| WHALE HUNTING LAMALERA, INDONESIA

Lamalera is a village which is perched on the rocky slopes of an active
volcano on the southern coast of the island of Lembata, in Nusa Tenggara Timur in eastern Indonesia. An anonymous Portuguese document of 1624
describes the islanders as hunting whales with harpoons for their oil, and
implies that they collected and sold ambergris. This report confirms that
whaling took place in the waters of the Suva Sea at least two centuries
before the appearance of American and English whaling ships at the beginning
of the nineteenth century.
The Christian Mission has been in place in the community for a hundred
years, schools have been established and a training workshop teaches
carpentry. It is a fishing village in a region where most communities
support themselves by agriculture. Lamalera has very little productive land,
so the villagers have to fish in order to survive. Their preferred quarry is
sperm whale. Catching sperm whale with hand-thrown harpoons from small open
boats powered by muscle and palm-leaf sail is no easy task, and the hunt is
by no means uneven between man and whale. The tail flukes of a whale can
smash the timbers of the boats and many boats are temporarily disabled by
their prey. Harpooners have been disabled and killed. But the attraction of
the whale is its size. The flesh of the whale (and shark and manta ray) is
cut into strips and sun dried in the village. The meat is then carried to
small markets where it is bartered with mountain villagers. One strip of
dried fish or meat is equivalent to twelve ears of maize, twelve bananas,
twelve pieces of dried sweet potatoes, twelve sections of sugar cane, or
twelve *sirih* peppers plus twelve pinang nuts.
Commercial whaling is banned throughout much of the world, but subsistence
whaling is ermitted by International Whaling Commission regulations in
Alaska, the USA, the USSR and Greenland. Indonesia is not, however, a
signatory to the IWC. Seven whales were caught in Lamalera in 1987.
(Please contact us for more information and tour available to this place;
Leonardus Nyoman, +62 81 236 62110 or e-mail: leonardus.nyoman@gmail.com)
Sources:
http://www.therai.org.uk/film/catalogue_2/79_lamalera.html
Anthropologist: Robert Barnes**
*Fotos : By leonardus*
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