unique islands
Travel in Indonesia: fascinating Tana Toraja culture of Central Sulawesi
by ph on May.20, 2009, under Asia, Destinations, Indonesia, Sulawesi, Vernacular Architecture, art & architecture, island hopping, man-made wonders, remote regions, unique islands




In the remote parts of Central Sulawesi of the Indonesian archipelago, an-odd shaped island resembling a hunched-over letter “k”, under the Dutch known as Celebes, there can be found a saddle-roof style house type built on piles. Depicted on Dong Son drums as far back as 500BC-AD100, its origin suggests being of mainland Southeast Asia. The region is known as Tana Toraja, or Torajaland, and the characteristic house style is referred to as “tongkonan” – a traditional ancestral house of the Toraja people that inhabit these mist-shrouded valleys, averaging some 3000 feet above seas level. Visiting Sulawesi’s Toraja region is easily done from Bali and the experience is always a highlight of travel in Indonesia.

Of tongue-and-groove construction, using no nails, bolts or other metal fasteners, the traditional houses are built on solid tree trunk piles high above the ground to safeguard against rodents, snakes and dampness of the tropical ground. It is the massive roofs, covered in a layered bamboo, today often by corrugated iron, that immediately catch one’s attention. The research shows that these proto-Malay peoples have originated from Cambodia. Their own lore and legends claim that their ancestors crossed the high seas to the north, suggesting they embarked off the coast of Southeast Asia. Their stories tell of storm having diverted their boats to shores of Sulawesi, thrown ashore the people used them as roofs.
Fact is the characteristic house type Toraja build over centuries developed only in the interior mountains that surround fertile plateaus and valleys where they live. Due to the remoteness of the region, even today some seven hours by road to the main urban port of southern Sulawesi, the mountains have protected lifestyle and customs, which have changed relatively little to this day.
A legend has it that the roof shape as well as the general shape of the house is patterned on the ships on which they sailed from their ancestral homeland. On another hand, closer look at their culture reveals worship of buffalo, which is a symbol of fertility, strength, and a protection from evil, and its horns decorate the gables of Torajan houses, hence the other theory has it the roof shape is that of a buffalo’s horn.
Whatever the shape’s origin the houses truly look as if they could sail, their sweeping roofs, especially when constructed closely together, the front of the house facing north, the direction of the ancestral homeland, look like ships moored at port. Opposite the houses are rows of granaries, too constructed in the same shape and on piles, often lavishly decorated. The uniform site plan of villages, compact settlements of freestanding structures set in a row, are precisely laid out as if based on well-thought out principles of a subdivision design.
The house type is always elevated off the ground but in some villages the front of yet longer and broader roof is supported by a massive pillar ever more so giving the house the appearance of a ship.
The interior of the house is quite simple, consisting usually of three rooms - a living area, kitchen and sleeping quarters. As there is no chimney soot of the large fire pit cooking area covers the beams and rafters.



Every house, typically on the front facade but often also on the side of the house, adorn horns of buffalos. The family status is usually shown by the number of horns mounting the house, the more there are the higher the merit and status for the family, attesting to many sacrifices, feasts and ceremonies performed by the family to which many guests have been invited.
In the ancient times, the old, “adat” ceremonies and animistic rites, practiced by the Toraja until the arrival of Christian missionaries, not only buffaloes were sacrificed but people as well. As in many other cultures of the Indonesian archipelago, from Sumatra to Timor, headhunting was part of animistic practices. Its existence shows relationship to headhunting practices of ancient cultures of South and Southeast Asia, further substantiating the roots of origin of the island cultures, whether of Indonesian or Philippine archipelago. Although buffalo and pig sacrifices have replaced human heads and the animistic religion has for the most part been diluted, reasonably strong adat practice still continues to this day and is practiced by about 25% of the Toraja people. Much of the traditional animistic practices take place during the funeral ceremonies called the Feast of the Dead. The practice is sustained by the Toraja inherent belief in afterlife, called Puya, or the Land of the Dead, where everyone is believed will live under the same conditions as he or she did on earth, a belief that spurs every Torajan to attain as much wealth as possible during his lifetime. Another belief of note is that the Toraja people believe the souls of animals will follow their masters into heaven, thus the buffalo sacrifice is in a way not perceived as taking of life as such but rather as an act which is only a temporary state of parting between man and beast and the two will reunite once again at death.

All Toraja houses are richly decorated in a maze of geometric ornamentation in ochre-red, black and white as well as a profusion of symbolic carvings representing aspects of ancestral worship, known as Aluk Todolo. Traditionally people were only allowed to depict motives characteristic of their social status or cast, whether that of the Tokapua or the noblemen, the Tomokaka or a middle-class tradesmen, or the Tobuda, the commoner, usually a farmer. Today people add designs expressive of their lifestyle as well as profession.









Most Toraja people are Christians, both Catholics and Protestants, and the church spires dot the horizon of the villages. Only about ten percent are Muslim, and in fact Muslim religion dominates the coastal areas as well as many deep valleys surrounding the Toraja region as such. All in all Toraja continue to practice highly ritualistic religious ceremonies including the rites of fertility, marriage, birth and death.


The Torajans believe that when a person dies, the soul leaves the body but remains restless until the burial ritual has been completed. Often a time much of family’s wealth can be spent on staging the finest, most elaborate funeral they can afford, a strange blending of solemnity and celebration. Today the Toraja may bury their dead in the ground but the traditional burial was by placing the body in a casket that was taken into a small structure shaped like their house before being moved to its final resting place inside a cliff-side grave. The caskets were inserted inside cave-like chambers although often left to protrude on specially constructed balconies high above the valley floor. As over time many caskets fell, the ground below is littered with bones and skulls. On the balconies are displayed “tau-tau”, the wooden effigies of the deceased, typically set in rows as puppets they stand gazing over the countryside.
There is definitely more to Indonesia than Bali and visiting Sulawesi and Torajaland should not be missed. On your next trip to Bali or elsewhere in Indonesia include Sulawesi in your itinerary!
Bicycle Vacations in Italy, Switzerland and France
by TomBel on Feb.20, 2009, under Bicycle Vacations, Europe, France, Italy, Mediterranean, Switzerland, active vacations, cycling, unique islands, unique towns
If you love bicycling and Italy, taking a cycling vacation in Tuscany or Sardinia is a must. Prefer high mountains, how about Switzerland and riding the Alps? If you love France, bicycle around Provence and climb Mount Ventoux, the Giant of Provence!
Whatever your decision you will find that any one of these trips will be a perfect combination of fine riding in company of like-minded people as yourself, all bicycle enthusiasts, that love riding together and enjoy good food and lodging in charming inns. The trips are designed to appeal to riders who prefer an active cycling vacation but perhaps not overly challenging rides, wanting just as much to enjoy the pleasures of Europe as to ride, as well as those who like to challenge themselves and do not shy away from the most demanding routes.
Cycling trips are in groups of 8 - 16 cyclists and range from 4 to 9 days, from Spring to Fall. There is a tour focusing on rides around the Maggiore Lake in Northern Italy with daily rides of about 70 km each. Lodging base is in Stresa, at the 4* Regina Palace Hotel.
In Tuscany tours start from Gaiole in Chianti and go to the Orcia valley, stop in Rocca d’Orcia (4* Castello di Spaltenna hotel), then take a different route back to Gaiole.
Around Sardinia, an easy tour, “Costa Smeralda Charme”, is six days of cycling, a great tour that includes five rides promising you’ll discover the true beauty of Sardinia (4* Delphina Cala di Lepre hotel).
Raid of Swiss Alps tour, a six days raid through Switzerland departing from Stresa, a thrilling route in the Alps and among the Swiss glaciers. Possible routes include the Susten Pass, the Furk Pass and the well-known passes of San Gottardo and Sempione.
And then there is France, and splendid in mid summer of July it is on a marvelous six days tour of rides with a base in one of the most beautiful locations of Provence, Gordes. The rides will take you along romantic back roads teeming in colors of Provence, the ambiance of the lavender in blossom, and include the rewarding climb of Mont Ventoux.
The trips and locations are selected not only for their unique landscape and natural beauty but above all for the memorable character of the cycling routes, each truly one of a kind that can be found only in these parts of Europe.
For tour details visit www.bikeitaliarando.com
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What about Bali?
by TomBel on Feb.10, 2009, under Bali, unique islands
Yes indeed, if a dream tells about an island with all-year-round idyllic climate, dramatic scenery, deep and varied culture, and an oasis of quiet beauty, then Bali, a Hindu island within Muslim Indonesian archipelago, has it all. A place where religion is the source of traditional customs in everyday life, Bali and the Balinese are extremely devout and no day goes by without making offerings to the gods. Made primarily of flowers, these offerings are given to the good spirits in hopes of continued prosperity and to the evil spirits as an appeasement. With a spectacular scenery, vibrant culture, unique arts and ceremonies, a gentle and friendly people, it’s not difficult to understand why some of the foreign artists who arrived in Bali in 1930th stayed on, thoroughly seduced and inspired by the island’s breathtaking physical beauty and cultural complexity, deeply impressed by the warmth and the hospitality of the Balinese, and the amazing breadth of artistic expression that pervaded their daily life (ref.)
It is for all the same reasons why Bali became one of the hottest tourist destinations in the tropics, a must-visit place namely for the discerning traveler in search of distinctive and authentic experience. For those that discovered Bali in the 70s, as late as mid-80s, Bali retains unforgettable images of paradise. But with more and more tourists non-Balinese had started to change Bali and with more money to be made the once romantic island had also become victim to rife civil and human rights abuses of the corrupt Indonesia. There is no shortage of good sources of information about Bali when it comes to images of paradise. Certainly the Balinese dance and the haunting percussion sounds of a Balinese gamelan orchestra can captivate and hypnotize (ref.), easily rendering Bali as “idyllic” from the outside, but the fact is Bali also knows poverty and since 2002 the world has taken notice of Bali also being a breeding ground for Islamic terrorists. For all the ills that have befallen Bali doubly more so it is important to support genuine Balinese and Bali friendly hotels and other businesses only. There are definite and valid reasons to either outright boycott Bali , or with utmost care make sure one can practice ethical tourism by ensuring that the money one spends on vacation in Bali goes to the Balinese and not the people who suppress and use them.
Moai - Mystery of Easter Island
by TomBel on Feb.03, 2009, under Journeys of a Lifetime, Places to See, South Pacific, island hopping, unique islands
Easter Island is perhaps among the most out of the way islands in the world but over 1000 years ago a canoe paddled by people of a distant land arrived there. As the desolate Easter Island suddenly became a landing spot, an amazing civilization grew all alone there in the hundreds of years that followed. For a yet unknown reason, using a volcanic rock, the inhabitants carved gargantuan statues, for which Easter Island became most known. The statues, called moai, are amongst the most amazing ancient monuments ever found. With hundreds of these gigantic statues scattered around, the Easter Island civilization, Rapa Nui, as the people called themselves, however, then suddenly disappeared. From where did they hail and what accounted for their sudden disappearance, who were they originally or where did they go, what happened to them?
Science has studied a lot about the Easter Island mystery and as a result has solved or debunked some of the stranger ideas, but the mystery continues, and questions remain.
One of the strangest theories as to the origins of the Easter Island people stems from the 16th century when a Spanish vessel named San Lesmems disappeared in the vicinity of Tahiti. Strangely enough, when tested Rapa Nui people showed the presence of Basque genes, hence stories describe Basque survivors marrying and breeding with native Polynesians.
At least 288 moai has been documented once stood on gigantic stone platforms named
ahu. Today there are approximately 250 ahu platforms about one half mile apart in a nearly unbroken perimeter line all around the island. Some 600 more moai statues, most in one way or another incomplete, are laying around the island, either still amongst the rocks from which they were cut or on the side of ancient roads that connect quarries with the coast where the completed statues were brought to stand.
Rano Raraku Volcano is the source of almost every one of the moai. The average height of the moai is 14 feet, 6 inches with a weight of 14 tons. Large moai can be as high as 33 feet and weigh an astounding 80 tons. One incomplete moai was 65 feet tall and when complete would have weighed as much as 270 tons. Depending on how big the moai were, it has been determined that as many as 150 people worked together to drag them across the ground over sleds and rollers cut from trees found on the island to bring the various sized statues to their final resting places.
Why the moai were constructed may never be known with certainty but it’s likely their construction may have come from a culture rooted in ancestral worship, similar to other cultures around Polynesia, but which took its own direction when practiced on Easter Island. The roots of the peoples of Polynesia show undeniable connections to shores of South East Asia, even further into the interior of Asia, and thus it is indeed a fascinating quest that one can make if only to seek for himself the mystery of the Easter Island — placing Easter Island on one’s list of places not to miss may then clearly be a must, certainly if one were to tour ever to Chile, as from there to Easter Island it’s a hop – well, a long hop, but one that can be easily arranged. So many places, so little time – start ASAP!
Easter Island info at Wikipedia. UNESCO - Rapa Nui National Park.
Great savings on Caribbean holidays
Cruise Chile, Galapagos, Peru & Ecuador - Cruising the South Pacific Ocean
by TomBel on Feb.01, 2008, under Journeys of a Lifetime, sea & river cruises, unique islands, wildlife watching
This easy-paced South American journey stitches together a number of fascinating strands like those of an elaborate alpaca yarn. Colonial cobbles contrast with high-rise city styles as we visit three capitals, and blend these with some of the most remote beaches and bays in the Pacific. Headlining your holiday is our stay in the Galapagos. Cruising the South Pacific Ocean on Voyage of Discovery.





