Type | Journal Article - Land and Life in Timor-Leste |
Title | Origins, Precedence and Social Order in the Domain of Ina Ama Beli Darlari |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2011 |
Page numbers | 23-46 |
URL | http://www.oapen.org/download?type=document&docid=459352#page=33 |
Abstract | Since 1999, communities across Timor-Leste have been engaged in what some observers have described as a ‘resurgence of custom’1 (Hicks 2007). This resurgence is most vividly associated with the rebuilding of sacred ancestral houses (Tetun: uma lulik), which were destroyed, abandoned or fell into disrepair during the course of the Indonesian military invasion and occupation. The reconstruction of these social and symbolic structures has occurred hand in hand with numerous other processes of restoration and renewal including: a return to settlements of ‘origin’ after years of displacement; the physical and/ or symbolic laying to rest of the dead and disappeared at ancestral burial sites; and renewed participation in communal ceremonies and rituals associated with the agricultural calendar. The time, effort and resources entailed in these rituals of return and renewal suggest that such actions are more than a simple reaffirmation of self-esteem following centuries of foreign domination. They involve the rearticulation of distinct forms of sociality structured around networks of kinship and alliance, closely tied to specific claims to land and access to natural resources (Bovensiepen 2009; Fitzpatrick and Barnes 2010; McWilliam 2006, 2007, 2008; Meitzner Yoder 2005; Palmer 2007). |
» | Timor-Leste - Population and Housing Census 2004 |