Ondel-ondel
Ondel-ondel is a large puppet figure featured in the Betawi folk performance in Jakarta, Indonesia. As an icon of Jakarta, ondel-ondel is often utilized as a pair for livening up festivals or welcoming guests of honor. It is one of a few Indonesian folk performances that has survived modernization and is still being regularly performed.
The musical accompaniment for the ondel-ondel performance varies with regions, occasions, and groups of performances.
History
Archaic and colonial period
Traditionally, the figure of ondel-ondel was known as barongan, a word derived from barong, a protective spirit that can be found across the animistic Austronesian culture long before the arrival of Hinduism. The figure was performed around villages to protect against calamities or ward off wandering evil spirits. It was thought of as a representation of the ancestors protecting the village.The first record of ondel-ondel is probably done by British merchant William Scot, who noted that een reus raksasa was one of the figures included in the procession led by Prince Jayakarta Wijayakrama to celebrate the circumcision of 10-year-old Prince Abdul Mafakhir in the year 1605.
Up until the modern colonial period, ondel-ondel figure was recorded to have a gruesome facial feature such as large fangs and menacing goggle-eyes, similar to the Balinese Barong or Rangda figure. The ondel-ondel was performed on the streets and asked by-passers for opium. When opium was banned in the Dutch East Indies, the ondel-ondel would ask for cigars instead, which is done by placing a cigar in their mouth. During this period, local Betawi people still believed that ondel-ondel could protect a village against diseases such as chickenpox. Ondel-ondel performance was recorded by American writer E.R. Scidmore who visited Batavia in the late 19th century and noted a street performance in the form of dances, which could be the ondel-ondel performance.
The construction of an ondel-ondel must follow a certain ritual. Before the construction of an ondel-ondel, the maker must give offerings in the form of incense, kembang tujuh rupa, and rice porridge. The offering was intended to ensure the process of making ondel-ondel is a smooth one and to allow a benevolent spirit to enter the figure.