Tanah Lot Temple


Tanah Lot Temple is located in coastal side of Beraban countryside, Kediri sub district and Tabanan Regency . It is situated in 30Km in west side of Denpasar town and about 11 Km in south side of Tabanan town. The temple is built on the rock with 3 acre size and reachable in a few minute by walk, because it is just 20 meters from the coastal lip. This temple is very famous among touri

Tanah Lot, tanah means earth and lot means ocean, consists of a couple of shrines built on an outcropping of rock on the ocean. The temple symbolizes the balance between male and female; inner and outer world. One of Bali's cosmic temples"Sad Kahyangan" which was built the great saint of Bali Danghyang Nirartha, in 16th century. Its popular because its sunset view, just like postcard. Next to Tanah Lot temple is located the complex of Bali Nirwana Resort.

No historical record is found so far to construct the history of the temple. Scripture of Dang Hyang Nirarta mentions that the priest Dang Hyang Nirarta had visited the temple and asked the people around the area to build shrine. While the priest also educate the fishermen there in making fish trap.

The temple as a whole is dedicated to the god of the sea. Fishermen pray to get fish and prosperity. A story mentions that one of the shrine at Batukaru temple was lost, and was found here standing at Tanah Lot temple complex. It was very probable that the temple was built by Mengwi kingdom as the sea temple. A kingdom in Bali normally had 3 main temples, one located near the sea, one in the city or near the palace, and one on the mountain or near the mountain. This concept of 3 temples has also influenced the smaller unit of Balinese settlement in the level called " Banjar ". Every Banjar in Bali has also 3 main temples dedicated to different way of worshipping the gods and ancestor's spirits.

Now only 3 villages that responsible for the temple those are all nearby villages of Braban, Kelating, and Tibu Biyu, and still as the temple for Mengwi palace. The ceremony is performed every 6 month, based on Hindu-Java calendar which is already printed out during November every year.

For tourists, it is not only the traditional magic of the temple is interested, but the location in the natural setting, especially during the sunset, the temple changes into silhouette against the sunsets above Indonesian ocean

Bali Guling: Balinese suckling pig ( Bali's traditional food )

Babi guling is Bali’s most fmaous dish. Ask a Balinese person what their favourite food is and there is a good chance they’ll say “Bali guling”. Indonesia is a Muslim country, so pork isn’t celebrated as it is here in Bali. The Balinese however often keep pigs at home behind the house, feeding on food scraps, for that important time when they will be killed and eaten. The young suckling pig is used because of its tenderness, spit-roasted to perfection. Finding Bali Guling is a bit hard in tourist areas as it takes a while to prepare and is not really a dish most foreigners will ask for. As soon as you get away from the tourist scene in Kuta / Seminyak and head to Kerobokan, Mengwi, Ubud, or any other local place, the babi guling stands pop up.



Here are the ingredients used in preparing babi guling.

Ingredients:
•1 suckling pig, weighing about 6-8 kg (13-17 lb)
•1 1/2 tablespoon salt
•10 shallots, peeled and sliced
•6 cloves garlic, peeled and chopped
•5 cm (2 in) ginger, peeled and chopped
•15 candlenuts, chopped
•10 cm (4 in) fresh turmeric, peeled and chopped
•2 tablespoons coriander seeds, crushed
•5 cm (2 in) laosfinely chopped
•25-30 bird’s-eye chillies
•10 stalks lemon grass, sliced
•1 tablespoon black peppercorns, crushed
•1 teaspoon dried shrimp paste, roasted
•5 fragrant lime leaves, finely shredded
•2 salamleaves
•2 1/2 tablespoons oil
•4 tablespoons turmeric water

Here are the instructions in case you have the urge to cook a babi guling at home.

Ensure the inside of the suckling pig is completely cleaned out. Season inside and outside with salt. Combine all other ingredients, except turmeric water, and mix thoroughly. Fill the inside of the suckling pig with this mixture, close the belly with string or thin satay skewers. Rub the outside of the pig with turmeric water until the skin is shiny yellow. Bake on a spit over a charcoal fire or in a moderately hot oven for 2.1/2 hours. Test if the meat is done by inserting a skewer into the thickest part. If the liquid runs clear the piglet is cooked. Baste with oil during cooking. Serve slices of pork with white rice and a hot tomato and chili sambal. If preparing a larger pig, increase the amounts of ingredients accordingly and allow extra cooking time. Alternatively place the suckling pig on a roasting rack and roast in hot oven (220°C/425°F) for approximately one hour. Rest for 10 minutes in warm place before serving.

Serving babi guling
When serving, first remove the crisp skin with a strong carving knife, then loosen meat from the bones and cut into even dice or slices. Place a heaped tablespoon of stuffing on each serving plate, then top with meat and skin. Traditionally this dish is eaten with Jukut Nangka Mekuah and steamed rice.

Suggestion:
If you have a large barbecue with a rotisserie or constantly turning spit, you can cook the pig over charcoal for an authentic Balinese flavour. You don’t want to burn it, but slow cook it, so patience is necessary.

Goa Lawah Temple

Gua Lawah or Bat Cave is one of favorite places of interest in Bali and it is located near of hilly bank so it is called reef of Middle hill. This cave is located in Pasinggahan countryside, Dawan sub district, Klungkung Regency, east part of Bali and about 1,5 hours from Denpasar Town. There is a nature cave dwelt by thousands of tail bat located at north side from Jeroan/center of Gua Lawah Temple . Meanwhile the main road from Klungkung to Amlapura is just in front of the temple. This cave is apposite to the beautiful beach with black sand along the coastal area.


Goa Lawah means ‘bat cave‘ in Balinese, and in Bali, Goa lawah is a famous tourist attraction, as well as a place of religious importance to the Balinese people. The temple was founded in 1007, by Empu Kuteran. Though the temple is small, it is considered very auspicious and is one of the 9 kayangan jagat (directional temples)
that protect Bali from evil spirits. The temple at Goa Lawah protects Bali from the SE.

Balinese people often stop when driving along thius part of the coast, to give offerings. This is the case all over the island. On special days, raod side shrines may attract a large crowd of Balinese, dressed in ceremonial gear, stopping on their way to a major temple, to give offerings and pray. The parking area and souvenir sellers are in front of the temple, which itself is quite small. There is a 11 tier meru inside, donating its importance, but the actuall temple is quite small. It is possible to visit Goa Lawah during ceremonies, and I managed to get inside to watch people giving offerings and praying. The cave itself is in the rear of the temple, up against the cliff. Inside are hundreds of fruit bats and legend has it that the cave extends all the way underground Pura Goa, at Besakih temple 30 kms away. The cave is the dwelling of Balinese naga, Basuki. Bearing in mind the people at Tirtaganga believe the waters of the Ganges (in India) flow through there, I’d take that with a pinch of salt.

•Function of Goa Lawah Temple :


- Based on Papyrus of Kusuma Dewa, it is Giha Lawah, a palace from Basuki god
- Based on Papyrus of Padma Bhuwana is explaining that in accordance to holy letter title Pentameter Aksara
- The structure of Gua Lawah Temple building is based on the temple building from Ista Dewata in particular of Padmasana which is located in front of Siwa Cave as power of entire universe potency
- Based on Lontar Babad Dalem is implying that Gua Lawah Temple as a good place to execute the Tirtha Yatra or Nyegara Gunung (meditation), because in this place there are nature potency of solidarity that is mount, the sea, goad an watu or petrify

•Location of Goa Lawah:
Goa Lawah is located on the main road between Kusamba and the turn off for Padangbai. Its on the mountain side of the coastal road and you will notice a parking area, souvenir vendors and tourists milling around.

•Getting to Goa Lawah:
From Kuta take the Bypass to Sanur, lookout for the sweeping turnoff to the right, just north of Sanur, that heads along the coast to Kusamba. The driving time will be 1.5 -2 hours, depending on how the traffic is in the Kuta area. At the end of the ever-extending coastal highway, you’ll turon off towards Klungkung, before swinging back towards the coastal road that goes to Candi Dasa.

•Opening hours:
Goa Lawah is open to the public daily, from 7am-6pm. The price 3,000rp. There is a parkirman taking payment for parking, 500rp. Sarongs can be rented for around 1,500rp.

•What is there to do at Goa Lawah?:
One can take photos of the temple, wander insdie, if you are appropriately dressed in sarong and sash, and buy souvenirs. I have in the past, at Besakih temple, received blessings with a group of Balinese people. This is probably also possible, but don’t charging in there by yourself. Across the street, next to the beach is a garden / picnic area, with views of the islands (Nusa Penida etc.).












•Where to stay at Goa Lawah:
Your reasons for being on the raod that passes Goa Lawah in the first place are; getting to East Bali and returning from East Bali. People usually don’t look to stay at Goa Lawah and keep going another 7kms to padangbai, or 17kms to Candi Dasa, where you’ll find plenty of choice in places to stay.

•What to wear at Goa Lawah:
Sarong and sash. Best to pick up a cheap one in Kuta art market, then you can visit temples on your trip around Bali. Rental is cheap too.

•Where to eat at Goa Lawah:
Vendors sell drinks and the usual snacks outside including grilled corn. There’s no warungs or McDonalds handy though, so your best best is to head to Padangbai, if that is your final destination, or carry on to Candi Dasa, if you are going further east.

•When to come to Goa Lawah:
The best time to visit Goa Lawah is during the odalan, the temple birthday, or any major Balinese festival, when the temple will be busy due to its importance. Balinese temples are often shabby and bare looking. Its only during a ceremony, that a temple comes to lifes with sounds, singing, offerings, and dancing.

Tejakula's Wayang Wong


On the map, Tejakula is an isolated dot midway on the dry coastal road from Singaraja in the north of Bali to Karangasem regency in the east of the island.

A few aficionados of Balinese culture will tell you that it is home to Bali's most famous wayang wong: a classical dance featuring Rama and the monkey kings of the Ramayana epic.


Yet one of the most interesting events Bali has staged recently took place there last Saturday. A theatrical performance called Persamuan Samudra Giri (Encounter of Sea and Earth) brought together itinerant artists from Java, a theater group from Denpasar and local village artists.

It took place at the Taman Seni Cili Mas, a park that houses a combination of beach bungalows and a cultural center. It was set up by Nyoman Tusan, Bali's first modernist painter, who dreamed of bringing combining the creativity of Balinese tradition with that of contemporary art.

The itinerant artists were invited by the Tejakukus Foundation of Tejakula, and the Dharma Nature Time, a Bali-based art association.

The event was particularly interesting in the way it revealed the existence of a virtually unknown layer of Indonesian cultural life, in this case, that of the itinerant artists.

The highly spiritual dance drama, wayang wong Tejakula, has its roots in a migrant community. Alpha Savitri explores this history, and the mystical tales that surround it. Kintamani is 98 kilometers from Denpasar. But so beautiful is the landscape you traverse on traveling there, the kilometers pass quickly by - especially once one enters the cool, refreshing ambience of the highland Gunung Batur area. It is the silhouette of this mountain which. forms the back drop to the village of Tejakula - a fertile, village located on the side of a hill. on the north coast of Bali. Tejakula welcomes visitors with an stounding temple. Homes and shops line the main road into town. Unlike most Balinese villages, the houses here arc tiny, and most of them do not follow traditions of Balinese domestic design.

This is unusual, for in most Balinese villages, local architectural traditions continue to be strictly upheld. Such traditions stipulate that a domestic compound must contain a family shrine (pemerajan), a master bed room where the family heirlooms are stored (bale daja), a family bedroom (bale dauh), a room for family ceremonies (bale dangin) and a rice store (jineng). But in Tejakula, only large landowners can affront such luxuries. The history of this village is one of immigration, not only by Balinese migrants from other area, but by Chinese and Persian migrants as well. Indeed ' Tejakula. was once a trading port that outstripped Benoa in Denpasar and Padangbai in Karangasem in size and fame. Based on archaeological data, it is estimated that the area has been populated since prehistoric time. Nyoman Tusan, a painter and cultural commentator and a native of Tejakula, asserts that the area has had trading links with the outside world since the first century. Many foreign artifacts, such as ceramic pots have been found in the area, suggesting that Tejakula functioned as an important crossroad where traders from all over the world came together. The original inhabitants of Tejakula were the Balinese aborigines, the Bah Mula.

This means that the people of Tejakula are not descended from the Javanese who invaded Bali when the kingdom of Majapahit began to fall in the 15th century, as are most area, the Bali

Aga people dominated the local population until the end of the 16th century. It is believed that Balinese from Blahbatuh, Karangasem and even Bangli migrated to this area in large numbers durig the 17th century. Tejakula was favored, it seems, for its volcanic, fertile earth which acommodated cultivation of rice and oranges alike, although it is difficult to know for certain why such migration took place. There is a legend, well known among Tejakula locals, concerning this period of migration. As the legend goes, a miracle took place in the village of Kulandih, in east Tejakula. A bright light with a yellowish glow began shining from this village, and could be seen from all over Bah and beyond the light is said to have struck shadows as far as China. Many believed the light to be a sign of the village's prosperity.As a result, it drew throngs of migrants; to it, including those from China, who subsequently settled there. Nowadays, one of the village's temples, Pura Sekar, as well as the regular shrine (pelinggih), contains shrines reserved for the area's Persian and Chineseinhabitants. At Pura Sekar, therefore, there arc three pelinggih: the Arab Ratu Gede Sedabat, the Chinese Ratu. Gede Subandar and the Balinese Ratu Ayu Jong Daluh. The migrants and the original Bah Mula locals of Tejakula coexist here in peace.

Even before the migrants came and settled in the area, the original Bali Mula inhabitants greed that a condition of becoming a resident of Tejakula should be the willingness to live according to certain Bali Mula 'democratic' ideals. The Bah Mula, that is, reject the social hierarchies that
characterizes main stream Balinese society in order to enter their Community, nobles must be prepared to renounce their nobility and live like jaba (literally 'outsiders', refers to the majority of Balinese who do not belong to the 'trinity of castes' brahmana, ksatria or wesya). Those who agree to these conditions would be given land. Those who didn't agree were not allowed to live in Tejakula. That is why in this village no one uses the title Anak Agung (the title for ksatria), even if they are descended from the puri (the house of ksatria). Further, it is also why 'refined', or high Balinese (bahasa halus) is not used to communicate with these people from the puri, as is the case in the rest of Bali. Cultural influences from Bangli, Karangasem and Buleleng and the force of 'democratization' in this area caused local art to flourish, for it provided the context in which local artists were encouraged to develop their ideas. But not only did such democratization contribute to the proliferation of local art forms, it also freed the artistic realm to pursue multi-faceted and contestatory interpretations of performance modes.

Thus, in a Tejakula rendition of the dance drama gambuh, a brahmana. or a ksatria may well be caste as a serf or even a servant and, conversely, a jaba actor may well be caste in the role of a king if indeed their performance skills thus allowed. This contrasts the mainstream mode of performance, in which it is extremely rare for actors of tri wangsa (three castes) descent to take on lowly roles in a traditional dance-drama. Tejakula is well known for its performance arts - gong kebyar and arja as well as wayang wong. But it is also renowned for its architecture, and in this a number of stone carvings in the village temple and some of the buildings around the town are notable. It

Is also famous for its prominence in the world of shadow pup petering. Nowadays, there are only three puppeteers (dalang) remain active in Tejakula, but several years ago the village was home to as many as eight active dalang an astounding figure given that most village only have at the most two active dalang. Indeed, a number of artistic forms have flourished in this area. But Tejakula is best known for its wayang wong. For most residents of Bali, mention of Tejakula immediately conjures an image of the wayang wong

Wayang wong is one of several Balinese performance art forms which melds dance, drama and music. Unlike the wayang kulit (shadow puppet), in which leather puppets are manipulated by a dalang behind a screen, wayang wong is performed by actors on a stage. in Bali, there are two kinds of wayang wong wayang wong parwa which adapts stories from the Mahabharata for the stage, and wayang wong Ramayana, which takes stories from the Ramayana.

In wayang wong parwa, all actors, except for the clowns, do not wear masks. In wayang wong Ramayana, all the actors are masked. Wayang wong Ramayana is generally known just as wayang wong, hereas the wayang wong parwa is usually referred to as parwa. According to the Rector of the Yogyakarta-based Indonesian Arts Institute, Prof. Dr Made Bandem, the Balinese wayang wong enveloped out of masked performances which existed in Bali prior to the arrival
of Hinduism when masks were used as a tool with which to communicate with the ancestors. The masks used to communicate with the ancestors could only be shown in public on certain days, or at religious rituals. In former times, the dancers would adorn themselves with bark and their dance was a way of thanking the ancestors for protecting thern from plague. Wayang wong is believed to have emerged around the time of the Waturenggong regime, between 1460-1550. The language used in wayang wong is Balinese or Kawi (a form of old Javanese) noble characters use Kawi and the clowns use Balinese. The Balinese have been acquainted with the Ramayana,the Indian epic which is the source of the wayang wong stories, for centuries. But the version of the Ramayana with which the Balinese are most intimate is the Kekawin Ramayana which came to the island via Java. "Although Balinese have access to other, more authentically Indian versions, the Kekawin Ramayana is the version most Balinese identify with the epic", asserted Bandem.


The Old Javanese version of Kekawin Ramayana is a free translation and adaptation of a Sanskrit poem from India, the Rawana Vadha by Bhatti, written in the 6th century The text was translated into Balinese and recorded on lontar palms, several hundred years ago. Parts of the poem are frequently translated and recited at important religious rituals on Bali, for the text is thought to contain some salient moral messages. Coincidentally, perhaps, the wayang wong has served as a medium for the preservation of the Ramayana, for today it remains as the only dance-drama form which performs the Ramayana, which tells of the war between Rahwana's giant troops, and Rama's army of monkeys. Rahwana kidnaps Sita, Rama's wife and takes her to his kingdom, Alengka. But in the end Rahwana is overcome by Rama, assisted by his army of monkeys; and their king, Hanoman.
























There are 72 sacred masks in the Tejakula troupe. The three main characters' masks Wibisana, Rama and Laksamana were donated by the king of Bangli sometime this at Batur temple. Apparently, eager to test Hanoman's magical powers, the king built a two meter high hurdle and ordered Hanoman to jump, it. Extraordinarily, Hanoman succeeded in the task. The king was so impressed that he donated the three masks to the troupe. The troupe's other masks date back to the 18th century, and remain in pristine condition. This is believed to be due to both the excellent quality of the wood from which they are made and the fact that the masks regularly undergo ritual cleansing, and have so for centuries. Special rituals accompany the use of the masks at every performance. In the morning, the performers pray in the temple to ask God to protect them while they arc performing. The masks are taken out, offerings are spread around, and the performers are ritually cleansed. The masks are sprinkled with water, and distributed to the performers. Then the performers hang the masks from an orange tree. At first glance, the masks