lundi 3 juin 2013

Sunset Temples of Bali


Tanah Lot
 Some of the temples of Bali are best seen at sunset--and make for a huge sunset business, with endless parking lots for countless tour buses. We visited Tanah Lot on the east coast, but we parked beneath a restaurant on a sea cliff. Tanah Lot is one of the sea temples founded by the famous Majahapit priest Nirartha in the 16th c., and is venerated beyond its commercialization.

A bride below Tanah Lot
We walked above the high cliffs over sea-sculptured volcanic rock. Below, a bride spread her white skirts over them. At the next cove surfers rode the waves.

 Temple after temple over the beating ocean was closed, but formed beautiful black profiles against what we had hoped would be the setting sun, but was murky gray. Tourists swarmed over the temples.

Tanah Lot
Below was a cave entrance. In the near darkness I gave the equivalent of one cent for my blessing. I drank holy water and a priest tucked a frangipani blossom behind one ear, as another smeared a circle of cooked rice on the forehead and the neck. In another cave a donation was required to see a captive snake but Jacques took its picture anyway. We climbed up along the final cliff which led to souvenir
Blessing at Tanah Lot
stands and bright eyed lewaks who sniffed us, crawled up our arms, tried to nip my nose. They are a kind of mongoose that eats coffee beans, very selectively, so their poop contains only the very best coffee beans, and is used to make an expensive coffee. We played with another of the beautiful fruit bats. We walked back over the darkened crashing sea while hoards of tourists sat down to dine.

Tame fruit bat








An Uluwatu monkey
Jacques visited the other very famous sunset temple in the south, at Uluwatu, also credited to Nirartha, but it was originally founded in the 11th c. by the Javanese priest Empu Kuturan. Uluwatu is also famous for its monkeys. We had enjoyed the lovely soft monkeys of the Monkey Forest in the mountains, but at Uluwatu the monkeys are infamous! Jacques had carefully strapped his glasses to his head, but no sooner had he started the walk above the sea-beaten cliffs than a monkey leaped on his head and broke off the glasses!



Setting of Uluwatu
But Jacques was lucky. One of the many women who carry peanuts and bananas to bribe the monkeys got Jacques' monkey to throw down the glasses---on the other side of a deep ravine! Another lady got the glasses before another monkey did. Other tourists watched their glasses being broken into bits, girls lost their
flip-flops to monkeys even as they were walking, and other tourists endured being jumped upon for the possibility of a monkey's good fun!

samedi 1 juin 2013

The Northeast Coast of Bali


Little Balinese colonials in the carving at Pura Beji
A bit drained from all the excitement of the day before, we drove eastward along the north coast for Singaraja, the Dutch center of power during their occupation of Indonesia in the first half of the 20th c. Only here is there a trace of western influence, and that scanty. Rather more obvious is a brilliant red Chinese Buddhist temple at the old Dutch harbor, now a series of restaurants on stilts. The Three Dharma Chinese temple is garishly painted and immaculately kept, with turtles climbing in and out of bronze pots in the courtyard. The three dharmas are: Taoism, represented by the Yin Yang symbol, Confucianism as a gold bell, and the swastika representing Buddhism, along with Quan Yin. Far better explained and more hospitable than any Balinese temple we'd been to, it's worth a stop.
Slack-breasted gods of death, Pura Dalem

We drove out into the steamy countryside to Pura Beji, a beautiful temple dedicated to Sri Dewi who protects rice and irrigated agriculture. Ornate carvings (including two small statues of colonially dressed Balinese string players) stand tall amidst rice fields of a staggering humidity. Down a pathway was the Pura Dalem, the cemetery temple, perched among glowing rice. Nearly every village has a Pura Dalem, this one with ferocious descending gods that crushed human heads, and ferocious slack-breasted goddesses of death.

Utterly wilting after a few more temples, we drove on to the smooth cool spring of Air Sanih, along a beautiful stretch of seaside road, where I swam in the fresh waters.

The Dutchman who introduced the bicycle to Baliat Pura Maduwe Karang
We drove past snorkeling and deep sea diving resorts, funky and beautifully tucked along the shore with their gardens and bungalows, where the ship US Liberty lies broken beneath the water, a favorite of deep sea divers. We reached our night's destination, the beloved resort town of Amed, at first dispiriting with its clutter of closely spaced hotels sharing
Spring at Air Sanih
shallow pebbly beaches. This legendary stretch of the east coast has higher prices than we had seen, and they don't bargain. Beachfront hotel rooms start at $78, the ones across the road at $40. We drove in to the next village of Jemeluk up a hill that rises over the sea past plush looking hotels where families sprawled around low tables, sometimes in a fevered, crowded luxury.

Our bungalow at Amed
Bungalows, even at the beach front, were cheaper so we finally settled on one lush with tropical gardens ($40 a night), a pool and a gate to the pebbly beach where in darkness Jacques and I glided through warm currents under a half moon, invisible to each other in the black waters. Gamelan and other music drifted from the various hotels along the beach. In the sparse light of the jungle garden masseuses worked on 2 girls in front of the ornately painted wood carving of a bungalow. It is a kind of paradise. But, fatally, the AC stopped working at 2am!

Amed
We rose (in the absolutely airless bunglow) for a brilliant dawn and the coastal road with exquisite views of the indigo sea, a transparent emerald when you look straight down the volcanic coastline. This entire region is called Amed, much less visited than the south, but its guests often stay for weeks. Only strips of jungle and a few tethered black goats stood between us and the sea as we rounded the coastline. In former days the bridges had been made of only coconut logs, and Wayan kept fearing he would have had to turn back.
Palace at Amlapura

After the ravishing detour we joined the city of Amlapura, a
Monument in Denpasar: Royal family walking into Dutch musket fire
former Dutch center of power, whose acquiescent king, Anak Agung Agung Anglurah Ketut Karangasem, had curried much favor with his Dutch overlords. (By contrast, when the Dutch arrived in the late 19th and early 20th c many royal families famously donned their ritual best and walked straight into Dutch musket fire, flouting their jewelry.) One of his palaces is a museum, with remnants of the old way of life, a Europeanized elegance, now shabby, with old photographs of the Royal Family. The palace across the road is still in use by the Royal family. Young teenage boys were lounging on a pavilion, playing guitar. They sat up abruptly when we arrived, and one member of the Royal family escorted us through the decaying compound, trying to sneak pictures of us. Generally members of the Royal family live in Denpasar or Jakarta for the high government posts.
Tirta Gangga

The more beautiful of the water palaces built by the king of Karangasem is Tirta Gangga, colorful with riotous blossoms, fantastic statuary, cement lotus pads on which you can walk through the fountains, intricate pathways and bridgese. Many Balinese swam in the swimming pools or sat in couples. One very thin old woman washed her clothes in the canal.

vendredi 31 mai 2013

Driving to the North Coast and An Incredible Balinese Tale


Waiting for Daddy to go away
We decided to take a 3 day circuit, up through the central mountainous area where we'd made many forays, to the resort of Lovina on the north coast, then drive east along the coast back to Sanur. We began our drive north through villages and jungle, endless family temples beyond compound walls, dignified meeting halls of carved stone and marble, down to the lake between the volcanoes, then up over rice fields to the monkey forest.

A calm monkey moment
A soft gray monkey family waited for us, with wizened features and articulate eyes and expressive mouths, but Daddy Monkey was fierce and his clan dared not accept our peanut and bananas until he was some distance away. Then the young ones of various ages would scamper up and pick peanuts and bananas out of our hands till Daddy started to glower and hiss at me with a vicious look. He took off after one of the kids till Mommy, with an infant slung around her shoulders and an equally vicious look, took off after Daddy.

Munduk waterfall
We drove up into a thickening fog and decided to stop for lunch till it cleared. We gazed into the opaque vapor (where otherwise we could have seen lakes and the sea) over excellent prawn curries. Then we proceeded on a small hike to the Munduk waterfall, the jungle ringing with shrill cicadas. The cold spray discouraged me from staying too long so I headed back just as a torrential downpour commenced. I dashed under the scarce tree cover and Jacques scampered after me. We found our driver, Wayan, sitting with some woodcarvers in their storefront. Eventually our third party reached us, looking like a ghoul, holding banana leaves over his head, his curved bare belly pure white in the jungle. 

Our ghoulish friend in the rain
We drove on into Munduk as Wayan told me the story of discovering his heroic ancestor.  And this is the incredible story. It is the story of finding his Cawetan, his roots, his true home.

He had been born in a palace, in a high caste, the Kshatriya caste, but because of local fighting his family had to flee to another region and strated to call themselves Sudra, the lowest caste, and worked in the fields.

The illustrious ancestor, 1478-1512
Fast forward.  Six months ago his son was in the hospital for 10 days and no one could find anything wrong.  So he did the normal thing, he went to a medium who told him he must find his Cawetan.  He told his uncle who thought it was nonsense (didn't they already know about their roots?) until his own son got sick.  In all, three children of the same family got sick, and three different mediums told them they must find their Cawetan.  So the uncle started to research this intensively, traveling from village to village, speaking with many people.

Shrine of the ancestor
 The research of his uncle took them to another medium, who became filled with the spirit of an ancestor, and spoke to a gathering of relatives.  In a laughing voice the ancestor said, "I am so glad to see you all.  But you know I cannot see you.  My head is buried in Munduk, and my body is buried on the island of Java."  This ancestor, from the 15th c., was a great warrior with great shakti--power. He was assassinated by enemies who were afraid to bury him whole because he would come back to life.  Now he was asking his descendant to recuperate the body and the head--they would do it symbolically, using sandalwood carved effigies--and hold a cremation ceremony.
Wayan with long lost ancestors

We decided to stop by the grave of the ancestor's head.  It has become a shrine.  In the past, people who lived there had wanted to move the boulder that marks the head, and their children peed on it.  But the children fell ill.  Now that it is a shrine the people there address Wayan in a high Balinese reserved for high castes.

Many altars of the Kshatriya temple
Afterwards we arrived at Wayan's Cawetan, the village of his newly found relatives, at a Caste Temple for the Kshatriya caste, his real caste.  Two different mediums have told him that he should change his name to a high caste name--Anadi Agung.  He made a phone call and a brown shiny many on a moto showed up to open the temple--then suddenly his long lost relatives swarmed to the temple (including the owner of the hotel where we would stay) and there was much joy and laughter.  They asked him, why haven't you changed your name yet?  Their caste temple was one of the most beautiful we had seen--colorful statues, elaborately carved sandstone and endless altars.

So they will hold a pilgrimage to gather the body and head of the ancestor, and cremation in August of this year.  7,000 relatives will attend, some of them very rich, some of them very poor, contributing to the expensive event as they can.  Now they are raising money with lottery tickets.
In the lobby of Aditya

What a Balinese story!
We drove on to Lovina, where Wayan took us to the palatial Aditya Hotel, owned by one of the relatives we had just met. From the lobby of giant Balinese reliefs and a brightly painted Barong costume looming over us, we took a walk on the grounds with sleek Asian bungalows facing the sea, mahogany and beige relief decorated verandas for each unit. At sunset we glided in the warm sea, for a glimpse of the sun's few red gleams.

jeudi 30 mai 2013

Ancient temple of Besakih, Pura Kehem and Batu Klotek



Entrance to Besakih
The mother temple of Bali is at Besakih, where a complex of 23 temples ascends a mountain into the lofty distance. The holiest of these is Pura Penatawan Agung, rising 6 levels. The foundations of Besakih's temples date to prehistoric times--they are step pyramids. Succeeding invasions of Hindus from Java, dating back to the 14th c., annointed Besakih as Bali's mother temple.

A gate of Besakih
An upper level of Besakih
Impressive, majestic, especially as throngs of Balinese in their ritual dress ascend the black steps, women resolutely carrying loads of offerings on their heads Besakih is nonetheless an infamous visit for tourists. The guards at the parking lot are stern, then children chase you uphill demanding money. As you approach the temple itself young men practically order you to leave unless you play along with the many scams to get you to fork over rupiah. All the while women under the burdens on their heads, climbing up the many steps, smile sweetly. 

Pura Kehem
We ascended and ascended, told to take the external stairs, we skirted the temples and were able to see a bit of the ceremony inside. It was a day to celebrate farm animals, but we were spared any living sacrifices. The formidable temples are built of black volcanic rock carved into varying styles of monsters, serpents coiled around the base or flanking stairways, or great birds as railings. People sat straight-backed in the hot sun in this holiest of Balinese temples, or outside the walls, dogs sometimes fought - embodying the aggressive spirit of Besakih. Despite all the warnings to turn back, plenty of souvenir stands adorn the higher levels, plenty of women selling drinks, along with chatty priests. A young man sold musical instruments so I bought a flute of a limited range and played it walking up, delighting the women selling drinks. We ascended into a temple where young men and priests were gathered. One of them invited me to pray with him
and make a donation--some people donate 100,0000 rp, some 200,000. No thanks.

We descended among people now smiling and picnicking yet still more were climbing higher, the women straight backed and head-laden.

The smaller counterpart of Beskih is Pura Kehem, the second most
Hanuman before Batu Klotek
important in East Bali. The carving of the various monsters was the most ornate and detailed we had seen, the 43 altars had brightly painted carved wood doors and elegant monsters, handsome princes. It was built around an ancient mangrove. On our way home a pig was slaughtered by the side of the road.

Batu Klotek, gate to the sea
And there is the unassuming temple where Besakih's statues are purified. On the east coast, at the sea's edge, where smokey distant hills, like furry stupa, are wreathed in smoke beyond foaming breakers is Pura Batu Klotek, empty of even a caretaker, its volcanic stone roughly finished. At the entrance is an enormous Hanuman bearing a vial of water, on top of a turtle in a fountain of serpents. Within, the parasols are gleaming gold but decor is tattered. A gate leads to the roaring sea where people gathered and dogs roamed, couples lit incense and prayed to the horizon. It had a powerful feeling, this temple where statues from the holy Besakih are carried on foot--3 days' journey, 40 km-- to be purified in these holy waters. It imparted a profound peace to finish a beautiful day.

mercredi 29 mai 2013

Ancient Temples of Goah Gajah, Gunung Kawi, Tirta Empul


Entrance to Goah Gajah
 It is difficult to know how old the temples of Bali are, even knowing that they date to the founding of the village. Time is counted with the cycles of harvest, life and ceremonies, while linear time seems of no interest to the unchanging culture. However certain temples date back a thousand years or more, despite the tendency to constantly renovate.

Linga at Goah Gajah
Our first day on the road, after an excellent lunch overlooking the rice fields of the Ubud area, stretches of brightest emerald cultivated by people in painted straw hats (the restaurant was called I Made Joni and staffed apparently by children in beautiful Balinese dress) we proceeded to Goa Gajah, the Elephant Cave, a small ancient dark temple filled with smokey incense. It dates back to at least to the 11th c, before the takeover of the Majahapit Empire, and was said to have been
Ganesh at Goah Gajah
created by the fingernail of a legendary giant Kebo Iwa. At that time, a period of trade with India brought a Budhhist/Hindu syncretism, whose traces at the Elephant Cave are lingams, a Ganesa, and yonis, ancient fertility symbols from India.

Buddha complex at Goah Gajah
From there a lovely descent into waterfalls and pools, without much explanation, is also considered a temple, named the Buddha complex. It resembles Buddhist grottos in China. It was earlier in that period, in the 9th c. that the earliest writing in Bali dates. Buddhist magic written in Sanskrit was inscribed on tiny clay tablets in a stupika, small Buddhist stupas, many of which have been found. We sat with coconut milk, hacked out by the vendor over the Buddha complex. In Bali there are formidable knives and machetes everywhere. Even in the market little women blithely chop tiny herbs with enormous machetes. Young Balinese practiced their English with us, recording little interviews.

Rice fields of Gunung Kawi
Candi of Gunung Kawi
Another ancient temple in the vicinity of Ubud is Gunug Kawi, the Rock Temple. In the village above we bought sarongs, requisite temple garb, while dozens of tiny Balinese women clung to us relentlessly. Then you must descend among irridescent rice fields to abandoned platforms and a cave entrance thought to have been the Royal temple in the 10th c. There, candi, or large reliefs of stupas, rise against the rocky hillside, thought to each have been a monument to a member of 11th c. royalty. Another version has Kebo Iwa carving the whole thing in a single night with his fingernails. Below, refreshing waters flow from holes in the temple into cascades below. I had been suffering from a burning chest pain (it would be a tough climb back up the rice field precipice) so I doused my head in the healing cascades.

Tirta Empul where I am submerged
But the next temple cured me! Temple of the Holy Spring, Tirta Empul, discovered in 962 and reputed for magical powers, has cement pools spouting water from 12 successive fountains. People lined up before each successive fountain for the blessing water. I leaped in, fully clothed and additionally wrapped in a sarong, and was instructed to proceed methodically, to each fountain, throwing water 3 times on my head, 3 times on my face, 3 times on my ears, drinking it 3 times. I truly felt infinitely better as we roamed the temple grounds afterward, covering my chest now because of the wet t-shirt effect. After extensive bargaining for trinkets, we climbed in the car to the mountain air overlooking the three volcanoes, Gunung Agung, Gunung Batur and Gunung Abang. Lush green
forest and landscape carpeted the fields beneath the black lava, each volcano wreathed in dense white cloud around the lake that provided our fish smothered in hot Balinese spices.

mardi 28 mai 2013

Some Dance Performances in Bali


The Barong and his friend, the monkey
The Balinese world of performance has accommodated itself to the tourist industry. Once nighttime dances traversed dangerous borders between good and evil spirits, but now they fit into daytime slots for the schedules of tour guides. 

We saw the classical Barong dance, depicting the eternal fight between good and evil spirits. The costumes are massive and monstrous, like the monsters that decorate the temples--they are often displayed in palaces or temples. The narrative contains as much farce and coarse comedy as it does refined dancing--a rather wonderful combination. I was especially fascinated by the fingers of the costumes. Classical dance from Java uses codified hand gestures, or mudras from India and the fingers are often in constant motion, I have been told, because of the
The innocent prince is sent out to the forest
incessant flow of life. But the monsters have, instead, limp white extended fingernails with evil powers.
We saw a morning performance, which became interesting because that day turned out to be the new moon. The elaborately costumed beasts are include the good Barong versus the bad witch Rangda (the very one who lives on Nusa Penida, see the blog on ceremonies), but the supporting cast steals the show with broad physical comedy and highly refined classical dancing. For example, one beast is killed and as the performing dwarfs mourn him his massive penis pops up, which involves a huge amount of stage business. On the other hand Sadewa, the prince, is
Dead best with unruly penis
played by a ravishing woman whose every gesture has a breathless beauty.

But tourists were only a part of the audience on this day of the new moon. Balinese themselves had come to see the final act, the kriis dance. Men in checkered sarongs, in trance, begin to go beserk over the witch Rangda, whom she casts aside one by one. They turn their kriis'---the classical crooken dagger of Bali--on themselves and stab and stab, but are protected by their trance. Mangkus, shamans who deal in good and bad spirits, come
Kriis dancers stabbing themselves
onstage sprinkling holy water, protecting from the evil. Finally the dancers are restrained and enter into normal consciousness.
At least this is what we're told. It was sometimes a little hard to believe, but then who are we to say? In the banal light of 11am it was hard to believe that people who were performing for tourist schedules were actually in trance. But who knows? I tend to credit it--the men were actively stabbing at themselves, they drew no blood. But my traveling companions doubted.

Performance during a political meeting
Even more perplexing is the Fire Dance, Kecak, which also closes with a trance dance, this one performed at night to dramatize the fire aspect. The Kecak is striking in that the orchestra is a
group of 100 men making orchestrated music without instruments: chanting, shouting, taking different parts of an orchestra, call and response, sometimes almost doo-wop, a capella tones, hypnotic rhythms, with a story being told. A tree of fire stands onstage. The men sit in different formations or lie down on each other in chains to form the scenery.

Ramayan in Kecak dance
First the Ramayana is performed in a tight circle between the fire tree and Kecak men, beautiful women playing the main roles except for a buffoonish Ravanna and the costumed Hanuman and other monkeys. Then the bright tree of fire vanishes, and two very young girls dance, vestige of an older version where the girls themselves would go into trance and enter fire unscathed. They still represent virginal angels who combat evil spirits.

But instead of the little girls entering fire, a man with burning eyes and jutting chin came out clothed in a straw horse and meditated with a mangku. A basket of coconut husks was soaked with petrol and lit. The mangku shouted for him to GO and he danced into the fire. Neither he nor his straw horse were burnt. Twice he attacked the flames, stomping into the fire, grabbing the burning coconuts, almost eating them as if hypnotized by them until a man grabbed him and flopped him down sitting, hands tightly around his waist till he came out of his trance. And then he joined the bowing performers, looking a little bewildered.

"Angels" in Kecak dance
I asked Wayan, why does the straw remain unburnt? The trance, he said, also protects the straw. It was absolutely true that straw entered into petrol-soaked fire and emerged without a trace. The man's feet were black, naturally. But Wayan felt the performer was not in the best trance. A better trance would have made him attack the fire more aggressively. It is a skill like any other, cultivated among gifted children, a specialty that leads to a career. Kecak dances are advertised everywhere in Bali, any night of the week. The trance seems to be pretty routine.

lundi 27 mai 2013

Ceremonies of Bali


Proceeding to a ceremony at Goa Lawah
Ceremonies are the supreme markers of life in Bali, they mark life's and death's passages, temple anniversaries twice a year, and defeat evil spirits at the spring equinox, before the purified new year arrives, in a silence more silent than Sabbath in Jersualem. Our driver was eager to find us a ceremony---first we were to attend a tooth filing, but it was rescheduled. At the age of 15 young people undergo a filing of their canines (which Wayan said was excruciatingly painful while other writers say it is not) surrounded by enormous pomp and circumstance. 

We were in luck, though: the brother of the king
Cremation tower
of Ubud would be cremated on the 14th of May. This is one of the most expensive and elaborate ceremonies on the island. Without cremation the spirit does not become free of the body. A cremation is enormously expensive, so bodies are buried sometimes for years as families save up for the cremation. In the case of the Royal Family absolutely no expense is spared: not the expenses of the villagers of the kingdom who will carry the floats on their shoulders, nor gifts for them, nor the construction of the enormous tower and bull and serpent Naga, nor musicians and priests. Because it is so expensive a few other bodies are cremated at the same time.

Blessing the tower and bull
In a fever of excitement Wayan arrived at 8:30 in the morning, while in Ubud the ceremonial tower already stood tall and brilliant as priests prayed, their wives burning incense, bells ringing. The tower was at least 10 meters high and made of wood, and it would be carried by the villagers of the Ubud region who owed the king their allegiance--he had paid for their temples, he had granted them favors. The Ubud kingdom turned out in their finest. Even more beautiful was the bull into which the body would be transferred for the actual burning. Throngs pressed into the palace
The bull
gates (where dancing took place only for invitees) and hawkers clung to us with sarongs and trinkets. We burned with exitement among the infectious crowds. We roamed Ubud before we finally took our seats which Wayan had arranged for us, at a restaurant where he was well known. We were facing the parade, as if on an elite viewing stand, where the villagers, 100 at a time carrying the heavy floats, almost weeping with the effort, would collapse, put down the weight of Naga and Bull and finally Tower and pass their burden on.
Villagers carrying the floats
After the burning
We sat at our viewing stand, next to Mr. Carlo, a Milanese who'd been coming to Bali for 45 years and had a house by Klungung. A sudden downpour as the orchestra approached put everything in doubt. The orchestra members in their turbans and black checked sarongs dispersed, crowding with their brown smiles into the restaurant. Yet the show went on. Amid thunder and sheets of rain the village men took up their burden with a shout and hustled toward us, putting it down in front of us, fainting with the effort. Boxes of water were broken open and rushed to the young men. The priests sprinkled water with rice sheaves and 1-2-3- GO the men shouted as a new crew pushed up the load, and trotted on to clamorous bells and drums.

Ceremony at Besakih
We missed the actual burning at the cemetery, not believing that it would be possible in the downpour, but in fact petrol was poured and poured and the bull now carrying the body exploded in flames. We arrived there after a museum visit, as the ashes were being prayed over. A stench of rotting flesh hung in the air. Someone carried a duck, and I did not see what happened to it, but later I understood.

Waiting for the Malasti procession
The next day we happened on a Malasti ceremony, in which the statues of the temple are carried to a purifying place before they are returned to the temple, which was happening as we were stopped on the road. Ominous chanting started up just as we arrived. Young girls danced in the road at the entrance of the temple. A woman held a terrified white duck, stretching its neck to face the oncoming procession. The clangorous orchestra started up. Parasols and
high flags shaped like palm fronds glittered with gold and bright colors. Little platforms with wooden statues had been cleansed in the river. Upon arrival the priest stabbed the duck in the neck, head, wings and feet to the ominous roar of medieval chanting. The
Malasti procession
procession circled the duck's plonged spasms of agony, the pure white feathers drenched in its own blood, its beak streaming like a red baton, a long, cruel death. They finally kicked the duck aside.

Back in the car, in a voice of studied neutrality, I asked Wayan about animal sacrifice. In fact every single ceremony includes animal sacrifice. Yesterday's white duck, at the end of the cremation, being so passionately videoed by the men present, had been hidden from me. But animal sacrifice is everywhere and incessant. In three days' time there would be a cockfight as well, the cocks fighting to the death, another constant. Everywhere in Bali roosters strut under woven baskets, waiting their turn to die.
Watercolored Rooster-so far, so good for him
Wayan didn't know why. I later read in the wonderful book on Bali by Miguel Covarrubias that it is to appease the evil spirits, who want blood.

Wayan told us that it is usually white ducks or black chickens, but a friend who owns a B&B in Seminiyak said that every kind of animal is sacrificed all the time, a detail normally omitted from tourist information or the usual rhapsodic description of Bali. I asked Indra, a Balinese masseuse who grew up near the most sacred temple at Besakih, about it. "I know!"she cried out, her face suddenly pained. "Why do they do that?"

Blessing at Tanah Lot - for a price
Another kind of blood is given in Tanganan, a bali-aga village with practices that pre-date the arrival of the Majahapit Hindu kingdom in 1343, when it took over the island. Men still fight, with bare torsos, using stiff fronds of a certain succulent bordered by sharp thick spikes. They strike each other and draw blood. It is painful. Only the master of ceremonies decides when they have had enough. 

So it seems the evil spirits of Bali have withstood time. The nearby island of Nusa Penida is said to be the home for these denizens of a black and white checkered universe. I have meditated there and it is in fact a strange place.