http://thejakartaglobe.com/home/chinese-lion-dance-banned-in-indonesias-aceh/348481

December 21, 2009 
Nurdin Hasan, Anita Rachman & Putri Prameshwari

 
Buddhists pray and release offerings to the sea at Uleelheu beach, Banda Aceh, 
on Sunday as part of commemorations of the upcoming anniversary of the 2004 
Indian Ocean tsunami, which left 170,000 people dead or missing and 500,000 
homeless in the province of 4 million people. (Photo: Tarmizy Harva, Reuters)



Chinese Lion Dance Banned in Indonesia's Aceh

Banda Aceh. Religious officials in Aceh have sparked yet another controversy, 
this time banning the barongsai , or traditional Chinese lion dance, from a 
cultural performance as part of commemorations leading up to the fifth 
anniversary of the 2004 tsunami that devastated the province. 

The move is seen as a slap in the face to hundreds of Acehnese Buddhists of 
ethnic Chinese descent who had wanted to include the dance in their official 
remembrance ceremony on Sunday. 

Yuswar, a member of the Buddhist commemoration committee, said plans to have 
nine barongsai groups from North Sumatra perform around Banda Aceh as part of 
events to mark the Dec. 26 disaster had to be canceled. 

" Barongsai has no religious elements. It's just a cultural show," he said, 
though he added that Chinese-Indonesians believed the dance had the power to 
calm the restless spirits of their relatives who died in the disaster. 

Yuswar said the committee had obtained permits from the city's mayor and police 
chief, but was rejected three times by the Aceh Religious Affairs Office. 

"They argued that conditions in Aceh did not allow [ barongsai performances] 
yet," Yuswar said. "But we weren't told what they meant by 'conditions.'?" 

A Rahman TB, head of the Religious Affairs Office, claimed the permit was not 
granted because the dance had never been performed in the province before and 
the Acehnese needed an introduction first. 

"If the people don't like it, what then?" he said. "It is for the sake of 
interfaith relations, between people of that religion and others. We can't let 
Aceh be ruined, or sow seeds of conflict." 

Barongsai in Indonesia dates back to the 17th century, but the late dictator 
Suharto banned it and other Chinese cultural expressions in the wake of the 
1965 coup attempt, allegedly led by Indonesian communists. 

Former President Abdurrahman Wahid lifted the ban in 2000, allowing the 
barongsai to be performed publicly for the first time in decades. 

Nasaruddin Umar, director general for Islamic religious guidance at the 
Ministry of Religious Affairs, said officials in Aceh should never have banned 
the performance, which he viewed as cultural, and promised to question those 
responsible. 

Aceh has been embarrassed by a series of negative headlines this year, 
including a bylaw that allows stoning as capital punishment for adultery, a 
local ordinance banning tight-fitting clothes for women in one district and 
claims by a local cleric that the province's representative to the Miss 
Indonesia beauty pageant had brought shame upon it.





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