objects can also be invested with a tondi. Tondi fluctuates and can move from a thing/person to another. The living’s actions is thus to maintain whole the strength of their tondi. When a person dies, it is said that the begu – the soul – is freed while the tondi goes back to the upper worlds to serve as a life-giving substance to another living being. Everyone who dies becomes a begu. With the appropriate amount of offerings and animal sacrifices, a respected ancestor’s begu can become sumangot, first, and then sombaon, i.e. a semi-divine ancestor. The soul of a man without descent or who died prematurely can disturb the order set by the adat, the customary law. Then, a puppet si gale gale, animated and dressed up, constitutes a vessel for the defunct’s begu during the funerals. |
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Funeral effigy with a magic staff. This staff have been sculpted by the datu panggana (the sculptor magician). © musée du quai Branly, photo Patrick Gries, Bruno Descoings, 70.2001.27.484.
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Toba Ancestral effigy
© musée du quai Branly, photo Patrick Gries, Valérie Torre, 70.2001.27.338.1-2. |
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Toba marionette si gale gale. |
Stone sarcophagus, pharholian, in the Samosir plain. The toba sarcophagus can cointain the bones of several persons after their second funeral. To the left, several rumbi cylindrical urns. |
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