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Unravelling Minangkabau Ethnicity
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 December 2019
Abstract
In the formation of ethnicity the interaction between the views of outside observers and insiders themselves is an important process. The Minangkabau, whose homeland is located in the uplands of central Sumatra, have been a popular source of study because of their matrilineal social organisation and the practice of the merantau, where young Minangkabau men leave the homeland to seek knowledge and fortune abroad. Since the 1970s as a result of the women's movement, there has been a growing number of works focusing on the matrilineal principles which underlie Minangkabau society. The merantau, too, has often been cited for the dynamism in Minangkabau society which has led to its considerable contributions to the Indonesian state in a number of fields. It is not surprising, therefore, that today the Minangkabau themselves see matriliny and the merantau as primary components in their identity. While these components were present in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, they did not play the central role in ethnic identity as they do today. As I hope to show in this paper, there were different historical circumstances in those years which required another approach to ethnic identity.
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1 This twin concept of a Minangkabau is discussed in Kato, Tsuyoshi, Matriliny and Migration: Evolving Minangkabau Traditions in Indonesia (Ithaca/London 1982)Google Scholar. See also the classic formulation of these characteristics in Jong, E. de Josselin de, Minangkabau and Negri Sembilan: Socio-Political Structure in Indonesia [3rd. impression] (The Hague 1980)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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14 Fox has argued that all Austronesian-speaking societies (which includes the Minangkabau) make use of precedence as a means of social and individual differentiation. Fox, James J., ‘Austronesian Societies and Their Transformations’ in: Bellwood, Peter, Fox, James J. and Tryon, Darrel eds, The Austronesians: Historical and Comparative Perspectives (Canberra 1995) 214–228Google Scholar. This would have encouraged ambitious individuals to found new communitie s and hence gain the prestige and privileges of a founder status. Bellwood, Peter, ‘Hierarchy, Founder Ideology and Austronesian Expansion’ in: JFox, ames J. and Sather, Clifford eds, Origins, Ancestry, and Alliance: Explorations in Austronesian Ethnography (Canberra 1996) 28–31Google Scholar.
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17 Duara, Prasenjit, Rescuing History from the Nation: Questioning Narratives of Modern China (Chicago 1995) 65CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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19 Jong, De Josselin de, Minangkabau and Negri Sembilan, 69Google Scholar. A study based on a survey made i n the 1970s and on statistics gathered in 1955 show the suku Malayu with the second largest representation among the Minangkabau nagari (unit of settlement consisting of the ‘mother’ village and its associated ‘children’ villages) after Caniago. One Minangka-bau source even claims that the oldest suku (matrilineage) in West Sumatra is Malayu. Kato, , Matriliny and Migration, 80–81Google Scholar.
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22 Willinck, , Het Rechtsleven, 33–34Google Scholar. The mamak, or mother's brother, plays the dominant role in the lives of the kemanakan, or his sister's children. In the rantau one often finds a modification of this customary practice.
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24 The interpretation is less well-known but more convincing than the generally-held belief that there was a military expedition sent from Java to Sumatra. Thi s interpretation was first raised by C.C. Berg in 1951 and supported in a n article written in 1985 byJ.G. d e Casparis. See Berg, , ‘De Geschiedenis van Pril Majapahitl’, Indonesia 4 (1950–1951) 485Google Scholar; and Casparis, , ‘Srivijaya an d Malayu’, SPAFA Final Report: SEAMEO Project in Archaeology and Fine Arts (Jakarta/Padang/Prapat/Medan 1985) 247–248Google Scholar.
25 C. C. Berg argues that the sending of the Amoghapasa Buddha statue to Dharmasraya was equivalent to the presenting of his real/sacred daughter Tapasi to Champa. In both cases it was a sign of great favour in the transferral of sakti or sacred power. Berg, ‘Pril Majapahitl’, 501; Berg ‘Pril MajapahitH’, 195.
26 The seventh-century Malay inscriptions found in Palembang, Jambi, and Bangka were all located in the confluence of rivers and landpaths or in importan t straits. Most were oaths intended to maintain th e loyalty of the subjects through threats of supernatura l punishments. Damais, Louis-Charles, Bibliographie Indonésienne V, BEFEO 51/2 (1963) 555Google Scholar;Andaya, L., ‘Search’, 4–5Google Scholar.
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29 Krom, , Hindoe-favaansche Geschiedenis, 393–394Google Scholar;Satyawati, Suleiman, ‘The Archaeology and History of West Sumatra’, Bulletin of the Research Centre of Archaeology of Indonesia 12 (1977) 4Google Scholar.
30 Casparis points out tha t Indonesian names do not usually distinguish between the kingdom, its capital, and its royal residence, and so Malayu would have been retained as th e name of Adityavarman's kingdom even at Pagaruyung. Casparis, , Srivijaya and Malayu, 246–247Google Scholar.
31 Satyawati, , ‘Archaeology and History’, 9–10Google Scholar.
32 Stuart Robson ed., Desawarnana (Nagarakrtagama) by Mpu Prapanca (Leiden 1995) 33.
33 The erection of the statue was accompanied by the dance of Adityavarman and his consort n i which the former was depicted as Matanginlsa, an aspect of Amoghapasa, a demonic form of the Dhyanibuddha Amoghasiddhi. Satyawati, , ‘Archaeology and History’, 3Google Scholar;Casparis, , ‘Srivijaya and Malayu’, 296Google Scholar;Parkin, Harry, BatakFruit of Hindu Thought (Madras 1978) 52–57Google Scholar. The image symbolises death and the spiritual release for the worshippers. The inspiration for the statue was clearly the Singasari court of east Java, where Adityavarman had spent some time and left an inscription in 1343. At Singasari there is a similar statue dated 1292 of the Bhairava seated on a dais surrounded by skulls, with a crown, earrings, and a necklace of skulls. Casparis, , ‘Srivijaya and Malayu’, 246Google Scholar;Fontein, Jan, The Sculpture of Indonesia (Washington 1990) 162–163Google Scholar.
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35 This is an argument which I develop in a forthcoming article entitled, ‘The Search for the “Origins” of the Melayu’.
36 Leonard Y. Andaya, ‘Aceh's Contributions to Standards of Malayness’, forthcoming Archi-pel. of great legitimizing power which enabled these ‘fatherless’ children to be enveloped into the parentship/guardianship of Pagaruyung's rulers.
37 The shift from a general cultural identification to a n ethnic one to gain greater access to resources and safeguard its members from perceived threat s is a well-known phenomenon. For other examples, see Patterson, Orlando, ‘Context and Choice in Ethnic Allegiance: A Theoretical Framework and Caribbean Case Study’ in: Glazer, Nathan and Moynihan, Daniel P. eds, Ethnicity: Theory and Experience (Cambridge, Mass. 1975) 305–306Google Scholar;Sow-Theng, Leong, Migration and Ethnicity in Chinese History: Hakkas, Pengmin, and Their Neighbors (Stanford 1997) 62–68Google Scholar.
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43 The name of the ethnic group can summon up for both its members and outsiders images of common characteristics, real and imagined, thus enforcing the sense of unity. Smith, Anthony D., The Ethnic Origins of Nations (Oxford 1986) 24Google Scholar.
44 The story is recorded in the Hikayat Raja-Raja Pasai. See Hill, A. H. ed., ‘Hikayat Raja-Raja Pasai’, Journal of the Malayan Branch of tlie Royal Asiatic Society 33/12 (1960) 162–163Google Scholar.
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46 Even among present-day inhabitants of Kuantan, who now view themselves as Malay, believe that the Minangkabau adat or customary practices is superior. They regard the Minangkabau uplands as a source of law, etiquette, myths, and of magical knowledge and power. Ostergaard, Lene, ‘Between Minang and Malay: Intimations of Identity in Central Sumatra’, Kabar Seberang 22 (1991) 35–41Google Scholar.
47 Increasing contact was also takin g place at the same time with th e emigrating Batak communities in the north. Joustra, BatakspiegeL, 20, 23-29. The period of large movements of groups in the seventeenth and eighteent h centuries contributed to a stronger sense of distinct ethnicities in Sumatra.
48 Reid, Anthony, Southeast Asia in the Age of Commerce II (New Haven 1993)Google Scholar.
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52 Satyawati, , ‘Archaeology and History’, 3Google Scholar. In an early nineteenth-century letter written in Malay from Pagaruyung, the term Maharajadiraja is still being used to refer to the ruler. Drakard, , Kingdom of Words, 156–157Google Scholar, Appendix 1, 273.
53 The name comes from the words pagar (fence) and ruyung (the outer portion of a palm trunk, which can be used for fences or palisades). According to legend, a fence made of the palm trunk was mad e to create a safe bathing place for the ruler's child free from crocodile attacks. The legend would have been widely known and would have reinforced the court's perceived role as parents providing protection for their anak Minangkabau (Minangkabau children).
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68 Drakard, Kingdom of Words, 229-230. Iskandar Zul-Karnain (Alexander of the Two Horns) in Malay traditions is the legendary ‘Islamic’ hero, Alexander the Great of Macedonia. While the Perso-Islamic tradition of the Romance of Alexander the Great emphasises his role as conqueror, seer, and prophet in search of the Water of Life, the crucial message is his destiny to establish a universal kingdom, a kingdom of Islam. Subrahmanyam, Sanjay, ‘“Persianization” and “Mercantilism”: Two Themes in Bay of Bengal History’ in: Om Prakash and Denys Lombard eds, Commerce and Culture in the Bay of Bengal 1500-1800 (New Delhi 1999) 79–83Google Scholar.
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70 Wolters argues that the compilers of the Sejarah Melayu attempted to eliminate all references to the Malayu-Jambi past in order to demonstrate an unbroken line in the Palem-bang-Melaka family. Wolters, , Fall of Srivijaya, 94–95Google Scholar. The aim, I believe, was not to eradicate references to Malayu-Jambi but to appropriate the whole Sumatra n tradition ofSrivijaya/Malayu for itself and thus shift the centre of Malayu identity to the ‘Malay’ Peninsula.
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74 Although the Dutch translation of Pagaruyung letters tended to refer to ‘Minangkabau subject’, the Malay would have been anak Minangkabau or ‘Minangkabau child’. A common way of referring to a patron-client or lord-subject relationship throughout the Malay-Indonesian region is by the kinship terms of bapak-anak (father-child).
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78 This manuscript, Cod. Or. 7304 from the Leiden University Library, is a version of the Sejarah Melayu, with an entire new section devoted to the kingdom of Siak. It has been called Hikayat Siak, or the Siak Chronicles, because of its Siak viewpoint. A romanised version of the text was published in 1992. See Hashim, Muhammad Yusoff ed., Hikayat Siak (Kuala Lumpur 1992)Google Scholar.
79 In Asahan there is a tradition of the father of the founder of the Asahan kingdom being a child born of a princess impregnated and then given away by the ruler of Aceh. Once the child is born, a member of the royal family in Pagaruyung is brought to Asahan to raise the child. Kroesen, C. A., ‘Geschiedenis van Asahan’, Tijdschrift voor Indische Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde 31 (1886) 87–88Google Scholar. Pagaruyung was obviously regarded as the source
80 This literally means: ‘I was observing the measures of other people’. It is interesting that the metaphor is one dealing with measures used in trade, demonstrating the importance of trade in the rantau to Minangkabau society.
81 The Malay for the ‘skins of lice’ is kulit tutna. Leyds suggests that this was a misreading of kulit umo, not tumo (-a). Umo, he was told, was a cat-sized animal once found everywhere i n the forests. It had a thin skin which tore at the slightest contact. Leyds identified it as the Sumatran hare (Neosolagus Nescheri). Leyds, W. J., ‘Larassen in Minangkabau’, Kolo-nialeStudim 10/10, 1 (1926) 401Google Scholar.
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83 The role of the Putri Jamilan in this Hikayat is very similar to that of the Bundo Kanduang (Real Mother) in the well-known Minangkabau Kaba Cindua Mala. In this Kaba it is the Bundo Kanduang who is the repository of knowledge of the history and customs of the Minangkabau. She conveys this knowledge to her son, the Raja Pagaruyung. In both cases, the Queen Mothers occupy an elevated position in keeping with the existence of matriliny in Minangkabau society. It is also part of the idea of the protective parent, in this case a mother figure who not only protects but nurtures the child.
84 Both the Hikayat Siak, which was written sometime in the early nineteenth century, and Pagaruyung letters of the same period translated into Dutch, use the metaphor ‘seas’ or ‘coasts’ to refer to the rantau areas. By contrast the Minangkabau heartland in the uplands of central Sumatra is known as the ‘land’ (darek) and is referred to as the darek Minangkabau.
85 Kratz, Ernst Ulrich ed., Peringatan Sejarah Negeri Johor (Wiesbaden 1973) 50Google Scholar.
86 There was an ancient personal relationship established between the Melaka-Johor royal family and the Orang Laut, which may even stem from the days of Srivijaya. Andaya, , Kingdom of Johor, 46–50Google Scholar; Wolters, , Fall of Srivijaya, 46, 124Google Scholar.
87 Andaya, Kingdom of Johor, ch. 9.
88 ARA, VOC 1557, Jambi 6 November 1694, fol. 147v. Commenting on events in the late seventeenth century, Valentijn believed that the name ‘Andelis’ was the local name for the island which Europeans called Sumatra. Valentijn, François, Oud en Nieuw Oost-Indien V (1726) (Dordrecht 1724–1726) 2Google Scholar.
89 A letter from the king ofJambi in 1694 informed the Dutch that tlie ruler of Pagaruyung was present to witness the establishing of peace between the warringjambi and Minangka-bau communities in the upper reaches of the Batang Hari river in Jambi. ARA, VOC 1557, Jambi 1 April 1694, fols. 35-36.
90 ARA, VOC 1609, Jambi 28 October 1698. fol. 20.
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95 At this time there was also a growing sense of belonging to a third major grouping, the Batak, as a result of migrations and confrontations with communities of Minangkabau, Malayu, and Acehnese. Marsden, , History of Sumatra, 365Google Scholar; Joustra, , Batakspiegel, 19–31Google Scholar;Castles, Lance, ‘The Political Life of a Sumatran Residency: Tapanuli 1915-1940’ (PhD Dissertation, Yale University, 1972) 4–6Google Scholar.
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