BY SCOTT BRODY (THE JAKARTA GLOBE)
Takengon, TAG – In the final two days of the Gayo horse races
commemorating the 436th birthday of the city of Takengon in Central Aceh last
month, glory and tradition were, at least in theory, outpacing money.
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The Gayo horse races are a biannual tradition in Central Aceh - LINTASGAYO.COM PHOTO |
As the jockeys wrangled
their horses into the starting gate for a semifinal heat, Masrul, a 54-year-old
coffee farmer clad in oversized Ray-Bans and a red felt beret, cheered for a
chestnut filly named Isabel. Her jockey was a barefoot teenager riding
bareback.
A field of 315 racehorses
divided into 10 classes based on age and size had been competing during the
week-long competition from Feb. 18 to 24.
A flamboyant racetrack
regular, Masrul has been attending traditional Gayo horse races since he was in
elementary school.
“I’m proud to be here,” he
said. “These races are a very important part of Gayo culture.”
Having traditions,
language and a cultural identity distinct from the Acehnese, the Gayo people
live in the Gayo highlands, spanning the Bener Meriah, Central Aceh and Gayo
Lues districts of Aceh province.
Held biannually — once
during the third week of February for Takengon’s birthday and again in August
to celebrate Indonesian independence — the horse races are an immensely popular
local tradition that are now drawing spectators from beyond the northern
Sumatran mountains.
Khalisuddin, secretary of
the organizing committee for this February’s races, estimates 30,000 people
from Aceh, other provinces in Indonesia and foreign countries attended the last
two days of the competition.
“All the hotels in
Takengon were full,” he said.
Sitting on a plateau
encircled by mountain ridges, the Haji Muhammad Hasan Gayo Race Grounds
resembled a county fair, complete with children’s rides, a ring toss and fried
meat on sticks. Vendors were hawking snake fruit, T-shirts, cutlery and miracle
teeth whitener, as families ate picnic lunches beneath tarps strung up on the
racetrack railing. For many, a day at the races is as much about buying,
selling and playing as it is about watching the horses.
“There’s no doubt the
races are very good for the economy of Takengon,” Khalisuddin said.
They also draw notoriety.
Seated on a tented platform overlooking the track, like a king and his retinue
at a joust, were the Central Aceh district head, the minister for administrative
reform and a slate of other honored guests.
The announcer called out
the names of the three horses in the semifinal, and Masrul hollered again for
Isabel. Like the majority of the field, she was imported from Down Under, an
Australian-Gayo or “Astaga.” Local Gayo horses are only the size of ponies.
The white flag came down,
and the horses bolted from the gate, their jockeys whipping furiously. The dust
hadn’t cleared before whooping men and boys spilled over the infield railing
onto the track.
Isabel got out to an early
lead and refused to relinquish it. She blew past the post, and the jockey threw
his whip into the crowd. Masrul smiled. He turned to a fellow spectator who
discreetly passed him a Rp 100,000 ($10) note via a handshake. Several other
people in the gallery were also shaking hands.
Aceh is governed by
Shariah law, and a prominent sign outside the race grounds cites gambling as a
violation punishable by lashing. According to Win Nur, a Gayonese businessman
who also watched the races as a young boy, betting has long been a part of the
Gayo horse racing tradition.
“It’s just a part of the
culture,” he said.
On the track, the barefoot
teenage jockey led Isabel to the honored guest platform. The mayor’s wife
stepped down to shake his hand and gave him an envelope containing a small
honorarium. The cash prize for a champion is slight, only around Rp 5 million.
What matters is the big trophy.
“These races are about
prestige,” Win said.
Takengon sprawls out from
the western shore of Lake Laut Tawar, Aceh’s largest freshwater body.
Outside of town, the
landscape yields verdant paddy terraces and mountainsides blanketed by dark
green Arabica coffee trees.
Regarded by some experts
as Indonesia’s finest coffee, Gayo Arabica has become a favorite in the global
specialty market for its distinct taste and fine aroma. It is the economic
lifeblood of the Gayo highlands. According to the Central Aceh Plantations and
Forestry Office, around 90 percent of people in the district depend on the coffee
trade to put food on their tables.
Historically, horses have
also been integral to the local Gayo economy.
“Whether for hauling
things or for traveling to neighboring villages, horses have always been an
important part of life for the Gayo people,” Khalisuddin said.
Though horse racing is a
Gayo tradition, organized races in Takengon were first held by the Dutch
colonial administration in 1912 to celebrate the birthday of Queen Wilhelmina.
The roots of horse racing in the region prior to that, however, are unclear.
On the bank of Lake Laut
Tawar opposite Takengon sits Bintang, a fishing village where late Gayo
historian A.R. Hakim Aman Pinan believes villagers held horse races as part of
annual rice harvest celebrations. The winners were esteemed and enjoyed elevated
status in the community.
Another version of history
holds that prior to the Dutch takeover there were no organized races, but
rather young men from the villages surrounding the lake would capture wild
ponies and compete in spontaneous races with one other — earning regional pride
for their villages with each victory.
Starting in 1956, the
Central Aceh government took over the races and fixed the date to coincide with
Indonesian independence.
In recent years, the
Astaga horses have been brought in and corporate sponsors obtained. Seven years
ago the races were moved outside the city to the larger Haji Muhammad Hasan
Gayo Race Grounds, allowing for greater attendance and economic activity.
In the finals, Isabel and
her barefoot jockey raced against four other fillies. Again she took the lead,
and again she didn’t give it up. As the jockey lifted the trophy, he smiled,
glowing with pride. Masrul too shared in the prestige as he left the grounds
after another year at the races.[]
Source link:
Off to the Races in Aceh’s Gayo
Reviewed by theacehglobe
on
March 06, 2013
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