'Those Murderous Dayaks'
Local Politics, National Policy, Ethnicity and Religious Difference in Southern Kalimantan, Indonesia
Keywords:
Dayaks, local politics, Southern Kalimantan, IndonesiaAbstract
In March of 2001, in central Kalimantan, a group of Dayaks, the indigenous peoples of Borneo, attacked and killed a number of Madurese farmers. These farmers had been settled in the area for some years, under the sponsorship of an Indonesian Government transmigration programme which, since 1953, has been responsible for the relocation in Kalimantan of literally tens of thousands of families from Java, Madura, and Bali. While ethnic difference has frequently been cited, both locally and nationally, as the cause of violence between, for example, Dayaks and Madurese, the constitution of Kalimantan’s ethnic groups, the historical, social and economic conditions under which they emerge, and the link between such ethnic groupings and inter-ethnic violence, has rarely been examined. This paper explores the relationship between national policies of resettlement and resource management and the emergence of a sometimes bloody politics of ethnicity in Kalimantan. It argues that while religious difference is frequently cited as in some way causing conflict, competition between locals, migrant groups, and the State over control of resources is a more crucial factor.
References
Antara (Indonesian National News Agency) 2001a Violence in Central Kalimantan to be stopped in three days. 22 May.
b District Heads to be authorized to issue HPHs. 27 May.
Banjarmasin Post 2001 Dayak Bakumpai Kecewa: Tak Dilibatkan Rekonsiliasi. 19 March.
Barber, Charles Victor 1998 Forest resource scarcity and social conflict in Indonesia. Environment 40.4: 5–37.
Basri, Hasan 1988 Perpindahan Orang Banjar ke Surakarta: Kasus Migrasi Inter-Etnis di Indonesia. Prisma 3: 42–56.
Beattie, Andrew 1999 Varieties of Javanese Religion. An Anthropological Account. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
Bernama (Malaysian National News Agency) 2001a Dayak-Mandurese conflict: settling age old scores. 6 March.
b Indigenous Dayaks oppose return of Mandurese to central Kalimantan. 7 March.
Bock, Carl 1985 The Headhunters of Borneo. Oxford University Press, Oxford (first published 1881.
Boston Globe 2001 Beheadings on Borneo linked to clash over land. 9 March.
Dove, Michael 1985 Swidden Agriculture in Indonesia: The Subsistence Strategies of the Kalimantan Kantu. Mouton, Berlin.
Dove, Michael (ed.) 1988 The Real and Imagined Role of Culture in Development: Case Studies from Indonesia. University of Hawaii Press, Honolulu.
Down to Earth 2000 New Kalimantan mega-project will not proceed. No. 45, May.
Geertz, Clifford 1960 The Religion of Java. The Free Press, Glencoe.
Hawkins, Mary 1989 Market People, Mountain People. Identity in a South Kalimantan Transmigration Village. Unpublished PhD thesis, Department of Anthropology, University of Sydney.
Becoming Banjar. Identity and Ethnicity in South Kalimantan, Indonesia. The Asia Pacific Journal of Anthropology 1.1.
Human Rights Watch Asia Report Excerpt 1997 Inside Indonesia 51 (July–September).
King, Victor T. 1985 The Maloh of West Kalimantan: An Ethnographic Study of Social Inequality and Social Change Among an Indonesian Borneo People. Foris Publications: KTLV Leiden.
A Question of Identity: Names, Societies and Ethnic Groups in Interior Kalimantan and Brunei Darussalam. Sojourn: Journal of Social Issues in Southeast Asia 16.1 (April): 1-36.
Miles, Douglas 1976 Cutlass and Crescent Moon: A Case Study of Social and Political Change. The Centre for Asian Studies, University of Sydney.
Newsweek International 1999 Rule of the Headhunters. 5 April.
a The Bloody Birth of a ‘Messy State’. 12 March.
b Indonesia’s Island Fever. 12 March.
Poffenberger, Mark 1997 Rethinking Indonesian Forest Policy: Beyond the Timber Barons. Asian Survey 37.5: 453-70.
Rousseau, Jerome 1974 The Social Organisation of the Baluy Kayan. Unpublished PhD thesis, Cambridge University.
Central Borneo: Ethnic Identity and Social Life in a Stratified Society. Clarendon Press, Oxford; Oxford University Press, New York.
Rutter, Owen 1985 The Pagans of North Borneo. Oxford University Press, Oxford (first published 1929).
Schiller, Anne 1996 An ‘Old’ Religion in ‘New Order’ Indonesia: Notes on Ethnicity and Religious Affiliation. Sociology of Religion 57.4: 409–15.
The Economist 2001 Bloodshed in Borneo. April 21.
Time International 2001 The Darkest Season. 12 March.
Tsing, Anna 1993 In the Realm of the Diamond Queen. Marginality in an Out-of-the-Way Place. Princeton University Press, Princeton NJ.
Whittier, Herbert L. 1973 Social Organisation and Symbols of Social Differentiation: an Ethnographic Study of the Kenyah Dayak of East Kalimantan (Borneo). Unpublished PhD thesis, Michigan State University.
World Bank Group 2001 Transmigration in Indonesia. Operations Evaluation Department.
World Press Review 1997 Headhunting again in Borneo (44.5): 39-41 (originally printed in The Australian).