Malaysia

As degazettement looms large, Temuan honour forest deities

On Hari Moyang, tribe prays to spirits dwelling in Kuala Langat forest reserve for continued protection

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 02 Jan 2021 10:00AM

As degazettement looms large, Temuan honour forest deities
Asih Anak Jehat offers prayers to Panglima Galang and Angkop, two guardian spirits said to dwell in the adjacent Kuala Langat North Forest Reserve. – SAIRIEN NAFIS/The Vibes pic, January 2, 2021

by Zaidi Azmi

Journalist

KUALA LANGAT – After reciting a lengthy prayer in the Temuan tongue for his tribe’s guardian deities, Kg Busut Baru’s resident medium, Asih Anak Jehat, suddenly let out a spine-chilling groan.

His back hunched. His face grimaced. His prayer form broke as he stretched an arm forward, as if begging for a time out from an unseen attacker.

Asih’s cry swiftly halted the liveliness in the compound of the village’s community hall, where two shrines to the tribe’s most revered spirits, which villagers address as Moyang, sit.

Only the rhythmic, almost hypnotic, knocks of the wooden percussion instrument known as “kanggok” continued. The smoke and aroma of burnt incense accentuated the mysticism.

Asih made another noise, this time a short, sharp grunt. His body started to tremble.

The chatter of three Temuan girls weaving nipah fronds into ketupat casings at the entrance of the hall stopped, and they inched closer to one another while stealing worried glances at Asih.

The tribal elders were equally quiet, but none of them shared the anxiousness felt by the youth. Instead, they appeared confident, assured that Asih would be fine.

The ‘kanggok’ is played on Hari Moyang, heightening the day’s mysticism. – SAIRIEN NAFIS/The Vibes pic, January 2, 2021
The ‘kanggok’ is played on Hari Moyang, heightening the day’s mysticism. – SAIRIEN NAFIS/The Vibes pic, January 2, 2021

“I was suffocating,” said Asih after the ceremony ended.

“Out of breath. Still lacking in experience. The Moyang wanted to enter me. But my body could not handle it. Not enough training.”

Asih is the successor to the village medium, and the only one to undergo training to summon, and be possessed by, the tribe’s guardian spirits on Hari Moyang.

Had the summoning succeeded, the Moyang that Asih was praying to – Panglima Galang – would have possessed him and feasted on the delicacies laid out as offerings in front of its shrine, a light-brown boulder with a heap of black cloth on top.

Hari Moyang is a day when the Orang Asli express gratitude to their guardian spirits for the protection given throughout the year.

Each tribe has its own Hari Moyang date and traditions, which are usually closely associated with the elements near where the tribe lives.

For example, the Moyang of the Mah Meri tribe on Pulau Carey, usually celebrated in January, are coastal and sea spirits.

The Moyang of the Temuan tribe, meanwhile, are forest spirits said to dwell in the Kuala Langat North Forest Reserve (KLNFR), which is adjacent to Kg Busut Baru.

Various fruits and delicacies are laid out as offerings to the Temuan’s Moyang. – SAIRIEN NAFIS/The Vibes pic, January 2, 2021
Various fruits and delicacies are laid out as offerings to the Temuan’s Moyang. – SAIRIEN NAFIS/The Vibes pic, January 2, 2021

Temuan’s last Hari Moyang?

Around 3pm, village chief Sari Anak Senin arrived at the community hall to pray to Panglima Galang and the other Moyang, Angkop.

Thanking the two deities, he also prayed for the village’s well-being and prosperity, and pleaded to the spirits to keep misfortune at bay.

Whatever restlessness Sari felt was not without merit, as this could be the Temuan’s last Hari Moyang.

“I don’t want to say much. The assemblymen have decided, haven’t they?” 

He was referring to a motion to protect every forest reserve in Selangor that was unilaterally passed in the state assembly in November last year.

The motion was tabled to safeguard KLNFR after it was earmarked for a massive mixed-development project that led to the need for its status to be degazetted, and the forest razed down.

After a deluge of 45,000 written objections since February last year, followed by a rowdy town hall in September, state authorities have kept relatively silent on KLNFR’s fate.

The forest reserve may be state land, but a 1927 gazette notice of the Selangor Forest Reserve Enactment confers on nearby Orang Asli tribes special rights to use it to maintain their way of life.

Temuan women and girls weaving nipah fronds into ketupat casings. – SAIRIEN NAFIS/The Vibes pic, January 2, 2021
Temuan women and girls weaving nipah fronds into ketupat casings. – SAIRIEN NAFIS/The Vibes pic, January 2, 2021

But on Tuesday, Sari’s heart sank.

News broke that the state Forestry Department had finished presenting a report on the degazettement proposal to Hee Loy Sian, the exco overseeing the matter.

Customary land disputes concerning the Orang Asli, particularly the intrusion into and encroachment on their ancestral land, are not uncommon.

It is a long-standing issue arising from their often-ignored land rights, despite landmark court rulings recognising the legality of their ancestral land.

Former Perak menteri besar Datuk Seri Ahmad Faizal Azumu infamously said “there is no such thing as ancestral land” when Orang Asli communities set up blockades in Gerik to prevent logging in the nearby forest, which they claim as the said land.

In its latest annual report, the Human Rights Commission of Malaysia (Suhakam) said the government has been too slow to improve the Orang Asli’s lot.

“Suhakam believes that the government is too slow to implement the national inquiry’s recommendation submitted almost six years ago, and has not changed the status of the community as the most vulnerable and marginalised group.”

A shrine to the Temuan’s Moyang seen in the Kg Busut Baru community hall. – SAIRIEN NAFIS/The Vibes pic, January 2, 2021
A shrine to the Temuan’s Moyang seen in the Kg Busut Baru community hall. – SAIRIEN NAFIS/The Vibes pic, January 2, 2021

In the case of KLNFR, the Temuan residents of Kg Busut Baru have had to keep up the fight to save the forest on their own, as the seven other Orang Asli settlements in Kuala Langat found themselves in a bind.

The circumstances forced the chiefs of the seven settlements to choose between objecting to the plan to degazette the forest reserve and being on the authorities’ “good side” so that their settlements can be gazetted as official villages.

Once gazetted, they will get access to paved roads, and water and electricity infrastructure, among other basic needs.

“We love the forest. There is not a single Orang Asli who does not love the forest,” said Kg Pulau Kempas chief Raman Pahat.

“But how can I protect it when I cannot even protect my village from uncertainty?”

Also on Tuesday, Hee announced that about 60% of the 74 Orang Asli villages in Selangor have been gazetted, and gave an assurance that the same will be done for the remainder within three years.

“We need to immediately gazette the Orang Asli villages to prevent others from taking over and managing the land arbitrarily.” – The Vibes, January 2, 2021

Related News

Education / 4mth

UMK shapes accountants of the future with strong social, environmental responsibility

Malaysia / 1y

Top-scoring Orang Asli students guaranteed IPMA entry – Ahmad Zahid

Education / 1y

SPM 2024: Nur Syafienaz - first Orang Asli from Kelantan to score straight As

Malaysia / 1y

Former Moyog rep leaves politics to focus on indigenous advocacy

Malaysia / 1y

Two Orang Asli villages in Negri Sembilan quarantined after one death from leprosy

Opinion / 1y

Missed opportunities for Orang Asli education in Budget 2025

Spotlight

Malaysia

Former head of a ministry's corporate communications unit acquitted of bribery charge

Malaysia

Two sisters die trapped in Johor house fire as escape routes cut off by flames

Malaysia

NS election speculation intensifies as Aminuddin granted audience with state ruler

Malaysia

Teenager who drove recklessly, causing death remanded for further investigation

Malaysia

Police looking for trio involved in violent armed robbery in Penang (video)

Malaysia

Family of five killed as car crashes into water pipe in Serian

Malaysia

'I was once spat on by a pakcik' — Marina denies fear of contesting Malay-majority seats

Malaysia

Jewellery shop among six premises destroyed in fire (video)

You may be interested

Malaysia

Cops dismantle 3 international fraud syndicates in Penang, arrest 32 suspects

Malaysia

Future cooperation between PAS and Bersatu determined next Monday - Annuar Musa

Malaysia

Police looking for trio involved in violent armed robbery in Penang (video)

Malaysia

Govt sees relief in lower US tariff proposal as exporters brace for competitive pressures

Malaysia

Toh Puan Na'imah’s legal team cautions against ‘dangerous’ application of SOSMA

Malaysia

‘What wrong did I do?’ – asks PKR MP after loss of MyKhas access

Malaysia

No early Penang polls as state prioritises voters’ mandate over electoral synchronisation

By Ian McIntyre

Malaysia

Tourist claims he was locked in car, threatened to pay RM300 from KLIA T2 to T1

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir