| ABOUT BALI
Bali is an Indonesian
island
located at 8°25'23?S,
115°14'55?ECoordinates:
8°25'23?S,
115°14'55?E,
the western most of the Lesser
Sunda Islands, lying between Java
to the west and Lombok
to the east. It is one of the country's 33 provinces
with the provincial capital at Denpasar
towards the south of the island. The island is
home to the vast majority of Indonesia's small
Hindu
minority. It is also the largest bali
tourist destination in the country and is
renowned for its highly developed arts, including
dance, sculpture, painting, leather, metalworking
and music.
History Bali
Bali has been inhabited since early prehistoric
times firstly by descendants of a prehistoric
race who migrated through mainland Asia
to the Indonesian archipelago, thought to
have first settled in Bali around 3000 BC.[]
Stone tools dating from this time have been found
near the village of Cekik in the island's west.
Balinese culture was strongly influenced by Indian,
and particularly Sanskrit, culture, in a process
beginning around the 1st century AD. The name
Balidwipa
has been discovered from various inscriptions,
including the Blanjong
charter issued by Sri
Kesari Warmadewa in 913
AD and mentioning Walidwipa.
It was during this time that the complex irrigation
system subak
was developed to grow rice. Some religious and
cultural traditions still in existence today can
be traced back to this period. The Hindu Majapahit
Empire (1293–1520
AD) on eastern Java
founded a Balinese colony
in 1343.
When the empire declined, there was an exodus
of intellectuals, artists, priests and musicians
from Java to Bali in the 15th century.
The First European contact with Bali is thought
to have been when Dutch explorer Cornelis
de Houtman arrived in 1597, though a Portuguese
ship had foundered off the Bukit Peninsula
as early as 1585. Dutch rule over Bali came
later, was more aggressively fought for, and was
never as well established as in other parts of
Indonesia such as Java and Maluku.
In the 1840s,
a presence in Bali was established, first in the
island's north, by playing various distrustful
Balinese realms against each other. The Dutch
mounted large naval and ground assaults first
against the Sanur region and then Denpasar. The
Balinese were hopelessly overwhelmed in number
and armament, but rather than face the humiliation
of surrender, they mounted a final defensive but
suicidal assault, or puputan. Despite Dutch
demands for surrender, an estimated 4,000 Balinese
marched to their death against the invaders. Afterwards
the Dutch governors were able to exercise little
influence over the island, and local control over
religion and culture generally remained intact.
Japan
occupied Bali during World
War II during which time a Balinese military
officer, Gusti Ngurah Rai, formed a Balinese 'freedom
army'. Following Japan's Pacific surrender in
August 1945, the Dutch promptly returned to Indonesia,
including Bali, immediately to reinstate their
pre-war colonial administration. This was resisted
by the Balinese rebels now using Japanese weapons.
On 20
November 1946,
the Battle
of Marga was fought in Tabanan in central
Bali. Colonel I Gusti Ngurah Rai, 29 years old,
finally rallied his forces in east Bali at Marga
Rana, where they made a suicide
attack on the heavily armed Dutch. The Balinese
battalion was entirely wiped out, breaking the
last thread of Balinese military resistance. In
1946 the Dutch constituted Bali as one of the
13 administrative districts of the newly-proclaimed
Republic
of East Indonesia, a rival state to the Republic
of Indonesia which was proclaimed and headed by
Sukarno
and Hatta.
Bali was included in the "Republic of the United
States of Indonesia" when the Netherlands recognised
Indonesian independence on Dec. 29, 1949.
In 1950
Bali officially renounced the Dutch union and
legally became a province within the Republic
of Indonesia.
The 1963
eruption of Mount
Agung killed thousands, created economic havoc
and forced many displaced Balinese to be transmigrated
to other parts of Indonesia.
In 1965,
after a failed coup
d'etat in Jakarta against the national
government of Indonesia, Bali, along with other
regions of Indonesia most notably Java, was the
scene of widespread killings of (often falsely-accused)
members and sympathizers of the Communist
Party of Indonesia (PKI) by right-wing General
Suharto-sponsored
militias. Possibly more than 100,000 Balinese
were killed although the exact numbers are unknown
to date and the events remain legally undisclosed.[2]
Many unmarked but well known mass graves of victims
are located around the island[citation
needed].
On October
12, 2002,
a car
bomb attack in the tourist resort of Kuta
killed 202 people, largely foreign tourists and
injured a further 209. Further bombings
occurred three years later in Kuta and nearby
Jimbaran Bay.
Bali lies 3.2 km east of Java and approximately
8 degrees south of the equator.
East to west, the island is approximately 153
km wide and 112 km north to south (95 by 69 miles,
respectively), with a surface area of 5,632
km˛. The highest point is Mount
Agung at 3,142 m (10,308 feet) high, an active
volcano
that last erupted in March 1963.
Mountains cover centre to the eastern side, with
Mount Agung the easternmost peak. Mount
Batur (1,717 m) is also still active. About
30,000 years ago it experienced a catastrophic
eruption — one of the largest known volcanic events
on Earth.
In the south the land descends to form an alluvial
plain, watered by shallow rivers, drier in
the dry
season and overflowing during periods of heavy
rain.
The principal cities are the northern port of
Singaraja,
the former colonial capital of Bali, and the present
provincial capital and largest city, Denpasar,
near the southern coast. The town of Ubud
(north of Denpasar), with its art market, museums
and galleries, is arguably the cultural center
of Bali.
There are major coastal roads and roads that
cross the island mainly north-south. Due to the
mountainous terrain in the island's center, the
roads tend to follow the crests of the ridges
across the mountains. There are no railway lines.
The island is surrounded by coral
reefs. Beaches
in the south tend to have white sand while those
in the north and west black
sand. The beach town of Padangbai
in the south east has both: the main beach and
the secret beach have white sand and the south
beach and the blue lagoon have much darker sand.
Pasut Beach, near Ho River and Pura Segara, is
a quiet beach 14 km southwest of Tabanan. The
Ho River is navigable by small sampan.
Black sand beaches between Pasut and Klatingdukuh
are being developed for tourism, but apart from
the seaside temple of Tanah
Lot, this is not yet a tourist area.
To the east, the Lombok
Strait that separates Bali from Lombok
marks the biogeographical
division between the fauna of the Indomalayan
ecozone
and the distinctly different fauna of Australasia
that is known as the Wallace
Line, for Alfred
Russel Wallace, who first remarked upon the
distinction between these two major biomes.
When sea levels dropped during the Pleistocene
ice
age, Bali was connected to Java
and Sumatra
and to the mainland of Asia and shared the Asian
fauna, but the deep water of the Lombok Strait
continued to keep Lombok and the Lesser
Sunda archipelago isolated.
Administrative divisions
The province is divided into 8 regencies
(kabupaten) and 1 city
(kota):
- Badung
- Bangli
- Buleleng
- Denpasar
(city)
- Gianyar
- Jembrana
- Karangasem
- Klungkung
- Tabanan
Economy Bali
Three decades ago, the Balinese economy was largely
agriculture based both in terms of output and
employment. Tourism is now the largest single
industry and Bali is as a result one of Indonesia’s
wealthiest regions. The economy, however, has
suffered significantly as a result of the terrorist
bombings of
2002 and 2005.
Although in terms of output, tourism is the economy’s
largest industry, agriculture is still the island’s
biggest employer[citation
needed], most notably rice
cultivation. Crops grown in smaller amounts include
fruit, vegetables and other cash
and subsistence crops.[citation
needed] A significant number
of Balinese are also fishermen. Bali is also famous
for its artisans
who produce batik
and ikat
cloth and clothing, wooden
carvings, stone carvings and silverware.
Although significant tourism exists in the north,
centre and east of the island, the tourist industry
is overwhelmingly focused in the south. The main
tourist locations are the town of Kuta
(with its beach), and its outer suburbs (which
were once independent townships) of Legian and
Seminyak,
Sanur,
Jimbaran,
Ubud,
and the newer development of Nusa
Dua. The Ngurah
Rai International Airport is located near
Jimbaran, on the isthmus
joining the southernmost part of the island to
the main part of the island. Another increasingly
important source of income for Bali is what is
called "Congress Tourism" from the frequent international
conferences held on the island, especially after
the terrorist bombings of 2002;
ostensibly to resurrect Bali's damaged tourism
industry as well as its tarnished image.
Demographics
The population of Bali is 3,151,000 (as of 2005).
Religion
Unlike most of Muslim-majority
Indonesia, about 93.18% of Bali's population adheres
to Balinese
Hinduism, formed as a combination of existing
local
beliefs and Hindu
influences from mainland Southeast
Asia and South
Asia. Minority religions include Islam
(4.79%), Christianity
(1.38%), and Buddhism
(0.64%). These official statistical figures do
not include immigrants from other parts of Indonesia.
Immigrants from other parts of Indonesia have
drastically changed the demographics in Bali.[citation
needed] Although the majority
of the population of Bali adheres to Balinese
Hinduism, recent years have brought an influx
of people from other islands seeking to benefit
from the tourist industry, export of local handicrafts
and other factors, making Bali the most affluent
island in the region. The bombings in Bali by
Muslim militants and the numbers of wealthy Muslims
from Jakarta with political connections buying
prime real estate for development has started
to create Hindu-Muslim tensions where none existed
before.
Language
Balinese
and Indonesian
are the most widely spoken languages
in Bali, and like most Indonesians, the vast majority
of Balinese people are bilingual
or trilingual.
There are several indigenous Balinese languages,
but most Balinese can also use the most widely
spoken option: modern common Balinese. The usage
of different Balinese languages was traditionally
determined by the Balinese
caste system and by clan membership, but this
tradition is diminishing.
English
is a common third language (and the primary foreign
language) of many Balinese, owing to the requirements
of the large tourism
industry. Staff working in Bali's tourist
centres are often, by necessity, multilingual
to some degree, speaking as many as 8 or 9 different
languages to an often surprising level of competence.
Culture Bali
Bali is famous for many forms of art, including
painting, sculpture, woodcarving, handcrafts,
and performing arts. Balinese gamelan
music is highly developed and varied. The dances
portray stories from Hindu epics such as the Ramayana.
Famous Balinese dances include pendet,
legong dance,
baris dance,
topeng dance,
barong dance,
and kecak dance
(the monkey dance).
National education programs, mass media and tourism
continue to change Balinese culture. Immigration
from other parts of Indonesia, especially Java,
is changing the ethnic composition of Bali's population.
The Hindu new year, Nyepi,
is celebrated in the spring by a day of silence.
On this day everyone stays at home and tourists
are encouraged to remain in their hotels. On the
preceding day large, colorful sculptures of ogoh-ogoh
monsters are paraded and finally burned in the
evening to drive away evil spirits. Other festivals
throughout the year are specified by the Balinese
pawukon
calendrical
system.
Kertha Wisesa
Bali Silat Grand Master Made Sujana Balok
in Traditional Costume
The Grand Master of Kertha Wisesa began his journey
in 1972 travelling to the mountain areas around
the mother temple district teaching the art and
philosophy of traditional Silat Bali. Today, across
the entire island one organization stands out
as being ubiquitous in every district and every
village. It is called Kertha Wisesa and teaches
the traditional Martial Art of Silat
Bali.
Each day between 5pm and 6pm you will see children
and adults dressed in traditional black uniform
gathering to practice traditional Silat.
This tradition differs from the more modern sport
version of Silat called Pencak
Silat that has world and national championship
competitions. It involves a deeper understanding
of the religious and ceremonial world in which
the Balinese
people live as well as being more combat oriented.
Environment And Wildlife
The Bali
Starling lives only on Bali. As few as
six may exist in the wild
Bali has around 280 species of birds, including
the critically
endangered Bali
Starling. The only endemic mammal of the island,
the Bali
tiger, became extinct<
in the 1930s. The Bali
Barat National Park is a refuge for wildlife
such as the pangolin,
common
muntjac, chevrotain,
leopard
cat, black
giant squirrel, macaque
and leaf
monkey.
wikipedia.org |