Tropes of Fear
Tropes of Fear
Tropes of Fear
3390/rel4020240
OPEN ACCESS
religions
ISSN 2077-1444
www.mdpi.com/journal/religions
Article
Department of Anthropology and Sociology, Université Lumière Lyon 2, 5 Avenue Pierre Mendès,
69676 Bron Cedex, France; E-Mail: [email protected]; Tel.: +60-192-593-145
Received: 13 March 2013; in revised form: 7 April 2013 / Accepted: 15 April 2013 /
Published: 22 April 2013
Abstract: The Batek are a forest and forest-fringe dwelling population numbering around
1,500 located in Peninsular Malaysia. Most Batek groups were mobile forest-dwelling
foragers and collectors until the recent past. The Batek imbue the forest with religious
significance that they inscribe onto the landscape through movement, everyday activities,
storytelling, trancing and shamanic journeying. However, as processes of globalization
transform Malaysian landscapes, many Batek groups have been deterritorialized and
relocated to the forest fringes where they are often pressured into converting to world
religions, particularly Islam. Batek religious beliefs and practices have been re-shaped by
their increasing encounters with global flows of ideologies, technologies, objects, capital
and people, as landscapes are opened up to development. This article analyzes the ways
these encounters are incorporated into the fabric of the Batek’s religious world and how
new objects and ideas have been figuratively and literally assimilated into their taboo
systems and cosmology. Particular attention is paid to the impacts of globalization as
expressed through tropes of fear.
Keywords: globalization; Batek; Orang Asli; religious landscape; place; Southeast Asia;
Malaysia
Abbreviations
DWNP: Department of Wildlife and National Parks; FELDA: The Federal Land Development
Authority; JAKOA: Jabatan Kemajuan Orang Asli Malaysia (the Department for Orang Asli
Religions 2013, 4 241
Development); JAKIM: Jabatan Kemajuan Islam (the Department of Islamic Development); NTFP:
Non Timber Forest Product.
1. Introduction
The Batek are one of approximately twenty Orang Asli (minority indigenous people) groups of
Peninsular Malaysia 1 . Administrators and anthropologists have classified the Batek as part of the
Negrito section of the Orang Asli, which also includes the Mendriq, Jahai, Lanoh, Kintak and Kensiu.
In 2010, the total Orang Asli population numbered around 178,000, accounting for only 0.6% of the
total population of Malaysia, and the total number of Batek was estimated at 1,447 [3]. The reasons
behind the Orang Asli constituting such a tiny part of the population are complex including the
following historical and sociological factors: ancestors of the Orang Asli becoming Malay peasants;
complex historical migrations of large numbers of Malays, Indians and Chinese into the Peninsula; low
population densities of Orang Asli groups; sustained enslaving of Orang Asli throughout history; huge
influxes of Chinese and Indian immigrants during the British colonial period; and large-scale
immigration throughout the post-colonial period, particularly of Indonesians [4]—an ethnic group that
can easily be absorbed into the Malay sector of society, thus bolstering Malay numerical dominance.
Historically the Batek and other Semang foragers have participated in a wide-range of economic
activities including hunting, gathering, occasional wage labor, swidden farming and selling or
bartering forest products [1,5,6]. Despite their small population size, Batek territories have covered a
large area of the Malaysian Peninsula in the states of Pahang, Terengganu and Kelantan. Large territories
and low population densities are necessary for hunter-gatherer populations to ensure they have a low
impact on flora and fauna in their territories and do not deplete their resources over the long-term.
Globalization is an extremely complicated process encompassing a wide range of phenomena,
which cannot easily be separated into mutually exclusive categories. It includes the incorporation of
national, regional and local economies into the worldwide capitalist system and the consequential
restructuring of economies, landscapes and legal systems that this entails. Globalization is firmly
connected to development, nation-building, resource extraction and the restructuring of landscapes into
areas of intense production to meet the ever-growing demands of global capitalism. These forces have
resulted in radical environmental transformations and the deterritorialization and marginalization of
populations, and the meanings they inscribe upon landscapes. Concomitantly, as theorists such as
Arjun Appadurai have highlighted, rapid changes and developments in technologies and infrastructures
have led to a rapid increase of cultural flows connecting people across vast distances [7]. These flows
include: satellite television broadcasts; circulation of DVDs and other media formats; and propagation
1
Anthropologists and administrators have usually divided the Orang Asli into three major sub-divisions: Negritos (or
Semang); Senoi; and Aboriginal Malay. In recent years most anthropologists have been using these three broad
categories to refer to societal patterns associated with different modes of subsistence rather than racial characteristics
that typified earlier anthropological studies. The Malaysian Government has followed this tripartite categorization and
defined 18 Orang Asli ethnic subgroups in the Peninsular, with six ethnic groups belonging to each of the three larger
categories. As Geoffrey Benjamin and Colin Nicholas have highlighted, this system of classification absorbs certain
smaller groups into other ethnicities to create overly neat and tidy categories [1,2].
Religions 2013, 4 242
of institutionalized ideas and ideologies stemming from national education and missionary activity.
Throughout this article, the impacts of globalization on the Batek religion are examined, with
particular focus on how the Batek’s religious landscape has been transformed.
The Batek religion is deeply embedded in their local environment, and processes of globalization
have transformed that environment radically. Intense global demand for palm-oil, a commodity which
has become the most-traded oil seed crop in the world and an ingredient the World Wildlife Fund
maintains is found in 50% of all packaged-food products found in supermarkets [8], has driven the
conversion of large areas of Batek forested land into immense plantations. Lye Tuck Po has written
extensively about landscape degradation [6,9,10] particularly on how Batek “sentiments of place now
include perceptions of loss and bereavement” ([10], p. 170). Radical landscape transformations have
been accompanied by huge influxes of people, objects, technologies and ideas creating what Anna
Tsing has called “zones of awkward engagement”, temporary and dynamic places where cultural
“frictions” “arise out of encounters and interactions” and “reappear in new places with changing
events” ([11], p. xi). The Batek increasingly have to interact with a wide range of outsiders, which they
refer to as gob; these include Malay settlers and government workers, loggers, miners, international
tourists, heavily-armed Thai, Cambodian and Vietnamese poachers, and Bangladeshi, Indonesian and
Nepalese immigrant plantation workers. Some of these complex interactions involve miscommunication,
deceit, disrespect, and veiled threats of violence. For example, miners and loggers frequently trick
the Batek to move out of certain resource-rich areas with unfulfilled promises of economic
compensation [12]. The Batek have also reported that Islamic proselytism has involved coercion and
occasionally direct threats of violence2. The massive palm-oil plantations that dominate the landscape
outside the Taman Negara national park are home to immigrant workers from Indonesia, Bangladesh
and Nepal. After work these, often illegal, workers are restricted to small villages situated within the
plantations closely guarded by armed police. Many Batek women fear the proximity of these
immigrants and the possibility of sexual abuse or assault. Other instances of cultural frictions can
involve less violence but equally complex interactions. For instance, in the protected Taman Negara
national park the Batek are visited by hordes of tourists throughout the year and theatrically play-up to
stereotypes of the ‘Noble Savage’ to satisfy tourists’ expectations [14].
The Batek’s historical and contemporary experience of globalization, ‘development’ and
nation-building has often been violent and terrifying and has had deep and pervasive impacts on their
religion, cosmology, economies, and socio-cultural formations. This has been due to the rapidity and
scale of changes involved. The Batek’s experience of violence has taken many forms including actual
physical violence, threats of violence, and the violence of landscape transformation. Whilst violence
and threats of violence are different, the Batek consistently understand their contemporary experiences
2
During fieldwork in December 2012 several Batek from one community reported to me that during the 1990s their
village had been visited three times by Malay Muslim missionaries who wanted them to convert to Islam en-masse.
After they refused they were visited by a ‘powerful’ Malay Muslim from a large city who told them that if their entire
community did not convert to Islam everyone in the village would be killed. Men from the same village also told me
that after Malays had moved into their area in about the 1920s three entire Orang Asli communities (two Batek groups
and one Semai group) were mass murdered by Malays. All men, women and children were killed. Endicott has also
reported Malay massacres of Batek during the same period although in a different area [13].
Religions 2013, 4 243
through the lens of historical experience, particularly in regards to their vivid stories about massacres
in the past. It must be emphasized that the Batek are in no ways ‘passive victims’, certain Batek
communities are now in the process of formalizing their grievances through statements and complaints
to ‘powerful outsiders’ including the Human Rights Commission of Malaysia, various NGOs, and
Malaysian government departments. Furthermore, as we shall see in this paper, the Batek have
figuratively incorporated their experience of the violence of globalization into their cosmology and
taboo system in ways which empower both their understanding and experience of the global forces at
work within their lives and landscapes. The modes of this figurative incorporation are the very
mechanisms that allow the Batek to structure and field their responses to the global forces at play
within their world.
The violence of the Batek’s encounter with globalization is by no means an isolated phenomenon.
In a comparative study of the political ecology of Southeast Asia, with particular reference to
commodification of nature and people, Joseph Nevins and Nancy Lee Peluso note: “State violence, or
the threat of it, was foundational to the growth of capitalism in Southeast Asia—a point that has been
largely and strangely unexplored in comparative studies of the rise of postcolonial economies in the
region … [L]ike primitive accumulation through enclosure, violence in Southeast Asia has not only
occurred at some initial moment but recurs or remains a threat, albeit in different forms” ([15], p. 4).
As Nevins and Peluso highlight, state violence and capitalism are fundamentally linked. However, it is
important to note violence was also inherent in state-making in the pre-capitalist and pre-colonial
period and has been a fundamental characteristic of Southeast Asian polities since their inception.
Contemporary restructuring of the environment in order to meet the demands of global capitalism is a
ferocious process. The practice of the State confiscating lands from indigenous peoples and then
selling this land to developers to raise money for the state coffers is always backed by violence. This
violence takes multiple forms and initiates a variety of often unexpected and complex responses. The
precise nature of this violence and the responses it invokes must be properly addressed if we are to
understand how aspects of globalization and development can be terrifying for indigenous populations
in Malaysia. Discussing land issues and the marginalization of the Orang Asli, Juli Edo has highlighted
that during the British colonial period “all land came under the control of the Queen, vis-à-vis the
colonial government … [Orang Asli areas] were converted under various legal titles to Forest
Reserves, Water Catchment Areas, Game Reserves, agricultural areas, and mining sites” ([16], p. iii).
The author continues by describing how the post-independence Malaysian government inherited
British policy, meaning the Orang Asli have been frequently been regarded as ‘squatters on state land’.
Discussing the Orang Asli Act 1954 (Revised 1974), Edo states: “[T]he Orang Asli do not have
absolute rights to their land. Most of their land, including those areas where projects, especially
agriculture, have been developed by the government for them, still does not belong to Orang Asli, but
is considered state land, forest reserve, game reserve, river reserve and so on” ([16], p. 2). Lack of land
rights is the most important issue the Orang Asli face today and is a major factor behind the
transformation of Orang Asli landscapes. State governments frequently pressure Orang Asli groups,
like the Batek, into moving from their ancestral territories when they decide to ‘develop’ land by
converting forests to palm-oil estates, mining or other ‘economically viable’ activities. Both the federal
and the various state governments of Malaysia have shown stubborn reluctance to recognize the Orang
Asli’s rights to their customary lands. This has meant that increasingly the Orang Asli have turned to
Religions 2013, 4 244
the courts for justice. However, so far no Batek groups have resorted to legal methods to try to protect
their lands.
Ongoing processes such as the destruction of forests and their conversion to plantations;
rapidly-increasing flows of global objects, images, people, and capital; social, political and economic
marginalization; deterritorialization; forced relocation; sedentism and Islamization have all had
profound effects on Batek religion and led to the emergence of what I term ‘tropes of fear’: dynamic,
figurative manifestations of collective anxieties about unrelenting and uncontrollable global processes.
Whilst both Endicott [5] and Lye [6,17] have written on the subject of Batek fear before, neither has
analyzed the connections between fears and global processes in detail3.
Although the Batek sometimes clearly articulate their fear of global processes in transparent
language without recourse to metaphor or other tropes, they most commonly express anxiety and terror
through ‘polysemic’ or ‘multivocal’ symbols [18] or ‘tropes of fear’, frequently in reference to the
wrath of their thunder deity Gobar and the flood-causing rainbow snake Dranuk. For example,
deforestation and mining activities, which have transformed Batek landscapes, are said to anger these
deities who respond by causing terrifying storms and flooding. The anthropologist James Fernandez
describes tropes as “figurative devices that lie at the very heart of discourse, defining situations and
grounding our sense of what is to be taken as real and objective and, therefore, entitled (by means of
the figurative entitlements we employ) to have real consequences” ([19], p. 1). Experience of the world
can be confusing and chaotic particularly during periods of rapid change. Tropes allow transferal of
meanings from areas we understand well to those we do not [19]. Batek tropes take many forms and
are usually drawn from the flora, fauna, landscape features and weather patterns of their environment.
Batek perception, knowledge, memory and identity are built into and negotiated through figurations
where sensory experiences are particularly relevant [20]. Often tropes are drawn from multi-sensorial
signifiers—auditory, olfactory, visual and kinesthetic. As global flows bring new elements into the
Batek's lives, signifiers from the forest combine with those from beyond the forest to create new tropes
and more complex multivocal symbols. Throughout this article we shall analyze how the Batek’s
experience of globalization and other closely connected dynamics have caused ‘tropes of fear’ to
dominate the Batek’s semantic web.
3
Endicott [5] has focused on how fear of both gob [strangers] and tigers are used by Batek adults to curb children’s
misbehaviour. Lye has also described Batek fears of gob and tigers [6]. Both authors describe the relation of fear to the
breaking of taboos and the punishments involved [5,6]. In “Before a step too far: Walking with Batek hunter-gatherers
in the forests of Pahang, Malaysia” [17] Lye analyses the connections between fear and knowledge, particularly
knowledge gained through movement. In the same article she states the Batek have “generally escaped their fear of
gob”. During all my fieldwork trips from 2007–2013 in both Kelantan and Pahang this has never been the case. Fear of
gob was reiterated in every community I visited. In fact I have only met one old Batek man who told me he “was no
longer afraid of gob”. The difference of observation between Lye’s and my own could be due to the situation worsening
for the Batek between Lye’s fieldwork period in the 1990s and my own which began in 2007.
Religions 2013, 4 245
The most important frame of reference for the Batek’s semantic web is the forest. This is true
whether or not they live in the forest permanently as full-time foragers, or live in villages and camps
on its fringes. As Lye Tuck Po describes:
On an everyday level, [the forest] provides practical materials, nourishment, and protection, a sense of
community and history, and is central to the Batek’s construction of their identity and ethnicity. It is where
one’s friends and relatives live; children’s playground and schoolroom; a place to walk in; to go visiting in;
stocked with an abundance of useful resources. It is, among its multiple uses, a source of intellectual
sustenance ([6], p. 50).
As Lye suggests, the importance of the forest for the Batek goes far beyond simple economic or
territorial concerns. Land is not only a source of subsistence but also the place of their ancestors, an
environment overflowing with meanings. Diana Riboli, whose research with the Batek has focused on
shamanism and medicine, maintains “the forest represents a shamanic cosmos […] closely linked to
the concept of identity and the sense of ethnic belonging” ([21, p. 94). Elsewhere she has described it
as a “perfect and balanced realm which offers all its creatures protection, shelter, food, water, and
medicinal plants” ([22], p. 100). In-other-words, for the Batek the entire forest landscape should be
considered as a ‘religious landscape’.
Batek social rules are intrinsically religious and embedded within the local environment, or what
Tim Ingold has conceptualized as the ‘weather-world’ [23,24]. The concept of ‘weather-world’,
inspired by the works of American psychologist James Gibson, encompasses more than either the term
environment or landscape, and is particularly useful when discussing the Batek’s phenomenological
experience of the forest. The forest is a place of continual environmental change. Small brooks can
quickly change into mighty torrents as heavy rainfall gushes down narrow gorges. Paths become
overgrown with vines, palms and new saplings, which the Batek cut back with their machetes as they
traverse the forest. Travel through the forest is difficult and Lye has detailed the special importance
that the halb9w (paths and routes) and t0m (rivers and streams) which crisscross the forest have for
linking camps, villages, forest groves, swiddens, foraging areas and other places. They are, as Lye
emphasizes in her book, not just routes between places but also ‘routes of knowledge’ ([6], p. 67).
Landscapes are not fixed environments but places of constant transformation resulting from weather,
plant growth and human and animal activities. For instance, following animal tracks whilst hunting is
dependent on rainfall the night before: without rain, tracks are unperceivable. However, excessive
rainfall makes trails dangerously slippery and restricts movement through the forest. As the weather
changes so too does the sensorial experience of the forest. During the dry seasons, leaves crunch under
foot and previously submerged sand banks and rock formations emerge from rivers. The materiality,
odors, colors, and sounds of the rainforest shift throughout the day and over the longer yearly cycles.
The whole phenomenological experience of the forest cyclically shifts. As the sun rises in the morning,
sunlight pierces the rainforest canopy, warming the forest from the coolness of the previous night.
Weather patterns play a fundamental role in the lives of the Batek as meteorological conditions
constantly alter conditions within the forest. Life-cycles of forest flora and fauna are determined by
seasonal conditions. Too little or too much rain can prevent fruit trees from flowering and thus affects
Religions 2013, 4 246
both when bees make honey and when fruit trees come into season. When and whether fruit ripens
affects animals foraging patterns and thus in turn the Batek’s own foraging. The preferred food of the
Batek is fruit, and the fruit seasons are always anticipated with impatience. Weather does not only
affect practical life in the forest but is also closely connected to Batek religion. The Batek usually mark
the beginning and end of the fruit seasons with a Kensing4 (‘singing, dancing and trancing ceremony’)
where they ask and thank the hala’ (‘superhuman beings’) for abundant fruit as well as request help for
curing sicknesses. When shamans are present at these ceremonies, they may enter trances and go on
‘soul journeys’ to visit the hala’ [5,12]. Weather is also fundamentally connected to the activities of
the terrifying thunder deity, known as Gobar, and the flood-causing dragon known as Dranuk, Naga or
Ya’. These deities unleash their fury whenever human activities transgress the established moral order
by breaking taboos. Like many other indigenous groups across the world, Batek social relations and
ideas of personhood spread beyond humans, into animals, meteorological phenomena, plants and
other-than-human beings [25–27]. Thunder storms are a common phenomenon throughout the year in
Malaysia and their violence can be extremely frightening. The heavy rain from thunderstorms can
quickly lead to flash flooding and landslides, and strong storm winds can reach very high speeds. In a
forest environment, storms can soon bring about devastation. The Batek believe severe weather such as
thunder storms and flooding are caused by Gobar and Dranuk punishing humans for breaking certain
rules that are codified in Batek taboo systems. Access to globalized media means the Batek are now
highly aware of extreme weather events across the planet, which they frequently interpret as being
caused by humans breaking these same taboos. Throughout this paper, we shall see the importance
weather and these deities play in the Batek’s religious interpretations of globalization and how they are
pivotal figurative markers within the creation of ‘tropes of fear’.
3. Taboos
Socio-religious rules, in the form of a complex taboo system which includes dietary prescriptions,
hunting rules and behavioral norms, firmly link the Batek socially, morally and corporally to their
environment. These taboos are categorized under the three categories of lawac, tolah and ceman.
Lawac ‘taboos’ link game animals, cookery, the hala’ asal (superhuman beings), menstruation, incest
rules, blood and water through a complex set of visual, auditory, and olfactory symbols. Ceman
offences are more serious than lawac offences and relate to improper sexual behavior such as incest,
and tolah offences relate largely to inappropriate social behavior, the worst being violence. Other
taboo acts include the mockery or impersonation of the hala’ or anything closely related to them
including the rainbow, sun, moon, sky, stars, seasonal fruit and bees. Acts which are considered to be
insulting to Gobar are specifically those which could be seen as mimicking his powers. These include
letting shiny objects flash in the sun like lightning and making any noise said to mimic thunder [5,6].
Breaking taboos incurs the wrath of Gobar and Dranuk in the form of tremendous thunder storms
and violent flash floods [5]. The Batek see Gobar as a physically indescribable, incredibly powerful,
vengeful, but often stupid force living somewhere in the sky, who unleashes his fury in the form of
terrifying storms when any taboos are broken. His counterpart has a tripartite image, she is
4
Kensing can also be a verb meaning to dance.
Religions 2013, 4 247
simultaneously an old woman (Ya’), a rainbow (Dranuk) and a giant snake or dragon (Naga). The
Batek use these three terms interchangeably to refer to the rainbow snake. She “supports the earth and
keeps it from being dissolved in the underground sea. The old woman is said to ‘hold back’ the
underground sea and the Naga’ is pictured as holding the earth on its back. But the earth deity can
deliberately let the waters burst through the earth to punish any Batek who break prohibitions” ([5],
p. 169). Like rainbow snake imagery across the world Dranuk is commonly associated with water and
the Batek consider streams to be magical entrances to the underworld realm where she lives. Any
blood washed into streams is taken straight to Dranuk, at the same time it somehow also reaches
Gobar who responds through sending thunder storms. Endicott also states: “There are many lesser
naga’, both male and female, who live in the underground sea, in rivers, and in pools on mountains.
Ordinary snakes are said to be special friends of the naga’, and that is one reason adduced for the
prohibition on eating them” ([5], p. 168). These two deities feature heavily in mythologies across
Southeast Asia and beyond and are most commonly referred to by anthropologists as the ‘thunder
complex’ which links them with complex taboos and the associated blood ritual needed for
appeasement during storms [5,28].
The blood ritual consists of cutting the shin with a knife to obtain a small amount of blood. This
blood is then mixed with water in a small container, which can be made of plastic but not glass. The
mixture must then be moved in a circular motion over a small fire whilst reciting a short incantation.
Then the blood/water mixture must then be thrown over the left shoulder, then the right shoulder whilst
reciting more words. Finally, the same words must be repeated whilst throwing the blood forward and
upwards to the left and right. A variant of this ritual to appease Gobar and Naga involves rubbing a
sweet-smelling leaf on your shin and then burning the leaf on a fire. The Batek stress the importance of
using a sweet-smelling leaf as the aromatic odor will rise like smoke and please Gobar and the Naga,
who will then stop their punishments. However, the odor must be asal (original) not something brought
into the forest such as perfume, hair cream or deodorant, which would further anger these beings.
Gobar and Dranuk are clear examples of what Victor Turner termed ‘polysemic’ or ‘multivocal’
symbols. They are one of the few dominant or focal symbols of Batek religion and are master
signifiers for fear and terror. Turner states a dominant symbol “has a ‘fan’ or ‘spectrum’ of referents,
which are interlinked by … a simple mode of association, its very simplicity enabling it to interconnect
with a wide variety of significata.” ([18], p. 50) The referential spectrum of signifiers for
Gobar/Dranuk is wide indeed and includes blood, game animals, snakes, behavioral and sexual rules,
social conduct, thunder, lightning, water, rainbows, and objects thought to mimic the Hala’ Asal
particularly Gobar. Lye states “Gubar’s wrath (thunderstorms) is often interpreted as a comment on
moral conditions in camp, and an immediate supernatural response to human commission of
proscribed behavior.” ([29], p. 11) Any act that threatens the social order also threatens to return the
world back to the primordial chaos of the time of origins.
In this section, the impacts of various global flows on Batek cosmology and practices are analyzed.
These global flows encompass new objects which have entered the Batek’s lives including
pharmaceuticals and foods from outside the forest; sensorial phenomena associated with non-Batek
Religions 2013, 4 248
people (sounds and odours); and international media broadcasts of satellite television, principally
imagery of other countries’ environmental catastrophes. When Kirk Endicott carried out his work on
Batek religion in the 1970s—symbols and tropes of this complex taboo system were drawn uniquely
from the Batek’s forest environment. However, as many Batek groups have now settled in villages and
increasing flows of people, objects, images and ideas have entered the Batek’s world, a wide variety of
new signifiers are being brought into the lawac spectrum of referents, particularly those associated
with angering the Hala’ Asal, and causing the wrath of Gobar and Dranuk. New objects, sounds and
activities including pharmaceuticals, shop-bought foods, clothes, perfumes and the noise of tourists are
often used by the Batek as signifiers in ‘tropes of fear’. For example, poachers’ gun shots, miners’
dynamite detonations and explosions from Malays fish-bombing are all said to mimic the sound of
Gobar’s thunder, thus invoking his fury in the form of violent storms. Both local and distant activities
can enrage Gobar and Dranuk causing extreme weather conditions. For example, at a local level the
Batek believe logging activities in their area have angered Gobar who has responded by increasing the
frequency of thunder storms and changing weather patterns. Yet they also claim the catastrophic
flooding and damage caused by ‘Superstorm Sandy’ in New York during December 2012 was caused
by events which angered these deities, probably because of violent acts carried out in America or in
another country by Americans. Any violent acts can invoke the retributive anger of these beings and
extreme human violence, such as warfare, can provoke an extreme supernatural response. Gobar’s
wrath is no longer merely a comment on moral conditions within the forest camp but an increasingly
manifest commentary on both global events and local landscape transformation as the endgame result
of wider forces of globalization.
Globalization’s most forcible impact upon the Batek has been the compulsory sedentism imposed
on many Batek groups in villages on the forest fringes—to free up their customary land for conversion
to plantations or other developments—and the corresponding rapidly-increasing flows of new objects,
people and images into the Batek’s world5. The Batek have reacted to these pressures by augmenting
the symbolic boundaries between town/village (historically associated with Malays) and forest
(associated with Batek). Forest/village boundaries have important implications for the religious
practices, material culture and social action the Batek consider appropriate inside and outside the
forest. All Batek communities express the opposition between these two worlds as being between
forest and modernity6. The symbolic distinction between forest and village has meant incorporation of
non-forest foods, objects and medicines into the Batek’s taboo system and the re-imagination of forest
foods and medicinal plants as powerful alternatives to shop-bought foods and bio-medicine. The Batek
terms of ji-hut (to smell something) and meni’ (odor) are important to understand in this context. These
terms are often used to describe dangerous interactions between the forest between human and non-human
worlds, but they increasingly concern the intermingling of objects between the forest and non-forest
5
Forcible sedentism is the result of Malaysian land and resource-use policies and could be, somewhat simplistically,
understood on the state or national level. However, it is global demand for timber, palm oil, rubber and other ‘resources’
which fundamentally shapes these policies. Thus local land transformations must be understood within a global context.
6
The Batek describe many objects from outside the forest as ‘modern’ and also often refer to themselves as being
modern. This is due to the clothes they wear, the fact that many of them now live in villages and because of their
ownership of televisions, motorbikes and other ‘modern’ consumer products.
Religions 2013, 4 249
world. Ideas, beliefs and rules associated with the separation of the forest and non-forest worlds differ
between Batek communities, and there are variances between ideal models for behavior and what is
actually practiced. However, certain ideas are widely accepted among all Batek communities including
the belief that the Hala’ Asal [original superhuman beings] do not like the odors from towns like
deodorants, perfumes, foods and other products because they have meni’ jebèc (bad odors) which are
dangerous like the smell of blood. Foods that many Batek say should be avoided being brought into the
forest include rice, coffee, tea, sugar and tinned foods. All of these are shop-bought staples bought and
consumed on a daily basis by Batek living in villages as well as those living in tourist areas. Though of
course the Batek do bring these foods into the forest as hunting success can never be guaranteed and
there are various ways of getting around these prohibitions such as ritual cleansing after consumption
of shop-bought foods by drinking water from forest streams in bamboo sections used as drinking
vessels. However, anything with a non-forest odor has the potential of offending Gobar and other
Hala’ Asal.
Forest foods are now often considered by many Batek—as well as neighboring Jahai and Mendriq
groups to the north—as being extremely powerful sources of health and strength whilst shop-bought
foods are increasingly associated with weakness, disease and death. Certain shop-bought foods such as
canned sardines are considered by most groups to be harmful for pregnant women or even to be
avoided at all costs. Some Batek say canned sardines are dangerous for pregnant women because the
sardines are tightly packed in the cans. They maintain this means an unborn baby could become stuck
inside the womb, like the sardines in the can, and the mother-to-be might experience difficulty in
delivering the baby. This is similar to a Batek taboo on women eating pangolins during pregnancy, the
prohibition this time connected to the animal’s defensive tendency of rolling up into a tight ball when
threatened, which again is seen as raising the analogous possibility of constriction impeding an easy
birth. Furthermore, many Batek say ‘modern’ pharmaceuticals such as paracetamol or antibiotics
should not be consumed after eating forest game animals with a strong odor of raw meat (pel'èng).
Otherwise, the individual may suffer from a terrible disease or be the victim of punishment such as
being struck by lightning or falling from a tree. Most Batek do not believe that pharmaceutical
medicines such as paracetamol are ineffective or dangerous. In fact, they are often sought after and
sometimes even given extra potency through the practice of jampi (spell incantation)7. It is the mixing
7
Jampi spells can be learned in two ways. The first way is when the exact words for incantations are learned and
memorized from an older person who already knows the particular spell. After learning a spell from another person the
student cannot teach the spell to someone else until the original teacher has died. Furthermore, a period of time ranging
from 10 to 15 years must be observed out of respect for the knowledge before the spell can be passed on. A second way
of learning magico-religious practices (for instance, the words for jampi spells, the medicinal properties of plants and
the songs for kensings) is from the forest directly. The Batek sometimes travel through the forest alone and
occasionally, while sleeping on one of these solitary journeys, they are given magico-religious knowledge through
teween (dreams or trancing). This kind of knowledge cannot be actively sought as that would be considered selfish and
therefore Tolah. Rather one’s intentions in the forest must conform to Batek norms. One must move slowly and
carefully through the forest with great respect. If the tracks of tigers or elephants—animals which the Batek give
human-like attributes to—are encountered the Batek traveller must inform these animals where they are going to
avoid confrontations.
Religions 2013, 4 250
of forest foods and medicines with ‘modern’ medicines that is usually the cause of danger and not the
actual medicines themselves. Interestingly, fears about the dangers of ‘modern’ foods seem to be most
prevalent in villages with the greatest interactions with Malays. In one particular village with
excessively high levels of infant mortality and illness, many villagers associated death and illness with
their reliance on shop-bought foods. These new rules, which are specifically concerned with the
prohibition of mixing categories of foods and medicines, show a remarkable similarity to lawac rules
concerned with the mixing of different categories of foods over the same fire or the mingling of odors
that should be kept separate.
Anthropologists such as Keith Basso [30] and Tim Ingold [24] who have helped theorize
‘world-building’ or ‘place-making’, as well as those working in the field of globalization studies such
as Arjun Appadurai [7] and Anna Tsing [11] have frequently emphasized the importance of
imagination and memory in their studies. ‘Place-making’ or ‘world-building’ and processes of
globalization are closely tied to identity formation: as places change, so too do identities. Globalization
and place-making both involve dynamic interconnections, where imagination plays a key role in
shaping how people think about themselves and their landscapes. Just as global flows of people,
images, finance, media and technologies create links over vast distances—and in doing so compress
perceptions of space and time—“place-based thoughts about the self lead commonly to thoughts of
other things—other places, other people, other times, whole networks of associations that ramify
unaccountably within the expanding spheres of awareness that they themselves engender. The
experience of sensing places, then, is both thoroughly reciprocal and incorrigibly dynamic.” ([30], p. 107)
Batek religious expressions of contemporary landscape change and increased global flows must be
understood as being fundamentally connected to this dynamic associative reciprocity inherent within
globalization. Their ‘place-based thoughts about the self’ are increasingly linked to wider associative
networks of people and places. However, the reciprocity of symbol and identity stemming from global
flows in the Batek’s contemporary world does not, unfortunately, reflect a mutual associative exchange
of benefit. The reality is far from this and can be better described, to modify Anna Tsing’s phrase, as
an ‘awkward engagement’.
For the Batek, a key outcome of their contact with globalized processes and the connected flows of
people, objects and ideas into their territories has been the emergence of numerous ‘zones of awkward
engagement’ and a corresponding augmentation of topophobia—fears relating to specific places and a
general fear the forest is becoming a more dangerous place. ‘Zones of awkward engagement’ include:
villages where the government has encouraged the Batek to settle in following displacement and
deterritorialization from their own territories; specific ‘sacred sites’ that have been dramatically altered
by outsiders’ activities or land transformation projects; and even the protected area of the Taman
Negara national park due to the intrusive activities of noisy and sometimes dangerous outsiders, such
as armed poachers. In this section, we shall look at each of these zones and how they have affected the
Batek leading to the emergence of ‘tropes of fear’.
Religions 2013, 4 251
The Batek often use the trope of the body when describing landscape and landscape degradation.
Tropes of the body vary from description to description. Sometimes the Batek describe the forest as
skin and the earth as the body. Lye describes in detail a warning she was given by a Batek shaman
about the dangers of forest degradation where the forest was described as the veins and tendons of the
Batek’s lives [6]. The Batek believe the forest keeps the earth at a suitably cool temperature by
protecting it from the heat of the sun. They love the forest, its plants and animals but especially its
quality of coolness. They have regularly commented on the unpredictability of the rain, fruit and honey
seasons in recent years, which they blame on the overheating of the world due to deforestation. Some
examples from my fieldwork carried out in 2012 help illustrate this more clearly. The first example
occurred after visiting an area of Kelantan near the Aring River known as Blok 9 with a Batek friend,
Tun8. When I first visited this area in 2008, it was the site of a Batek village but the following year it
was transformed into a series of open-cast iron-ore mines by local Chinese entrepreneurs. The impact
of the landscape’s transformation to the Batek is clear from Tun’s heartfelt description:
Look at our land [pointing towards the devastated landscape]. The earth is a body. Imagine it was your body.
[He scratches at his arms and chest mimicking the action of a digger clawing at his body] We would become
sick if we were treated this way, wouldn’t we? The earth is sick now because the forest, its skin, has been
stripped away. Without the forest it is getting too hot, and now it’s being hurt by the mining too. (Tun,
November 2012, Block 9)
Tun described landscape transformation linguistically and performatively through the tropes of
bodily sickness and pain. Without the protective forest (skin) the earth is vulnerable to sickness and at
the same time the body (earth) is being torn apart by development. This is typical of the tropes of fear
to which the Batek recourse when discussing their experience of landscape transformations and global
flows. In this way, local landscape change is linked to global climate change through a ‘play of tropes’
concerning sickness, the body and heat. In turn, these tropes are contextually linked to the gamut of
referents associated with the master symbols of Gobar and Dranuk. The belief that the world is getting
too hot and perhaps dying is a widespread fear among the Batek and other Orang Asli groups and is
firmly connected to landscape transformations and recent changes to seasonal weather patterns. The
Batek say forest destruction has angered Gobar and many Batek and other Orang Asli see current
climatic changes as a sign of the onset of the world’s end brought on by devastating human activities [6].
Within Batek cosmology heat is an important referent associated with sickness and disease whilst
coolness signifies health and well-being [5,6]. The Batek often contrast the coolness of the forest to the
heat of villages, towns and plantations. The town/forest dichotomy has various ramifications. Towns
and villages are associated with Malays; the forest with the Batek. Both zones are important identity
markers. The forest is considered to be safe, except when intruded upon by dangerous ‘outsiders’;
while towns are associated with danger and violence. In the current context of landscape
transformation the Batek have witnessed the ripping apart of their forests, the bulldozing through of
8
The names of all Batek individuals mentioned in this article have been changed to protect their anonymity. New names
were chosen by the individual Batek I cited.
Religions 2013, 4 252
networks of logging roads, the carving up and reshaping of landscapes into terraces suitable for
plantation species, and the planting of palm-oil and rubber mono-crops in endless uniform grids. It is
hardly surprising they consider the world to be sick.
The following quote is from a conversation I had at another village in Kelantan with two elderly
brothers, Dek and Bar Oon, who were much respected by other Batek for their knowledge of Batek
history, landscapes and forest knowledge.
There are no original trees [‘kayu asal’] around here anymore. The gob [Malays and Chinese] have cut
everything down [he points across the Lebir River]. We love [‘saying’] the forest and the original trees but
now it has all gone. I miss/long for [‘ha-ip’] them. This is our land, the land of our parents and our ancestors,
we love this land. How can we live without the forest? (Dek, December 2012, Macang)
Dek was particularly upset and made no effort to conceal his anger. He told me story after story
about his family’s history and their links to the landscape. After he left, his brother signaled for me to
close my notebook and said:
Close the book. That is enough for now. I can’t tell you more today, just a little at a time. I’m frightened of
the gob [Malays]. They will get angry if they hear us. Just a little at a time. [I agree and ask if he thinks Dek,
his brother, is okay.] He is hot, hot with anger, he is not frightened anymore. (Bar Oon, December
2012, Macang)
9
During the 1920s Batek territories in Pahang and Kelantan were opened up to outsiders through the construction of the
north-south railroad line. The railways construction led to an influx of Malays moving into areas where formerly only
Batek or other Orang Asli communities lived and the rapid growth of towns like Gua Musang, Bertam, Manek Urai and
Kuala Krai [13].
Religions 2013, 4 253
Orang Asli and stems from their history as victims of sporadic but repeated enslaving by the Malays
and their ancestors. The enslaving of the Orang Asli’s ancestors began in about the middle of the first
millennia CE when Indianized polities were established on the coast of the Peninsular and continued
until the 1920s when they were finally ended by the British colonial authorities [13,31,32]. Robert
Dentan has convincingly argued how Orang Asli religions were shaped in this traumatic period during
the “unpredictable raids by slavers from Hinduized states which represented themselves to their
subjects as embodiments of a Hindu God, Siva the Destroyer” ([32], p. 172). He reasons the traumatic
experience of centuries of repeated violence of slave raids fundamentally helped shape Orang
Asli constructs of their thunder deity. Dentan uses the psycho-analytical concept of ‘learned
helplessness’ within a historicized and globalized Durkheimian framework to argue that this violent,
uncontrollable, and stupid deity is a personification of the violent dangerous slave-raiding state: “a
nuanced and subtle symbolic interpretation of the impact of despotic states on relatively powerless
egalitarian indigenes” ([32], p. 172). Historically the violence of slave raids was fundamental in
shaping Batek cosmology and religion as well as their intense distrust and fear of ‘outsiders’. The
Batek’s vivid use of Gobar in the contemporary period to increasingly personify the violence inherent
in certain global flows is built upon these historical roots.
Thirdly, fear and danger is expressed via Dek being described as ‘hot’ with anger. As previously
mentioned, heat is most often considered as dangerous. It can bring about sickness, even death. Batek
social rules, in the form of lawac and tolah taboos, require that violence, anger, jealousy, bossiness,
greed, selfishness and other possibly harmful emotions are suppressed. One consequence of this is that
although the Batek often complain about their marginalized situation to each other (or visiting
anthropologists) they would rarely if ever make an angry complaint to the Malaysian authorities or
loggers and miners. This is not to say the Batek never inform the authorities of problems in their
villages, they do, but complaints are always made in a calm and ‘cool’ manner. The belief that anger
should be avoided at all costs is firmly entrenched in Batek socio-religious rules. Even showing one’s
anger can provoke punishment by Gobar. The practice of interacting with Malays in such a peaceful
manner is also related to past conflicts that characterized Orang Asli-Malay relations prior to the
1920s. It is also closely connected to the economic, social and political marginalization the Batek have
experienced throughout the post-colonial period. Marginalization of the Orang Asli takes many forms
but the heart of the problem stems from their lack of land rights. The entrenched fear and distrust of
Malays coupled with a lack of land rights severely affects the types of political action the Batek can
take when faced with problems and grievances.
7. Sacred Sites
Whilst the entire forest environment is considered ‘sacred’ by the Batek, certain places have
particular importance, including sites of tree-burials; landscape features created by Batek culture
heroes during the world’s creation; and caves, mountains and waterfalls often considered as home to
various other-than-human beings. These other-than-human beings include usually benevolent spirits,
mountain-dwelling Bawak Gerai (blood-thirsting, huge ape-like beings which the Batek describe as
Religions 2013, 4 254
being like ‘King Kong’ 10 ), cave-dwelling Sakai-Pangan 11 (extremely dangerous tigers which can
transform into humans) [33], and forest-dwelling Orang Pendek or Pé (small human-like beings).
‘Sacred’ sites are neither places of pilgrimage or ritual performance. In some cases they mark the
activities of culture-heroes’ exploits in the past and in other cases they mark the dwelling places of
other-than-human beings which often become angered and dangerous if these places are polluted
or destroyed.
One important site is situated on the Aring River near Baryen, a new Batek village just within the
boundaries of Taman Negara. Baryen is composed mainly of Batek from a village called Blok 9 who
relocated here because of iron-ore mining at the site of their village. On a bend of the Aring River not
far from Baryen two huge boulders lie on the river bank. The Batek say this is the place where long
ago a very powerful and dangerous shaman called Tak Kelambai encountered two rhinoceros. As soon
as he saw the animals he pointed at them and they were instantly turned to stone becoming the two
huge boulders on the river bank. There are many other sites in this area where the Batek say we can see
animals and people who were turned to stone by the much-feared Tak Kelambai12. One is in the Lebir
River where two large rounded rocks protrude from the river. The Batek say these are the breasts of a
young Batek maiden who was petrified by the shaman whilst she was bathing in the river. Some Batek
have told me these boulders have healing properties for women suffering from fertility problems.
Landscape features are not only important geo-historical and religious markers but are often frequently
visited sites that have continual importance in the Batek’s everyday lives.
Huge limestone outcrops dominate the landscapes in Pahang and Kelantan near Gua Musang (a
small town situated just across from the Pahang border in Kelantan) and are important places in the
Batek’s religious landscape. The Batek say many of these incredible rock formations were formed by
culture heroes in the distant past. Until recently, these giant rocks jutted out from the forest canopy but
they now tower over the enormous FELDA oil-palm estates that stretch across the land. In the Ciku
River valley, several of these outcrops are important sites in a story mapping the historic movements of
two brothers and their grandmother as they travelled across Kelantan to Pahang. Due to their
grandmother’s age, the small group regularly stopped to build haya (lean-to shelters) so their
grandmother could rest. The haya were then magically transformed into the limestone hills and the
caves within them, thus engraving their adventure into the landscape for time immemorial. Even the
10
Whenever I have asked the Batek to describe Bawak Gerai they always begin by saying they are like King Kong. When
I have shown the Batek books on animals they always compare images of orang-utans and gorillas to these beings.
Unlike Gobar who is never actually seen, many Batek say they, or someone they know, have encountered the Bawak on
mountains. Likewise, many Batek claim to have seen Sakai-Pangan and the Orang Pendek. These encounters are
always described as being frightening and involve the Batek fleeing from the area as soon as possible.
11
The words Sakai and Pangan were both terms Malays used to refer to Orang Asli in the past. The derogatory term Sakai
means ‘slave’ or ‘serf’ in Malay and has similar connotations to the word ‘nigger’. Pangan was sometimes used to mean
‘men of the forest’ [33].
12
Tak Kelambai has been described to me as a shaman who terrified the Batek and caused chaos in the forest in the
distant past. He was eventually tricked by the Batek and forced to leave their area. He is said to be now trapped either
underground or ‘far-away’, but he remains a menacing and ever-present reminder of how shamanic power can be
misused with terrifying consequences.
Religions 2013, 4 255
haloi palm leaves used to build the shelters metamorphosed into boulders. The Ciku River valley was
previously home to a Batek group who were forced to relocate to the village of Post Lebir when the
area was deforested and converted to palm-oil plantations, and holds many other collective memories
for the Batek of Kelantan. However, nowadays the landscape is rarely traversed anymore meaning the
stories connected to places are recounted less and less and only the older generation is fully aware of
their socio-cultural significance.
As resources—most commonly, land, timber and mineral deposits—are appropriated by the state
and private enterprise, forests are replaced by palm-oil and rubber plantations, mines, roads and other
development projects forcing forest-dwellers to relocate, or be relocated, to other areas. A major effect
has been the impact on indigenous people’s connections with their ancestral landscapes. Deforestation
of landscapes equates with deterritorialization of people; and consequently transforms the meanings
attached to specific places. As forests are converted into mono-crop palm-oil plantations, the continual
acts of revisiting which Henri Lefebvre, terms “rhythms of being” [34] and Yi Fuan Tuan calls “fields
of care” [35] which result in social and emotional attachment to place disappear. As people are
deterritorialized from landscapes, so too is important socio-cultural knowledge. The now
deterritorialized fields of meaning often embodied religious and historical significance that was
concretely embedded within people’s identities. As Lye Tuck Po has noted, transformations of forests
into oil-palm plantations and other development projects are literally ‘removing the humanity from the
landscape.’ ([6], p. 30) This means landscapes are transformed into areas similar to what Marc Augé
has termed ‘non-places’—areas or spaces which cannot be defined as ‘relational’ or ‘historical’—
places stripped of meanings associated with identity ([36], pp. 77–78). Palm-oil plantations are extreme
examples of ‘non-places’, stripped clear of virtually all biological diversity and socio-cultural meaning.
8. Topophobia
Until the very recent past most sacred sites, including the homes of the above-mentioned
other-than-human beings, were inaccessible to anyone apart from the Batek. As landscapes have been
opened up to tourism and development, outsiders have increasingly begun to visit them and radically
transform them through polluting acts including graffiti, littering, noise and defecation. As outsiders
move closer and closer to Batek villages, and forest cover is reduced year after year, certain places
considered as important by the Batek are now situated on the periphery of the forest and are visited by
non-Batek outsiders. The interactions of Batek and outsiders are often cause of friction and can
radically transform the meanings the Batek give particular places. It is important to document how
these very real changes and transformations have given rise to changes within the Batek’s own
descriptions of their world.
Though the Batek have kept the location of many ‘sacred’ sites secret, certain places, including
those in close proximity to tourist centers, Malay villages and logging camps, have been impossible to
protect. The Batek complain outsiders accidentally agitate the dwelling places of non-human beings
through their intrusive activities. Sometimes places such as waterfalls—described as berdet (beautiful)
by the Batek—are located near Batek villages where families would take children for day trips to relax
and play in. However, many of these places are now considered as polluted or too dangerous to visit
because of the presence and activities of outsiders. During my research, I have documented the
Religions 2013, 4 256
transformation of several much-loved waterfalls and rock shelters that have been tainted by outsiders’
activities. A waterfall that villagers from Sungai Rual in Kelantan13 would regularly visit until just a
few years ago is now considered so dangerous that only one man from the village would take me and
fellow anthropologist Dr. Diana Riboli to document how it had changed. All other villagers we asked
were literally terrified of going there. Even the man that took us there remained nervous and silent
until he began describing his memories of how the place was before outsiders began to visit it. The
Batek claim the waterfall became dangerous after local Malays and immigrant workers began visiting
the spot, littering the area and covering rock faces with graffiti. Many women from Sungai Rual said
they were frightened of going to the waterfall because they feared being sexually abused, raped or even
killed by outsiders. However, it is not only the physical fear of encountering outsiders that has led to
heightened fear and anguish about these places but fear that spirits residing within these places have
become angered and therefore dangerous. Many Batek believe the anger of spirits residing in these
formerly beautiful places is directed at all humans, Batek included. Some Batek say angry spirits can
disorientate visitors making it impossible for them to leave the place.
Riboli has described the impact of tourism at another place, Gua Telinga, a cave situated close to
Taman Negara’s entrance at Kuala Tahan. In 2005, the Batek told her this cave was occupied by
Sakai-Pangan but on a return visit in 2006 these beings had reportedly fled the cave due to noisy
tourist visits. Several years later in 2010 Riboli further discussed the cave with the Batek, who told her
there had been unusually violent thunderstorms over the last few months. They also described the
extremely unusual and frightening behavior of an old Batek man who had ‘gone crazy’ and threatened
to kill everyone in his camp. Shocked by the old-man’s actions the Batek immediately abandoned the
camp the next day. Strangely, the night following Riboli’s discussion a section of the cave collapsed
blocking the caves entrance to any more visitors [33].
Topophobic fears also stem from the activities of Thai eaglewood collectors and heavily-armed
Thai, Cambodian and Vietnamese poachers who now roam deep within the Taman Negara national
park. Many Batek residing along the Tembeling River on the southern edge of Taman Negara, and also
Batek living on the northern fringe near Kuala Koh, have described their fears of poachers. Many
Batek are now frightened of venturing into large areas of the forest due to fear of encountering
poachers and so prefer to stay on the edges of the forest. Many stories circulate about the violence of
these outsiders. In one story the Batek say that after two Thai eaglewood collectors found a large
supply one killed the other out of greed. Another story concerns a young female backpacker from
Europe or America who disappeared in Taman Negara. Many Batek (and Malays) say she was
probably raped and killed by a group of poachers. The Batek also claim poaching activities have made
tigers and elephants increasingly aggressive. Many Batek have told me how elephants actively seek
revenge after one of their companions has been killed by poachers. The Malaysian government and
various NGOs have made great efforts to combat illegal poaching in Taman Negara and elsewhere.
The Batek and the Wildlife Department have told me that within Taman Negara both forest rangers
and army patrols are actively policing the park. Local police also regularly set up road blocks outside
13
This is a village composed of Jahai, Mendriq and Batek who were regrouped here by the government as their territories
were logged over and converted to plantations. The villagers now often refer to themselves as Menraq.
Religions 2013, 4 257
the park to stop and search illegal poachers. However, policing the park is an incredibly difficult job
due to the size and feasibility of patrolling such a large area, the numbers of poachers involved, and the
fact that poachers are heavily-armed.
The Batek have reacted to deforestation, plantation conversion, resource extraction and the rising
flows of people and other concomitant pressures of globalization on their landscape by increasingly
using tropes of fear to describe specific places, and often the forest in general. Perhaps most revealing
is the Batek’s topophobia, their total reluctance to return to certain locations which they consider as too
dangerous to visit. These fears have radically altered how the Batek perceive the forest. It is no longer
a ‘perfect and balanced realm’ [22]. The activities of violent and disruptive outsiders mean fear and
danger—previously associated with towns—are now creeping into the forest.
As forests are converted to palm-oil plantations the Malaysian government has encouraged the
Batek to settle in forest-fringe villages and assimilate into the Malay segment of Malaysian society,
which involves intense pressure on the Orang Asli to convert to Islam. This means the Batek have been
increasingly forced to permanently co-inhabit two radically different socio-cultural worlds, their forest
home and the village world (most commonly associated the Malays). Islam is seen by the Orang Asli
as a defining feature of ‘Malayness’, particularly concerning the religious acts of praying, manners of
dressing, and food habits. From the Batek’s perspective, converting to Islam is tantamount to
becoming Malay. In the Malay language, this process is referred to as Masuk Melayu (to enter or
become Malay).
Operating between two culturally different worlds has been common for minority indigenous
people of Southeast Asia (and South Asia) for over a millennium. In dealing with traders and others,
indigenous minority peoples have needed to be competent in the socio-cultural worlds of their more
powerful neighbors and historically people like the Batek have been adept at operating linguistically,
socially, culturally and economically in both their forest homelands and dominant state society.
However, in the past these groups were always able to retreat to their forest homes beyond the gaze of
the state and dealings with Malays and other outsiders would have been episodic. For Batek living in
resettlement villages and camps located near tourist centers, retreat is no longer an option as there is
simply not enough forest left.
In many Orang Asli villages, mosques have been constructed by the governmental agency JAKIM
(the Department of Islamic Development) who also run regular events to promote Islam in Orang Asli
communities. In 1996, the Malaysian government began offering RM10000 ($3,220) to Muslim
missionaries who married Orang Asli women. Other incitements to persuade Muslim missionaries to
live in Orang Asli villages include monthly payments of RM1000 ($322) and a 4 × 4 vehicle [37].
Currently, JAKIM continues to organize programs to promote Islam in Batek villages as do other
Islamic organizations such as the International Islamic University of Malaysia (Universiti
Antarabangsa Islam Malaysia, UAIM). During a recent visit to the Batek village of Post Lebir eighty
students from UAIM stayed in the Batek village Post Lebir for one week as part of an “Orang Asli
Development Project: Summer Camp” organized by a university club. The Malay students organized
various activities and games for Batek children in the village each morning, prepared halal food for the
Religions 2013, 4 258
villagers and split up into small groups in the afternoon to visit all the households in the village with
the aims of befriending the Batek and teaching them how to pray and follow Islamic rites properly.
These kinds of highly intrusive activities are becoming increasingly regular in Orang Asli villages
across the Peninsula. Often Islamic students, Ustaz (Islamic teachers), local politicians, JAKOA
officers, school teachers and other visitors have highly patronizing and paternalistic attitudes in their
dealings with the Orang Asli and show little understanding of local cultural practices. Although the
motives of the above-mentioned students may be fairly innocent and good-natured, as it was evident
they wanted to help the Batek, they must also be seen against a back-drop of highly coercive sustained
attempts at Islamizing the Orang Asli and through the Orang Asli’s longer historic experiences as
victims of slaving raids.
In Kelantan, many Batek, Mendriq and Jahai communities nominally converted to Islam during the
1980s after an extremely coercive campaign of proselytism and are now considered as Muslims by the
Malays. This means they are obliged to behave according to Malay Muslim norms when in the
presence of Malays. However, beyond the gaze of Malays, the Batek show absolutely no interest in Islam.
There are many ways in which the Batek appear to conform to the expectations of Malay norms of
behavior. Modes of conformation include Batek women in villages often wearing the Malay hijab;
concealment of the consumption of haram forest animals; children attending village schools praying
daily; and villagers using a Malay name in any dealings with Malays. Occasionally, when Malay
dignitaries or Malays working for the Department of Islamic Development (Jabatan Kemajuan Islam—
JAKIM) visit villages, the Batek will join in cultural performances in acts of collective praying and
processions. Within Batek homes framed Islamic prayers written in Arabic script are often hung on the
wall of front rooms as a display of religious affiliation to please Malay visitors. This has meant life
within certain villages superficially resembles that of a Malay village. However, the reality is far more
complicated and this complexity has important ramifications for Batek religion. These acts and
performances of conformity can be seen as conscious strategies in the sense that they are calculated
attempts of conflict avoidance and are also sometimes used to win material or financial gains from
visiting Malays.
These performances are enacted to avoid confrontational situations with Malays and to maintain
cordial or civil relations with them in what, to use Homi Bhabha’s terms, are acts of ‘sly civility’ or
‘mimicry’ [38]. Bhabha’s concepts of ‘sly civility’ and ‘mimicry’ describe subtle interactions between
the colonizer and the colonized. Bhabha states that “colonial mimicry is the desire for a reformed,
recognizable Other, as a subject of difference that is almost the same, but not quite. Which is to say,
that the discourse of mimicry is constructed around an ambivalence; in order to be effective, mimicry
must continually produce its slippage, its excess, its difference” ([38], p. 86). The desire for the
colonized to resemble the colonizer always necessitates a slightly distorted doubling, never an exact
mirroring. For if the colonized truly became identical to the colonizer, the ideological assumption of
the colonizers superiority would disappear. When used by the colonized, ‘sly civility’ and ‘mimicry’
involve deliberate and exaggerated copying of language, culture and manners which often involve a
mockery of the colonizer. Alberto Gomes has described Orang Asli ‘sly civility’ as resulting from the
imbalanced power relations between the Malays and the Orang Asli. It is used by the Orang Asli as a
means of operating between two social universes with different sets of rules and norms [39].
Religions 2013, 4 259
The Bateks’ involvement with Islam means their traditional practices and way of life have been
completely marginalized and driven underground. Daily meals within villages normally consist of rice
and canned sardines. However, occasionally the Batek eat forest game such as monkeys, siamangs,
gibbons, and turtles. Due to fear of Malays witnessing them eating these haram foods, they are usually
either eaten (by men) within the forest during collecting and hunting trips or after dark with families in
the village behind closed doors. Animals brought back to the village are concealed within bags and
bones, skin and fur are immediately buried. In most villages situated outside Taman Negara men use
scooters and cars to access areas of remaining forest where they collect eaglewood, rattan and other
forest products which they then sell on to towkay (Chinese or Malay middlemen). In the past women
would also access the forest regularly and contribute equally to the household economy [12]. However,
as areas of the forest containing economic resources are no longer within walking distance women
spend most of their time within villages caring for children. This has led to important gendered
divisions emerging within Batek village communities including the marginalization of women as
economic partners within the household unit and severe limiting of their mobility. Women’s mobility
has been further reduced due to increased fear of sexual harassment and rape by Malay villagers or
immigrant plantation workers who often live close by.
To recap, the Batek’s religious life has been transformed in several ways due to sedentary living.
Firstly, as previously noted, a major impact of village life has been the augmentation of symbolic
boundaries delimiting appropriate social action within the forest and the village. Secondly, the Batek
have been forced to act like Malays within villages, often in acts of ‘sly civility’. And thirdly,
congruous to this ‘sly civility’ but not simply stemming from it, is the way the Batek are unwilling to
perform their own religious rituals in the presence of Malays. Due to the importance of the blood
ritual—needed to appease Gobar and Dranuk following storms—the Batek will perform this ritual in
villages quietly if they believe there are no Malays present. However, the Batek will not perform
Kensings (singing, dancing and trancing ceremonies) in villages as they believe these rituals must be
carried out deep within the forest well away from any outsiders. Normally Kensings should be carried
out several times a year to please the Hala’ Asal but most Batek living in villages have not participated
in these ceremonies for many years due to the constraints of sedentary life.
The extent of the fear of gob varies from village to village and depends on local circumstances and
history. In villages where there have been violent encounters or threats of violence in the recent past,
fear of gob is often highly charged. One such village is the previously mentioned resettlement village
of Sungai Rual, where in 1993 a group of Orang Asli men from the village killed three Malay men and
wounded two others following an argument over land [40]. This event was well documented in the
national media and became known as the ‘Jeli Incident’. It is an extremely rare example of Orang Asli
violence. While Sungai Rual is home to a mixture of Orang Asli from the Jahai, Batek and Menraq
ethnic groups it seems only Jahai men were involved in this incident. However, due to the situational
nature of Orang Asli ethnicity the question of whether the men involved were Jahai, Batek or Mendriq
is somewhat irrelevant. In Sungai Rual levels of child mortality and poverty are extremely high,
sickness is widespread and stories filled with ‘tropes of fear’ regularly circulate the village. One such
story concerns the fear that local Malays have been using black magic to curse the Orang Asli and
cause sickness. In another story, a terrifying headless ghost reportedly killed a man in the village in
broad daylight. The inhabitants have no source of regular income and the local economy is based upon
Religions 2013, 4 260
men foraging for forest products to collect and sell to middle-men. Due to deforestation men must
drive for hours to find areas of forest with remaining resources. The local authorities have opened an
Asram (hostel) in the village where Orang Asli children can get free-meals if they stay and learn about
Islam. Due to extreme poverty, some parents have chosen to send their children to the Asram so at
least they will be fed. These factors are clearly connected with the topophobic atmosphere of the
village and the prevalence of ‘tropes of fear’. Many women in this village frequently enter painful and
traumatic teween trance states.14
The impact of sedentary life and Malay attempts of proselytism on the Batek must be seen as highly
ambiguous and involves a dialectic whereby as everyday practices and rituals have been driven
underground there has been a corresponding augmentation of the Batek’s belief in the importance of
the forest and its religiosity.
Many Batek living in villages outside the forest have televisions in their homes and those living in
Taman Negara often get the chance to watch television at tourist restaurants near the park entrance.
Increased access to technology and media has had important effects upon Batek religious beliefs. They
are well aware of global events and frequently discuss natural catastrophes and wars they hear about
through the media. The Batek indigenize these catastrophic world events, interpreting them in the
framework of their own cosmology, often through tropes of fear. They do not distinguish between
natural and man-made catastrophes in the way I have just done here. Like many indigenous groups, the
Batek do not have a straightforward nature/culture dichotomy. During research I conducted in 2008,
the Batek often talked about the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. They believed these wars could lead to
even more terrible consequences due to the huge quantities of blood being spilt on the earth. They said
the smell of this blood would reach Gobar and Dranuk angering them and lead them to cause
catastrophic storms and flooding as a punishment. Several Batek expressed their belief the wars in
Afghanistan and Iraq were a kind of divine punishment for Muslims because of past offences (such as
the historical enslaving of the Orang Asli). Yet they also believed the flooding and destruction in New
Orleans was a punishment against the Americans due to the bloodshed they caused in these very
same places.
The Batek interpreted the terrible Indian Ocean Tsunami of 2004 as the consequence of Gobar and
Dranuk’s anger due to Indonesians breaking certain lawac or tolah taboos. Batek religious beliefs and
cosmology are both fluid and dynamic: stories transform in interesting ways as they circulate
throughout the Batek area and beyond. In regard to the tsunami story, which taboo was broken depends
on who is telling the story. One Batek bidan (mid-wife) explained to me that the Tsunami was caused
14
The Batek refer to both lucid dreams and trances as teween. This is a common activity that most Batek can do and is
different from the trance states where Hala’ shaman can transform into the flora and fauna of the forest. In teween states
the Batek claim they make ‘soul journeys’ during which they visit places and friends in the forest. Usually these trances
are peaceful and enjoyable but they can be distressing. As the forest can no longer be visited physically, due to the
above-mentioned constraints on women’s mobility, they have responded by increasingly making these soul-journeys to
the forest to ‘visit’ places and friends.
Religions 2013, 4 261
by Gobar because in Aceh and other places people were laughing at animals and breaking other lawac
and tolah taboos. A very interesting variation of this story was recounted to Diana Riboli by a young
Batek man currently training to become a hala' shaman. In this version, trans-national flows are
emphasized even more vividly. To quote Riboli:
[He] explained that the tsunami was a terrible punishment sent by Gobar, whose rage had been incurred by
the worst offence: the purposeful pouring of menstrual blood into the water of a river or the sea. Together
with his friends and relatives, the halak explained that some poor Indonesian girl must have been hired as a
housemaid in Dubai or Saudi Arabia and had probably decided to take a revenge on her cruel employer for
the many abuses and injuries she had suffered by using black magic. They believed she had probably gone to
the sea and thrown in a concoction of her menstrual blood mixed with other things, and the consequences of
her act had grown out of proportion. Her pain, suffering and rage along with her menstrual blood, transported
by strong sea currents, tried to go back to her country of origin: Indonesia. When the menstrual blood
crossed the sea close to Malaysia, Gobar smelled it and, offended, but also struck by the attempt and the
girl’s suffering, transformed it into a devastating force which, combined with the powerful black magic,
exploded as soon as it came close to Sumatra. ([33], pp. 16–17)
All versions of the story interpret the catastrophe as being caused by the breaking of taboos with
consequent supernatural punishment in the form of the devastating tsunami. This interpretation is fairly
straightforward as the Batek consider any transgression of the moral order must result in such a
punishment. However, as Riboli has noted, the global themes within the story are particularly
interesting and need unpacking: the suffering of the Indonesian maid working in the Middle East (a
common tragic story repeated regularly in the Malaysian media); Indonesian black-magic (which is
widely feared in Malaysia); and the transnational nature of the tsunami’s destruction [33]. It is these
trans-national elements that give us insights into the Batek’s problematic confrontation with
globalization. As I have already described in earlier sections of this paper, the Batek’s encounters with
the processes of contemporary globalization have frequently been violent and traumatic. The Batek’s
interpretation of the Tsunami, as being Gobar’s punishment for an act that involved throwing the most
dangerous substance, menstrual blood, directly into the ocean (a place which transcends all national
boundaries) combines multiple global elements (Malaysia, Indonesia, the Middle East, immigrant
labor, a transnational catastrophe) and translates them through local cosmology. Riboli comments the
“Batek could not explain who was supposed to be the real target of Gobar’s punishment. It had
certainly not been directed at the Batek, or the rest of Malaysian population. It had perhaps been
directed at the girl, her family and social group, as well as her vicious employer somewhere in Dubai
or Saudi Arabia” ([33], p. 17). This uncertainty reflects the uncontrollable aspects of Gobar’s rage and
stupidity but also the unfathomable and destructive aspects of the Batek’s experience of globalization.
The Batek’s environment has been radically transformed in a remarkably short period since logging
began in the early 1970s. Forests have become logged-over then converted into palm-oil estates and
landscapes have been opened up via the infrastructure developments of roads, railways and
communications and media technologies to global flows of migrant workers, poachers, tourists, media
Religions 2013, 4 262
imagery and objects. The Batek’s experience of these rapid and often violent transformations has been
particularly traumatic. Their fears are by no means irrational; they make sense and are well-placed.
The Batek have witnessed the ripping apart of their environment, the continual stripping of their
forested homelands and voracious extraction of resources at unprecedented rates. Landscape changes
coupled with the Batek’s heightened anxiety to the earth overheating has meant the coolness of the
forest—which the Batek associate with well-being and health—is held in opposition to the insufferable
heat of tarmacked roads, villages and palm-oil plantations. As landscapes have been transformed and
the Batek have been pushed aside they have become acutely aware of their fragile legal position and
lack of land rights. They have been given virtually no monetary compensation for any resources found
within their customary territories 15 and have been pressured into settling only later to be resettled
again. In resettlement villages, they have been subjected to aggressive proselytism. Excluded from
political processes, they are forced to live in a world governed by people they have not elected and
who they do not trust. While valuable resources like timber and mineral wealth have been extracted,
the remaining areas of forested lands have been invaded by heavily-armed international poachers and
noisy intrusive tourists. Globalization has also meant an influx of new objects, technologies and
images into the Batek’s world including an array of global images depicting an extremely violent,
dangerous and unstable world. The Batek have reacted to their real and virtual exposure to global
violence and the violence of globalization by increasingly expressing their anxieties through ‘tropes of
fear’. These tropes are primarily used to describe the radical transformations of their immediate
environment and to give voice to their topophobia of certain places, which are now actively avoided
due to the activities of dangerous outsiders. There has also been a growing fear of the forest in general
as it becomes increasingly dangerous due to the activities of poachers deep within the Taman Negara
national park. Despite the violence of the transformations the Batek face—to which their tropes of fear
bear eloquent witness—their religious cosmology has shown a remarkable robustness and an
impressive ability to incorporate whatever global flows come its way.
The Batek articulate landscape change through ‘tropes of fear’ and incorporate what are at first
analysis seemingly unrelated global flows and changes into their lawac taboo system. These ‘tropes of
fear’ and the lawac system are fluid figurative devices connected to the shifting multi-vocal symbol of
Gobar, which uncannily brings together disparate global phenomena. While in the past, the multi-
vocal symbol of Gobar signified the violence of the slave-raiding state, he now can correlate with the
devastating power of globalization, a transformed potential of meaning which the tsunami story
dramatically illustrates. In Riboli’s analysis of the story, she states that “the abuse and violence were
so extreme that the consequences enacted by other-than-human-persons somehow mirrored the violent
acts perpetrated by humans” ([33], p. 17). There is certainly a ‘mirroring’ or symbolic ‘doubling’
occurring in the Batek’s magico-realist interpretations of catastrophes like the tsunami. However, it
seems that rather than these interpretations being a mirror of human violence, they could best be
understood as horrific kaleidoscopic refractions where multiple forms of violence—human,
15
Kirk and Karen Endicott reported the Batek were given about RM3,000 (at the time equivalent to about US$1,000) for
some Durian trees that were cut down when a plantation was built on the upper Aring [12]. The Batek are normally
given no economic compensation for their resources when land is logged and converted to plantations or mines.
Religions 2013, 4 263
environmental and supernatural—collide, reflect and magnify each other in grotesque ways. Rather
than pinning down the signification of their symbolism to one particular meaning perhaps they should
be seen as texts-in-motion, a ‘play of tropes’ working at multiple levels, but which must be understood
from the Batek’s perspective as front-line witnesses to the environmental destruction that has unfolded
concomitantly with a dramatic increase in the often frightening flows of globalization.
Globalization encompasses a wide variety of seemingly disparate phenomena and processes
including technological change, large movements of people and rapid flows of capital and media. New
social meanings emerge as these phenomena dynamically interact with each other and with the
mechanisms of development and nation-building. The tropes and symbols the Batek use to describe
their experiences of the changes wrought by globalization are more than what Manfred Steger has
termed the ‘discursive dimension’ of globalization; the ‘ideologically charged narratives’ with which
people frame the ways globalization is discussed [41]. For while Batek ‘tropes of fear’ and topophobia
are interesting examples of the ‘plethora of stories that define, describe, and analyze” globalization [41],
they also demonstrate the Batek’s acute awareness and fears of transnational flows. In this way, they
offer compelling insights into both phenomenological and socio-political aspects of globalization,
particularly of how disenfranchised marginalized groups experience global power.
Acknowledgements
Many people and organizations have contributed to the research for this article and in offering
useful advice during the writing of this article. Most importantly I must thank my Batek friends and
acquaintances from Pahang and Kelantan who have allowed me to stay in their communities for long
periods since my research began in 2007. I must also thank the other Orang Asli communities I have
had the opportunity to visit since beginning my research including the Mendriq, Jahai, Jah Hut,
Temiar, Semai, Mah Meri and Semelai. Many individuals have kindly offered help with my research
and I am extremely grateful for all the help I have been given.
Research from 2012–2013 have been supported by a generous dissertation fieldwork grant from the
Wenner-Gren foundation in New York. My research has been made possible by the Economic
Planning Unit of the Prime Minister’s Department, the governments of Pahang, Kelantan and Perak
and JAKOA granting me permission to carry out research. This permission would not have been
possible without the help of Juli Edo from the University of Malaya who has acted as my local
counterpart during my research periods. I must also thank Kamal Solhaimi from the University of
Malaya for all the time and advice he has given me throughout my research. I would equally like to
thank all the staff of the department of anthropology and sociology at the University of Malaya for
their help.
I also wish to thank Lionel Obadia from l’Université Lumière Lyon 2 who has been my research
supervisor since beginning my research with the Orang Asli. Furthermore, I would especially like to
thank all the academics working in the field of Orang Asli studies who have offered me invaluable
assistance and advice throughout my studies. Special thanks must go to Diana Riboli from Panteion
University in Athens, Kirk Endicott from Dartmouth College, Robert Dentan from the University at
Buffalo, New York, Geoffrey Benjamin from Nanyang Technological University Singapore, Alberto
Gomes from La Trobe University, Melbourne, Hood Salleh from the National University of Malaysia,
Religions 2013, 4 264
Lye Tuck Po from the Universiti Sains Malaysia and Colin Nicholas from the Centre for Orang Asli
Concerns in Kuala Lumpur.
Finally I would like to thank Adam Eppendahl, Wildred Lamb and my brother Richard Tacey who
have read through many previous drafts of this paper and offered valuable criticisms, suggestions
and feedback.
References
1. Geoffrey Benjamin. “On Being Tribal in the Malay World”. In Tribal Communities in the Malay
World. Edited by Geoffrey Benjamin, Cynthia Chou. Singapore: The International Institute for
Asian Studies, 2002, 7–76.
2. Colin Nicholas. “Organizing Orang Asli Identity.” In Tribal Communities in the Malay World.
Edited by Geoffrey Benjamin and Cynthia Chou. Singapore: The International Institute for Asian
Studies, 2002, 121.
3. JAKOA report. Pecahan Penduduk Orang Asli Mengikut Kumpulan Kaum Dan Etnik Bagi Tahun
2010. Kuala Lumpur: JAKOA, 2010.
4. Prema Letha Nair, and Norhayati Jantan. International Migration in Malaysia. Report for Expert
Group Meeting on ESCAP Regional Census Programme, 27–28 November 2006, Kuala Lumpur:
Department of Statistics, 2006.
5. Kirk Endicott. Batek Negrito Religion: The Worldview and Rituals of a Hunting and Gathering
People of Peninsular Malaysia. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1979, 68–82, 163–169.
6. Lye Tuck-Po. Changing Pathways: Forest degradation and the Batek of Pahang, Malaysia.
Lanham: Lexington Books, 2004.
7. Arjun Appadurai. Modernity at Large: Cultural Dimensions of Globalization. Minneapolis:
University of Minnesota Press, 1996.
8. WWF global website, 2013. Available online: http://wwf.panda.org/what_we_do/footprint/
agriculture/palm_oil (accessed on 1 March 2013)
9. Lye Tuck Po. “The Road to Equality? Landscape transformation and the Batek of Pahang,
Malaysia.” In Property and Equality Volume 2: Encapsulation, Commercialisation,
Discrimination. Edited by Thomas Widlok and Wolde Gossa Tadesse. New York & Oxford:
Berghahn Books, 2005, 90–103.
10. Lye Tuck Po. “Forest, Bateks, and Degradation: Environmental Representations in a Changing
World”. Southeast Asian Studies 38 (2000): 165–84.
11. Anna Tsing. Friction: An Ethnography of Global Connections. Princeton: Princeton University
Press, 2005, xi–xiv.
12. Kirk Endicott, and Karen Endicott. The Headman was a Woman: The Gender Egalitarian Batek
of Malaysia. Long Grove: Waveland Press, 2008.
13. Kirk Endicott. “Batek History, Inter-ethnic relations, and sub-group dynamics.” In Indigenous
Peoples and the State: Politics, Land, and Ethnicity in the Malayan Peninsula and Borneo. Edited
by Robert L. Winzeler. New Haven: Yale University Southeast Asia Studies, 1997, 30–50.
14. Kirk Endicott, Lye Tuck-Po, and Nurul Fatanah Zahari. “Batek playing Batek for tourists at
Peninsular Malaysia's national park.” To be included in Cultural Tourism Movements: New
Religions 2013, 4 265
Articulations of Indigenous Identity. Edited by Alexis Celeste Bunten, Jenny Chio and Nelson
Graburn. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2011, book proposal in preparation.
15. Joseph Nevins, and Nancy Lee Peluso. “Introduction: Commoditization in Southeast Asia.” In
Taking Southeast Asia to Market: Commodities, Nature and People in the Neoliberal Age. Edited
by Joseph Nevins and Nancy Lee Peluso. Berkeley: Cornell University Press, 2008, 1–24.
16. Juli Edo. “Claiming Our Ancestors’ Land: An Ethnohistorical Study of Seng-oi Land Rights in
Perak, Malaysia.” Ph.D. Dissertation, Australian National University, Canberra, 1998.
17. Lye Tuck Po. “Before a step too far: Walking with Batek hunter-gatherers in the forests of
Pahang, Malaysia.” In Ways of walking: Ethnography and Practice on Foot. Edited by Tim
Ingold and Jo. L. Vergunst. Aldershot: Ashgate Publishers, 2008, 21–34.
18. Victor Turner. The Forest of Symbols: Aspects of Ndembu Ritual. New York: Cornell University
Press, 1967.
19. James W. Fernandez. “Introduction: Confluents of Enquiry.” In Beyond Metaphor: The Theory of
Tropes in Anthropology. Edited by James W. Fernandez. Stanford: Stanford University Press,
1991, 1–16.
20. Diana Riboli, and Ivan Tacey. “Using Our Senses in the Forest: Multisensoriality as an
Ethnographic Tool.” In Special Issue Man and Society. Kuala Lumpur: University of Malaya
Press, 2013, Forthcoming.
21. Diana Riboli. “We Play in the Black Jungle and in the White Jungle: The Forest as a
representation of the Shamanic Cosmos in the chants of the Semang-Negrito (Peninsula Malaysia)
and the Chepang (Nepal).” Shaman 19 (2011): 93–112.
22. Diana Riboli. “Ghosts and Paracetemol: Batek and Jahai Shamanism in a Changing World.”
Shaman 18 (2010): 99–108.
23. Tim Ingold. “Footprints through the weather-world: Walking, breathing, knowing.” Special Issue:
Making Knowledge. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 16 (2010): S121–39, Issue
Supplement s1.
24. Tim Ingold. The Perception of the Environment. Oxon & New York: Routledge, 2000,
209–88.
25. Phillippe Descola, and Gísli Pálsson, eds. Nature and Society: Anthropological Perspectives. New
York: Routledge, 1996.
26. Eduardo Vivieros de Castro. “Cosmological Deixis and Amerindian Perspectivism.” Journal of
the Royal Anthropological Institute 4 (1998): 469–88.
27. Nurit Bird-David. “Beyond ‘the hunting and gathering mode of subsistence’: Culture-sensitive
observations on the Nayaka and other modern hunter-gatherers.” Man 27 (1992): 19–24.
28. Robert Knox Dentan. “Against the Kingdom of the Beast: Semai Theology, Pre-Aryan religion,
and the Dynamics of Abjection in Malaysia.” In Tribal Communities in the Malay World. Edited
by Geoffrey Benjamin and Cynthia Chou. Singapore: The International Institute for Asian
Studies, 2002, 206–36.
29. Lye Tuck Po. “The Significance of Forest to the Emergence of Batek Knowledge in Pahang,
Malaysia.” Southeast Asian Studies 40 (2002): 3–21.
30. Keith Basso. Wisdom Sits in Places: Landscape and Language among the Western Apache.
Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1996.
Religions 2013, 4 266
31. Kirk Endicott. “The effects of slave raiding on the aborigines of the Malay Peninsula.” In Slavery,
Bondage and Dependency in Southeast Asia. Edited by Anthony Reid. St. Lucia: University of
Queensland Press, 1983, 216–45.
32. Robert Knox Dentan. Overwhelming Terror: Love, Fear, Peace, and Violence among the Semai
of Malaysia. Plymouth: Rowman & Littlefield, 2008.
33. Diana Riboli. “Of Angry Thunders, Smelly Intruders and Human Tigers. Shamanic Representations
of Violence and Conflict in Nonviolent Peoples: the Semang-Negrito (Malaysia).” In Shamanism
and Violence. Power, Repression and Suffering in Indigenous Religious Contexts. Edited by
Diana Riboli and Davide Torri. London: Ashgate Publishers, 2013, forthcoming.
34. Henri Lefebvre. The Production of Space. Translated by Donald Nicholson-Smith. Oxford:
Blackwell, 1991.
35. Yi-Fu Tuan. Space and Place: The Perspective of Experience. Minneapolis & London: University
of Minnesota Press, 1997.
36. Marc Augé. Non-Places: An Introduction to Supermodernity, 2nd ed. London and New York:
Verso, 2009.
37. “Incentives for Marrying and Converting Orang Asli.” The Star Online, 27 June 2006.
http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2006/6/27/nation/14660015&sec=nation (accessed on
28 November 2012).
38. Homi Bhabba. The Location of Culture. London and New York: Routledge, 1994.
39. Alberto Gomes. “Civility, ‘Double Life’ and Interethnic Relations: Orang Asli (Malaysian
Aborigines and Malays in Malaysia.” 2008, unpublished paper.
40. Alberto Gomes. Modernity and Malaysia: Settling the Menraq Forest Nomads. New York:
Routledge, 2007.
41. Manfred B. Steger. Globalization: A Very Short Introduction. New York: Oxford University
Press, 2003.
© 2013 by the author; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article
distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license
(http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/)