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LIFE IN THE LONGHOUSE

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Title: TeCHNo CYBER CAF Author: tisna tajudin Last modified by: Monorail User Created Date: 4/27/2000 7:45:42 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: LIFE IN THE LONGHOUSE


1
LIFE IN THE LONGHOUSE
  • Dedicated to-International Coffee Hour Program
  • Presented by-
  • Tisna Tajudin

2
INTRODUCTION
  • Malaysia is divided into peninsular Malaysia and
    Sabah and Sarawak
  • Sabah and Sarawak are located in Borneo Island
  • Population of native people in Malaysia are
    concentrated on Borneo
  • Lifestyle of the native people differ than
    Malaysian in the peninsular
  • This presentation focus on longhouse a unique way
    of living by the native people

3
LOCATION
4
LONGHOUSE
  • Most are situated off the Skrang, Lemanak, Batang
    Ai and Rejang River areas
  • A typical longhouse is a long, one-story
    dwelling, covered by single roof usually woven of
    fronds from the ubiquitous sago palm.
  • Longhouse can stretch as long as a city block and
    have five hundred people living in it, or it can
    house a community as small as a few dozen.

5
KUDAT LONGHOUSE
  • Kudat longhouse

6
BIDAYUH LONGHOUSE
  • Bidayuh longhouse

7
BIDAYUH LONGHOUSE-SKULL HOUSE
  • Bidayuh longhouse-skull house

8
IBAN LONGHOUSE
9
IBAN LONGHOUSE
  • Interior of Iban Longhouse

10
IBAN LONGHOUSE
  • One of the family of Iban Longhouse

11
ORANG ULU LONGHOUSE
12
MELANAU TALLHOUSE
13
PEOPLE
  • There are 27 distinct indigenous ethnic groups
    that speak 45 different languages and dialects
  • The Iban are the most famous of Sarawak's ethnic
    groups. They were once the legendary warriors of
    Borneo the most feared of the headhunting
    tribes.

14
PEOPLE
  • There are 26 other tribes. There are the Bidayuh,
    formerly known as the "Land Dayaks", who so
    enchanted the first White Rajah with their
    gentleness.
  • Then there are the Melanau fisherman of the
    littorals of Central Sarawak, and the multitude
    of upriver tribes who collectively form the Orang
    Ulu (people of the headwaters) the nomadic
    Penan, guardians of the rainforest

15
CULTURAL LIFESTYLE
  • Families live in large rooms located off a main
    hall, a kind of social center that stretches the
    length of the entire building.
  • During the day, residents are out working in the
    fields or forest, the main hall is mostly empty,
    a peaceful, somnolent space of cool refuge.
  • Young children playing quietly on intricately
    woven matts, always watched by an older member of
    the community.
  • In an environment where respect for each other's
    space is essential to a healthy community, even
    the family dogs seem to honor each other's small
    territory.

16
CULTURAL LIFESTYLE
  • At night, just after supper, the main hall livens
    up.
  • Families come out to socialize and  guests gather
    in front of the chief's room.
  • The chief's home is almost always in the dead
    center of the building, and is often
    distinguished by a fetish of antique human skulls
    - a reminder of the days when the Iban and other
    tribes in Borneo practiced headhunting. The
    practice faded quickly following the arrival of
    colonialism and the White Rajas of Sarawak, who
    actively discouraged it. 
  • When there are visitors, the Iban will peform
    traditional dances and music, drink spicy rice
    wine (which can go to your head with remarkable
    speed) then close off the evening by offering
    some handmade crafts for sale.
  • There is no obligation to buy anything, but the
    goods made in the longhouse are almost always
    better and cheaper than similiar items you'll see
    in the cities. 

17
CULTURAL LIFESTYLE
  • People here live communally
  • Divorce, for example, is a simple affair. When it
    happens (which is almost never), there are no
    prolonged litigious procedures, no
    child-wrenching custody battles. The unhappy
    party simply informs the chief, gathers up his or
    her few possessions - a bundle of clothes, some
    floor matts -  then heads off to another room or
    back to their own family's longhouse. Children
    stay with the mother, always. 

18
WONDERS OF BORNEO ISLAND
  • Orang utan-pongo pygmaeus better known to the
    world as orang utan.
  • Orang utan means "man of the forest" in Malay and
    these fascinating and very human ginger apes gave
    rise to the legend of the Wild Man of Borneo.

19
WONDERS OF BORNEO ISLAND
  • The Rafflesia - World's Largest Flower
  • The Rafflesia is the largest flower in the world,
    measuring up to 1 metre (3.5 ft) in diameter when
    in bloom.
  • Can be found in forests on the Main Range in
    Peninsular Malaysia as well as in Sabah and
    Sarawak.
  • A parasite by nature, the plant lives by
    infecting the roots.
  • The flower takes many months to develop, and the
    open bloom which lasts only for a few days
    looks like deat meat, crawling with maggots when
    it starts to rot.

20
WONDERS OF BORNEO ISLAND
  • Niah Cave-prehistoric inhabitants evidence
  • Humans inhabited Niah Great Cave 40,000 years
    ago. Today, local Penan tribesmen venture into
    the cave to collect edible birds nests and the
    guano dropped by the myriad swiftlets and bats
    that live there.
  • Evidence of prehistoric inhabitants in the
    Painted Cave where human figures drawn on the
    wall watch over grave sites where the dead were
    laid in boat-shaped coffins.

21
THANK YOU _at_ TERIMA KASIH
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