Sekar Baruna Women’s Cooperative: Tulamben, BaliBy Barrie | Permalink |  No 
Comments | October 16th, 2007 | Trackback            
  Before Ni Nengah Dempi joined the Sekar Baruna women’s cooperative in 
Tulamben, Karang Asem, it was a daily struggle to feed her five children. The 
cooperative is located near a number of popular diving destinations some 90 
kilometers east of the provincial capital of Denpasar. Dempi and some 28 other 
women and girls from Tulamben now work carrying diving equipment the 500 meters 
from hotels to scuba spots. They are paid Rp 8,000 per diving session. “Most 
Balinese women are willing to work hard. This is hard work in physical terms, 
but it is alright for us as long as we can feed, clothe and educate our 
children,” Dempi said. 
  Tulamben has been transformed from a dry, unattractive and arid village into 
a diving paradise. Its remarkable underwater life has attracted thousands of 
divers across the world to this once sleepy fishing village. The village has 
been dubbed one of the best diving destinations in Indonesia and even in 
Southeast Asian countries. 
  One of the attractions is the Liberty shipwreck. The Liberty worked as a 
cargo ship during World War II. 
  There are around 1,204 families in Tulamben, which 20 years ago was one of 
Bali’s poorest villages. 
  But now, there are various accommodation options for domestic and overseas 
visitors from luxury villas owned by large-scale operators and rich investors 
to modest guesthouses belonging to local people. Most of the facilities are 
located nearby the beautiful Tulamben beach. 
  “Peak season in Tulamben is usually from July to the end of the year-end 
holidays,” Dempi said. 
  I Nyoman Karyasa, the head of Tulamben, said the growth of the tourism 
industry would be of particular benefit to fishermen who had no fixed income. 
“One day, they net a lot of fish, the next day they come home empty-handed,” 
Karyasa said. 
  The development of tourist-related facilities has brought new hope for the 
community’s poorest families. 
  In l990, the village head set up a small cooperative called Sekar Baruna. 
“The cooperative was set up for the benefit of uneducated and poor women,” 
Karyasa said. 
  One function of the cooperative is to arrange work for the women as porters. 
They generally work from 8 a.m-5 p.m. 
  At the end of the day, a cooperative official collects all the money 
together, setting aside 20 percent of it as savings and 5 percent for the 
village association. The rest is divided evenly among the cooperative’s 29 
members. 
  “We make Rp 15,000-50,000 a day, which is enough for us,” Dempi said. What is 
more important is that they (the women) no longer have to deal with loan 
sharks. 
  “We can borrow money from the cooperative with a very low interest rate 
because we are members. In the past, we had to borrow money from cold-blooded 
people who demanded we pay almost 100 percent interest,” she said. 
  Karyasa said villagers could borrow money to start up a small-scale business, 
such as a home-based laundry or shop. 
  He said Tulamben must be preserved as a diving and tourist destination by 
keeping its environment healthy. “We have established rules to prevent locals 
and visitors from harming underwater and coastal areas,” he said. 
  Fishermen are not allowed to use poisonous or harmful fishing devices when 
working off the Tulamben coast. 
  Every hotel, restaurant and villa is required to pay a certain amount of 
money every month to support village improvement programs such as cleanup days. 
  “The tourism industry has to directly benefit local people not just big 
investors,” Karyasa said. 
  The establishment of Sekar Baruna cooperative is really a clever way of 
helping the poor help themselves. 
  Wasti Atmodjo

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