SHAMAN, SAIVA AND SUFI
A STUDY OF THE EVOLUTION OF MALAY MAGIC
BY
R. O. WINSTEDT, M.A., D.LITT.(OXON.)
MALAYAN CIVIL SERVICE
CONSTABLE & COMPANY LTD.
LONDON - BOMBAY - SYDNEY
1925
PREFACE
THis book is the outcome of a close study of the language and beliefs of the
Malays during a period of residence in the Malay Peninsula that has now reached
twenty-two years. Its object is to unravel a complex system of magic in the
light of historical and comparative data. By itself this system is a tangle
every thread of which scholars working in Europe are led to term Malay, although
even the native distinguishes this thread as Indian and that as Muslim. Chapters
i.-iv. deal with the Malay's evolution from animist to Muslim; chapters v. and
vi. with his animism; chapters vii. and viii. with his shamanism; chapter ix.
with rites largely infected with Hindu magic; and chapters x. and xi. with Muslim
accretions.
Like all writers on this subject I am indebted to the classical works of Tylor,
Frazer, and Jevons, and particularly to the articles by specialists on the magic
of different races and faith in Hastings' Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics.
Working far away from an adequate library, I have found this Encyclopaedia of
incalculable value.
Chapters iv., vi. and viii. are based almost entirely on manuscripts written
down for me by Malays and checked by my own observation. The chapter on "Magician
and Muslim" is founded on Malay lithographed texts and on a manuscript
magico-religious treatise obtained by Dr. Gimlette in Kelantan and kindly lent
by him to me. The same manuscript and an old Perak court charm-book have been
used for the chapters on "The Malay Charm" and "Magician and
Mystic." Papers on Malay charms, on birth and marriage ceremonies, on the
ritual of the rice-field and the ritual of propitiating the spirits of a district
have appeared from my pen in the Journal of the Federated Malay States Museums,
and should be in the hands of those who wish to study original sources and vernacular
terms. I owe a debt to the authors of many articles printed in the Straits (now
Malayan) Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, to Dr. Gimlette's Malay Poisons
and Charms, to Fasciculi Malayenses by Messrs. Annandale & Robinson, and
above all to that assiduous collector, Mr. W. W. Skeat, the author of Malay
Magic. Not to burden my pages with footnotes I give detailed references and
authorities for each chapter in an appendix.
I would remind Malay readers that every race has its lumber-room of magical
beliefs and practices, and many such survivals are gracious and beautiful and
full of historical interest. It is to be hoped that the rapid influx of modern
ideas will not wash away too many of the landmarks of their complex and ancient
civilisation.
I have to thank Mr. C. O. Blagden, Reader in Malay at the School of Oriental
Studies, London, and Che' Zainal-Abidin bin Ahmad of the Sultan Idris College,
Perak, for reading this work in manuscript; the former has made many useful
suggestions and the latter given me valuable material.
SINGAPORE,1924.
TABLE OF
CONTENTS
PREFACE
1. INTRODUCTION
II. GODS, SPIRITS AND GHOSTS:
(a) Primitive Gods
(b) Siva and the Hindu Gods
(c) Good and Evil Spirits of Dead Mortals
(d) Primitive Spirits, Fairies and Ghosts
(e) Angels and Devils of Islam
(f) Jinn
III. THE MALAY MAGICIAN
IV. THE MALAY CHARM
V. THE SOUL OF THINGS
VI. THE RITUAL OF THE RICE-FIELD
VII. THE SHAMAN'S SÉANCE
VIII. THE SHAMAN'S SACRIFICE
IX. MAGIC AND MAN:
(a) Birth and Infancy
(b) Adolescence
(c) Betrothal and Marriage
(d) Death
(e) Installation Ceremonies
X. MAGICIAN AND MUSLIM
XI. MAGICIAN AND MYSTIC
AUTHORITIES AND REFERENCES
INDEX
I. INTRODUCTION
THIS book deals with the magic
of the Muslim Malays of the Crown Colony of the Straits Settlements, comprising
Singapore, Penang and Malacca; of the Federated Malay States, Perak, Selangor,
Negri Sembilan and Pahang; of the Unfederated Malay States, Johore, Kedah, Kelantan
and Trengganu; and of Patani, a northern Malay State belonging to Siam.
The Malay Peninsula is the most southern extremity of the continent of Asia.
It has the region of Indo-China to the north. South lies the Malay Archipelago.
It stands midway between India and China. Nature has laid it open to many influences,
though students not presented with the evidence of geography, anthropology and
history are apt to speak as if Malay magic were unique and indigenous.
The language belongs to the Malayo-Polynesian or Oceanic or Austronesian family,
which obtains from Formosa to New Zealand and from Madagascar to Easter Island.
To the eastern branch belong the languages of Samoa, Tahiti and Tonga. To the
western branch belong Malay, Malagasy, and languages of the Philippines, Sumatra,
Java, Borneo and Celebes. This latter branch is termed Indonesian, rather unfortunately,
since for anthropologists the word defines a particular physical strain found
in the Bataks of Sumatra, the Dayaks of Borneo and the Torajas of Celebes.
The typical civilised Indonesian peoples, Malays and Javanese, are variants
of a Proto-Malay race with Indian, Arab and other foreign admixtures. In that
Proto-Malay race, whatever else may be its components, there is a Mongoloid
strain.
In the south of the Peninsula, the bullet-headed straight-haired Proto-Malays
are represented by jungle-tribes known generally as Jakun and specifically as
Biduanda in Negri Sembilan, Blanda in Selangor, and Mantra In Malacca. The coastal
tribes are termed Orang Laut, or "Men of the Sea," and form a link
between the Proto-Malays of the Peninsula and those of the Riau Archipelago
and Sumatra, their original home.
Another aboriginal forest-dweller is the wavyhaired long-headed Sakai, supposed
mainly on linguistic grounds to have come down from Indo-China and on anthropological
grounds to be related to the Veddas of Ceylon. A branch of this tribe, the Besisi,
have intermarried freely with the Jakun.
Oldest of all Malaya's inhabitants are the Semang and Pangan of the north, small
dark frizzy-haired Negritos, thought to be related to the Aetas of the Philippines
and the Mineopies of the Andamans.
Already at the beginning of the Christian era Indian religions, the caste system
and government by rajahs had been introduced into Java and into Sumatra, whence
most of the Malays of the Peninsula came, and Indian influence spread in a less
degree throughout the Archipelago even as far as the Philippines. The old Malay
kingdom of Palembang in Sumatra introduced Mahayana Buddhism into Java and had
a vague suzerainty over the Malay Peninsula for several centuries, until in
the thirteenth the modern Siamese gained control in the north and Islam a permanent
hold in the south. A Buddhist inscription from Province Wellesley opposite Penang
(in the southern Indian style of writing found In West Java) dates back to 400
A.D. But in Malaya, as in Java, the religion of Siva retained a footing until
the advent of Islam.
II. GODS, SPIRITS AND GHOSTS
(a) PRIMITIVE GODS
THE Mantra, a Proto-Malay tribe, claim to be descended from Mertang, the first
magician, who was the child of two persons called Drop of Water and Clod of
Earth. In the Moluccas the earth is a female deity, who in the west monsoon
is impregnated by Lord Sun-Heaven. The Torajas in Celebes believed in two supreme
powers, the Man and the Maiden, that is, the sun and the earth. The Dayaks of
Borneo hold that the sun and the earth created the world. The terms, "Father
Sky and Mother Earth," occur in the Malay ritual of the rice-year, at the
opening of mines and of theatrical shows and in the invocations of the Kelantan
shaman. A Kelantan account relates that sun and earth once had human form, sun
the form of a man and earth the form of a woman, whose milk may be traced in
the tin-ore of Malaya and whose blood is now gold. Actors in the north of the
Malay Peninsula say that "the earth spirit, whom actors fear, is the daughter
of Seretang [1] Bogoh, who sits in the sun and guides the winds, and of Sang
Siuh, the mother of the earth, who sits at the navel of the world." Many
religions at once unite and dissociate the fruitful earth and the gloomy underworld.
But as Malay drama came from India, this northern tradition may be a corruption
of Hindu mythology. By some Malay actors Raja Siu, lord of the surface of the
earth, is invoked along with Siva, and the name is perhaps a corruption of Siva.
Anyhow, in time Siva and Sri usurped the place of Father Sky (or Father Water,
as he is sometimes called) and of Mother Earth in the Malay pantheon, and to-day
even the existence of these two primitive gods has been forgotten.
The study of early cults shows that the place of a sky-god tends later to be
taken by gods of the sun, the moon and the stars. So in some ancient layer of
Malay beliefs before the introduction of Saivism, the white spirit of the sun,
the black spirit of the moon, and the yellow spirit of sunset may have been
important, seeing that they have Indonesian names (mambang), have been incorporated
into the Malay's Hindu pantheon, and have survived under Islam as humble genies.
"The fishermen along the west of the Peninsula sacrifice to four great
spirits " (also called mambang) "who go by many names but whose scope
is always the same. One is the spirit of the bays, another
[1. A dialect form of Sultan.]
that of banks or beaches, another that of headlands, and last and fiercest is
the spirit of tideways and currents." Three of these bear primitive names
used by the Proto-Malays. The spirit of the tides is famous. The spirit of the
bays is mentioned as a black genie and the spirit of headlands as a white. Was
there originally a fourth spirit? To the three Proto-Malay names yet another,
not convincingly authentic, is sometimes added. But only three of the four bear
Sanskrit names. And the modern naming of four spirits after the Archangels may
be due to the liking of the Malay Muslim pantheist for that number.
It is uncertain, too, if the primitive Malays, like the people of Madagascar
and Celebes, believed in four gods of the air in charge of the quarters of the
globe. In Bali Indian influence gave these gods Hindu names, and three are still
worshipped there as forms of Siva. One Peninsular charm speaks of "the
four children of Siva who live at the corners of the world." A Perak charm
describes Berangga Kala as the spirit of the West, Sang Begor as the spirit
of the East, Sang Degor as the spirit of the North, and Sang Rangga Gempita
as the spirit of the South. But generally the four corners of the world are
held to be in charge of four Shaikhs, of whom the most often mentioned, 'Abdu'I-Qadir,
is probably the founder of the famous order of Muslim mystics.
A Malay knows of Vayu under the name of Bayu. But when with arms akimbo, loosened
hair, and head-cloth streaming over his shoulder, the sailor whistled to the
Raja of the Wind, he may have been invoking not Vayu but some indigenous spirit
or the Prophet Solomon, to whom Allah gave dominion over the breezes of heaven.
In the Malay pantheon there is a mysterious black Awang, addressed by actors
as king of the earth, who "walks along the veins of the earth and sleeps
at its gate." Apparently, therefore, he is identified with Siva, and this
identification, if correct, suggests a high place for this forgotten figure
of some early cult. But in a Proto-Malay charm to propitiate the aforesaid spirits
of the sea, Warrior Awang figures as their servant, who climbs the mast of a
ship in distress, a young man with "hairy chest, red eyes, black skin and
frizzy hair." A Kelantan charm, also, depicts him as a haunter of forest
undergrowth, "a span in height, with bald temples, frizzy hair, red eyes,
white teeth, broad chest, and feet and hands disfigured with skin disease."
This is a good picture of a Negrito, member of the oldest race in Malaysia,
but it may be a posthumous description as applied to this god or godling of
a primitive cult, who rides the storm and can cause ague and disease.
(b) SIVA AND THE HINDU GODS
A white genie, "jewel of the world," lives in the sun and guards the
gates of the sky. He has a brother, with seven heads, king of all the jinn.
This white genie is entitled Maharaja Dewa, a Malay corruption of Mahadeva,
the blue-throated Siva. The distinction between this white genie and his black
brother, who lives in the moon, is sometimes obliterated, as in the invocation
used when opening the stage for a ma'yong play:--"Peace be upon Mother
Earth and Father Sky! ... Peace be upon thee, Black Awang, king of the earth!
... Peace be upon the blessed saints at the four corners of the world! ... Peace
be upon my grandsire, Batara Guru, the first of teachers, who became incarnate
when the body was first created, teacher who livest as a hermit in the moon,
teacher who rulest in the circle of the sun, teacher of mine whose coat is of
green beads, teacher of mine whose blood is white, who hast but one bone, the
hair of whose body is upside down, whose muscles are stiff, who hast a black
throat, a fluent tongue and salt in thy spittle." Incidentally it is interesting
to find the Malay still paying homage to Siva as Nataraja, lord of dancers and
king of actors, though to-day he is quite unaware of this name and róle
of the Hindu god whose theatre is the world and who himself is actor and audience.
In another Malay invocation the Black Genie too is painted as "having but
one bone, the hair of whose body is upside down, who can assume a thousand shapes."
Though he has "one foot on the heart of the earth," yet this Black
Genie also "hangs at the gate of the sky."
Batara Guru or Divine Teacher is the Malay name for Siva. And it is not surprising
to find that on accepting the Hindu deities into their spirit-world Malays paid
great homage to Siva under his sinister aspect of Kala the destroyer of life.
Anyhow, here are the white spirit of the sun and the black spirit of the moon
identified with manifestations of Siva. The spirit of the tides is often associated
with the spirits of the sun and moon, and, again, the Malay expressly identifies
him with Siva and makes Kala the dread god of the sea.
Furthermore, in Malay mythology there is a Spectre Huntsman, whom magicians
identify with Siva. This Spectre Huntsman is even known by the various Malay
appellations of the Divine Teacher such as "Raja of land-folk," "Raja
of Ghosts," and "Gaffer Long Claws." Now Siva, of course, was
the Rudra of Vedic times. And it has been pointed out how in Rudra are found
the same characteristics that distinguish the German Wodan (or Odin), namely
those of a storm-god followed by hosts of spirits, a leader of lost souls, identified
both in Malay and German legend with the Spectre Huntsman. The association by
Malays of the Spectre Huntsman with Siva clearly corroborates the relationship
between Rudra and Wodan and lends colour to the theory of an Indo-Germanic storm-god,
the common source of the Indian and Teutonic myths.
The identification of Siva with Gaffer Long Claws finds a parallel among the
Bhils, Kols and Gonds of India, who also confound him with a chthonic tiger-god.
And like those tribesmen the Malay appears sometimes to confuse Siva with Arjuna,
calling that demigod the earth spirit and king of the sea.
Last phase of all, Siva becomes father and king of the jinn imported with Islam.
Even his white bull Nandi is yoked to the service of the new religion. According
to early Hindu mythology Brahma, or according to later belief Vishnu, took the
form of a boar and raised the earth out of the waters. Other stories current
in India make an elephant or a bull the support of the earth. Muslim cosmogony
definitely places the earth on a bull with forty horns having seven thousand
branches, a beast whose body stretches from east to west. So the Kelantan magician
invokes "the father and chief of all jinn practising austerity in the stall
of the black bull who supports and fans and shakes the world." The idea
that the king of the jinn is the father of seven children may be connected with
the Muslim notion of seven earths.
The wife of Siva is known to Malays as Mahadewi "the great goddess,"
as Kumari "the Damsel," and above all, as Sri, goddess of rice-fields.
As Sri she may be said to have taken the place of "Mother Earth,"
just as her divine spouse represented "Father Sky." As Kumari she
is supposed in the north of the Peninsula to have been made by Gaffer Mahsiku
out of a bit of eaglewood. (In Patani a name for the earth spirit is Siriku.)
The goddess married her creator. But the legend adds that she had one daughter
by the god (deva) of the moon and one by the god of the sun, a remarkable preservation
of the Malay myth that the Divine Teacher under different manifestations lived
in both those luminaries. The same tradition adds that Kumari is invoked against
lock-jaw and dumbness, because she made her eldest daughter live on a hill as
an ascetic with her mouth wide open till it grew into a cave which Hanuman entered!
The Malay magician often vaunts that "the sword of Vishnu is before his
face" to protect him. And with Siva, Brahma, Kala and Sri, this god presides
over the five divisions of the old-world diviner's day. Brahma is known as Berma
Sakti, but hardly enters into Malay magic. In Kelantan, Krishna is said to be
entreated to cure snake-bites and the stings of scorpions and centipedes. Ganesha,
under the name of Gana, is little more than a village godling.
The Hindu demons and demigods that have found a place in the magic of the Malays
may be conveniently inserted here. Of most of them the magician has only a literary
knowledge. The Asuras exalted demons that war not against men but gods, are
represented by Rahu, who causes eclipses of the sun and moon, and to the Malay
mind is a huge dragon. Danu, a demon relation of his in Hindu mythology, is
the serpent who inhabits the rainbow. In the north, where plays founded on the
Ramayana are popular, Sri Rama, the hero of that epic, is a demigod invoked
especially in charms connected, with the hunting of elephants, and Hanuman,
the monkey-god, is an evil spirit with the face of a horse and the body of a
man. There, too, the great Rishis or sages are invoked, and the magician takes
shelter behind the name of Narada and the name of Samba, his derider.
Bhuta and Raksasa are often mentioned as demons even by Malay peasants. But
to-day, at any rate, acquaintance with them is due mainly to popular romances
that have come from the Deccan. The Malay will turn, for instance, to the story
of Marakarma and read of a Raksasa who lights a fire as big as a burning town,
pours rice on a mat a hundred yards wide, and eats it along with spiders, centipedes,
lizards, flies, rats and mosquitoes that, overcome by the steam, drop on to
his food; he drinks a well of water, hiccups like thunder, and picks from his
teeth with a log chunks of food so large that they kill cat, goose or fowl by
their impact. Of the cousinship between the Indian Bhutas and the Indonesian
spirits of men who have perished by violence so little is known that in one
account the Spectre Huntsman is called a Bhuta and in a Perak charm the great
goddess Sri is described as the "Genie Bhuta Sri who presides over rice-fields!"
But in fact it is not these immigrant demons that are the concern of the Malay
magician.
For centuries the Muhammadan zealot and more recently the Ford car have invaded
the fastnesses where Malaya's illiterate priests of Siva invoked these alien
deities. The Hindu gods continue to survive in invocations degraded to magical
charms. Still, too, at the installation of a Perak Sultan the real Hindu name
of the demigod, who descended on a Mount Meru in Sumatra and became the father
of most of the royal houses of the Peninsula, is whispered by Sri Nara 'diraja,
keeper of the State secret, into the ear of the new ruler. He and his master
are perhaps unaware that so at the initiation of a child into one of the higher
Hindu castes his teacher whispers a formula containing the name of the god who
is to be his special protector through life. It is to be hoped that fanaticism
will never extinguish this voice from the past.
(c) GOOD AND EVIL SPIRITS OF DEAD MORTALS
The view that ancestor-worship is the oldest of religious practices no longer
obtains. Some savages have believed in a god existing before the coming of death.
Some sacrifice to gods and not to the ghosts of the departed. Others, exchanging
old lights for new, have come to neglect their high gods and sacrifice to dead
ancestors. Many have nature-gods. Besides, being a family cult, ancestor-worship
cannot have accompanied the group-marriage of the most primitive tribes.
The origin of this form of worship is easily intelligible. The dead appear to
the living in dreams. Or the dead may be born again in a child, who is the image
of a forefather. A Malay prays at the grave of an ancestor to beget a child,
unaware that probably his worship is based on the idea of the dead welcoming
reincarnation. The exact likeness of a male child to his father, that is, the
possession of two hosts by the same soul, causes alarm to a Malay; one of the
boy's ears must be pierced, otherwise either the father or the son is likely
to die. Curiously, the resemblance of a girl to her father or of a boy or girl
to the mother is of no moment.
That the dead can be kind to the living is a notion not foreign to the Malay
mind. The ritual by which a Malay acquires the powers of a shaman suggests that
originally the magician's familiars were spirits of the dead. At the propitiation
of the spirits of Upper Perak, invocations were addressed to the spirits of
a famous Raja Nek and of the byegone magicians of the neighbourhood. A ruler
looks to his royal ancestors for the protection of his person and his State,
visits their scattered tombs after his installation or before any great enterprise,
and when sickness afflicts his house sets a cooling potion for the patient overnight
upon a family grave. As a Muslim the Malay makes vows to prophets and saints
imploring their aid in the hour of need. In Singapore many vows are sworn at
the shrine of Habib Noh, a humble clerk of the last century, who gave up the
pride of the eye and the lusts of the flesh for religious asceticism until he
could appear in several places at once. "In every part of Naning are found
tombs of men famed for piety, in whose names the people make vows for the prosperous
termination of any project and whose burial places they honour with frequent
visits and oblations." One outward and visible sign of the sanctity of
such tombs is the supernatural lengthening of the space between the head and
foot stones, supposed to be the work of the deceased. There are the long graves
of Shaikh Muhammad and Shaikh Ahmad on Bukit Gedong in Malacca, the burial place
of an old Achinese medicine-woman at Kemunting in Perak, the graves of Shaikh
Sentang at Temerloh, of To'Panjang at Kuala Pahang and of To'Panjang at Ketapang
in the Pekan district of Pahang. These sacred tombs, which exist throughout
Malaya, bear an Arabic name (karamat), though the dead whose tenements they
are need not be Muslim saints and may have been merely some powerful ruler or
the revered founder of a settlement, or even a pagan trafficker with black magic.
A celebrated shrine is the reputed tomb of Sultan Iskandar, the mythical last
Malay ruler of ancient Singapore, whose grave on the slopes of Fort Canning
is the resort of many suppliants; and a few years ago, when it was desired to
explore it, no one, Malay, Indian or Chinese, would undertake the task. In Jempul,
in Negri Sembilan, there is a grave shaded by a yellow-blossomed chempaka tree,
whose branches are always hung with strips of white cloth to commemorate the
vows paid to a magician interred beneath them. If the entreaty for health or
a son or whatever may be desired wins a favourable answer, then failure to sacrifice
the promised goat and hold a feast with prayers and cracker-firing beside the
grave brings tribulation upon the perjured ingrate. The tenant of that Jempul
grave was believed to attend his widow in the form of a tiger. He would frighten
off his daughters' lovers, protect the home when their mother was absent, and
drive temporal tigers from their path. "There are many little graveyards
throughout Jempul which are credited with having produced tigers out of-human
corpses." So, too, the spirit of the last chief of Muar is supposed to
haunt the wooded hills round his home, a sacred tiger friendly to his people.
The credulity of these Sumatran settlers in Negri Sembilan finds a counterpart
in that of certain Patani families, who in sickness or misfortune invoke the
aid of 'To Sri Lam, an ancestor's sister who turned into a crocodile. None of
these spirits of the dead that can be gracious to suppliants are homeless ghosts;
they are attached to a religion, a district or a clan.
Fear, however, leads to respect for many sacred places. The anger of a Malay
ruler is dreaded when he is alive; it is not less terrible when he is gone.
A European who visited the graves of the Johore princes at Kota Tinggi in 1826
records how his guide trembled on approaching the place, declaring that any
injury to the stones would bring misfortune on all present and behaved "as
if a demon was about to pounce upon him." There may have been a peculiar
reason for this. Among the tombs is that of Sultan Mahmud, the last representative
of the royal house of Malacca, which furnished rulers for most of the Peninsular
States. He alone of Peninsular rulers was murdered, stabbed to death for a sexual
crime, the white blood of (Muslim saints and) Malay royalty gushing from his
veins. Apparently he survives in Kelantan as a white genie, Sultan Mahmud, a
sea-spirit, who can cause chills and ague. A chief, swearing to his suzerain
that he had not offered a bribe to a Government officer, undertook in a tremendous
oath (which came into my hands) to be smitten "by the majesty of the ruler
and of his royal ancestors," if he were committing perjury. Attributable,
perhaps, to this fear of deceased rulers is the custom of dropping their real
names after death and giving them such titles as "The Deceased who died
at the Three Islands," "The Deceased Pilgrim," and so on. The
magician also is not less terrible after death than in life. Only fear could
regard as a sacred place the rock at Batu Harnpar, where a Sultan of Johore,
caused to be executed a pagan jungle chief "detected in necromantic practices!"
Three months after his execution this Jakun chief appeared to his son on the
same spot and thereafter haunted it, sometimes assuming the form of a white
cock.
Especially baneful are the homeless ghosts of those who perish by a violent
death, of murdered men, of women who die in child-birth. To them no honour is
paid. They are driven away by magical charms and amulets, by prickly thorns,
ashes, and the stench of burnt herbs.
According to the Muhammadan faith those who die in child-birth are entitled
to the rank of martyrs with whom God is well pleased. The Malay has found it
hard to accept this comfortable doctrine. The horror of their untimely end led
his ancestors to think that such women generate malevolent spirits. Throughout
Malaysia terror is felt at the plaintive cry of a banshee (Pontianak), which
is supposed generally to appear in the form of a bird and drive her long claws
into the belly of the expectant mother, killing her and the unborn child. Another
banshee (Langsuyar) flies in the shape of an owl with a face like a cat. The
knowing imitate her hoot and utter the insulting ejaculation, "Your hoot
is near, your grave is far, and you are sprung from the lid of a cooking-pot
in a deserted house," whereupon she keeps silent and cannot bring death
or disaster to any one in the village. Or she may wear the form of a beautiful
woman with flowing tresses. But in the nape of her neck is a hole, which she
is terrified may be found by the smooth-scaled climbing perch, used therefore
by the cunning to make protective amulets. She flies by night and the rustle
of her tresses is as the rustle of rain. She loves to alight on tall trees and
hide in the bird's-nest fern. When this banshee passes, the pregnant woman should
be bathed and the following charm recited over betel-vine, which must be given
her to chew
I am a Great Rishi!
I slay without asking leave
I behead without making enquiry
I am Allah's champion on earth
I can destroy all creatures;
Only what I create I cannot destroy.
We are children of different seed!
O thou with broad bosom and small teeth!
Thou with flowing tresses and long nails!
Thou with the swaying gait!
If thou alightest on a tree,
Mistress Stickfast is thy name!
If thou alightest on a rapid,
Sang Rangga is thy title!
If thou sittest on a tree-stump,
The Fair Bhuta is thy name.
If thou alightest on the ground,
The Fair Swaying One thy name!
If thou mountest the house-ladder,
Thy name the Fair Sitter!
If thou sittest at the house-door,
Thy name the Fair Bar-door.
If thou sittest on a roof-beam,
Thy name the Fair Peerer!
If thou alightest on the mat,
Thy name the Fair Seated Woman!
Molest not the children of Adam
Or thou wilt be a traitor to Allah!
Such, at any rate, is the charm used in Upper Perak.
To prevent a woman who dies in child-birth from becoming one of these banshees
glass beads are put in the corpse's mouth to keep her from inhuman shrieking,
hen's eggs laid under her armpits so that she may not lift them to fly, and
needles placed in the palms of her hands so that she may not open or clench
them to assist her flight. (A hen's egg is laid also under the arm-pit of a
still-born child before burial.)
Another spirit (Penanggalan) which sucks the blood of those in child-bed, consists
of a woman's head and neck with trailing viscera, which shine at night like
fire-flies. If she sucks the blood of woman or child, death follows. The lights
of a hill in Perak called Changkat Asah, lights described in that most readable
book on the Peninsula, George Maxwell's In Malay Forests, are thought by the
superstitious to be troops of these shining ones.
Then there is a class of familiar spirits created from the dead. Many Malays
say that their several names are only dialect terms for one familiar, but others
distinguish three species. The Bajang may be just a malignant forest spirit
or, according to others, a man's familiar. As the latter he is kept in a stoppered
bamboo vessel and fed with eggs and milk. Released he will cause sickness and
delirium to his victims, especially to children. His visible embodiment is a
civet-cat. He may be the hereditary property of his owner, but more often is
conjured at dead of night from the newly-dug grave of a still-born child. Pour
the blood of a murdered man into a bottle and recite the appropriate charm,
and after seven or twice seven days a bird-like chirp will announce the presence
of a Polong. Every day the owner must feed this familiar with blood from his
or her finger. Its victim dies raving unless through his mouth the Polong will
confess the name of its owner and of any malicious person who may have hired
it from that owner. But the best known of these familiars (Pelsit) is of the
nigget type and takes the shape of a house-cricket. A woman goes into the forest
on the night before the full moon, and standing with her back to the moon and
her face to an ant-hill recites certain charms and tries to catch her own shadow.
It may take three nights. Or she may have to try for several months, always
on the same three nights. Sooner or later she will succeed and her body never
again cast a shadow. Then in the night a child will appear before her and put
out its tongue. She must seize the tongue, whereupon the body of the child vanishes.
Soon the tongue turns into a tiny animal, reptile or insect, which can be used
as a bottle imp. According to a more gruesome version the tongue that can change
into this familiar must be bitten out of the exhumed corpse of the first-born
child of a first-born mother and buried at cross-roads. This vampire cricket
is employed especially by jealous wives to injure their rivals or their rivals'
children.
Besides these two classes of malicious birth-spirits and familiars, created
from the corpses of man, there are graveyard spooks of the sheeted dead. In
Patani one of the most noted of these (hantu bungkus) is thought to appear as
a white cat or to lie like a bundle of white rags near a burial ground. "Should
a person pass it who is afraid, it unrolls, twines itself round his feet, enters
his person by means of his big toe and feasts within on his soul, so that he
becomes distraught and dies in convulsions, unless a competent medicine-man
can exorcise it in time to save his life and reason." A bold person anxious
to see ghosts has only to use as a collyrium the tears of the wide-eyed slow
loris!
A relic of the Malay's fear of the departed survives in the moribund custom
of abandoning a house where a death has occurred.
(d) PRIMITIVE SPIRITS, FAIRIES AND GHOSTS
Spirits and ghosts that are not termed jinn by the Malay spontaneously may be
classed together as flotsam of primitive beliefs. They may be the ghosts of
men who lived too long ago to be associated ordinarily with the genies of a
religion they never practised in their lives. They may be fairies too human
to have sprung from smokeless fire. They may be godlings or nature-spirits too
local or petty and neglected to have attracted the attention of the pious. Or
they may be spirits too vague to have acquired a local habitation and a name.
Challenged, the devout Malay would give to all of them the sinister canonisation
of Jinn.
Some of this class are on the border-line between spirits and ghosts. There
is the Spectre Huntsman, known generally as a ghost, in one aspect an avatar
of Siva, in another an uxorious villager whose endless hunt for a mouse-deer
for his gravid wife led to his being turned alive into a forest demon. In many
lands a vanquished aboriginal people are allotted by their conquerors to the
borderland class between ghost and spirit. Were it not that he also is identified
with Siva, it would be tempting to include in it Black Awang in his shape as
a Negrito (p. 7 supra).
Then there are "Bachelor" spirits, who may be forgotten godlings or
the ghosts of youths cut off in their prime. There is the Bachelor Cock-fighter,
who presides over mains and hates liars. There are the Black Bachelor and the
Boy with the Long Lock, of whom Perak peasants speak.
There are a few spirits of high places, like the Chief of the mountain Berembun
in Perak or Dato Parol, sainted lord of Gunong Angsi in Negri Sembilan and commander
of an army of the dead who have sprung from their graves as tigers. Most famous
is the fairy Princess of Mount Ledang in Malacca, who married Nakhoda Ragam,
a wandering prince of Borneo. After his death at sea from the prick of her needle
she donned fairy garb and flew to Gunong Ledang, whence she migrated later to
Bukit Jugra further up the coast with a sacred tiger as her companion. Others
make her consort of the founder of Malacca. But a foreign and literary origin
is suggested for this fairy by the mention of her flying garb, the account in
the seventeenth century Malay Annals of her garth, her singing birds and her
demand, when a Sultan of Malacca wooed her, for a betrothal present of seven
trays piled with the livers of mosquitoes, seven trays piled with the livers
of fleas, a tub of tears, a basin of royal blood, and one golden and one silver
bridge to be built from Malacca to her hill top.
There is a mysterious Grannie Kemang, known both in Sumatra and in the Malay
Peninsula. In Perak it is thought that she will sow tares, a refuge for goblin
pests, on the fresh clearing unless the farmer rise betimes to alleviate with
cool offerings; the smart of the burnt forest. Her cooking-pot is the inexhaustible
widow's cruse of the Malay peasant. She is said to have taught the art of rice-cultivation.
One Perak account speaks of her as the embodiment of the rice-soul. (In a Kelantan
charm she is described as the nigget vampire and declared to be the product
of the afterbirth.)
There are echo-spirits of the mountains, like men and women in shape. If one
of them visits a mortal woman, she bears an albino child. A former Dato' of
Kinta lived with a female echo-spirit in a cave in the face of a limestone bluff,
a beautiful woman called the Princess of the Rice-fields by the Hot Spring.
One of his followers took another echo-spirit to wife. In three weeks she bore
him a son, whom no mortal woman could suckle.
There is a vague dream demon, Ma' Kopek, the hag that causes nightmare. Children
playing hide and seek may lose themselves behind her prodigious breasts and
be found days later dazed and foolish. Sometimes she takes them to a thorn-brake
and feeds them on earth-worms and muddy water, which by her magic look and taste
like delicate cates.
There is a Kitchen Demon, a gray dishevelled hag, who warms herself before the
hearth at night and loves to blow into flame the embers in a deserted house.
There is the Spook that Drags Himself along. He wears the shape of an orang-outang,
peeps into attics where fair maids sleep, and once carried a girl off up a tree
and lived with her as his wife.
There are formless spirits that bring colic, cholera, smallpox, blindness. Most
of these are unknown except to the medicine-man, who diagnoses, for example,
one hundred and ninety nine spirits of smallpox according to the part affected,
and names the one that attacks a patient's tongue after the Muslim Angel of
Death!
Formless too are maleficent auras that emanate from the corpses of murdered
men, of slain deer, wild pig, wild dogs, certain reptiles and birds. "Soon
after death the bristles on the back move, and stand on end with contraction
and relaxation of the muscles; and to come within the range of the aim of these
bristles, which have the position they assume when the living animal is enraged,
is to invite the attack of the bahdi." A white jungle cock, or indeed any
jungle cock of unusual colour, a jungle cock that does not struggle in the toils
but perches on the rod that suspends the noose, these have bahdi. "The
bahdi have the power of bringing sickness, blindness or madness upon the hunter,
and an attack of fever after unwonted exertion in a malarial forest is always
ascribed to them. The jinggi can let the deer pass by the unwitting hunter in
the form of a mouse or attack him in the form of a tiger. They can also give
the hunter the appearance of the hunted and thus expose him to the fire of his
friends. The genaling can kill the hunter outright." In these auras the
idea of potent soul-substance seems to have become merged in the idea of malicious
spirits. The bahdi of a deer can be expelled by sweeping first a gun, then a
branch, and finally the noose in which the animal was caught, over its carcase
from muzzle to hind-legs; the noose is quickly slipped on to a stake and tightened
round it. Here the magician appears to remove "transmissible properties
of matter" to the stake. In Patani syncretism has given the aura of a murdered
man the shape of a mannikin, and has made the auras of beasts the slaves of
Siva. By some Kelantan magicians bahdi are said to be one hundred and ninety
in number and are given a name (gana) meaning spirit. All these evil influences
are sometimes classed with jinn.
With jinn, too, are often classed one hundred and ninety goblins of the soil
(jembalang) that creep into the baskets of the reaper and round the stems of
rice-plants, and infest hill and mountain and plain. Ordinarily their shape,
if they have a shape, is not given. In Patani it is said they are the ghosts
of men and, under Muslim influence, it is alleged that they may "be seen
at night in waste places, leaning on long sticks, wearing red caps and eating
earth. If any one is bold enough to seize one of their caps and swift enough
to escape their pursuit, he will gain the great art of becoming invisible."
There are numerous nature-spirits; the spirit of the river bore, that drowns
men in its matlike curling wave; the spirit of the cataract that lies "prone
on the water with head like an inverted copper"; spirits of the sea that
settle on masts in the form of St. Elmo's fire; spirits of the jungle track;
spirits that tamper with the noose and snare of the hunter; spirits that live
in trees especially where wild bees nest; the spirit of the faded lotus. Many
a sacred place in jungle and grove, supposed now to be the site of some saint's
vanished tomb, is really a relic of primitive worship of the spirits of nature.
(e) ANGELS AND DEVILS OF ISLAM
To-day in every hamlet in Malaya, that has sufficient inhabitants to form a
congregation, there is a mosque where, along with his fellow villagers, the
magician acknowledges that there is no God but Allah and Muhammad is His Prophet.
The office of Caliph or head of the Muslim faith within his own State is the
most cherished prerogative of a Malay ruler. His installation is attended by
the magician, once master of the ceremony but now merely an onlooker, who listens
and hears the court heralds call to the four archangels to send down upon their
new ruler "the divine majesty of kings by the hands of his angels: the
angels of the rising sun, the angels of the evening, the angels who stand upon
the right and left of the empyrean throne, the angel of the zenith and the horned
princess, angel of the moon." Suckled in creeds outworn, the magician sits
at the feet of the pious and learns all he can about these angels and the demonology
of the youngest of Malaya's religions. He adds the names of angels and devils
and spirits to his repertory of incantations.
He learns that there are angels, demons (or Shaitan) and jinn, all higher than
man. Actually he has had a Malay account of Muhammadan mythology for nearly
three hundred years in a work called the Garden of Kings, written in 1638 A.D.
by an Indian missionary of Islam in Acheen. That work tells him of the four
angels who bear the throne Of God, one in the form of a bull, one in the form
of a tiger, one in the form of an eagle, and one in the form of a man. It tells
also of the cherubim who cry incessantly "Glory to God." But more
interesting to him are the four archangels with individual names, who are concerned
with the welfare of men. There is Gabriel, the angel of revelation, with six
pinions, each composed of one hundred smaller wings; he is covered with saffron
hairs; between his eyes is a sun, and between every two hairs of his body a
moon and stars. Every day he dives three hundred and sixty times into the Sea
of Light, and every drop of water from his wings creates a spiritual angel (Ruhaniyun)
in his likeness. Two of his pinions he expands only when God desires to destroy
hamlet or town. Two green pinions he opens only once annually on the night of
destiny, when from the tree that stands by the throne of God the leaves fall
inscribed with the names of those who shall die during the ensuing year. There
is Michael, created five hundred years before Gabriel and five hundred years
after Israfil. His whole body is covered with saffron hairs, every hair possessing
a million faces having a thousand mouths, each mouth containing a thousand tongues
that entreat the mercy of God, while the tears of his million eyes, weeping
for the sins of the faithful, create cherubim in his likeness. These cherubim
are his servants, who control rain and plants and fruits, so that there is not
a drop of rain falling on earth or sea that is not watched by one of them. There
is Israfil, whose head is level with the throne of Allah and whose feet reach
lower than the lowest earth. With one pinion he envelopes the west, with another
the east; with a third he covers his person, and with a fourth he veils himself
from mouth to chest. Between his eyes is the jewelled tablet of fate. His duty
it will be to sound the last trump on the day of judgment. There is 'Azrail,
who according to this version is not (as he should be) the angel of death but
only his warder, and is like Israfil in appearance. The angel of death, bigger
than the seven earths and the seven heavens, God kept hidden and chained with
seventy thousand chains until the creation of Adam. When he was seen by the
angels, they fell into a faint that lasted a thousand years. He has seven thousand
pinions. His body is full of eyes and tongues, as many as there are men and
birds and living things. Whenever a mortal dies, an eye closes. He has four
faces. When he takes the life of prophet or angel, he shows the face on his
head; the face on his chest is shown to believers, the face on his back to infidels,
and the face on the soles of two of his feet to jinn. Of his other two feet
one is on the borders of heaven, the other on the brink of hell. So huge is
he that if the waters of all seas and all rivers were poured upon his head,
not one drop would reach the earth. No living creature shall escape death except
the four archangels and the four angels who bear the throne of God.
There is also a huge angel called Ruh or the Spirit, with the face of a man,
who will stand beside the throne on the day of judgment and implore mercy for
the faithful.
There are the two inquisitor angels, Munkar and Nakir, who visit the dead in
their graves and enquire if they are believers.
Night and day man is protected from devils and jinn by two out of four attendant
angels, who change guard at sunrise and sunset. Recorders of his good and evil
deeds, they are termed Kiraman Katibin, the Noble Writers; good deeds are written
down by the angel on his right, bad by the angel on his left.
Nineteen Zabaniah (or Guardian Angels), under Malik their chief, are in charge
of hell.
Finally, Iblis, the fallen rebel angel who refused to prostrate himself before
Adam, is commander of an army of supreme interest to the magician, the host
of infidel genies or jinn.
(f) JINN
Jinn or genies sprang from three mangrove-leaves, the green jinn from a leaf
that soared into the green sky, the black from a leaf that fell at the gate
of the forest, the white from a leaf that fell into the sea. According to another
incantation they were created from the earth of the mountain Mahameru, the Malay
Olympus with the Hindu name. So Malays believe, unless it is to be supposed
that in such charms the magicians were merely inventing fictitious origins for
spirits they wished to control. According to some incantations the genies of
the earth were born of afterbirth, according to others of the morning star.
One magician's account says that jinn are sprung from the coconut monkey! Another
declares that they were created from Sakti-muna, a great serpent: the king of
the jinn from his life's breath, the white jinn from the whites of his eyes,
the black, blue, green and yellow jinn from their irises, the genie that lives
in the lightning from his voice. Muslims hold that Jan was the father of all.
the jinn, and Jan in the Quran also signifies a serpent. There is another legend
with a Muslim colouring. When Cain and Abel were still in the womb they bit
their thumbs till the blood came, and along with them were born jinn, black
from the blood that spurted cloud-high, white from the blood that fell to the
ground. So run the discrepant accounts of the Malay magician, who accepts also
the Quran's version that jinn were created from smokeless fire.
The account of genies in the Garden of Kings is as follows: Jan, the father
of all jinn, was originally an angel, called firstly Aristotle but later 'Azazil.
When 'Azazil refused to do obeisance to Adam, his name was changed to Iblis
or Jan and his form into that of a genie; of the relation of Iblis to the genies,
however, there are several variant accounts. Begetting a child every two days,
Jan became the ancestor of all the genies, countless shadowy beings, numerous
as the sands of the earth and filling hill and cave, forest and plain. At first
they inhabited the lowest heaven. Thence they got the permission of Allah to
descend to the earth, seven thousand troops of them. In time they fought among
themselves and disobeyed God. So He sent Prophets and Angels to quell them and
pen them in a corner of the world. To plague mankind jinn can assume any shape.
Some take the form of men, others of horses or dogs or pigs, others of snakes,
others of insects. Some can fly. Some can eat, drink and marry. One tradition
talks of three classes of jinn, one winged, another in the form of dogs and
insects, another in human form. A few are good Muslims and will go to heaven;
most are infidels doomed to hell. Their great age is illustrated from the story
of the genie detected by Muhammad under the disguise of a very old man. Being
recognised as a genie, he admitted that he had met Noah and all the Prophets
after him.
Again the Malay has read of jinn in his recension of the story of Alexander
the Great. That world-conqueror meets a descendant of the genie Sakhr, who stole
Solomon's ring, and assuming Solomon's shape reigned in his stead for forty
days. He and his kin are guarding till the day of judgment a mosque built for
Solomon by Sakhr in retribution for his presumption. He appears to Alexander
in the form of a handsome youth but turns by request into his proper shape:
huge as the mosque, having seven heads, each with two faces, each face having
four eyes like tongues of flame, a cavernous mouth, teeth like fiery tongues,
a nose like the nose of a bull; on each forehead are two snakey locks, and the
genie has the feet of a duck and the tail of a bull! Near the border of the
world where the sun sinks Alexander finds genies guarding King Solomon's treasure-house
of jewels. They are the descendants of human men and ten daughters of Iblis.
When Alexander marvels, the Prophet Khidzr quotes the case of the Queen of Sheba,
who had a human father and a genie mother, and showed this origin by the hair
on her calves.
All jinn are the subjects not of Muhammad but of Solomon, to whom God gave authority
over genies, the animal creation and the wind of heaven.
One Malay charm speaks of "Jin the son of Jan of the line of the Pharaohs,"
a pedigree founded on the Arab notion that the last king of the pre-Adamite
jinn was Jan the son of Jan, and that he built the Pyramids.
According to Malay belief there are jinn inhabiting the sun, the moon, the sky,
the wind, the clouds. There are others whose homes or hosts are ant-hills, wells,
rocks, the hard heartwood of trees, ravines, fields, swamps, lakes, rivers,
mountain or plain. Others are genies of cape or bay, the sea, the tide, estuaries.
Syncretism has included in these classes Indonesian soul-substance and nature-spirits
and Hindu divinities; but one tradition of the Prophet also distinguishes three
kinds of genies, one in the air, one on the land, and one on the sea. Malay
medical lore, having borrowed from Arabia Plato's theory of the origin of disease,
differentiates a fourth class, the genies of fire and fiery sunsets.
The colour of a Malay genie varies according to his habitation. Genies of earth
and the dark forests and lowering clouds are black. Those inhabiting the sky
are blue or to the Malay eye green. The jinn of fire and sunset are yellow.
In fleecy clouds and the shimmering sea they are white.
Just as Plato ascribed disease to disturbance of the balance of power between
the four properties of earth, air, fire and water, out of which the body is
compacted, so the Malay medicine-man ascribes all diseases to the four classes
of genies presiding over those properties. The genies of the air cause wind-borne
complaints, dropsy, blindness, hemiplegia and insanity. The genies of the black
earth cause vertigo, with sudden blackness of vision. The genies of fire cause
hot fevers and yellow jaundice. The white genies of the sea cause chills, catarrh
and agues.
All these are external genies, visible to lonely wayfarers, to the magician
in a trance or, according to Kelantan belief, to the gazer upon the finger-nails
of small innocent boys. They can talk among themselves or through the mouth
of the shaman medium. Genies of the earth may appear in human form "floating
in the air and not always remaining the same size," or in the form of animals
or ants or scorpions or in any shape they please. The manufacture of old Chinese
crackle-ware is ascribed by Malays to genies. Muslim genies haunt two mosques
in Negri Sembilan, flitting to and fro in long white robes and sometimes chanting
the Quran. If a person stand under a ladder and bathe in water wherein a corpse
has been washed, he has only to stoop and look between his legs to see crowds
of genies and demons sipping the water. Infidel genies of the earth are thought
in Patani to assume the form of dogs and guard hidden treasure. If they take
a fancy to a person, they change into little old men and leave sacks of gold
for their favourites to remove. Peculiar bubbles on the surface of the water
indicate the presence of jars of treasure placed by genies in pool or well.
There is a genie "supposed to resemble the human form but to dart about
like a will-o'-the-wisp" and daze the man that crosses it. Seize a genie
and hold him, no matter what terrifying aspect he may assume, and one can wrest
from him the secret of invisibility. "If a man had a tame genie, he could
cause the meat from another man's cooking-pot to come to him." The founder
of a house of great chiefs in Perak was a poor fisherman. His traps were repeatedly
thrown on the bank and his weirs opened. He watched and saw the offender, a
genie clad in the green robes and turban of a Muslim pilgrim. He seized the
genie and refused to let him go. The genie said "Swallow this," spat
in his mouth, and told him that he would become the greatest chief in the country
and his family prosper for seven generations.
But these external jinn (for whom Malay physicians find yet another origin suitable
to their medical theories, namely wind) cannot inflict disease without the help
of the class of genies that inhabit the bodies of men. So, at least, it is said
in Kelantan. When the genie, whose host a man's body is, has weakened him by
loss of blood, coughing, dyspepsia, then only can jinn from outside enter and
cause him hurt. There is a yellow genie controlling a man's five senses. There
is a white genie (jin or malaikat), also called the Light of the Prophet, that
"takes up its abode in the heart of every Muhammadan and prevents him from
being wicked," Even these internal jinn have colour and shape. False etymology
and recollection of the Indonesian bird-soul make Patani Malays identify a man's
white genie with a bird, one of Muhammad's parrots!
In some genies abstract ideas seem to find a local habitation and a name.
The genie of golden life,
The genie of bright desire,
Wearing bangles of brass and coat of steel,
can both abduct a woman's soul on her lover's behalf.
The moral character of the white genie in man's bosom may be due to confusion
of this spirit with the Light of the Prophet. Genies, destined for heaven, are
moral beings, and belong to the several schools of Muslim belief. The others
are capricious and do not distinguish between good and evil.
The syncretism that has made the name of Malay jinn legion is patent in the
Perak magician's address to "the procession of the thousand jinn."
In that invocation the evil influence believed by Malay animists to invest the
corpses of deer, Indonesian goblins of the soil, the Misty Beauty that floats
over blind wells, the Piebald Pony, four spirit guardians of the corners of
the world, Kala or Siva in his destructive form, Sri the Hindu Ceres, a Hindu
Moon Fairy beautiful upon waters, the Herald of the World that dwells in the
clouds with a name half Sanskrit half Arabic, Jamshid a spirit of the headlands
bearing the name of a Persian king, the spirits of the Muslim dead-these and
scores more are entreated so that the magician may display the wealth of his
uncritical lore, offend none of the spirit world and let no genie escape the
net of his magic.
An equally good example is found in the list of the guardian jinii of Perak,
or, to give them their other name, the genies of the royal trumpets, whose indwelling
spirits were fed and revived annually centuries before the coming of Islam.
These include the Four Children of the Iron Pestle, Old Grannie from up-river,
the Prince of the Rolling Waves, the Children of the Gaffer who lives in the
sky. Brahma, Vishnu, and Indra are among them. King Solomon and 'Ali, the fourth
Caliph, find a place. There are royal familiars of the State shaman and his
assistant. There is the Raja of all the jinn, who is throned on the breeze of
heaven. There is the Sultan of the Unsubstantial World (maya), who condescends
to the ear-posies of kings from his throne on a crystal car that is followed
by all the Sultans of the universe. And there are spirits with royal titles
in Persian, and female fairies with Sanskrit names. The list shows a wide knowledge
of Malay romances, like the Hikayat Shamsu'l-Bahrain and the Hikayat Indraputra,
that are based on Indian models and full of heroes and genies with Indian names.
Acquaintance with such literature was an esteemed accomplishment at Malay courts.
Among the jinn regarded by Perak commoners is 'Umar Ummaiya, the Ulysses of
the Persian romance of Amir Hamzah!
III. THE MALAY MAGICIAN
ANTHROPOLOGY and history confirm the various stages in the development of the
Malay magician.
First he was the Indonesian animist, requiring no initiation into his office
and no help from a familiar spirit. Hunting, fishing, planting, and healing
the sick demanded merely different experts acquainted with the practice and
customs of the particular craft. In the ritual of the rice-field, for example,
a midwife or other old woman took the leading part, because her sex had a beneficent
influence on the fertility of the crop, and her experience with human infants
qualified her to handle the rice-baby. Courtesy and persuasion and diplomatic
language were the weapons of the Malay magician of animism.
Next came the shaman. Comparative study has, revealed that shamanism was "the
native religion of the Ural-Altaic peoples from Behring Straits to the borders
of Scandinavia," and "probably of the early Mongol-Tartar peoples
and others akin to them, for example, in China and Tibet." Its part in
the religions of Malaysian tribes reminds one that on linguistic grounds it
has been surmised the Malay descended from the continent of Asia and that anthropologists
detect in him a Mongol strain. The shaman still retains his pride of place among
the aboriginal tribes of the Malay Peninsula, Negrito, Indo-Chinese and Proto-Malay.
One word is used by the Malay both for the magician expert in some particular
line and for the shaman who controls spirits by the help of a familiar. But
a distinction between them is recognised. "Upon the exercise of the shaman's
power every Malay looks with considerable dread, and the least orthodox shakes
his head when it is mentioned." Islam looks far more askance at the shaman
who calls down spirits at a séance than at the commoner medicine-man
who relies solely on charms and invocations covered with a veneer of orthodox
phraseology. His brothers in magic respect the shaman more highly. In Kelantan
when a shaman is operating in any district "all other medicine-men are
disqualified for the time being."
Sometimes the Malay shaman wears cords round his wrists and across back and
breast over each shoulder and under the opposite arm. He can use cloth of royal
yellow at a séance. Rarely he is a Raja. In Perak the State shaman was
commonly of the reigning house and bore the title of Sultan Muda. He was too
exalted to inherit any other office except the Sultanate, and according to one
account could ascend no temporal throne. He was allotted a State allowance from
port dues and the tax on opium. The twenty-fifth holder of the office was a
grandson on the distaff side of Marhum Kahar, a famous ruler of Perak in the
eighteenth century: on the spear side he was a descendant of the Prophet! The
wife of its holder bore the title of Raja Puan Muda. His deputy or heir-apparent
was styled Raja Kechil Muda. So, too, in parts of Timor two Rajas are recognised-a
civil raja who governs the people, and another raja who can declare tabus and
must be consulted by his colleagues in all important matters.
At a curative (but not apparently at a State-cleansing) séance the spirit-raising
shaman may be a woman. During the last illness of Sultan Yusuf, a nineteenth
century ruler of Perak, a séance was conducted by Raja Ngah, a scion
of the reigning house on the female side, "a middle-aged woman dressed
as a man" for the occasion-a device I have seen adopted by Malay midwives
also. In Kelantan the shaman may be a Malay or a Siamese woman.
Negritos and certain northern Sakai placed the bodies of dead shamans in shelters
built among tree-branches. The soul of a Negrito magician may enter tiger, elephant,
or rhinoceros, and there abide until the animal dies, when the soul at last
goes to its own heaven. Some Kinta Sakai used formerly to leave the corpses
of magicians unburied in the houses where they died. The Jakun of Rompin put
them "on platforms and their souls go up to the sky, while those of ordinary
mortals, whose bodies are buried, go to the underworld." Other Jakun believe
that great magicians are translated alive to heaven. Clearly it was the custom
of the Peninsular aborigines not to bury a magician. His soul might inhabit
a large animal temporarily, but found its way in the end to some place in the
air that is full of the unseen spirits he controlled. Malays have long buried
their magicians. "The majority of sacred places in the Patani States are
the reputed graves of great medicine-men." But in two of the States on
the west coast, at least, when a practiser of black magic is in the throes of
death, it is believed that the spirit of life can escape only if a hole is made
in the roof of the house.
A shaman by inheritance comes into possession of a familiar spirit, or perhaps
he may inherit one from his preceptor. In Patani it is said that if a shaman
does not bequeath his (or her) art to a pupil before dying, then his clothes,
drums, censer, and other magical appurtenances will generate a savage ghost.
There, too, it is held that hairy persons are especially qualified to become
magicians. The Benua, a Proto-Malay tribe, believe that the soul of a dead shaman
(who has to be left unburied in the forest) will in the seventh day attack his
heir in the form of a tiger: if the heir betrays no fear and casts incense on
a fire, he will fall into a trance and be visited by two beautiful female spirits
who become his familiars; if the heir fails to watch by the corpse and observe
this ritual, the dead man's soul enters a tiger for ever. According to the belief
of the Jakun his familiar spirit comes to a shaman by inheritance or in a dream.
In all accounts the shaman must acquire as his familiar a spirit that has not
found rest. This he does in a trance, often during a vigil beside a grave.
Kelantan Malays prescribe a method of acquiring a shaman's powers that shows
an accretion of Muslim belief on a primitive idea, akin to the Proto-Malay superstition
that round a grave a ditch must be dug wherein the soul of the deceased may
paddle his canoe. Sitting one at the head and one at the foot of the grave of
a murdered man, the would-be shaman and a companion burn incense and make believe
to use paddles shaped from the midrib of a royal yellow coconut palm, calling
the while upon the murdered man to grant magical powers. The landscape will
come to look like a sea and an aged man will appear, to whom the request for
magic must be repeated. Now one of the evidences of Muslim saintship is the
ecstatic vision or dream of the Prophet or of one of the greater saints of Islam.
Possibly the "aged man" was Luqman al-Hakim, the reputed fattier of
Arabian magic. One day, according to Kelantan belief, the Angel Gabriel was
commanded to upset Luqman and his books at sea as a punishment for his pride,
and the finders of the few scattered pages of those books became medicine-men
in their several countries. A Selangor account corroborates the Kelantan belief
that Luqman was the first magician: he lived in the sky, was descended from
Adam and Eve, was a son (or perhaps brother) of Siva, and so a link with the
Hindu element in the modern Malay medicine-man's shibboleth!
The Malay has always been apt to ascribe greater power to foreign magic, whether
that of a naked illiterate aborigine from the woods or that of a Hindu trader
or an Arab missionary. In an eighteenth century history of Perak it is recorded
how among the medicine-men in attendance on the daughter of a famous Malay ruler
there were Sakai from the jungle. Magicians, like prophets, have more honour
outside their own borders. It is no wonder, therefore, that the Malay midwife
learnt from the Hindu all the magic he could teach for the great occasions of
birth, adolescence, and marriage, or that the Malay shaman added gods of the
Hindu pantheon to his demonology and made invocations and offerings to Siva.
Long before the introduction of Islamic mysticism, Hinduism had encouraged the
Malay magician to fortify his powers and command the wonder of the credulous
by ascetic practices. Malay romances, paraphrased from Indian originals, are
full of stories of heroes who acquire magic, especially for warfare, by retiring
into a hermit's seclusion on a mountain-top. In Patani there is a "curious
belief, perhaps more Siamese than Malay, that no man can become a really great
magician in any country in which the peaks of the hills are rounded, and that
therefore the State of Patalung, in which there are many conical hills, produces
the most powerful medicine-men in the Malay Peninsula."
When Islam came, the Malay magician sat at the feet of its pundits, studied
their arts of divination, and borrowed their cabalistic talismans. Before his
old incantations he set the names of Allah and Muhammad, often in impious contexts.
He detected his latest avatar in the living saint of Islam, to whom folk resort
"for advice in legal disputes or as to the success or failure of an enterprise
or as intercessor for the sick or to get a child or to remove blight or plague
or confound enemies." He will, therefore, seclude himself for certain days
of the week or for a period, the practice being given an Arabic name and having
a religious colour. Sometimes he keeps celibate. Or he may fast to impress the
common herd and enable himself to see visions. A magician of this type is generally
a disciple of a crude form of Sufism derived from India. A Selangor account,
strongly affected by Neo-Platonic ideas, makes Allah (as Absolute Being beyond
all relations) the first of magicians. "When haze was still in the womb
of darkness and darkness in the womb of haze, before earth bore the name of
earth or sky the name of sky, before Allah was called Allah or Muhammad was
called Muhammad, before the creation of the Divine Throne and its footstool
and the firmament, the Creator of the worlds was manifested by Himself and He
was the first magician. He made the magician's universe, a world of the breadth
of a tray, a sky of the breadth of an umbrella.... The magician before time
existed was Allah and He revealed Himself by the light of moon and sun and so
showed Himself to be verily a magician." The first sentence of this quotation
is a Malay paraphrase of the Prophet's simile for God before the creation: "the
dark mist above which is a void and below which is a void." As Skeat has
suggested, the conception of a miniature universe, Plato's "fixed archetypes,"
would remind the Malay of the relation of the tiny Indonesian soul to the physical
body. It reminds also of Ibn 'Arabi's saying that all the universe contains
lies potential in God like the tree in the seed. Indeed, one Malay account of
the origin of the magician relates how at the Muslim word of creation (kun)
"the seed was created and from the seed the root, from the root the stem,
and from the stem the leaves," and then in the same sentence relates how
the word of creation brought into being a miniature earth and sky. So time has
changed the Malay brother of the Siberian shaman into a humble relative of the
Sufi mystic.
Are there traces of the magician in the Malay king? Among some, at least, of
the Proto-Malay tribes of the Peninsula the commoner chief or Batin is judge,
priest, and magician.
Between the old-world commoner chiefs of the matriarchal tribes of Negri Sembilan
and the Raja ruler there are several ties. Like the magician (and the European
district officer!) both can influence the weather: a wet season will be ascribed
to a cold constitution! Both are chosen from several branches of one family,
theoretically from each branch in rotation, actually from the branch that happens
to possess the candidate most suitable in years and character. Both, therefore,
like the Malay magician hold "offices hereditary or at least confined to
the members of one family."
Like the Brahmin the Malay magician and the Malay ruler have a tabu language.
A king does not "walk" but "has himself carried"; he does
not "bathe" but is "sprinkled like a flower"; he does not
"live" but "resides"; he does not "feed" but "takes
a repast"; he does not "die" but "is borne away." Of
the dozen or more words constituting this vocabulary half are Malay, half Sanskrit.
Shaman and ruler both have felt the influence of Hinduism.
Like the magician, the ruler has wonder-working insignia of office. The tambourine
and other appurtenances of the shaman will generate an evil spirit if not bequeathed
to a successor. To tread on a Malay State drum may cause death: even a Chinaman
has been known to swell up and die after removing a hornet's nest from this
terrific instrument. The regalia of a Malay ruler were miraculous talismans
that controlled the luck of the State. Quite recently in Malacca a pretender
to the chieftainship of Naning got hold of the insignia of office, refused to
surrender them, and declared that possession of them gave him a good title.
In the old annual ceremony of expelling malignant spirits from a Malay State,
the ruler took a leading part. And in the ritual of the now obsolete Perak court
magician there are two noteworthy details. At the séance held during
his last illness Sultan Yusuf was placed shrouded on the wizard's mat with the
wizard's grass-switch in his hand to await, as at an ordinary séance
the shaman alone awaits, the advent of the spirits invoked. Again, after the
annual séance to "revive" the Perak regalia, the State magician
bathed the Sultan and in his person the genies of the State, who would seem
therefore to be regarded as His Highness' familiar spirits. According to an
old account the State shaman of Perak was eligible for the Sultanate, and the
Raja Muda, or heir to the throne, could become State shaman.
Modern man has forgotten that in appropriating buffaloes with peculiar horns,
albino children, turtles' eggs and other freaks of nature, the Malay ruler started
not as a grasping tyrant but as a magician, competent above all his people to
face the dangers of the unusual and untried. For under paganism, Hinduism and
Islam magician and raja dead and alive have been credited with supernatural
powers. It is claimed for a modern Malay magician that he can remain under water
for an hour! It was claimed for a bye-gone ruler of Perak that every Friday
he could translate himself to Mecca and once brought back three green figs as
evidence of his journey. The graves of kings and the graves of magicians have
been alike the object of worship.
IV. THE MALAY CHARM
THERE are three words used by Malays for incantation or charm, two of them Sanskrit
(jampi; mantra), the other the Arabic word for prayer (do'a). Charms are employed
in agricultural operations, by fishermen, hunters, fowlers and trappers; to
abduct or recall the soul; to revive ore in a mine or a patient on a bed of
sickness; against cramp, poison, snakebite, enemies, vampires, evil spirits;
at birth and at teeth-filing; to save men from tigers, and crops from rats and
boars and insect pests; for beauty, virility, love; to weaken a rival in a race
or in a fight; to divert a bullet or break a weapon as it is being drawn.
A Malay charm may form part of a primitive ritual, like that of the rice-year,
conducted by a skilled magician. It may be merely recited on an appropriate
occasion by any layman who has learnt it. One may buy the words of a love-charm,
for example, from an expert "for three dollars, three yards of white cloth,
cotton and thread, limes and salt, areca-nut, and betel-vine," or for "limes
and salt, three small coins, five yards of white cloth and a needle."
The charm may require to be supplemented by contagious and by homœopathic
or mimetic magic. Sand from the foot-print of the woman loved, earth from the
graves of a man and woman, the hair-like filaments of bamboo, black pepper:
these are often steamed in a pot while a love-charm is being recited. Another
method is to "take a lime, pierce it with the midrib of a fallen coconut
palm, leaving one finger's length sticking out on either side whereby to hang
the lime. Hang it up with thread of seven colours, leaving the thread also hanging
loose an inch below the lime. Take seven sharpened midribs and stick them into
the lime, leaving two fingers' length projecting. The sticking of the midrib
into the lime is to symbolise piercing the heart and liver and life and soul
and gall of the beloved. Put jasmine on the end of the midrib skewers. Do this
first on Monday night, for three nights, and then on Friday night. Imagine you
pierce the girl's heart as you pierce the lime. Recite the accompanying charm
three or seven times, swinging the lime each time you recite the words and fumigating
it with incense. Do this five times a day and five times a night in a private
place where no one shall enter or sleep." A woman recites a charm for beauty
over the water in which she bathes or over the coconut oil with which she anoints
her hair.
Sometimes the Malay appears to be indebted to India for a charm and to have
forgotten or purposely omitted the accompanying ritual. In the Atharva-Veda
there is an incantation to arouse the passionate love of a woman:
May love, the disquieter, disquiet thee; do not hold out upon thy bed. With
the terrible arrow of Kama I pierce thee in the heart!
The arrow winged with longing, barbed with love, whose shaft is undeviating
desire, with that well-aimed Kama shall pierce thee in the heart!
With that well-aimed arrow of Kama which parches the spleen, whose plume flies
forward, which burns up, do I pierce thee in the heart!
Consumed by burning ardour, with parched mouth, come to me woman, pliant, thy
pride laid aside, mine alone, speaking sweetly and to me devoted!
I drive thee with a goad from thy mother and thy father, so that thou shalt
be in my power, shalt come up to my wish!
All her thoughts do ye, O Mitra and Varuna, drive out of her. Then having deprived
her of her will put her into my power alone.
Now turn to the modern Malay equivalent:
In the name of God, the Merciful, the Compassionate!
Burn, burn, sand and earth!
I burn the heart of my beloved
And my fire is the arrow of Arjuna!
If I burnt a mountain, it wouldfall;
If I burnt rock, it would split asunder.
I am burning the heart of my beloved,
So that she is broken and hot with love,
That giveth her no rest night or day,
Burning ever as this sand burns.
Let her cease to love parents and friends!
If she sleeps, awaken her!
If she awakes, cause her to rise and come
Yielding herself unto me,
Devoid of shame and discretion!
By virtue of the poison of Arjuna's arrow,
By virtue of the invocation,
"There is no God but God and Muhammad is His Prophet."
The Malay lover only talks of Arjuna's arrow. But the Hindu lover pierced the
heart of a clay effigy by means of a bow with a hempen string carrying an arrow
whose barb was a thorn and whose plume was plucked from an owl.
Even in Vedic times, however, often no ritual was required and the mere recital
of the verbal charm sufficed. A Hindu would mutter in the presence of a hostile
witness:-"I take away the speech in thy mouth, I take away the speech in
thy heart. Wherever thy speech is I take it away. What I say is true. Fall down
inferior to me." So, too, the Malay today without any ritual recites:-"O
God! let the world be blind, the universe deaf, the earth stretched out dumb;
closed and locked be the desire of my enemy"; or he whispers,
Om! king of genies!
The rock-splitting lightning is my voice!
Michael is with me!
In virtue of my use of this charm
To make heavy and lock,
I lock the hearts of all my adversaries,
I make dumb their tongues,
I lock their mouths,
I tie their hands,
I fetter their feet.
Not till rock moves
Shall their hearts be moved;
Not till earth my mother moves
Shall their hearts be moved.
The voice of the Malay animist is heard in the charm calling the corn-baby to
her embroidered cradle, or in the sailor's invocation for a breeze: "Come,
wind, loose your long flowing tresses," or in the Perak raftsman's address
to the spirit of a perilous rapid:-"Accept this offering, granddam! Send
our raft safe through the long rapid, we beseech thee! Cause us no harm in mid
journey. Open like the uncurling blossom of the palm! Open like a snake that
uncoils." But it is not in many incantations that the Malay roars thus
"gently as any sucking dove."
Most of his charms bear all the characteristic marks of the Indian mantra. They
must be kept secret. They are in rude metrical form. Many are a mixture of prayer
and spell. Numerous spirits are generally invoked so that the particular spirit
whose help is wanted or whose malevolence is to be baulked shall not escape
mention. And as knowledge of a man's name will give another power over him,
so it is sought to influence and control a spirit by enumerating his various
names. 'Take an address to the Earth-Spirit:-
At daybreak thou art called Lord of the Sun-Ray,
In the morning Lord of Fortune,
At mid-day Lord of the World,
At evening Lord of the Evening Light:
In the high forest thy name is the Leafy Orchid,
In mid plain, the Flat One,
In the rivulet, the Flowing One,
In the spring, the Trickler.
Like the Brahmin, the Malay magician will exhaust a series of possibilities,
expelling disease from
Skin and bone and joint and vein,
Flesh, blood, heart, spleen, racked with pain;
or bidding
Genies of the mountains return to the mountains!
Genies of the hills return to the hills!
Genies of the plain return to the plain!
Genies of the forest return to the forest!
For the Malay, too, as for the Hindu the origin of a thing or spirit gives magical
control over them. In the Atharva-Veda the mention of the names of the father
and mother of a plant, for example, is a typical part of a magic formula. Incense
is hailed by the Malay magician as a product of the brain of Muhammad, "its
smoke the breath of his spiritual life."
Rice-paste:-
It came down from Allah's presence,
From a drop of dew descended!
From the water whence eternal
Life comes-that it's source of being.
The trapper addresses genies -
I know the source of you, genies!
From the mangrove leaves ye were sprung!
One soared into the sky and became the green genies.
One fell at the gate of the forest and became the black genies!
One fell in the sea and became the white genies!
Sometimes an absurdly base origin is purposely assigned, as in a charm against
tigers:-
Ho tiger! I know your origin!
Your mother, tiger, was a toad!
On the plains of Syria you were begotten!
The Malay magician under Indian influence threatens and commands, though he
is apt to disclaim responsibility:-
Take this bait, crocodile,
A cake of yellow rice
The gift of thy sister Fatimah!
If thou takest it not,
Thou shalt be cursed by her,
or again:-
Obey my words, trapped elephant!
If thou obeyest not,
Thou wilt be killed by Sri Rama.
If thou obeyest,
The Great Rishis will keep thee alive.
In a charm to weaken a rival the Malay boasts:-
It is not on the earth that I tread!
I tread on the heads of all living things.
In a charm against a thunderstorm he outroars the tempest:-
Om! Virgin goddess, Mahadewi! Om!
Cub am I of mighty tiger!
'Ali's line through me descends!
My voice is the rumble of thunder,
Whose bolts strike a path for my seeing;
Forked lightning's the flash of my weapons!
I move not till earth moves!
I rock not till earth rocks!
I quake not till earth quakes,
Firm set as earth's axis.
By virtue of my charm got from 'Ali
And of Islam's confession of faith.
To frighten and capture a male elephant the hunter stands on one leg at sunrise
and vaunts his prowess:-
My countenance is the light of breaking day!
My eyes are the star of dawn!
My body is as that of a tusker!
My prop is a fierce tiger!
My seat is a ravening crocodile!
Sitting on the skin of a tiger was supposed by Hindus to give invisible strength.
But these daring assumptions of power were very far from the mind of the primitive
animist, who addressed all things in heaven and earth with courtesy and deference.
In Malay as in Hindu charms the curse plays a weighty part:-
I would wed the image in the pupil of my mistress' eye
With the image in the pupil of my own!
If thou lookest not upon me,
May thy eyeballs burst!
Or again:-
Genies of supernatural power!
Your home is at the navel of the sea,
By the tree on the broken rock!
Enter not the line drawn by my teacher!
Else will I curse ye with the words,
"There is no God but Allah and Muhammad is His Prophet."
Om! I neutralise all evil,
O Solomon! In the name of God.
The mystic Om, symbolical of the Hindu triad, Vishnu, Siva, and Brahma, still
remains a word of power with this Muslim magician, though almost supplanted
by the Arabic kun, "Let it be," the creative word of Allah:-
In the name of God, the Merciful, the Compassionate!
I fry sand from the foot-print of my beloved;
Nay, I fry her heart and liver
Night and day, as this sand is fried.
"Let it be," says God.
"And it is so," says Muhammad, His Apostle.
Let her body itch with desire
Giving her no rest from longing for me.
"And it is so," says Gabriel.
Islam, coming first from India, introduced the Malay to a wide field of fresh
magic. A woman desiring the love of a man gets the following charm written down,
wrapped in cerements that have covered the face of a male corpse, and buried
where her lover is bound to step. The charm is interesting, because so, too,
the Moroccan bride will pray to Allah and the Prophet and Fatimah that her husband
may "be fond of her as the dead is fond of his grave"; and Syro-Christian
charms (which appear to have influenced early Islam) invoke the Father and the
Son to bind the tongues of false witnesses and the navel of the newly-born child
as "the ox in the yoke, the dead in the grave." The Malay charm runs
as follows:-
If Muhammad can be sundered from Allah
And a corpse move in the grave,
Only then shall my lover's desire move to another.
The desire of his heart shall be only for me;
Straying now hither he shall be my mate unto death,
Safe near me like a corpse in the grave.
The Muslim element in Malay magic will form the subject of a separate chapter.
But the final evolution of the spoken charm in the Malay vernacular may be illustrated
here by the incantation whereby the Kelantan shaman exorcises the demon of disease
at a séance:-
O universe, the world of Adam!
Earth was made from a clod rom Paradise,
Water from a river of Paradise,
Fire from the smoke of Hell,
Air from the four elements.
Skin and hair, flesh and blood,
Bones and sinews, life and seed
Came from four elements of sperm.
Skin and hair were created by Gabriel,
Flesh and blood by Michael,
Bones and sinews by Israfil,
Life and seed by 'Azrail!
Where is this genie lodging and taking shelter?
Where is he lodging and crouching?
Genie! if thou art in the feet of this patient,
Know that these feet are moved by Allah and His Prophet;
If thou art in the belly of this patient,
His belly is God's sea, the sea, too, of Muhammad.
If thou art in his hands,
His hands pay homage to God and His Prophet.
If thou art in his liver, It is the secret place of God and His Prophet!
If thou art in his heart,
His heart is Abu Bakar's palace.
If thou art in his lungs,
His lungs are 'Omar's palace.
If thou art in his spleen,
His spleen is 'Usman's palace.
If thou art in his gall-bladder,
His gall-bladder is 'Ali's palace.
The heart, the lung, the spleen, the gall-bladder
Are the homestead of life,
Not the homestead of genie or Iblis,
Not the homestead of sickness or suffering.
Ho there, genie! thy origin was from the tonguelike fumes of smokeless hell.
I know thy origin,
The name o thy father, thy mother, and of thy child.
V. THE SOUL OF THINGS
THF, primitive Malay looked below the outer aspect of man and beast and plant
and stone and found a veiled power or inner life for which their exterior is
the host or tabernacle. This animating spirit he called the vital "spark"
(semangat), probably because the dead are cold. For lack of an exact equivalent,
it may be termed soul, despite that word's other connotations. It is possessed
by all things "in widest commonalty spread." There is no aristocracy
among souls, no "rank, condition or degree," distinguishing the soul
of man from the soul of plant or animal. But souls inhabiting things useful
to men, like rice, arrest the Malay's attention only less than his own soul.
The soul is the personal property of its host. It is also an impersonal substance,
whose deficiency in the sick can be supplied by soul-substance derived, for
example, from proper diet, rubbing with a bezoar stone, being breathed upon
by the medicine man or brushed with the lush grass of his aspergillum.
This substance, which enters the Malay child the moment the bamboo knife (or
midwife's teeth) severs the umbilical cord, permeates his whole body and its
secretions like an electric fluid. In some parts of the globe it is believed
that there are separate souls for the head, the blood, the heart, the saliva,
and even the foot-prints. A survival of this idea may be traced in the Malay
shaman's altar piled with morsels representing every part of the beast sacrificed.
According to one Malay account the soul lives in the belly. His head to a Malay
is sacred: he resents it being touched even in play. All parts of the body where
soul-substance is present must be guarded from the sorcery of enemies. A woman's
blood can be employed to her hurt by a disappointed lover. Clippings from hair
or nails are hidden or destroyed for fear possession of them may give an enemy
control over their owner's soul and so over his life. Clippings from finger-nails
can turn into fire-flies just as the soul of a whole man can turn into a firefly.
So strong is the soul-substance in the hair shorn at a girl's first tonsure
that it is buried at the foot of a barren tree to bring fruit as luxuriant as
her tresses. The abundance of this substance in hair and teeth makes it politic
to sacrifice all save a lock of a Malay boy's hair and to file off part of a
child's teeth at puberty: formerly the stumps were blackened, it has been surmised,
to conceal from the spirits the partial nature of the sacrifice. In old days
warriors especially, like Samson, wore their hair long and uncut. And after
a death relatives used to sacrifice some or all of their locks so that the dead
might not revisit them. The history of Pasai tells of a Malay princess born
from a bamboo whose life was bound up with one golden hair that glittered among
her raven tresses: when her consort pulled it out, white blood gushed forth
and she died.
The Malay's respect for saliva is shown by the deputing of a courtier to take
charge of the royal cuspidore on ceremonial occasions. The midwife spits on
the baby she welcomes into the world. This is a gift of a portion of one's self,
a pledge of union and good-will, a diluted form of blood-covenant. Religious
teachers of piety and learning are invited by parents to spit upon a child's
head or into his mouth to endow him with intelligence and facility for learning
to recite the Quran. The saliva of a living saint brings benefits to the credulous.
For medicinal purposes saliva is often reinforced by scarlet betel juice. At
a sacrifice in Malacca to the earth spirit before the planting out of the young
rice a man walked round the field, spitting rice from his mouth, probably not
a mere offering of food but a bond of union between himself and the earth to
which his rice-plants were to be entrusted.
After-birth is full of soul-substance, and dropping on the earth can generate
evil spirits. In many charms the magician threatens such spirits with knowledge
of their origin:-
I know the origin whence ye sprang!
When the discharge before birth began,
A drop of blood fell to the earth,
Creating genies of the earth, goblins of the soil.
The soul may be attacked through objects that have come into contact with its
owner. One way to abduct a girl's soul is to "take sand or earth from her
foot-print or from her garden path or the front of her door or from her carriage
wheels or her pony's hooves." Frying this soul-substance in oil, one recites
a charm:-
I am burning the liver, the heart, the lusts and passions of my beloved,
So that she is broken and hot with love,
Madly in love with me and restless,
Burning as this sand burns.
The personal soul may depart in sleep "what it sees the man dreams."
A well-known Malay quatrain tells how a girl pats her pillow and calls upon
her lover's soul, which comes to her in dreams. Sudden awakening, fright or
sorcery may separate soul from body for ever. Then the house of life will fall
into disrepair and, unless the shaman or medicine-man can recall the wanderer,
the body will die. The shaman's personal soul quits his body in a trance to
hold intercourse with spirits. The soul may leave the human frame and enter
that of a tiger to prey upon men.
The Negrito of the Malay Peninsula conceives a man's soul to have human shape,
to be red like blood, and no bigger than a grain of maize. A Besisi legend finds
it in a person's shadow. Both these conceptions of the soul in its personal
aspect recur in the beliefs of the Malay.
The soul is in the shadow of the physical body. One should not walk upon a person's
shadow, the agriculturist must not hack his own shadow and the magician, to
establish and vaunt his invulnerable strength, will declare his shadow to be
"the shadow of one beloved by Allah and the Prophet and angels forty-and-four."
The personal soul is in one's name. The Malay is reluctant to utter his own
name lest breathing it he may part with a piece of his soul-substance: a third
party must be asked to divulge the secret. A child receives a tentative name
before the umbilical cord is cut, but if the infant falls sick the name will
be regarded as unlucky and changed to mislead the spirits of disease. A name
like 'Abdu'l-Qadir may offend the Muslim saint who founded the great religious
order. Some parents even call their children by such names as "Ugly"
or "Fool" in order to persuade demons that they are unattractive prey.
It is desirable always to disguise one's real name. An adult Malay is often
known as "father (or mother) of so-and-so." A neighbour calls her
friend's husband "your house." A Perak man refers to his wife as "the
person at home" or "my rice-bag," a Perak woman to her husband
as "my chopper." The Malay seldom mentions the names of close relations,
alluding to them as "elder brother," "younger sister," "grandad,"
"mother-in-law," and so on. Of the dead person he speaks as "that
soul," using an Arabic word. To his ruler he refers as "Lord"
or "He-under-whose-feet-we-are": and the life name of a dead Sultan
is always dropped for a new Arabic title, "The Deceased on whom Allah have
mercy", "Allah's Great Saint," "The Friend of Allah,"
"The Deceased who was strong." The mention of Siva is rare in Malay
charms, the god was invoked as the "Supreme Teacher"; and the worldly
Malay Muslim in ordinary talk speaks of Allah simply as "Lord," both
practices suggestive of a tabu of divine names. The Malay is afraid even to
attract the spirits of beasts. In the jungle the dreaded tiger is "grandfather."
On a mine the elephant, whose heavy feet and roving trunk can undo the work
of puny men, must be called "the tall one," the blundering water-buffalo
"the unlucky one,"the poisonous snake "the live creeper."
In Patani Bay fishermen call a crocodile the "gap-toothed thingummy-bob,"
a goat or sheep "the baabaa," a buffalo "moo," a sea-snake
"the weaver's sword," a tiger "stripes," a monkey "Mr.
Long Tall," a vulture "bald-head," a Buddhist monk "the
yellow one," and sea-spirits "thingummies." Smallpox in many
places is termed "the complaint of the good folk." The mention of
the real name may attract the capricious attention of the lords of the sea,
the spirit of a disease, a human ghost, a king, a mammal or a mother-in-law:
it may also frighten away such elusive things as ore in a mine or camphor in
a tree. So on a tin-mine the ore must be called "grass-seed " and
the metal "white stone." Collectors of camphor use an elaborate tabu
vocabulary of aboriginal, rare and artificial words: the bamboo is called "the
drooper," bananas "the fruit in rows," bees "seeds on branches,"
blood "sap," a cat "the kitchen tiger," a fire-fly "a
torch for the eyes," the nose "the smeller," the jaws "the
chewers," a bed "the cuddling place," and so on. Not only is
the name of camphor itself avoided, but no words are uttered which might lead
the tree to suspect that Malays were in search of its treasures. So human in
anger and fear are trees and minerals and beasts.
For there is no difference between the soul of man and the soul of beasts and
plants and objects. As the soul of man can take the form of insect or bird,
it is easy to figure him re-incarnated in animal form. The deer was a man who
died of abscess on the leg. The tiger wears the stripes he earned as a naughty
school-boy. The elephants have a city where they live in the shape of men. Limes
can be used to abduct the soul of an elephant as well as the soul of a girl.
The solid-casqued hornbill was a malicious son-in-law, the argus pheasant once
a woman. In using dogs to hunt deer, the magician reminds them of that common
kinship which in a Malay folk-tale makes the house-dog a fitting bridegroom
for his master's daughter, and he urges them by promise of relationship or marriage
with the quarry
Buck and he shall be thy brother
Doe and she shall be thy mistress.
Dogs, like rice, are close friends of man and have personal names and souls.
To make it bear fruit the durian tree is beaten like a naughty child. "There
are plants to which a particularly strong soul-substance is attributed, on account
of their tough vital power. Among all Indonesians, Dracoena terminalis stands
foremost. It is the sacred plant, which is used by magicians in all their proceedings,
and whose strong soul-substance they try to transfer to man." Moreover,
plants, like men, have this substance in every part of them. Take the tree,
where wild bees nest. Its root is called the Seated Raja, its stem the Trailing
Raja, its branch the Pendent Raja, its leaf the Soaring Raja-in Malay the word
Raja denotes either sex. Similar names are given to the parts of the lime tree,
and the spirits of the parts of the eagle-wood tree are called expressly princesses.
The aesthetic side of such nomenclature is a side issue to the Malay. To the
coconut palm he ascribes definitely seven souls, named after princesses whose
"neck" the tapper seizes, whose blossom-like "hair" he rolls
up, for whose juice he holds an ivory "bath," where the princesses
may "clap their hands and chase one another." Like rajas and spirits,
the camphor tree is addressed with a special tabu vocabulary. Formerly there
were seven experts required to take camphor, as there are seven midwives required
to bring a raja into the world.
The camphor princess lives in the tree, which is her house. Once she was wooed
in her human form by a man. When he broke her command and recited to his ruler
the magical chants his bride had taught him, she became a cicada and flew up
into a coconut palm. So the soul-substance of a camphor tree may appear in either
shape, as the soul of rice may appear as a grasshopper or be treated as a human
baby. The soul of the rattan is in its tiny mimic, the stick-insect. The soul-substance
of eagle-wood, the coconut palm and of man is conceived as a bird. Therefore,
souls are summoned by the burring call of the housewife to her chicken, and
rice is sprinkled over a man to retain his soul in his body. Stress was laid
rather on the soul's power of flight than on any definition of this symbol until
the Malay philologist studying the Muslim cosmogony discovered the soul in the
Nur-i-Muhammad (the Radiance of Muhammad) and identified the bird in his bosom
as the Prophet's parrot (nuri Muhammad)!
The flutter of the heart, the vital spark in the firefly, the stridulous telegraphy
of the cicada in a tree, the rustling flight of a bird from its branches, an
uncanny likeness and the anthropomorphic learnings of men explain the origin
of these conceptions. Possibly association of colour has led to the soul of
tin-ore being detected in the buffalo and the soul of gold in the barking deer,
an animal often described in Malay romance as golden and stamped on the obverse
of the tiny gold dinar minted in Kelantan. A Besisi legend speaks of a bright
snake with seven souls in the form of iridescent rainbows. The ascription of
seven souls to men and trees, when the soul-substance has so many hosts and
so many shapes, is a moderate estimate based on the worldwide regard for the
number seven.
In Negri Sembilan the soul of a house is said to appear as a cricket. The Patani
fishermen think that even a boat has an individual soul (maya), generally invisible,
to keep it from dissolution. It is lucky to hear the chirping sound of this
soul. It is luckier still to see the soul. That of a dug-out manifests itself
as a fire-fly, that of a large boat as a snake, that of a ship as a person either
male or female according to the qualities of the vessel. If ill fortune at sea
reveals that the soul of his boat is weak, the fisherman engages a magician
to feed it with offerings laid on each rib. There is no soul until all planks
have been fitted and the hull can be properly called a boat. It is dangerous
to keep a perfect neolithic celt (which the Malay takes to be a meteorite),
as it has life and will attract lightning to disappear in the flash, but chipped
or damaged the stone is dead and harmless.
Hard objects have strong soul-substance, of which magic makes good use. The
sick are rubbed with bezoar-stones. A candle-nut, a stone and an iron nail are
employed both at the birth of a child and at the taking of the rice baby. The
drinking of water in which iron has been put strengthens an oath, for the soul
of the metal will destroy a perjurer. Applied to the wound, the blades of some
daggers can extract the venom from a snake-bite, and the mere invocation of
magnetic steel will help to join parted lovers.
VI. THE RITUAL OF THE RICE-FIELD
IN the magic safe-guarding rice from seed-time to harvest survives the primitive
ritual of the Indonesian race. Strip away the obvious accretions, the names
of Hindu deities, the thin Muslim veneer, and the essence of the ritual remains
intact in Malaya to-day. It deals with the soul-substance, human, animal, vegetable,
with the spirits of dead magicians, nature-spirits and Father Sky and Mother
Earth. Except for Sky and Earth the spirits invoked lack the omnipresence and
individuality of gods, bear generic names and are indefinite in number. Their
sphere is a particular district. They inhabit the rice-field, the thick jungle,
the rays of the setting sun. No temples are erected in their honour. The customary
and symbolic rites that persuade them to friendly relations with man can be
enacted in a forest clearing, in the corner of a rice swamp, on the floor of
a village barn. No shaman or priest of Siva or Muslim elder presides. The magician
has the narrow scope of the spirits he serves. He belongs to one small village
or humble district. Often the rites controlling the growth of rice are conducted
by an old Malay woman, relic of the far distant past when man hunted and killed,
and woman, the bearer of young, delved, lending the benign influence of her
motherhood to make crops prolific. Among many aborigines this older custom is
observed and the rites are celebrated not by a man but by a woman, fitting midwife
for the rice-baby. Still in parts of the country agricultural implements are
given by the Malay groom to his bride as a wedding present.
Before starting to fell a clearing for rice, the farmer takes a lump of benzoin
on a plate wrapped in a white cloth as a present to the local magician, a survivor
in Malay culture whose trust is "first in God, next in His Prophet, and
then in the magicians of old, the ancestral spirits who own the clumps and clods
" of the locality.[1] This expert recites charms over the benzoin and returns
it to the planter with traditional instructions. First he is to burn the benzoin
in a bamboo conch and fumigate his adzes and choppers, praying to the guardian
spirits, male and female, newly dead and dead long since, to be cool and propitious.
Then he is to stand erect facing eastward and look round at the four quarters
of the heavens; he is to notice at which quarter his breath feels least faint
and begin to fell in that
[1. Except where acknowledgment is made to other sources, the following account
is based on two manuscripts written for me by Perak Malay headmen twelve years
ago. It contains certain interesting details hitherto not noted in the Peninsula.]
direction. After one or two hacks at the trees he must cease work for the day.
When the time comes to burn the clearing, the man gets more benzoin from the
magician, furnigates his torches, lights them and cries thrice to spirits of
all sorts, Indonesian, Indian, Persian, Arabian, to goblins with a Sanskrit
name, to indigenous vampires, and goblins of the soil, saying that the magician
has duly informed them of his desire to burn, that he himself has paid them
due respect, and that trusting to the luck of his instructor he hopes for a
favourable breeze. Very early in the morning after the burn he and his wife
and children must hurry to mitigate the smart of the half-burnt clearing with
water in which are steeped cold rice from last night's meal, a slice from the
cool heart of a gourd, and other vegetable products chosen for their natural
frigidity or appropriately cool names. Also a little maize should be planted.
All this must be done before Grannie Kemang can get up and sow rank weeds that
will flourish and provide hiding places for goblin pests. Before quitting the
clearing, one should pile and singe three rows of the unburnt brushwood. Then
one must go home and wait three days before completing the burn.
The next important occasion is the planting of the rice-seed. In Perak and Kedah
the time for this is taken from observation of the Pleiades. "When at 4.30
a.m. or thereabouts a few grains of rice slip off the palm of the hand, the
arm being outstretched and pointed at the constellation, or when, the arm being
so directed, the bracelet slides down the wrist, it is considered to be time
to put down the rice nursery." In some places the planter is guided by
observation of the sun, calculating from the time when it is thought to be exactly
overhead at noon. Others "keep the seed-grain in store for a certain definite
period, that varies with the character of the grain and may be anything between
four and seven months.... This period of rest is vital to the productive power
of the seed." The flooding of some stream, the fruiting of certain trees
also afford rough local indications to supply the defect of the misleading Muhammadan
lunar calendar.
A seed plot is chosen where the soil smells sweet. It is partitioned off by
four sticks into a square of a prescribed size. Here both Sakai and Malays sometimes
practise a method of divination. Water in a coconut shell and leaves are placed
within the square. If the next morning finds the leaves undisturbed, the water
unspilt and the frame unmoved, the spot is auspicious; it remains only to plant
rice-seed in seven holes within the square as custom ordains.
A stick, if possible of a special kind of wood (termed the "tortoise's
chest") which has grown on an anthill, must be cut fresh on the morning
of the ceremony to make the "mother dibble." It must be in length
thrice the span between a woman's thumb and ring-finger and it must be peeled.
A match or "twin" for the mother dibble must also be prepared, of
any wood, unpecled, three cubits and three ring-fingers long. Another dibble
is selected by the magician from the heap of dibbles brought by the planters.
A pretty leafy shrub is got ready to make a " plaything " for the
seed. The leader of the village mosque chants prayers for all souls. Then those
present feast.
Next, with a white cloth about his head the magician squats, facing the east.
The big toe of his right foot is above the big toe of his left, and he recites
charms over benzoin. He fumigates the mother dibble, her "match" and
the other dibble, and sprinkles them with rice-paste, does the same to the other
tools, and the same thrice to the earth in the middle of the chosen square.
He holds out to the four quarters of heaven seven packets of sweet rice, seven
sugar-canes, seven bamboos containing rice cooked in them, the Malay's most
primitive cooking-pot, and rice parched, yellow and white. He lifts the mother
dibble in both hands, holds it across his head, its point towards the right.
After reciting charms he holds it above his shoulder point to earth, and digs
it into the middle of the square, withdraws it and then plants it firm and erect
in the hole. Next he plants the twin or duplicate, and then the leafy shrub.
He ties the mother dibble, her "twin" and the shrub together with
bark, and decorates the mother dibble with a creeper whose name denotes increase.
At the foot of the mother dibble he sets a bamboo containing rice from the freak
ears most favoured for the rice-baby as certain to contain the rice soul, a
rod of iron, a stone worn smooth in a waterfall, and three quids of betel. On
the shrub he hangs seven packets of sweet rice, seven sugar canes, seven kinds
of banana, seven sorts of jungle fruit, apparently to attract and keep the seven
souls of the rice. He charms the third dibble and, before planting it also by
the side of the mother dibble, uses it to make seven holes, saying as he makes
them: "Peace be unto thee, Solomon, Prophet of Allah, prince of all the
earth! I would sow rice for seed. I pray thee protect it from all danger and
mischance."
After fumigating two handfuls of rice he holds it with his right hand above
his left and sprinkles it with cool rice-water of the kind made for his burnt
clearing and with the rice-paste used in all magical ceremonies. (In Negri Sembilan
as he does this he recites a verse
Rice-paste without speck!
I'll get gold by the peck!
I charm my rice crushed and in ear!
I'll get full grain within the year.)
The rice-paste is taken from a coconut shell (or in modern days from a soap-dish!),
in which there have also been steeped a nail and husked rice. It is applied
with a brush of herbs whose vigorous growth or lucky names ("the reviver",
"the full one") are calculated to benefit the seed, body and soul.
Going to the first hole the magician cries: "Peace be unto thee, Solomon,
Prophet of God, prince of all the earth! Peace be unto you, genies and goblins
of the soil! Peace be unto my father the Sky and my mother the Earth! Peace
be unto you, guardian father, guardian mother! I would send my child, daughter
of Princess Splendid to her mother. I would bid her sail on the sea that is
black, the sea that is green, the sea that is blue, the sea that is purple.
For six months I send her, and in the seventh I will welcome her back. It is
not seed I plant: it is rice-grain." Holding his breath, he puts the seed
into the seven holes. When he releases his breath, he does it gently and with
averted face.
The rice-paste he buries beside the mother dibble and turns the coconut shell,
its receptacle, upside down on the surface of the ground, fumigating it and
passing a censer three times round it. Then he rises from his task.
Children rush to pick the sweet offerings from the shrub, though one offering
at least must be left on its branches. The leader of the mosque intones prayers
in honour of the Prophet. Men seize the dibbles, women the seed. With shouts
and laughter the sexes strive to outdo one another in speed at their respective
tasks. Before he goes home the owner of the field removes from the square the
bamboo filled with rice. This cereal is eaten for the evening meal by himself
and his family, but no stranger may partake of it.
If it is dry hill rice, the seed has been sown over the field from the first
and no transplanting is required. If the rice is to be planted in an irrigated
field, the seed is sown in a nursery and forty-four days later the young shoots
are transplanted. That wet rice cultivation is less primitive is perhaps shown
by the omission in many districts of all charms at this function, though again
seven bunches are planted first, along with a banana plant and three stems of
the Clinogyne grandis, and a fence is built round them. (In Negri Sembilan the
following invocation is addressed to spirits:-
O Langkesa! O Langkesi!
Spirits of the field ye are four!
Counting me we are five!
Hurt not nor harm my child!
Break faith and ye shall be stricken
By the iron that is strong,
By the majesty of Pagar Ruyong
(Home of our royal house),
By the thirty chapters of the Quran.
Allah fulfil my curse!)
After this preliminary rite no work is done for the rest of the day. On the
morrow the seedlings are planted out by women, who must neither drop the young
plants nor speak. A wooden dibble is used in remote districts; elsewhere a dibble
with a steel point that bears the euphemistic name of "the goat's hoof."
"This instrument carries from five to nine seedlings at once and is used
seven times in quick succession." While each of seven bunches of seedlings
are being planted the tongue must be "pressed against the roof of the mouth."
At this season a propitiatory sacrifice is sometimes offered to the earth spirits.
If dry rice is being cultivated, this is done about the time the rice begins
to swell. From about the fourth month of its growth no stranger may enter the
field.
As soon as the ear has swollen large, the farmer cooks sweet rice in a bamboo
and invites the magician, the leader of the mosque, and other worthies to the
feast of "splitting the bamboo." Nightly now rubbish and stinking
herbs are burnt to scare evil spirits.
When the crop is ripe for harvest, the magician has to "take the souls
of the rice." For two evenings he walks round the edge of the field, coaxing
and collecting them. On the third he enters the field to search for their host,
looking about for ears of royal yellow, certain types of freak ear reminding
one of a veiled or laughing princess, ears on stalks interlaced, ears from stalks
with a lucky bird's nest at the root. When he has found a suitable host, he
ties seven stalks with bark and fibre and many coloured thread having a nail
attached to it, and slips the nail into the middle of the bunch. Thrice before
the cutting of the seven stalks is performed the magician walks round them bidding
malicious earth spirits avaunt:-
"Goblins of latter days! Goblins of the beginning! Goblins one hundred
and ninety! Goblins under my feet and subjection! Goblins that creep into baskets
and round stalks! Goblins of hill and mountain and plain! Goblins mine! Get
ye back and aside or I will curse ye."
Early the next morning the leader of the mosque mounts a covered shelter in
the field and intones prayers in honour of the Prophet. A feast follows. When
evening is about to fall, the magician and an assistant and the farmer walk
up to the plant chosen the day before. A puzzle ring is carried to hang on the
stalks. The magician, his head covered with a white cloth, draws near. Taking
care lest his shadow fall on the seven stalks, he fumigates them and, sprinkling
rice-paste, grasps them gingerly, hiding in his palm a tiny blade, whose handle
is carved in the shape of a bird for disguise. He bows his head to the ground
and mutters a traditional invocation:-
Soul of my child, Princess Splendid!
I sent you to your mother for six months, to receive you growing tall in the
seventh month.
The time is fulfilled, and I receive you.
I told you to sail to the sea that is black, the sea that is green, the sea
that is blue, and the sea that is purple,
To the land of Rome, to India, China, and Siam.
Now I would welcome you up into a palace hall, To a broidered mat and carpet.
I would summon nurses and followers,
Subjects and soldiers and court dignitaries for your service;
I would assemble horses and elephants, ducks and geese, buffaloes and goats
and sheep with all their din.
Come, for all is ready I would call you hither,
Soul of my child, Princess Splendid!
Come., my crown and my garland, flower of my delight!
I welcome you up to a palace-hall,
To a broidered mat and carpet.
Soul of my child, Princess Splendid!
Come! I would welcome you!
Forget your mother and wet-nurse.
White and black and green and blue and purple get ye aside!
Brightness of genie and devil begone!
The real brightness is the brightness of my child.
Clearly the four seas must symbolize the black earth of the newly-tilled fields,
and the carpet of green rice-plants changing tint from light to dark until the
harvest.
The magician lifts his head. Skyward and all around he gazes for the advent
of the rice-soul. With the sound of a breeze it appears either in the form of
a grasshopper or other insect or in the shape of a girl, Grannie Kemang. If
it fails at first to come, the repetition of the most coaxing lines of the invocation
three times is certain to fetch it. The magician holds his breath, shuts his
eyes, sets his teeth, and with one cut severs the ears from the seven stalks.
Like a midwife holding a new-born child, he puts the ears in his lap and swaddles
them in a white cloth. This rice baby he hands to the owner of the land to hold.
He cuts seven more clusters of grain from round the plant whence "she"
was taken and puts them along with an egg and a golden banana into the basket
prepared for the baby. The rice-baby is cradled among brinjal leaves, a stone
and a piece of iron, and under a canopy of cool creepers and bark and fibre
and coloured thread. The magician smears the seven stalks from which the ears
were cut with clay, "as medicine for their hurt from the knife," and
hides them under neighbour stalks that are whole. Then facing the east, he touches
the maimed stalks and cries:-
Ho ancestresses whose rice-fields shone at the coming of our first king!
Grow here, maidens, in clumps!
Establish your home here!
If the seven tiers of heaven are shaken,
Then only shall my child, Princess Splendid, be shaken;
If the seven layers of earth are shaken,
Then only shall my child, Princess Splendid, be shaken;
Else shall she be established as rock, firm as iron
From this world unto the world hereafter,
Established in limbs and body with father and mother.
Only if the Prophet be parted from Allah
Shall you be parted from me.
The magician kisses the rice-stalks and heads the procession carrying the rice-baby
home. The farmer is addressed as the father of the baby and his wife as the
mother. She and her children are waiting and, as she takes the basket from her
husband, the woman exclaims:-"Dear heart! My life! My child! How I have
longed for your return from your voyage! Every day of your absence, every month,
all the year I've missed you. Now you've returned safe and sound! Come! Your
room is ready." She kisses the rice-baby three times. The magician fumigates
and sprinkles a spot for the cradle. Then he takes the egg out of the cradle
and breaks it. If there is an empty space at the top of the egg, it is a poor
omen; if at either side of it, a good; but if the shell is quite full, the omen
is so good that it must be greeted with an offering of yellow rice and a spatchcock.
The egg and the golden banana must be eaten by the farmer and his family, and
no one else may taste them. For three days the household must keep vigil, the
fire may not be quenched, the food in the cooking-pots may not be finished,
no one may go down from the house or ascend to it. Thus all the precautions
fitting for a new-born child must be observed. During the three days following
these birth tabus, one small basket of ears a day may be reaped, and the reaper
must work silently, not gaze around, and guard against his shadow falling on
the plants as he would guard against another's shadow falling on his own. On
the seventh day reaping may begin in earnest, but the yield for that day is
devoted to a feast in honour of the spirits of dead magicians, the forebears
who have charge of the district.
The rice won on the seventh day is trodden out on a mat, and winnowed in a sieve.
Then the grain is placed on a mat in the middle of the garden along with brinjal
leaves, a stone from a waterfall, an iron nail, a candle-nut, three cockle-shells,
a creeper and the inverted rattan stand of a cooking-pot on which is put a coconut
shell full of water (to quench the thirst of the parching grain). Around this
stand the grain is spread, nor may it be left unwatched until the sun has dried
it.
In some parts of the Peninsula there is a "harvest dance that forms part
of the procedure of gathering in the rice. The performers are a band of some
fifteen or twenty young children, both boys and girls, who carry winnowing-sieves
and other tools of the harvester. The troop is invited forward by an old woman
taking up her position on the threshing screen and singing to the children,
who respond by dancing and putting questions for the old lady to answer in verse.
When the spectators are weary of the dancing and singing the performance is
brought to an end in the following very curious way. The girl-leader of the
children's chorus sings a verse that purports to be a charm ' making all things
brittle.' Having done so (doubtless with the idea of making the threshing easier)
she leads her band of dancers to the screen by way of testing the efficacy of
the magic. The children tramp and stamp on the screen; and when a lath has shown
its brittleness by breaking, the charm is supposed to have done its work and
the dance ends."
The next process is to pound the rice in a wooden mortar. Again the mortar must
be hung with bark, black fibre, coloured thread and cool-named leaves. Allah
and the Prophet are invoked. The pestle crushes the grain slowly three, five
or seven times, and then may work at ordinary speed. The rice crushed, the "eldest
child of the year," is cooked in a spray-hung pot and eaten at a feast.
The last and biggest feast of the rice year is "the Malay harvest home.
Each planter keeps open house in turn, when all his friends come to help him
tread out his grain. Even the reverend elders assume for the time the manner
of children and verses are bandied with the gentle licence characteristic of
Malay junketings." Games, theatricals (and formerly buffalo-fights) formed
part of the celebrations. Tithes are paid to the mosque and fees to the magician.
The magician presides over the first storing of the grain in the barn. Again,
brinjal leaves, a stone from a waterfall, a piece of iron, a candle-nut or better
three candle-nuts, a plant with a fine healthy name, three cockle-shells, a
piece of torch, all covered with the ancestral rice-measure and the measure
covered with the rattan stand of a cooking-pot hung with bark and fibre and
coloured thread-on these solid soul-strengthening foundations he pours the grain
from the three basketfuls of rice cut near the sheaf whence the rice-baby was
taken. The shepherd of souls has performed his final task and the remainder
of the grain is left for the farmer to pile.
Some of the ears that go to make up the rice-baby will be mixed with next year's
seed and some with next year's magic rice-paste used at all functions by the
Malay magician.
This account of the ritual of the rice-year in the Malay Peninsula can be supplemented
from other sources. Nearly a century ago in Province Wellesley the seed was
twice measured before being sown in the nursery "in order to ascertain
that none had escaped preternaturally." There, too, sometimes seven stalks
were cut for the rice-baby, sometimes two only, a male and a female, on each
side of which a gold or silver ring was tied before they were wrapped together
in a white cloth. The most notable point in the Perak account is that the farmer
and his wife are regarded as the father and mother of the rice-soul. In Malacca
the sheaf from which the baby is cut is called the mother, treated like a woman
after childbirth and reaped by the farmer's wife. In ancient Greece there was
confusion as to the moment when Demeter, the corn-mother, changed into Persephone,
the corn-daughter, and in many other countries the bucolic mind has glozed over
this difficulty.
The charming of hatchets, the dibble cut from a special tree likely by sympathetic
magic to influence the quality of the rice-plant, the dibbling of seven holes
in a special plot, the holidays prescribed after felling and sowing and reaping,
the seven ears for the rice-soul, the various communal feasts throughout the
rice-year, all these are found among the Proto-Malay tribes of Malaya.
In Negri Sembilan, where matrilineal custom laughs at the proscriptions of Islam,
girls and men bandy Malay pantun, half verse half riddle, one with another as
they work in the fields. Comparison with planting rites in other lands has suggested
that riddles are a survival of a tabu language, employed not to frighten the
soul of a cereal by direct reference to the processes of agriculture.
The symbolism of the ritual will be clear to any one who has grasped the primitive
Malay notion of the soul. The soul of the rice in the field is of the same stuff
that villagers' are made of and, figured in anthropomorphic form, is treated
with the care lavished on a new-born child.
The recognition by the animist of souls that may inhabit stock or stone, man
or plant, and quit its host to assume the shape of tiger, grasshopper or girl,
leads naturally to belief in disembodied spirits that may enter man and make
him sick, enter drum or stone and make it a fetish, and act as capriciously
as animals or human beings. The idea of the survival of the soul apart from
the body leads also to the worship of ancestors. So in the ritual of the rice-field
there is continual reference to ancestral spirits and goblins of the soil, the
hill, the plain. Accordingly, every three or four years before clearing their
fields for planting Malay husbandmen have a mock-combat to expel evil spirits.
Sometimes banana stems are the weapons wielded. Sometimes the two opposing parties
hurl thin rods with pared flat ends like that of an old-fashioned stethoscope
across a gully until a blow makes the face of one of the combatants bleed and
ends the fray. It has been suggested that originally one of the parties in such
mimic battles represented the forces of evil. In Negri Sembilan the magician
opens the proceedings with this conjuration:-
In the name of Allah, the Merciful, the Compassionate!
Ancestors that inhabit the layers of the earth!
Genies of the soil! Idols of iron!
Get ye aside, genies and devils!
Make way for the might of Allah!
You who thrust up to peer
Bow down, for as a tiger I pass by.
Genies and devils and goblins!
Trespass not where Allah hath forbidden,
Else are ye traitors to Him whose Being exists of necessity.
I know the origin whence ye sprang:
From the soil of Mount Meru ye were born,
In the clouds, called the Beautiful Billowy Ones!
In the sky, the Pendent Ones!
In the fig-tree, the Peerers!
In the water, the Crawlers!
In the paths, the Up-Stickers!
I have Allah's mandate!
His Prophet is my prop:
The recording angels fight for me;
The four archangels are my brethren;
I live in a fort with seven walls of steel.
Descend angels and protect me.
And cause my enemies to bow down;
Locked be the teeth and heart and spleen
Of all who purpose evil against me.
I know the origin of ye spirits of evil:
Ye were sprung from the serpent Sakti-muna!
May ye be afflicted and distressed;
When ye gaze, may your eyes be blinded,
And may your going be shameful and grovelling.
Grandsire! thou who dwellest in bay and reaches, upstream and down,
Dwellest on mountain and in forest and on mound,
In ravine and valley and spring and tree and rock!
Take thy soldiery, thy people and thy children
To the shady tree at the land's end
At the foot of Mount Kaf.
Keep me from harm and destruction
Or thou shalt be smitten by the majesty of God's word.
For God and Muhammad and His saints and Prophets
And the angels forty-and-four and the four archangels
Are with me.
Noah, guardian of earth!
Jacob, guardian of rock!
Luqman, guardian of iron!
Solomon, guardian of all living things!
I crave earth, water, wood and stone,
A place to build houses and hamlets and a country.
Ho! all living creatures,
We are all of one origin, all servants of God!
If ye harm or destroy me,
Ye shall be smitten by the word of God,
The miraculous power of Muhammad,
The sanctity of His saints and prophets,
By the four-and-forty angels,
The four archangels and the thirty chapters of the Quran!
Grandsire, save me from harm!
If thy eye offend me, God shall blind thee;
If thy hand molest me, God shall break it;
If thy heart purpose evil towards me,
It shall be crushed by the Apostle of God.
Another incantation follows to open the doors of the seven heavens and the seven
earths:-
Genies infidel and Muslim!
You and I are of one origin, both servants of God.
But ye are born of hell-fire,
And I of the light of the Prophet
Ye are children of Sakti-muna the serpent,
I am descended from the Prophet Adam;
Ye are followers of the Prophet Solomon,
I am a follower of the Prophet Muhammad.
You and I are servants of God.
Plague not the followers of Muhammad,
Else ye will be traitors to God,
To His Prophet and the four archangels
And the angels forty-and-four.
Genies and devils and goblins!
Get hence to the big leafy tree at the land's end
At the foot of Mount Kaf,
Else ye will be traitors to Him who was from the beginning
To God's house at Jerusalem, the primal land.
My altar is strewn with clods red and black:
Jinn! goblins! hence! and come ye not back.
This expulsion of demons, these incantations, this reference to an altar introduces
the shaman with his confident control of the spirit world, his séances
and periodical sacrifices for the public welfare.
VII. THE MALAY SHAMAN'S SÉANCE
THE main tasks of the Siberian shaman are healing and divination. His familiar
spirit or spirits, possessing him their medium, descend at a séance to
cure the sick, avert evil, foretell the future or answer enquiries. By auto-suggestion
the shaman falls or pretends to fall into a trance and is possessed by spirits
who speak through his mouth. All these are features of the Malay séance,
which resembles very closely that of the Mongol shaman even in details of ritual:
the beating of a tambourine, wild singing, the rustle and voices of invisible
spirits, the expulsion or sucking out of the spirit of disease, the medium on
return to consciousness oblivious of what has passed, the offerings made to
spirits.
Information about the ritual of the aboriginal shaman of Malaya is scanty but
accords generally, so far as it goes, with what might be expected. He performs
mostly inside a round hut or circle of some kind. He wears on his head a wreath
of leaves with a tuft, and he carries a switch of leaves. Often his hut is darkened.
Invocations are chanted to the sound of bamboo stampers clashed on logs. One
account states that the shaman strokes the evil spirit out of a patient with
his switch, and that he shouts and shrieks to drive it into a cage or network
of loops to be imprisoned by his magic. Perhaps this is a vague description
of the frenzy of possession?
The Malay séance is used to cure sickness; to divine the whereabouts
of lost or stolen property; to discover if a princess shall bear a son or what
the future holds for a Mecca-bound pilgrim! There is a record of a séance
where earth spirits were entreated to allow a sacred rhinoceros to be hunted.
The object of the most famous séance in the history of Perak remains
obscure. Either it was to enquire from the spirits of the State if a plot against
the British Resident would succeed or to ask their leave and help to take his
life.
Sir Frank Swettenham has described how a spirit-raising séance was conducted
by a royal female shaman during the illness of a ruler of Perak some thirty
years ago. The magician, dressed like a man, sat with veiled head before a taper,
in her right hand a sheaf of grass cut square at top and bottom. This sheaf
she took convulsively. The taper flared, a signal that the spirit invoked was
entering the candle. The magician, now supposed to be in a trance, bowed to
the taper "and to each male member of the reigning family present!"
After many spirits had been invoked, the sick raja was brought out and seated
on a sixteen-sided stand (an improvement on the double pentacle called Solomon's
seat) to await, with shrouded head and a square bunch of grass in his hand,
the advent of the spirits of the State. Conducted back to bed, His Highness
fell later into a swoon attributed to possession by those spirits! At this royal
séance the magician's daughter led an orchestra of "five or six
girls holding native drums, instruments with a skin stretched over one side
only" and beaten with the fingers.
At a humbler séance held in Perak there was only one musician, the shaman's
wife, a "wild-looking Moenad." Her husband held a bunch of leaves
in either hand. The musician beat a one-sided drum and screamed out interminable
chants. Her husband began to nod drowsily, sniffed at his leaves, waved them
over his head, struck them together, and became possessed of the shaman's usual
familiar, a tiger-spirit, as shown by growls and sniffing and crawling under
a mat. Between the incantations he accepted a cigarette and talked to the patient's
family, using, however, an aboriginal Sakai dialect. Possessed again of the
tiger-spirit he executed weird dances and sprinkled the sufferer with rice-paste.
Finally his tiger-spirit identified as the cause of the patient's illness a
dumb vampire (Langsuyar), to be expelled neither by invocations nor the sprinkling
of ricepaste.
Another magician accompanied by a male tambourine-player then took his place.
He held convulsively a single sheaf of grass and became possessed by four spirits
in succession but to no purpose. Finally both magicians waved all evil spirits
away from the patient on to a miniature revolving model of a mosque, and set
it, filled with the flesh of a fowl and other delicacies, adrift upon the river.
In an account of yet another séance in Selangor, where to cure an ailment
the magician became possessed by the tiger-spirit, it is said that the ceremony
usually took place on three nights and that the same odd number of persons should
be present each time. For the reception of the spirit an artificial bouquet
of flowers, doves and centipedes, all made of palm-leaf, was prepared. After
an invocation the magician bathed himself in incense, suffered spasmodic convulsions,
spoke a spirit language, became possessed, sat with shrouded head, lit tapers
on the edges of three jars of water, and rubbed the patient with a bezoar stone.
Then donning a white coat and head-cloth, he fumigated a dagger, dropped silver
coins into the three jars, and gazed to see their position under the three tapers,
declaring that it indicated the gravity of the patient's illness. Scattering
handfuls of charmed rice round the jars, he put into them improvised bouquets
of areca-palm. blossom, and plunged his dagger into each bouquet to dispel lurking
spirits of evil. Another sheaf of palm-blossom he anointed with oil and used
for stroking the patient from head to heel. Next he was possessed by the tiger-spirit,
scratched, growled and licked the naked body of the patient. He drew blood from
his own arm, with the point of his dagger and fenced with his invisible spirit
foe. Once more he stroked the patient with the sheaf of blossom and with his
hands. Again he stabbed the bouquets, stroked the patient, and after lying still
for an interval recovered consciousness.
In Perak a séance is known as "possession by spirits": in Kelantan
as "the play of the fairy princess." This Kelantan ceremony is performed
for three or sometimes seven nights in succession. It is repeated after a week
or so if the sick person's condition improves. Besides the shaman there are
three musicians, one to strum on a three-stringed viol, one to beat a brass
bowl with pieces of bamboo, one a drummer. The shaman recites a long invocation
to the four archangels, the friends of the Prophet, the seven miracle-workers,
and the father of all genies, explaining that not he but Luqman al-Hakim is
offering them a little rice and water and a quid of betel. Next the musician
with the viol chants a song with an orthodox introduction but ending with an
invocation to the spirits of the village, various nature-spirits, the Spectre
Huntsman and Siva, begging them to recall any of their followers plaguing the
sick man. The shaman shrouds and fumigates himself and falls into a trance.
The orchestra plays frantically. A chant, disguised by the phrases of Muslim
medico-religious lore, invites the spirit of the fairy princess to enter the
medium. The shaman nods and whirls his head violently; his eyes are closed and
he is possessed by spirit after spirit until he has chosen the one he desires
to retain. Gazing at the flame of a candle he reports the cause of the patient's
illness. He sucks or pretends to suck the body of the sick man and starts another
chant full of pantheistic Muslim lore declaring that man's body is God's house
and no place for spirits of evil. This exorcism eventually transfers the spirit
from the patient into the shaman, who has to dispel it thence with the help
of one of his familiars.
Should the patient recover, a final séance takes place at which there
is a sacrificial offering. The patient is bathed in charmed water from three
jars and has three rings of thread drawn over him from head to heel. "At
Penpont, in Dumfriesshire, the emissary of a patient, when he reached the (holy)
well, I had to draw water in a vessel which was on no account to touch the ground,
to turn himself round with the sun, to throw his offering to the spirit over
his left shoulder, and to carry the water without ever looking back to the sick
person. All this was to be done in absolute silence, and he was to salute no
one by the way.'" In Pahang when a Malay woman fetches water from the river
for a sick person's séance, she must let it trickle into her vessel slowly
without gurgling, she must cover the mouth of the full vessel with leaves and
she must not speak to any one while carrying it.
In Kelantan there are several milder forms of exorcism, practised by traffickers
with special spirits, such as the nature spirits of yellow sunsets and the echo
spirits. In one, where, however, there is no music and recitations take the
place of chants, the shaman becomes possessed and waves over the sufferer a
leather puppet figure of Smar from the Javanese shadow-play! If recovery ensues,
among the final sacrificial offerings a model of a wayside resting-place is
reserved with dainties for Siva.
The séance to "revive" (memuleh) the Perak regalia has never
been described. The duties of the Sultan Muda or State magician were to be chief
of all magicians and to know their merits, to attend royalty in sickness, to
pay homage to the genies presiding over the destinies of Perak, and to give
annually a feast to the spirits inhabiting the regalia. At the séance
preceding this feast the palace would be full of shrouded magicians, each invoking
his or her familiar. The Sultan Muda sat veiled, a bunch of grass in his hand,
while the chief musician called upon the genies in order of precedence to descend
and bring their thousand attendant spirits. "Come down to the gate of this
world! Pass in procession to the posy, your place to alight. In your might lies
the might of our Sultan. Come around, pass into the posy, your place to alight,
and enter your jewelled curtain." As each spirit entered the posy, the
chant ceased and the sound of the tambourines was stilled.
Meanwhile some humble musician would be crying on the tiger-spirit:-"Warrior!
Son of a warrior! Matchless in might! Come, my lord! Come, my life! Descend
into this posy, your alighting place, and pass into your jewelled curtain. Come
by the blessing of 'Ali, the spirit who hangs at the door of the sky."
And as the tiger-spirit came, the village magician who had invoked him would
turn about seven times and leap and growl, as his familiar asked why he had
been summoned. The magician would answer:-"You have been invited because
our lord has got ready a hall and is inviting the Sultan of the Impalpable Air
and all his followers to a feast upon the morrow and he hopes that no harm may
befall them on the way." Speaking through the magician, the spirit answers:-"It
is well. I and my subjects can be present. The bad I will not bring." So
spirit after spirit was raised and invited until the Sultan Muda gave the signal
to retire.
The next morning the Sultan Muda, the Raja Kechil Muda and their tambourine
players went with rice-paste and turmeric and censers to superintend the building
of a nine-storeyed hall, surmounted by a model of a fabulous bird, Jatayu (offspring
of Vishnu's Garuda) that lives on dew. It was adorned with palm-streamers from
which hung woven boxes of rice, cakes, sugar-cane and bananas: on the topmost
tier was the severed head of a pink buffalo, surrounded by water-vessels. An
altar on sixteen posts was erected with offerings for spirits not connected
with the destinies of the State. Two bamboo conches served to hold food for
hungry spirits of the dead (karamat). At dusk the Sultan Muda mounted and waved
from the nine-storeyed hall. The others waved beside the altar and the conches.
Then the Raja Kechil Muda fell into a trance and with shouts ascended to the
mat prepared for him. Twelve musicians beat tambourines and chanted invocations
to the genies to leave the pools and plains of spirit-land and enter the jewelled
curtains and posies prepared for them. After a rest and refreshment the magicians
renewed their invocations. The tambourines and drums of their assistants were
answered by the thud of all the royal drums and the blare of the royal trumpets.
On the right of the presiding magicians sat virgin princesses holding sacrificial
offerings on their laps, on the left young unmarried princes supporting the
regalia. Then the two chief magicians did obeisance to the regalia, offered
delicacies to "the thousand gcnies" and poured upon the royal drums
and into the royal trumpets drink, which vanished miraculously as though imbibed.
Finally, towards dawn the Sultan Muda and his magicians fetched the ruler of
the State, and bathing His Highness bathed in his sacred person the genies that
presided over the destinies of his kingdom.
In Kelantan also when a feast was prepared to propitiate the spirits of a district
or to banish evil spirits from the countryside a séance formed part of
the ritual.
Exactly how the spirits visit the medium is not expressly stated. They enter
the flame of candles and cause them to flicker. At the installation of a Sultan
of Perak the guardian genies of the State may inhabit the State sword and make
it press upon the ruler's shoulder. In the regalia ritual they are invited to
descend on posies (jinjang malai), perhaps flowers stuck behind the ear of the
magician, as the yellow chempaka blossom is still stuck behind the ear of a
ruler at his installation. The convulsive shaking of the shaman's grass switch
may indicate that they enter there. Sweet jasmine attracts them. A Perak chief,
who knew how to make from the shroud and coffin of a murdered man powder rendering
spirits visible, enabled a friend at a séance to see two women with streaming
hair descend through the roof and alight on the flower-vase, the artificial
garden prepared for their advent!
All the evidence points to the make-believe of the Malay shaman's trance. One
magician possessed by a spirit remembers court etiquette sufficiently to bow
to members of the royal family, and falls down before a dish-cover the sight
of which was anathema to the spirit possessing her. Another toothless shaman
asked why the betel-nut has not been pounded, as the genie possessing him is
stricken with years. One possessed by a female spirit impersonates a woman in
his gait, and by arranging his dress to suit the part is said to cause amusement
to the spectators. Another showed an anxious husband a hollow bamboo stopped
up at either end. "Therein he declared, recovered by his magic, was hair
and a fingernail of my wife, which some enemy had stolen. On no account was
the bamboo to be opened. But I was unbelieving, risked the harm which old folks
prophesied and broke the seals. Now my wife's hair was fine as silk and this
was as coarse as the hair of a horse's tail; my wife's finger-nail was curved
like the young moon and delicate as pearl, and this nail was thick as the nail
on a man's thumb. It is a pity the white man has not made a law to clap such
rogues in gaol, but they shall be shut in Allah's gaol hereafter, which is much
worse."
There are parallels to the indication by a familiar of this cause of a disease,
but the two related to me were both examples of a shaman's roguery. As a rule
the object of a séance for the sick is to expel or coax an evil spirit
out of the sufferer's body, sometimes into the shaman's own but usually on to
a receptacle containing food.
VIII. THE SHAMAN'S SACRIFICE
AT "the primitive annual nocturnal rite" of feasting the spirits of
the regalia and State of Perak the head of a pink buffalo was set on the topmost
tier of the altar, the royal princesses held bits of the sacrifice on their
laps, and there was a feast on the spot while drink was being poured upon the
royal drums and trumpets. The ceremony recalls Westermarck's theory that the
origin of sacrifice was the idea that supernatural beings, having human wants
and human needs, might suffer privation and become feeble if offerings were
not made to them. This account of an annual feast to the guardian spirits of
a Malay State can be supplemented by records of parallel rituals to propitiate
beneficent spirits and expel evil influences from State, district and sick men.
One account of the ritual to feast the spirits of a district comes from Upper
Perak. When the people of the place are agreed as to the time of the celebration,
each brings a measure of rice and two coconuts. Candles are lit and the shaman
burns incense, invoking it as "born of the brain of Muhammad, the breath
of his spiritual life"! Next he calls upon "the ancestor spirits,
genies and goblins to whom the earth and water of the district belong,"
and informs them that he is slaughtering a pink buffalo, without blemish and
with horns the size of a man's closed fist, in order to invite the countryside
to a feast. He prays that they may cherish all from danger and hurt. The buffalo
is slaughtered and its blood caught in a bamboo. The shaman removes and sets
aside nose, eyes, ears, mouth, hooves, legs and shoulders, tongue, tall, heart
and liver, representative of every part of the body. From the flesh of the carcase
seven kinds of food are prepared; soused, fried, boiled, toasted, and so on,
and one portion is left raw. In ancient China, also, offerings were "of
blood, of raw flesh and of sodden flesh." A four-sided seven-tiered altar
is built of palm stems. On the topmost tier are placed the blood of the buffalo,
the pieces of the carcase set aside by the shaman, the seven kinds of meat,
seven cooked and seven raw eggs, and seven vessels of water. On the five central
tiers are spread sweetmeats; on the lowest tier twenty-five cigarettes and twenty-five
quids of betel. The food not offered on the altar is eaten by those present.
If there is a surplus, it may not be removed: those who wish to eat it must
resort to the spot on the following day. At dusk the Muslim audience depart,
all except the shaman and one or two hardy assistants. Circumambulating the
altar, Malaya's primitive celebrant then invoked the spirits to the feast and
summoned them by burning incense and waving a white cloth. Seven times he cried
hail to the spirits and then went away. For seven days no stranger might enter
the parish, no one might throw anything into it or take anything forth, no one
might use abusive language or cause leaf or branch to wither.
In this and the Perak regalia feast have survived the elements of one of the
world's oldest ceremonies: the victim without spot, the feast in which all partake
before the altar, the blood that is not left to fall upon the ground, the offering
that must be utterly consumed and that no stranger may approach, the celebration
by night or before dawn. Decay has marred the ritual. The Upper Perak ceremony
the Muslim villagers regard as an occasion for junketing and, afraid or ashamed
to be present, depart before the most tremendous moment has arrived. Again,
it is not a totem but spirits who are approached, nature-spirits, spirits of
the dead, Arabian genies and the Prophet addressed as a shaman! Upon them all
the celebrant cries the peace of Allah.
In the regalia ritual there are four altars or receptacles for the sacrifice,
and their modern significance is explained. In Kelantan, too, when a sick person
recovers after the "play of the princess," it is the custom to offer
a sacrifice on four altars or receptacles. On the model of a square five-storeyed
platform are placed "fish-a bit of skate, of shark, a crab, a prawn; flesh-pieces
of chicken, duck, goat and beef, both cooked and raw; vegetables-various, both
cooked and uncooked; boiled rice of seven different colours; two kinds of intoxicating
liquors (arrack and toddy); some bananas; various kinds of cake, the blood of
a fowl, and parched rice. . . . . One silver dollar is placed on each storey."
This money is intended for " the princess." Three tiny collections
of the same things in miniature, with a silver dollar to each, are put, one
on a square mat, another into a cradle-shaped basket termed "the raja's
hall," and the third upon a little platform half way up a bamboo splayed
into a conch. The princess descends and proceeds to taste the offerings, beginning
with those on the small mat, going next to the model platform, and ending at
the cradle-like basket. The model platform is taken to the neighbouring jungle
and left there, but the small mat and the cradle, both designedly appropriate
for the princess, are kept in the village for a few days'. The flat platform
and the bamboo posts splayed into conches may possibly be connected with the
widespread evolution of the altar proper and the idol, developed from a post
or monolith beside the altar on which the sacred blood of the totem was splashed
to keep it off the ground. In Polynesia, also, "beside the larger temple
altars there were smaller altars some resembling a small round table, supported
by a single post fixed in the ground: occasionally the carcase of the hog presented
in sacrifice was placed on the large altar, while the heart and some other internal
parts were laid on the smaller."
Eating together marks the tribal bond among Malays. In Negri Sembilan a newly
elected chief invites all his people, men, women and children, "the cocks
that lay not eggs, the hens that cackle and the chicks that chirp," to
a public feast called "the sprinkling of the broken grain." He sprinkles
the grain as a symbol of gathering them under his wing, and the bond of tribal
unity is acknowledged in old-world sentences:-"Together we skin the heart
of the elephant; together dip the heart of the louse. What we drop is common
loss: what we gain is common profit." No one can slaughter a buffalo without
permission of the tribal chief. No tribal chief can refuse to be present at
a feast for which a buffalo is slaughtered: the heart, the liver, and a slice
off the rump are his perquisites. A buffalo (never an Indian bull or cow) is
slaughtered at all big Malay feasts, secular, magical or Muslim. At certain
secular festivals the animal is caparisoned with cloth and has round its neck
the three-tiered gold ornament, modelled after its horns and worn at weddings.
The Yamtuan or overlord of Negri Sembilan used to claim all buffaloes with abnormal
horns as perquisites of royalty. To spirits a pink buffalo must be offered.
The roof-trees of the Bataks, a Proto-Malay people of Sumatra, are decorated
with buffalo-horns. This domestic animal was imported into the Malayan region
ages ago from India.
In ceremonies conducted to coax away patently maleficent spirits, the risk of
a bond between the spirits and their propitiators, if both partook of the same
sacrificial meal, seems to be consciously shunned. A banana-leaf tray or model
house or boat is often filled with offerings for the spirits plaguing a sick
Malay, and hung up in the jungle or set adrift on the river to bear them away.
Among the offerings on one such tray was observed a faked quid, the betelnut
replaced by nutmeg, the gambier by mace, and the lime by oil. But the quid prepared
along with it to be chewed and ejected by the magician upon the patient's back
was genuine. Again, there is a notable record from Selangor of a wave offering
for a sick Malay. A hanging frame-work or tray was filled with the usual three
kinds of rice, parched, saffron and washed, an egg, bananas from one comb, pieces
of uncooked flesh making up a whole fowl. The blood of the fowls was placed
in one of five miniature palm-spathe buckets, two of the other four containing
water and two the juice of cane. Five waxen tapers were placed on the tray and
lighted to guide the spirits to their meals, and five lighted cigarettes for
them were added. The tray was waved slowly above the patient, waved seven times
before him, held for him to spit on, and carried out and hung from a tree in
the jungle. It is significant that the cooked and uncooked flesh each made up
a whole fowl and that all the bananas were plucked from one comb. No meal was
taken by those present.
The precaution not to eat of the food presented to spirits is not however observed
in the ritual to "cleanse" a country or district. Perhaps like the
coconut, betel and cigarette offered outside a village quarantined for smallpox,
the buffaloes sacrificed at the cleansing of a countryside are offered not to
maleficent spirits but to the spirits invoked to combat them. Until recent years
Perak used to be "cleansed" periodically by the propitiation of friendly
spirits and the expulsion of malignant influences:-"The main line of development
in ritual is from the propitiation or insulation of evil influences to the conciliation
of beneficent powers." The royal state shaman, his royal assistant, and
the chief magicians from the river parishes assembled at a village at the foot
of the rapids below which the habitations of Perak Malays began. Séances
occupied seven days. A pink buffalo was killed and a feast was held. The head
and other pieces of the victim were piled on one of the rafts, which then set
out down-stream. The four leading rafts were prepared for the four great classes
of spirits and were manned by their appropriate magicians. The foremost raft
carried a branching tree, erect and supported by stays, and was for the shaman's
familiars. The fifth raft bore Muslim elders! Next came the royal band with
its sacred drums and trumpets, and then the Raja Kechil Muda (the title of the
assistant State shaman) and his followers. As they floated down the river, the
magicians waved white cloths and invoked the spirits of the districts passed
to come aboard and consume the offerings. Whenever they reached a mosque, they
halted for one night while a séance was held and the villagers slaughtered
a buffalo, placing its head on one of the spirit rafts and eating the rest of
the carcase. At the mouth of the river the rafts were abandoned and allowed
to drift to sea. The State shaman did not accompany the procession downstream,
leaving the escort of the spirit rafts with their grisly freight to his assistant.
So, too, the magicians of the different parishes of the river-banks stayed behind
in turn, each of them supplying a substitute to go downstream with the assistant
State shaman.
In Kelantan a similar ceremony took seven days and seven nights, pink buffaloes
were sacrificed, and the shaman conducted the séance called "the
play of the princess."
The communal sacrifices for state or district described in this chapter all
follow a shaman's séance and may be surmised to be part of the most primitive
ritual in Malaya. They reveal the early attitude of the Malay mind towards sacrifice.
With human wants, kind spirits may become feeble through hunger. With human
weakness and fallibility, evil spirits will desert a person or country for offerings
of food and be decoyed by greed on to waste waters. The partaking of a sacrifice
establishes communion. It is necessary therefore to eat of the offering to friendly
spirits. Food offered to spirits of disease one should be chary of tasting.
By a gift, as in the shaman's invocations a sacrifice is so often termed, spirits
can be conciliated. Finally, when a patient recovers there is the offering to
the spirits for their beneficence, actuated no doubt by fear of punishment for
omission but containing also the germ of the freewill sacrifice of gratitude.
Sacrifices were made to spirits either at the uncertain times of epidemics or
at periods more or less defined. The sacrifice to revive the spirits of the
Perak regalia was annual. The "cleansing" of the States of Perak and
Kelantan is said to have been triennial. One account indeed states that Perak
was cleansed once in seven years or once in a Sultan's reign, but this is probably
a native explanation of the gradual lapse of the custom. The ritual to feast
the spirits of the Upper Perak district took place "when the grain in the
rice-fields was beginning to swell." In most places where rice is grown
elaborate propitiatory ceremonies of a communal character are celebrated in
the spring of every third or fourth year.
IX. MAGIC AND MAN
To protect the soul-substance of his staple food-plant the Malay peasant, conservative
as agriculturists all the world over, is content with the primitive ritual of
the animist, covered for decency's sake with a thin veneer of his later religions.
Courts and ports, where new faiths first found acceptance, are more open to
liberal influences, and to safeguard the body and soul of man the Malay has
added to the practices of the animist all the magic that Hindu and Muslim could
teach him. Like all primitive peoples, he believes that evil spirits are especially
active on the abnormal occasions of life, so that birth, puberty and marriage
are invested with the most lavish ceremonial. For the dead he accepts Muhammadan
rites almost unalloyed.
(a) BIRTH AND INFANCY
As soon as a Malay woman is with child, she and her husband have to observe
certain rules and abstentions, so that no vampire may injure the expectant mother,
no prenatal influence affect the unborn, and nothing impede or mar a safe delivery.
To frustrate evil spirits the woman must carry a knife or iron of some sort
as a talisman, whenever she ventures abroad. If her husband stir out of his
house after dark, he may not return direct but must visit a neighbour's house
first to put any chance vampire following him off the scent. At the time of
an eclipse when spirits prowl, the woman must hide under the shelf in the kitchen,
armed with a wooden spoon and wearing as a helmet of repulsion the rattan basket-stand
that is used for the base purpose of supporting the round-bottomed cooking pots.
Every Friday she must bathe with limes, a fruit distasteful to devils, and drink
the water that drops off the ends of her tresses.
To avert untoward prenatal influences great circumspection is required. In the
event of an eclipse the Malacca or Singapore woman will bathe under the house-ladder,
so that she may not give birth to a parti-coloured child, half black half white.
If a Malay husband blinds a bird or fractures the wing of a fowl, his offspring
runs the risk of being born sightless or with a deformed arm. As this last prohibition
would involve a vegetarian diet in humble homes, modern husbands get over it
by the convenient fiction that, if the death of an animal is compassed deliberately,
there is no startling of the child in the womb and so no fear of harm. Before
the end of the sixth month, when the foetus acquires personality, and especially
before the third month, the Patani husband may not even cut down a creeper,
and if he slits the mouth of a fish to remove a hook, the child will have a
hare-lip.
At a Perak house where there is a pregnant woman, no one may enter by the front
door and pass out at the back or contrariwise, probably because there is one
exit only from the womb, the house of birth. Guests may not remain only one
night, perhaps because any form of hurry is likely to induce miscarriage. Neither
husband nor wife may sit at the top of their house-ladder, a rule wide-spread
in the Malay Archipelago, for any blocking of a passage protracts delivery.
An unplaned house-pillar indented by the pressure of a parasitic creeper that
twined round it when it was a living tree will exercise a like obstructive influence.
After the engagement of the midwife in the seventh month, the Malay husband
(like the Brahmin) may not have his hair cut, for fear the afterbirth break.
In Upper Perak another rite precedes the customary lustration in the seventh
month of a first pregnancy. Apparently it is an example of imitative magic,
designed to facilitate delivery. A palm-blossom is swathed to represent a baby
with a child's brooch on the bosom. This doll, adorned with flowers, is laid
on a tray and the tray placed in a cradle made of three, five or seven layers
of cloth according to the rank of the prospective parents. Midwife and magician
sprinkle rice-paste on doll and cradle. The midwife rocks the cradle, crooning
baby songs. Then she gives the doll to the future mother and father and all
their relatives to dandle. Finally the doll is put back into the cradle and
left there till the next day, when it is broken up and thrown into water.
Everywhere when a woman has gone seven months with her first child there is
performed a ceremony, observed also by Indian Muslims. In Malaya, today, it
is begun with chants in praise of the Prophet. Next morning husband and wife,
arrayed in holiday attire, are escorted down to the river. Incense is burnt.
Toasted, saffron and white rice and a cooling rice-paste are sprinkled as at
every momentous business of Malay life, at seed-time and harvest, at birth,
at the shaving of a child's head, at circumcision, in sickness, on return from
a long journey, at a chief's installation, at a warrior's preparation for battle.
Now it is sprinkled on water for lustration. The couple are bathed, a white
cloth is stretched above their heads, coconut palms are waved over them seven
times, and they are drenched with water specially charmed to avert evil and
procure wellbeing, as at the lustration after marriage. Two candles are lit
and carried thrice about their heads, and they must face the light with direct
glances to avoid any chance of their child being squint-eyed. Then the procession
returns to the house, where the couple sit together in state as at a wedding.
Shawls are spread on the floor (seven if the patient is a raja), and the expectant
mother lies on her back with the shawls under her waist. The midwife seizes
the ends of the first shawl and rocks the woman slowly as in a hammock, removes
it, seizes the ends of the next shawl and repeats the performance seven times.
Among the presents given to the midwife as her retaining fee on this occasion
is a betel-tray. The contents of this she empties: if all of them drop together,
it is a sign that delivery will be easy. In Negri Sembilan betel-nuts are cut
into pieces and thrown like dice, inferences being drawn as to the sex of the
unborn child according as more flat or rounded surfaces lie uppermost.
The magician "chooses an auspicious place for the birth and surrounds it
with thorns, nets, rays' tails, bees' nests, dolls, bitter herbs and a rattan
cooking-pot stand, to keep the spirits of evil from molesting mother and child
in the perilous hour of their weakness. He selects the suitable spot by dropping
a chopper or axe-head and marking the place where it first sticks upright in
the ground. Thorns and rays' tails are thought to be dangerous to the trailing
entrails of the vampire; bitter herbs are unpalatable to every one; dolls may
be mistaken for the baby; nets and bees' nests are puzzling to spirits because
of their complexity, and sometimes a much perforated coconut is hung over the
door to bewilder ghosts by the multiplicity of its entrances and exits."
Most of these demon-traps are set under the floor of the house. But over the
patient's head is hung a fisherman's net and a bunch of the red Dracoena, whose
tough vital power denotes its strong soul-substance. By some midwives imitation
weapons of lathe are suspended from the roof. The midwife may dress as a man.
All locks on door or box are opened, the sufferer's hair is unbound, and any
knot in her clothes is untied.
If delivery is difficult, the magician may be called to lift the end of the
woman's tresses and blow down them. Or he may recite charms or write a text
from the Quran on paper and tie it round waist or thigh. The husband will be
summoned to step to and fro across his wife or kiss her, thus condoning any
sins she may have committed against him. If the woman is a Raja, chiefs will
make vows of a goat or other offering for her recovery. To register each vow,
the midwife ties a ring round the wrist of the patient. Should the throes be
prolonged, husband or mother puts dollars under the sufferer's back to be distributed
in charity when her peril is past. If the afterbirth will not follow, a portion
of the umbilical cord is cut from the child and tied to the patient's thigh
as a kind of sympathetic attraction. A boy born with a caul is considered very
lucky. Immediately after birth the umbilical cord is tied with seven circles
of black fibre and severed with a bamboo knife: later, when the cord falls off,
a poultice is applied, mixed with pepper to make the child brave. In Negri Sembilan
it is believed that if the severed cords of a woman's successive children are
preserved together, these children will not quarrel or be disunited when they
grow up.
Her trouble over, the mother is laid on a platform and toasted frequently during
forty-four days of seclusion. The toasting is a primitive and widely spread
custom, still surviving in Hindu ritual with invocations to Agni. As for the
seclusion, "the contagion of woman during the sexual crises of menstruation,
pregnancy, childbirth, is simply intensified, because these are occasions when
woman's peculiar characteristics are accentuated, these are feminine crises
when a woman is most a woman." The savage dreads the contagion of her effeminacy,
weakness, timidity and hysteria. And survivals of this dread may be traced in
the observance of continence by Malay warriors and fishermen, in the notion
that menstrual blood can cause leprosy, in the custom of husband and wife feeding
separately except on the occasion of their marriage.
A baby's first cradle is a tray on which are placed a bit of iron and a peck
of unhusked rice. In Perak "when the baby is promoted from this tray, the
rice whereon he has lain is measured to foretell his future; if the measure
is brimming, he will be rich; if it is short, poor; the balance of the rice
is thrown to the chicken to avert ill-luck."
A brush is dipped in a black mixture made of burnt coconut shell, and the eyebrows
and outlines of the nose, chin, and other features are marked in black so that
demons may not recognise or desire the infant. A cross is put on the forehead
and a spot on the nose. In Selangor a girl's forehead is marked with a cross,
a boy's with a mark recalling the caste mark of the Hindu. The mother, also,
is daubed on nose and bosom.
In some parts the moulding of the child's head, due to the process of birth,
is reduced by massage or a constricting cap.
A tentative name is given to a child before the umbilical cord is cut. "In
Upper Perak names suggested by some local circumstances are given at birth,
and girls, for example, are called after a butterfly, a fish, a plant. Later
the parents will consult a religious elder to take a horoscope and select a
Muhammadan name for the child according to the date of the birth. This name
may be adopted temporarily or permanently. The original pagan name may be used
still but will be changed for another in the event of sickness. . . . In Kelantan
five or seven bananas are dubbed with persons' names: they are laid before the
infant and he is given the name allotted to the particular banana he grabs first."
The Perak Malays have a series of conventional names for their children in order
of seniority. A Malay, as we have seen, will often drop his own name and be
called "Father of Awang," or whatever is the name of his first-born.
Like the Brahmin, he refers to his wife never by name but as "the person
in my house," or, when she is older, as "the mother of Awang or so-and-so."
If the child is a raja, young mothers of good family suckle him or her in turn,
their own children thus becoming foster brothers or sisters of the infant. The
royal mother may confirm this by suckling the infant of the foster mother.
Muslim custom prescribes the seventh day for the formal naming of the child,
the shaving of its hair, and the sacrifice of two goats for a boy and of one
for a girl. This is followed in Malaya. One lock of hair is left on a boy's
head as on the head of Brahmin children and of Egyptian Muslims, but it is a
custom of primitive Malays also to leave a lock unshorn as a refuge for the
child's soul. Sometimes this tonsure ceremony may be deferred for girls until
marriage. At one such deferred ceremony the headman and the girl's nearest relatives
clipped the ends of seven locks with seven strokes of the scissors, an exact
though unconscious imitation of Brahmin ritual. When the head of a royal baby
is shaved, the wives of the great Perak chiefs each snip a few hairs in turn
according to their rank. Notable, too, is the opening of the child's mouth by
a ceremony performed also in Arabia and Egypt, but perhaps dating back to Brahminical
India. A gold ring is dipped in a mixture of betel-juice and sugared and salted
water, and an elder utters a Muslim adjuration of which the original occurs
in the Rig-Veda: "In the name of Allah, the Merciful, the Compassionate!
May he lengthen your life! May he teach you to speak fittingly in the court
of kings! May he give to your words the attractiveness of betel, the sweetness
of sugar and the savour of salt!" The gold ring is tied to the child's
wrist.
When the forty-four days of purification are complete, the midwife throws away
the platform on which the young mother has been roasted and the ashes of the
fire that has burnt without cease by her side. And now, just as the Brahmin
takes a child out formally to see the sun, so the Malay introduces his child
to "Mother Earth and Father Water." The midwife carries the baby to
the top of the stair or house-ladder, recites incantations and marks a cross
on the soles of the infant's feet with lime. She descends and puts the child's
feet first on iron (the blade of a wood-knife or the head of a hoe), then into
a tray containing gold and silver (usually a ring of each metal) and lastly
on the earth. That is the custom in Upper Perak, but details vary in different
places. In Kelantan a raja's child has to be taken down from the house by three
steps, no more, no fewer. He is carried through a line of women holding lighted
candles to a spot where seven gold plates are placed. The first plate contains
herbs, the second unhusked rice, the third husked rice, the fourth rice-paste,
the fifth yellow turmeric rice, the sixth earth from a grave, and the seventh
sand from the sea. Into each of these plates the child's feet are pressed before
they are allowed to tread the earth. Then the baby raja is carried up a seven-tiered
stand and bathed. After the lustration, the stand is thrown, with the spirits
attaching to it, into the sea.
Next the Malay infant is carried down to the river. A candle is lit and stuck
on a boulder or bamboo staging. Mother and midwife descend into the stream.
The mother bathes the hair of the midwife and then the midwife performs the
same service for the mother. An offering is made to the water-spirits: an egg,
a quid of betel, seven long and seven square rice-packets. The usual three kinds
of rice and rice-paste are sprinkled over the surface of the river. The child
is passed through the smoke of incense. Then a live fowl is placed in the water
and the child made to tread on it, so that he may have power over all domestic
animals. Next a sprouting coconut seedling is set afloat and the infant's feet
are placed on it, so that he may have power over all food plants. Lastly a jungle
sapling, usually a rattan creeper, roots and all, is put in the stream and the
setting of the little feet upon it gives the child dominion over the forest.
A palm-spathe bucket and a banana-flower are turned adrift. If the baby is male,
a boy catches a fish with a casting-net; if the baby is female, a girl should
throw the net. Finally a man casts the net over a group of the midwife, mother
and infant, and a crowd of tiny children representing fish.
After this ritual introduction to earth and water, the infant is laid for the
first time in a swinging cot fashioned of black cloths hung from a rafter. Into
the bunt of the cot are put a cat, a curry-stone, and an iron blade to mislead
and terrify evil spirits. Then the midwife lifts the baby into his new home.
Pious old ladies croon lullabies. Muslim prayers are recited. There is a feast
on curry and rice.
In the water for a baby's ablutions arc steeped the same collection of strong-souled
substances that are put beside the garnered grain of the rice fields. If the
attacks of spirits have made him sickly, the leaves of a plant called the Genie's
Tongue (Hedyotis congesta) may be infused in his bath. If the baby cries continually,
he may be "smoked over a fire made of the nest of a weaver-bird, the skin
of a bottle-gourd, and a piece of wood that has been struck by lightning."
It is unlucky to praise the health or beauty of a child.
Great care is taken of the placenta, the child's "younger brother"
(or sister), which is kept for a while and then buried, generally under a tree.
If the new born child is royal, boys of good family, five to seven years old,
are chosen for this function. Their leader envelopes his head in a black cloth
and on it carries the placenta in a new earthen pot to a place selected for
the burial. Sometimes the boys ride there on elephants. In Perak the coconut
seedling used at the infant's introduction to water is planted to mark the site.
Head and face still enveloped, the leader of the band returns to the royal cot,
greets its occupant with the Hindu Om and hails him as brother of himself and
his followers.
(b) ADOLESCENCE
Magical precautions accompany circumcision, teeth-filing and the boring of girls'
ears. Even the observances at handing a child over to the care of a religious
teacher and at the conclusion of his studies, Muslim as they now are, may be
a survival of Hindu ritual or some more primitive initiation ceremony.
Circumcision is regarded as a Muslim obligation. A boy undergoes it at any lucky
and convenient age between six and twenty. Often it is done immediately after
the celebrations at the conclusion of his religious studies. At the Perak court,
amid great festivities, a young raja is clothed like a bridegroom in State dress.
The State magician pours oil upon water in which the acid juice of limes has
been mixed. From the pools of oil that float in the shape of moon and stars,
he tells if the moment is propitious for the ceremony, and if the boy will later
marry a girl of his own class. Then he rubs the mixture on the forehead, hands
and feet of the boy and of his companions who will undergo the operation at
the same time. Feasting may last for days. Royal candidates are borne in procession-in
Perak on painted elephants or men's shoulders, in Negri Sembilan in the ruler's
processional car, in Patani on a huge coloured model of a mythical bird. In
Patani, too, sham weapons of wood are carried in front of them. In Kelantan
a torchlight procession goes seven times round the house of the chief where
the function is to be held; wooden or palm-leaf walls are removed and the procession
perarnbulates the house without descending to the ground. In Perak sometimes
the boy is seated on a bridal dais, has a dance with lighted candles performed
before him and his fingers stained with henna. There, too, a raja is covered
with a silk cloth, his body sprinkled with saffron rice and cooling rice-paste,
and his mouth stuffed with a lump of glutinous rice and three grains of parched
rice. A hen is placed on his body and encouraged to peck up any of the grains
of rice that may be sticking to his mouth. If she is slow to peck, it will be
long before the boy marries. Two coconuts and a small bag of rice are rolled
over him from head to heel. Just before the operation the boy is escorted to
river or well, where the same offerings are thrown to the spirits of the water
as when he was first introduced to that element. The boy bathes along with his
parents, and the one long lock of hair that has been a symbol of childhood is
shorn by his mother or nurse or the man who later is to circumcise him. During
this tonsure a mock fight is started with bundles of rice, till the water resounds
as if buffaloes were fighting in it, a custom recalling the mock combat to clear
the rice-fields of demons. The final ceremony then takes place indoors. The
boy is seated on the stem of a banana or on a sack of rice, and at the Perak
court a swordsman stands beside him so that if aught goes wrong "the plug
for the wound and the dressing may be taken from the operator's corpse."
At the same court throughout the various stages of the ritual, at the taking
of the omens, at the procession to the river, and at the operation, the royal
drums are beaten and the royal flutes and trumpets blown. The sufferer's food
consists of dry fish or buffalo meat and his plate is lined with a parched banana-leaf,
the dryness of diet and leaf having a hornoeopathic effect on his unhealed wound.
Till the wound is well, he may not wear a cap. For months before the operation
he is warned not to eat tough meat. These and other rules are dictated by mimetic
magic. If he was born with a caul, a piece of it preserved from his birth is
often given him to eat in a banana.
An analogous but merely nominal ceremony of a very private nature is observed
for girls also, either in infancy or early youth, a midwife being the surgeon.
Puberty brought also for both sexes the practice of filing and blackening the
teeth in order to substitute for sharp white fangs, "like those of a dog,"
an even row of teeth, black "like the wings of a beetle." One of the
incantations recited is for personal charm and pre-eminence and shows signs
of travestying the Sufi's "perfect man." In a folktale called "Awang
Sulong" the operation was done with one rasp of the file a day and one
a night for nine days and nights, and the beauty of the glossy black stumps
of the hero made folk ask
Whose the cock that struts so bravely,
His lips a shore beset with bridges,
Bridges of black shining palm-spikes,
Teeth as stems so sharp and knitted,
Mouth a boatful of red nutmegs,
Ebon teeth like bracelet circle?
The object of this practice, as of circumcision, was, it has been surmised,
to sacrifice a part to save the whole. Blackening of the teeth has died out,
but filing is still practised, even after marriage, to beautify the teeth and
prevent their decay.
Girls' ears are bored either in early childhood or at puberty, with the usual
magic ritual to worst evil spirits. At the Perak court in the eighteenth century
two nights were devoted to henna-staining before the ears of a ruler's daughter
were pierced, and on the second night she was escorted on an elephant seven
times round the palace. The needle employed is threaded with cotton of many
colours, having at the ends turmeric cut in the shape of a floweret; two of
these flowerets adorn the thread left in each ear. just as the boring begins,
those present throw money into a silver bowl, perhaps to drown any cry or murmur.
After this, large ear-studs used to be worn during a girl's maiden days but
are now donned only at her wedding to be discarded formally on the consummation
of the marriage. At the Perak court the ceremony is concluded with a feast and
prayers in honour of the Prophet and of the parents and ancestors of the ruler.
(c) BETROTHAL AND MARRIAGE
There is little or no magic about a Malay betrothal. It is a contract to be
ratified before headman or elder, and to be published abroad by the despatch
to the girl's relatives of two elaborate betel boxes, one of them containing
one, or in Negri Sembilan two, rings wrapped in betel-leaf. If the youth is
guilty of breach of promise, the girl's people keep the ring or rings: if the
girl is guilty, her parents return them with cash their equal in value. In parts
of Perak the betel boxes are replaced by trays, one of which is adorned with
a paper tree; and, when the bearers arrive, yellow rice is strewn. The boxes
or trays are proffered only if negotiations for the marriage are successful.
Nowadays girls are seldom married before they are fourteen or fifteen, or boys
before the age of seventeen: often both are older. Like the Hindu, the Malay
considers a hairy person unlucky. The Brahmin student may not feed "the
husband of a younger sister married before the elder, the husband of an elder
sister whose younger sister was married first, a younger brother married before
an elder, an elder brother married after a younger," and in Malaya, also,
the request for a younger sister's hand before her elder sisters are wedded
is universally disliked. In the figurative language of Malay betrothal verses
the suitor comes, like the Esth wooer, "in search of a lost calf,"
just as among the Finns he wants to buy a bird, and among the Sardinians to
ask for a white dove or a white calf. The suitor accepted, his mother is invited
within, where she slips the ring (or two rings) on the finger of her future
daughter-in-law. Songs and feasting conclude these preliminaries.
Seven days later the suitor and his friends resort to the girl's house and stay
singing and feasting for two days and two nights. Before leaving, the suitor
does obeisance to his future mother-in-law. When harvest time comes, he and
his friends are invited to help, and the rice that will be eaten at the marriage
is trodden out to the accompaniment of songs bandied between men and women,
the two parties of groom and bride. But in Negri Sembilan a youth is ashamed
to meet either of the parents of his future bride, even accidentally on the
road.
Favourite times for weddings are after the harvest or after the season of rice
planting, not only because those are days of leisure but probably because so
the child in the womb and the grain in mother earth are likely to develop simultaneously.
The festivities may occupy two or four or five days if the contracting parties
are humble peasants, seven or forty days or even months if they are rajas. Astrological
tables are consulted to determine a lucky time to begin them.
On the first day the magician takes steps to protect the groom, and a matron
to protect the bride from all jealous spirits. In Upper Perak this preludes
a most elaborate marriage ritual. The magician ties a ring on a white thread
round the bridegroom's neck; lights a candle on cup or tray; burns incense and
invokes all spirits and the sacred dead to be kind. He scatters saffron rice,
sprinkles the groom with the usual cooling rice-paste and dresses his hair.
A matron does the same service for the bride. If her shorn fringe lies close
to the forehead, it is a sign that she is a virgin; if it sticks up, then "the
flower has been sipped by a bee." At the Perak court the midwife first
waxed and clipped seven long hairs: if the stumps moved or the tips fell towards
the girl, she had been deflowered. On either side of the house-door a red and
a white flag are stuck. The magician descends the house-ladder, sprinkles the
earth with yellow rice and rice-paste, and offers betel. to the spirits of the
soil. The bride is bathed in her house. The groom is conducted down to the river.
A white flag with a candle fixed on its shaft is planted on the bank. Near by,
two large candles are put on the ground. Incense is burnt in three bamboo cressets,
to which are tied three candles, three quids of betel, and three native cigarettes.
On a vertical frame is fastened a palm-blossom. Again rice is scattered with
appeals to all the spirits of earth and water. The palm-blossom is broken open
that the dew in its heart may be mixed with limes and rice-powder for bathing
the bridegroom. During the lustration he stands in the river facing downstream
and has water thrown into his mouth. The white thread is broken from his neck
and he is dressed in a raja's garb: a scion of the Perak royal house will be
lent the armlets and jewellery used at the installation of the ruler. Then,
mounted on elephants with painted foreheads, the procession wends its way with
religious chanting and song to the house of the bride. An umbrella is held over
the bridegroom's head and his attendant fans him. On arrival the groom steps
down into a tray of water, in which are a stone, a ring, a razor, and a dollar.
He is sprinkled with saffron rice and seated on a dais. For three nights, singing
and firing crackers, youths encircle a "henna tree" in a bowl containing
henna and stuck with lighted candles. The experts seize and dance with it in
turn until one of them carries it up the house-ladder, where girls receive the
"tree" and take up the dance. To extinguish the candles during inversions
and gyrations is the sign of a boor. On this first night both bride and groom
are stained with henna in private, and the formal marriage before an authority
from the mosque may now take place. All the fingers of the girl are stained;
three of the man's, counting from the little fingers. On the second day a Perak
princess of the highest rank used to be taken in procession with flags, umbrellas
and music, seven times round the palace. On that night the fingers and palms
and toes and the sides of the feet of the married pair are stained with henna
in public. Dramatic shows, dancing girls, and feasting entertain the guests.
The rice for the confarreatio on the morrow is brought out, piled in tiers on
an octagonal platter, topped with a tinsel tree and stuck with dyed eggs on
skewers. The couple sit in state, and guests pay homage to the bride now and
to the husband at the sitting in state on the following day.
On the third day there are chants in praise of Allah and the Prophet. A buffalo
is slaughtered. The girl's relatives escorted by music present decorated rice,
coconuts and firewood to the relatives of the groom. The bridegroom is escorted
thrice each way round a circular dome-shaped frame containing incense, that
is, in a passage between its mat sides and a white cloth held up by those present.
Afterwards he is placed inside the frame and censed for the space it takes a
dancer with a branched candlestick to circle the structure three times. Next
the bride is brought out to undergo the same ordeal. The bride goes to her room.
A duenna guards the door. There is a mock combat between the sexes. The magician
demands entrance for the bridegroom, and is admitted after presenting a betel-box
that contains a ring and some cash. His instructor lifts the groom's left hand
and puts it on the bride's head. The couple have to feed one another with betel.
Then three, five or seven old people paint the palms of the couple's hands with
henna and sprinkle them with rice. After that they are stripped of their finery,
led three times in each direction round an inverted rice-mortar and seated upon
this symbol of sex and fecundity. They are lifted thrice before they arc declared
duly seated. The magician pours fresh coconut oil into a bowl of water, and
after throwing five grains of rice on the oil, drops the wax of a lighted candle
on to the mixture. The pair are bathed with this compound, together with water
from blossoms of the areca and coconut palms. Coconut fronds are waved seven
times above their heads. Bathing accomplished, vari-coloured string is dropped
round and over the heads of the pair three times while they step forward, and
then under their feet and upwards three times while they step back. After that
the string is lowered to their chests and severed over the right rib of the
groom and the left of the bride. If the front piece is longer, the wife will
obey her husband; if the back piece is longer, the "rudder will be at the
bows," that is, the wife will rule the roost if the two pieces are equal,
both will hold their own. The next ceremony obtains everywhere. Husband and
wife don royal costume (or nowadays the man may wear Arab dress)-this, it has
been surmised, "shows both the tabu character of bride and bridegroom,
and also an attempt at disguising them by fictitious change of identity."
The couple then sit in state on a dais, the husband on the right of the wife.
Sumptuary custom fixes the number and colour of mats and pillows allowed, according
to the rank of the contracting parties. There is an exercise in Swedish drill,
where the performer has to sink slowly down into a squatting posture, straighten
his knees and stand erect. This exercise the embarrased pair have virtually
to fulfil, until after three efforts they are seated simultaneously as custom
ordains. The floral pyramid of rice on the octagonal platter is broken and the
pair have to feed one another three times with clots of the rice held in their
fingers. After that they must remain motionless, like a ruler at his installation,
while those present do obeisance to the "royalty for a day." Guests
throw money into a bowl. Muslim prayers may be read. At last the principals
are allowed to retire. Each guest is given a dyed egg out of the rice pyramid
to take home.
On the following days there is more lustration and feasting.
Throughout all these ceremonies bride and groom remain silent and no glances
are exchanged between their downcast eyes.
If a husband is disappointed in the virtue of his bride, he may advertise his
disillusionment by appearing without headdress or creese and he can claim back
half the dowry. But a marriage is not consummated for three nights or more.
So it is not usually till the seventh day that, with little fingers interlaced
or both holding one handkerchief, the couple are bathed again with all the precautions
described for the bathing on the third day. The seven fronds waved over them
are dropped for bride and groom to step to and fro across them three times,
after which the fronds are cast out of the house taking ill-luck. A censer is
passed about the pair and a cord of vari-coloured thread is tied around their
necks joining them. At this ceremony the guests, also, are drenched with water
from buckets and bamboo squirts. (At royal weddings, before they are bathed,
the pair are carried in procession three or seven times round a storeyed pavilion
built for the lustration.) After being bathed, both don finery once more and
sit in state.
Sometimes on the night before this final lustration the groom's friends tear
him from the dangerous fascination of his wife's arms by lighting a smoking
fire to bring him to the door, whereupon he is carried off to his parents' home
and only escorted back next day for the bathing ceremony.
Everywhere it is usual for the husband to live in his bride's home for some
while after the marriage. Among the matrilineal Minangkabau colonists of Negri
Sembilan he lives in it permanently.
The ritual of Upper Perak on the border of the Siamese Malay States contains
some novel details. The circumambulation of a structure containing incense and
the lustration of the couple before the day when the big sitting in state takes
place have not yet been recorded from the south.
The order of marriage ceremonies varies according to locality and the means
of the parties. Sometimes the Muslim service is performed just before the sitting
in state. Sometimes the mimic combat for the bride's person, a custom practised
in ancient India and in Europe, takes place on arrival at her house and is repeated
before the bridal dais.
The throwing of rice over the head of a bridegroom is commonly observed by Indo-Germanic
peoples. Confarreatio, or eating together, is a worldwide usage. In many parts
of India and Europe and in Muslim Morocco the bridegroom is treated as a king
on his wedding day.
The Code of Manu lays down that among the elements of a Brahmin's wedding are
the leading of the bride three times round the sacred fire, each time with seven
steps, and the binding together of the wedded pair by a cord passed round their
necks. Again, "On the second or third day of Brahmin marriage ceremonies,"
says Thurston, "sacrifices are performed in the morning and evening and
the nalagu ceremony. The couple are seated on two planks covered with mats and
cloth, amidst a large number of women assembled within the pandal. In front
of them betel leaves, areca nuts, fruit, flowers and turmeric paste are placed
on a tray. The women sing songs they have learnt from childhood. Taking a little
of the turmeric paste rendered red by the addition of lime, the bride makes
marks by drawing lines on her feet. The ceremony closes with the waving of water
coloured red with turmeric and lime, and the distribution of betel leaves and
areca nuts. The waving is done by two women who sing appropriate songs."
In many parts of India bridegroom and bride are seated on mortar or pestle or
grinding stone.
A custom of Hindu origin is for a Malay raja to remain away and send his creese
or his handkerchief to represent him when he marries a wife of humble birth.
An obsolete raja custom was to send a creese to parents who were reluctant to
give their daughter in marriage, with a message that the suitor was ready with
dower and presents doubled: if they remained obdurate, the creese had to be
returned with double the dower offered. Another method, with a Sanskrit name,
was for the suitor to force entry into the house, secure the girl, and drawing
his creese defy resistance. If the ruse succeeded, the man had to give twice
the usual dower, present two garments instead of the customary one and pay double
the ordinary fines for trespass. These two ways of wooing are probably of Indian
origin.
The painting of the couple with henna to fend off evil influences, the first
night in private, the second in public; the dance with the henna bowl and lighted
candles-these ceremonies occur at Muslim marriages even as far away as in Morocco.
Islam has added items to the ritual of Malay marriage but has failed to banish
others incompatible with its tenets. The sitting in state and the lustration
of the pair before mixed audiences of men and women offend the strict, but retain
so strong a hold on the Malay imagination that a bigoted chief, whom I knew,
reluctantly observed them, but in a loft under the roof, where guests could
not scale!
It should be added that when the bride is a widow, particularly a childless
widow, the marriage rites are greatly curtailed and often confined merely to
the short legal service before the Kathi.
(d) DEATH
It is no part of the plan of this book to describe the ordinary Muslim rites
for the disposal of the dead. But certain Malay superstitions require notice.
In Selangor and Negri Sembilan, when a practiser of black magic lies dying,
dissolution of the powerful soul from the wasted body is helped by the making
of a hole in the roof. Everywhere a dagger or a pair of betel scissors or some
other symbol of iron is placed on the chest of a corpse, and watch is kept especially
to prevent a cat from touching the body and electrifying it to an awful travesty
of life. Lights must be lit and incense burnt and the bed where the deceased
slept in life arranged for seven days after a death. In the neighbourhood of
the house no rice may be ground, shots fired or music or dancing performed.
After the demise of an important member of a royal family no gong or musical
instrument may be struck for forty days. It is forgotten that originally silence
was kept in order not to guide the deceased back to his temporal home, and such
silence is now regarded only as a mark of respect.
The body of an important person is escorted under umbrellas to the place of
ablution where men or women, according to the sex of the deceased, support it
on their extended legs. The corpse of the chief of Jelebu is "washed by
all the mosque officials in the district together with the Hajis." This
chief's retainers hold his insignia round his corpse, which is laid upon a dais
of the type prepared for all formal functions. As the corpse is being shrouded,
forty Hajis offer prayers. For it is believed that among every forty who offer
the prayers there will be a saint whose request will be heard.
A chief's bier is a huge platform, which it may take a hundred men to lift.
At the obsequies of the last Sultan of Singapore eighty hired bearers and numerous
volunteers carried this structure, at the corners of which stood four men scattering
yellow rice and flowers mixed with pieces of gold and silver. A bier may be
of several storeys. The bier of the commoner chief of Jelebu, for example, is
of five storeys; the bier of a raja is of seven. At the Jelebu rites a lad chosen
from a particular tribe scatters coin from the topmost bier; nine maidens of
the same tribe are seated on the litter, eight keeping the corpse in position
with their extended hands and the ninth holding a young plantain tree as a symbol
that "the broken grows again " and the chieftainship of Jelebu never
dies. At the funeral of royalty sixteen girls used to support the body. Outside
the Minangkabau colonies of Negri Sembilan the tree symbol is not found in the
Peninsula. Children are made to pass under a parent's bier before it is carried
to the grave, not only as a token of respect but to prevent them from pining
for the deceased.
In many places strips are torn from the pall and worn by relatives of the dead
on arm or wrist to keep them from undue longing for the departed. This is the
practice in Negri Sembilan and at the obsequies of a Sultan of Perak. The Malay
Annals record an instance where the pall of a tributary prince was despatched
to his suzerain with the news of his demise. Generally Malay mourners wear workaday
shabby clothes, a custom still followed at the Sri Menanti court. But in some
places, like Malacca, European influence has led to the adoption of black garments.
Again, the old custom was for mourners to go without headdress and with dishevelled
hair, and at a royal funeral it was expected that all a ruler's subjects should
exhibit these signs of grief. For three days after the death of the chief of
Jelebu no man may wear any headdress except a white cap, Hajis must discard
their turbans and women their veils. When the most famous ruler of Perak in
the eighteenth century came to the throne, for seven days the royal drums and
trumpets were silent in honour of his predecessor, and on the eighth the new
raja's headdress was brought on an elephant by the Bendahara, the chief who
rules temporarily during the interregnum between ruler and ruler; Sultan Iskandar
'Inayat Shah donned it. and only then did his courtiers cover their heads. (The
new Sultan dismissed from office and broiled in the sun many persons who had
failed to arrive for the obsequies!) Sometimes for forty days after a ruler's
death no headdress is worn. But in place of the baring of the head, Perak Malays
have introduced a very popular fashion of wearing a white band round the hat.
At a ruler's funeral the State drums are beaten and the state trumpets blown.
Then for seven or even twenty or forty days they are silent. After the death
of a great chief his royal master may order that they keep silent for five or
seven days. This custom also was probably designed to avoid guiding and recalling
the departed to his earthly home.
It is considered unlucky to attend the funeral of one who has died a bad death,
or of one whose corpse turns a dark livid hue, and mourners hurry away. There
are some who will not partake of a funeral feast, especially on the third and
seventh days after the death, because demons have often been seen pouring into
rice and curry water that has run off the corpse at the final ablution. Take
a strip of the shroud, a chip of the coffin-plank, and a broad leaf to hide
behind, and one can see them, some with children on their backs, like human
beings, catching the water in jars!
Temporary wooden posts are often planted at a grave, until permanent stones
can be got. If the deceased has left a child frantic with grief, then every
night for three or seven successive nights a vessel of water is tied to the
temporary tombstone by a shred of the shroud, and every morning the child is
bathed in the water. In Perak, on the hundredth day the temporary posts are
cleansed with limes and rice-paste, thrown into the river and have water sprinkled
over them thrice to drive away evil influences.
Sometimes over the tomb of a saint or ruler there is fixed a mosquito-net or
a light frame and canopy or a palm-thatched roof under which lamps and candles
are lit.
Everywhere Muslim burial is the rule now, though there survive shadowy traditions
of older rites. Cremation was practised in mediaeval Malacca. The Dayaks of
Borneo carry into the forests the bodies of those who have met a violent death,
and lay them on the ground; their priests they honour by exposure on a raised
platform. In the Malay Annals and the tale of the Malacca hero, Hang Tuah, there
are allusions to leaving bodies on the ground, but only those of traitors or
enemies. In the north of the Malay Peninsula suspension of the dead between
trees is practised by the Buddhist Malayo-Siamese, both as a permanent form
of burial and as a preliminary to cremation, and the northern Sakai dispose
of the bodies of their magicians in the same way. "Among some of the Sakai-Jakun
tribes of Pahang it appears that not only is a settlement deserted when a death
occurs but the corpse is left unburied . . . in the abandoned house, for, if
they put a corpse into the ground, the spirit would not be able to make its
escape upwards."
Are there signs of former aerial burial among the civilised Malays? Many of
the grave-stones of rulers of Perak are on raised platforms. And it was not
uncommon in the past for rajas and chiefs to be left unburied for days, their
successors having to be elected before the interment. Sultan 'Ali of Perak,
who died in 1871, was left unburied for forty days, because his lawful successor
feared to come upriver, "and the presence and proclamation of the new Sultan
are essential features of the burial ceremonies of the old." A similar
case is recorded from Jelebu.
The Proto-Malays of the Peninsula have perhaps been influenced by the civilised
Muslim Malay. Anyhow they bury their dead. "The body lies about three feet
underground, the tomb, which is made of earth beaten smooth, rising about the
same height above the surface. A little ditch runs round the grave, wherein
the spirit may paddle his canoe. The body lies with the feet pointing towards
the west. The ornamental pieces at each end of the grave answer to tombstones
" and have a Malayo-Arabic name. "On the other side of them are seen
the small, plain, upright sticks, called soul-steps, to enable the spirit to
leave the grave when he requires. There are four horizontal beams on each side
of the grave, joined in a framework, making sixteen in all, laid on the top
of the grave and so forming a sort of enclosure, in which are placed, for the
use of the deceased, a coconut shell, a torch in a stand, an axe-handle and
a cooking-pot, while outside this framework hangs a shoulder-basket for the
deceased to carry his firewood in." Thus is described the grave of a Johore
aboriginal chief who died in 1879.
Expensive and well-built houses are killing the ancient custom of abandoning
a home where a death has occurred. But Sultan Iskandar 'Inayat Shah of Perak
removed from Brahmana Indra and built a new palace at Chempaka Sari because
he "disliked hearing the royal music near the grave of his predecessor,"
and Sultan Mahmud, his successor, removed from Chempaka Sari to the Big Island
Indra Mulia. Nowadays a wooden house is sometimes taken to pieces and erected
on a site more lucky.
(e) INSTALLATION CEREMONIES
The selection of a ruler is supposed to be made before his predecessor's body
is consigned to the grave. In one Malay folk-tale, where a king has died childless
and his successor is chosen by a sagacious elephant (as in many Indian stories),
the prince selected is bidden to sit beside the corpse of the deceased, while
guns are fired and the drums and trumpets of the royal band are sounded seven
times. In Naning and in many parts of Negri Sembilan, a chief's successor must
mount the bier; failure to achieve this is regarded as a bar to election and,
if there are more claimants than one, they scramble on to the hearse together
or one after another. At his installation a new commoner chief of Jelebu has
to sit on the dais on which the body of the last chief was washed for burial.
The formal installation of a ruler is made some while after the obsequies of
his predecessor. There are festivities for seven days or forty days. Then the
prince is bathed ceremonially and dons robes of state. A Perak Sultan wears
a gold neck-chain, dragon-headed armlets of gold, and a creese in his belt;
in his head-kerchief is thrust the royal seal, and from his shoulder hangs a
sword with an Arabic inscription, reputed to have been the weapon of his ancestor,
Alexander the Great! Seven times he is taken in procession round the royal domain,
to the thud and blare of the state drums and trumpets, escorted by courtiers
carrying flags and pennons, creeses, lances and swords. On his return to the
palace, he listens to a herald reading a proclamation from an unintelligible
version of an old Sanskrit formula. He is cooled with rice-paste and sprinkled
with rice. About him clusters a retinue, holding umbrellas, weapons, and betel-caskets.
The Sultan's pages rest swords and creeses on the right shoulder; the pages
of the heir to the throne may not lift his insignia above their arms. His Highness
enters the hall of audience, mounts the throne, and has to sit motionless "
while the royal band plays a certain number of times. . . . The number should
not exceed nine or be less than four. Any movement by the Sultan would be extremely
inauspicious." At this moment the genies of the State are apt to make the
sword of Alexander the Great press on the royal shoulder. Into the Sultan's
ear, the king's secret, namely, the real Indian names of the divine founders
of his house, is whispered by a descendant of the herald who came out of the
mouth of a bull when first the bearers of those Indian names alighted on earth
and required a pursuivant. His subjects in the hall bow to the earth seven times
in homage.
In Negri Sembilan the Yamtuan's regalia comprise sets of eight, eight weapons
of each kind, eight umbrellas, eight betel-boxes, eight tapers, eight water-vessels,
eight handfuls of ashes, and a bowl with one strand of human hair. When all
is ready for the installation, chamberlains invoke the archangels to send down
the divine power of kings by the hand of angels. "The weapons are taken
out of their yellow wrappings, the royal umbrellas are opened, the royal candles
lit, the water-vessels and betel-boxes are lifted up on high for all to see.
A copy of the Quran is set down before these mighty regalia, and ewers filled
with every kind of holy water are arranged before them. One ewer contains water
mingled with blood; another contains water with a bullet in it; another may
have water mixed with the pure rice-paste that sterilizes all evil influences.
A censer is waved. . . . The great chiefs are about to swear allegiance to the
king. The presence of the holy regalia, the water crimsoned with blood, the
water that washes the lead or iron of war-all these things lend additional terror
to perjury." The herald who proclaims the election of a new Yamtuan "is
expected to stand on one leg with the sole of his right foot resting against
his left knee, with his right hand shading his eyes, and with the tip of the
fingers of his left hand pressing against his left cheek!" The chiefs sweep
forward on their knees, raise folded hands seven times to their brows, kiss
their overlord's hand thrice and retire. Again incense is burnt, "and the
word of God as written in the Quran is believed to come down and is repeated
in Arabic in the hearing of the people, 'Lo, I have appointed a Caliph to be
My vicegerent on earth.'"
When a commoner chief is installed by the Sultan of Perak, he stands at the
entrance to the palace under a large banana leaf, while a herald reads over
him the chiri, that unintelligible Sanskrit formula "in the language of
the genies." Then the oath of allegiance is taken. Drums clash. An old
man steps forward, and using a grass brush sprinkles rice-paste down the banana
leaf that covers the candidate's head. The brush and the leaf are cast away
and the rice is scattered over his body. When the new chief has doffed his creese
and crawled up to the throne to do homage, the Sultan moistens his brow with
rice-paste, tucks a bunch of yellow chempaka bloom under his head-kerchief and
sprinkles him with rice. The chief retires backwards, doing obeisance as when
he came. A curtain is dropped midway across the hall and he goes out. He must
cross water and may not look upon the Sultan or his palace or his elephants
or anything that is his for one week. Violation of this rule may cause death
to chief or ruler.
To the primitive patriarchal and matriarchal communities of the Malay race kings
and royalty were foreign. The description in Malay romance of royalty's silks,
seamless, fast of dye, iridescent, of gossamer muslins tangled by a dewdrop,
and of other wonderful raiment, are only the hyperbole of village rhapsodists
marvelling at the luxurious novelties of the court and winning favour by lauding
them. The yellow umbrella of the Malay ruler was imported from China. Court
sumptuary laws for cloths, weapons, and houses came from India. Among Malay
regalia, the sword and the seal are foreign, and the names of half the drums
and trumpets are Persian. The idea that a ruler can slay at pleasure without
being guilty of crime is not Malayan. The word Raja is Sanskrit; the word Sultan
introduced with the religion of Muhammad. The divinity that hedges a modern
ruler is Muslim and conferred by Allah during the recital of the text: "Lo!
I have appointed a Caliph to be My Vicegerent on earth." The white blood
of Malay princes is that ascribed by Muhammadan mystics to certain saints.
X. MAGICIAN AND MUSLIM
A rough granite monolith inscribed with Muslim laws in the Malay language and
Arabic lettering, recently discovered in Trengganu, is evidence that Islam had
reached the east coast of the Malay Peninsula as early as the fourteenth century.
At the beginning of the next century it became the State religion of Malacca.
Barbosa ascribed this change of creed from Hinduism to the presence of many
Indian Muslim traders at that port. An Achinese account gives 1474 A.D. as the
date of the conversion of the first ruler of Kedah to embrace the religion of
the Arabian Prophet. The royal house of Malacca gave rulers to Johore, Pahang
and Perak, dominated Selangor and Negri Sembilan and so spread the new faith
throughout the Peninsula.
The early missionaries came from the Coromandel Coast and Malabar, and therefore
made the Malays Sunnis of the school of Shafe'i. Later arrived missionaries
from the Hadramaut. In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries Sayids of the
great Hadramaut house, descendants of 'Alawi, grandson of 'Isa al-Mohajir, gained
enormous influence at the Perak court, one of them marrying a sister of Perak's
most famous ruler and becoming the father of a Sultan of that State.
The Malays of the Peninsula have been Muslims for some five hundred years. No
zealots, they are orthodox and convinced believers. But in their beliefs and
their magic the influence of the early Indian missionaries of their latest faith
is marked.
There is a book called the Crown of Kings, of which several editions have been
printed in Egypt and at Mecca. It is on sale at most native bookshops in the
Peninsula. Its author was an Achinese, prominent in the war against the Dutch,
Shaikh 'Abbas, who died in 1895. The book is especially interesting because,
like "the majority of Muslim philosophers and authors of bibliographical
and encyclopaedic works," the compiler "keeping to the classification
of the sciences given by the Aristotelians, considers astrology as one of the
seven or nine branches of the natural sciences, placing it with medicine, physiognomy,
alchemy, the interpretation of dreams, and so on." The work is not free
from Malay and Indian influence. There are given, for example, five divisions
of a five-day cycle, presided over by Siva the Supreme Lord, Siva the Destroyer,
Sri, Brahma, and Vishnu! Still, the treatise is a fair example of what Islam
has taught the Malay to regard as science, and it is, in effect, a repertory
of his latest magical lore.
The author begins by saying that the science of astrology as first taught by
Enoch was simple, and became complex and difficult only at the prayer of Jesus,
whose whereabouts before His arrest by the Jews were betrayed by astrological
calculations. This part of the book quotes among its authorities Abu Ma'shar,
an Arab astrologer known to Christendom in the Middle Ages as Albumasar, and
Ja'far al-Sadik, the sixth of the twelve Imams, reported by the Shilahs to have
been the author of a book of infallible astrological prognostications for the
information of the House of the Prophet. A manuscript work on "Prognostications
by Ja'far al-Sadik" came into my hands from Malacca, and in Acheh and Java
also fortune-tellers' manuals are ascribed to him.
Crude astrology divorced from all knowledge of astronomy enters largely into
the Muslim element in Malay magic. It determines lucky and unlucky times for
begetting children, fighting, house building and planting. At the Perak court
the moment propitious for the circumcision of a prince is divined from pools
of oil floating on water "in the shape of moon and stars." There are
charms that must be written only when the constellation of the Scorpion is invisible.
The meaning of a dream may depend on the day of the week on which it came to
the sleeper; the omen to be drawn from an eclipse on the month and year of its
occurrence. Astrology is employed to trace a thief or recover stolen property,
and is part and parcel of most forms of divination. For example, there are several
ways of ascertaining how long one shall live, ways different according to the
month of the Muhammadan year. In the first month one has to close one's eyes
at midnight, recite "Say, 'God is One!'" ten times, and then open
one's eyes and gaze at the moon; if it looks black, in that month one will die.
In the fifth and sixth months one must gaze not at the moon but at a lamp and
that only on a Wednesday night. In the seventh and eighth months one recites
"Say, 'I seek refuge in the Lord of the daybreak!'" seven times and
gazes at water in a bowl; if it looks red, in that month one will die. In the
Fasting month one recites "Praise be to God" nine times and gazes
at the moon; if one's shadow is there, in that month one will die. In the last
two months of the year the eyes have to be closed, the passage "Say, 'God
is One!'" recited thrice and the creed once, and one's gaze directed at
a cloudless sky either at dawn or at eve; if it looks red like blood, assuredly
in that month one will die.
All Malay treatises on divination from dreams bear an Arabic title and are of
Muslim origin. A popular poem on the subject begins by explaining the omens
to be drawn from dreaming that one sees Allah, meets an angel, beholds the Throne
of God or Paradise or the Razor Bridge across hell-fire or the Guarded Tablet
of Fate. Then it interprets the meaning of dreams about the Four Friends of
the Prophet, the Quran, Iblis, being banished by a Shaikh, riding a camel, eating
horse-flesh, seeing a date tree or a fig tree! Needless to say, none of this
theology, zoology and botany is Malayan. Local fauna often takes the place of
alien fauna in native translations of Muslim manuals, but otherwise their contents
are foreign and it is futile to look for an indigenous theory of dreams among
Muslim Malays. All these dream manuals are divided into chapters according to
the class of object about which one dreams: men, beasts, flora, clothes, birds,
insects, countries and roads, stones, fruits, musical instruments, traps for
fish and game.
The Crown of Kings devotes several pages to the omens to be drawn from involuntary
convulsive movements of the left eyebrow, the right eyelid, the left nostril,
the upper lip, the shoulder-blades, the left ring-finger, and every part of
the body. When the Malacca hero, Hang Tuah, was in Java, one day he donned his
magic creese because an involuntary twitch of his right shoulder led him to
expect a brawl. But few modern Malays heed these niceties or have read of them.
Divination by the values attached to the letters of men's names is best known
from a "Poem on Affinities" to determine if a marriage will be happy:
the abjad or alphabet of letters representing numerical values is employed.
This Malay poem has been translated into English. Divination by possession is
known to the Malays as to the Arabs, but belongs to the primitive, impious,
and decried practices of the shaman, who on demand will use it even to foretell
the outcome of a pilgrimage to Mecca! Geomancy, or divination from sand, is
mentioned in Malay literature under its Arabic name, but is never practised
by the Malays. Nor do they observe the entrails of animals for omens.
Malay treatises enumerate many animals, pigs, the rhinoceros, wild dogs, deer
of all kinds, whose entrance into a garden forebodes calamity, unless the evil
portent is averted by the offering of prayers to the Prophet and of cash, cloth,
and a feast to the pious expert who recites the prayers. Butterflies, bees,
hawks, woodpeckers alighting on a roof, frogs, monkeys, snakes, and geckoes
invading house or garden, a tortoise under the floor, fungus growing in a kitchen,
coconuts two on a stem, nests of wasps or mason-bees in one's clothes-all these
are variously portents of poverty, divorce, disease or death, which the recital
of an appropriate passage from the Quran can change into omens of riches, health
and happiness. When a mat belonging to the second Caliph of the Abbaside dynasty
was gnawed by a mouse, it was sent to a diviner who foretold a quiet and prosperous
reign for its owner. The Malay manuscript from which the above list of portents
is taken concludes with a dissertation on the omens to be drawn from the gnawing
by mice of mats or pillows or of the neck, the right arm or the left arm, or
the bottom or side or back of a man's coat!
A Kelantan magician, whose lore was full of Muslim borrowings, claimed that
he could reflect genies on the finger nails of innocent little boys. Sir Frank
Swettenham met an Arab in Malaya who declared that he could see a robbery re-enacted
in the surface of water, but that first of all he would see a little old genie
by whose help the scene of the crime would be reflected. The same writer saw
a bowl of water, with a cotton lid tied taut across it, used as a planchette
to discover a thief. A chapter of the Quran was read, two men supported the
bowl by the rim, and when at last a slip of paper containing the name of one
of the suspects was laid on the lid, the bowl began to revolve. (The author
explains that the bowl failed to respond to the first four names, that the names
were written in English characters unintelligible to the Malays present and
that the experiment succeeded twice!) Among the regalia of the ruler of Negri
Sembilan is a bowl and a hair. Divination with this apparatus is done by Malays
to discover a thief. The bowl is divided by lines of Indian ink into eight compartments,
each inscribed with the name of the possible culprit. A blind man holds the
hair, to which a gold ring is tied above the centre of the bowl, and intones
a Muslim prayer, whereupon, if the name of the culprit is there, the ring swings
violently into the compartment containing it.
Arab diviners, the recitation of passages from the Quran, the description of
methods of divination in magico-religious tracts, the observance of astrological
times, all suggest that the forms of divination popular with the modern Peninsular
Malay are derived from Muslim sources.
A notable contribution from Islam to Malaya was a new type of amulet. The animist
found a fetish in every object possessed of potent soul-substance, stones from
a water-fall, candle-nuts, cockle-shells, the hardy grass (Eleusine coracana)
that survives even on the trodden path. A strange knot in a Malacca cane, a
curious whorl on the wooden sheath of a dagger, a mark on the damascene of a
creese that no smith designed to fashion, the rare celt, the Perak "ball
of petrified dew," all these attracted his attention and awe and trust.
The bezoar stone secreted in fish or monkey or coconut he kept in rice-grain
for fear that it should vanish offended and an article of great medicinal value
be lost. Then, India introduced a fresh stock of charms. The tinsel marriage
crown protecting bride and groom, the thread tied round the newly-wedded and
on the wrist of a child, the incense burnt to scare demons, the waving of charmed
water over a married pair and over the sick, and perhaps the rubbing of those
in ghostly peril and the frail and ill with yellow turmeric, red betel, and
black ashes may be traced to this source. Last of all, Islam trafficked in amulets
inscribed with magic squares, cabalistic letters, the signs of the planets and
the signs of the zodiac, the names of the angels and the Excellent Names of
Allah. The hexagonal star of Solomon's seal is used by Malays to cure madness
and possession by devil, familiar spirit, ghost or genie. In Perak three such
stars are drawn on paper that is steeped in water for washing the face of one
afflicted with dizziness. A magic square scratched on leaf or paper and buried
in the middle of a rice-field or at its four corners will keep away rats and
pests from the plants. Arabic characters representing K, M, 7, D, 3, ALA if
traced in oil on the palm of the hand and furtively rubbed on one's face in
the presence of one of the opposite sex will attract that person's love. Another
such formula will bring the Perak fisherman a good catch. Yet another is hung
round the neck of an infant that refuses its mother's breast. One is inscribed
on lead and planted under the house-ladder of a woman one loves illicitly. Another
is put under a patient's pillow to induce sleep. A text from the Quran is hung
in a child's locket to save it from convulsions or tied in a woman's waist-belt
to save her from demons, or fastened to an aching limb or written on paper to
be dissolved in a patient's drinking water. Printed or manuscript texts are
pasted over the door of house or room to scare evil spirits. There is a translation
by a Kelantan Malay of a treatise popular with Indian Sunnis, the Mujarrabati-i-Dirbi,
or "Prescriptions," which cites among its sources works by al-Buni,
a celebrated Arabian writer on the Cabbala, divination, magic squares, and the
virtues of the Basmala. The Basmala is a name for the Arabic formula translated
"In the Name of God, the Merciful, the Compassionate." The Malay translation
of the "Prescriptions" relates as follows:-"When God sent down
the Basmala the hills shook. Its Arabic letters are nineteen, the number of
the angels in charge of hell; whosoever recites them shall not be damned. It
was the Basmala that set up Solomon's kingdom. Whoever writes down the phrase
six hundred times and wears it shall be honoured by men. Whoever recites it
seven hundred and eighty-six times for seven consecutive days shall gain whatever
he desires. Read fifty times over the face of a tyrant it will bring him low.
Written down sixty-one times and worn it will make the barren fruitful. Written
on tin and put in a fishing net it will attract shoals from all the seas."
Similar virtues attach to the opening chapter of the Quran and many texts used
by Muslims to ward off physical and spiritual ills.
Incantations are frowned upon by strict theologians but, as we have seen, they
are the breath of the Malay magician's life. Recited for a lawful object they
do not strike the vulgar as unorthodox. Illicit charms for the seduction of
women the Malay has inherited from the Hindu. And if there is reason to suspect
the efficacy of his appeal to "Allah, the Merciful, the Compassionate"
and to Muhammad to make a girl yield to her lover, then "it is better if
possible" to add a conclusion patently impious:-
In the name of God, the Merciful, the Compassionate!
Friend of mine, Iblis! and all ye spirits and devils
That love to trouble man!
I ask you to go and enter the body of this girl,
Burning her heart as this sand burns,
Fired with love for me.
Bring her to yield herself to me!
By virtue of this rice and steam
Place her here by my hearth
Or else take ye heed!
In a charm against the Will o' the Wisp a Kelantan magician, with pantheism
perhaps unconscious, vaunts, "I am Iblis, the son of Pharaoh! "
To destroy an enemy, there is prescribed in Malay versions of Muslim treatises
a world-wide method of sorcery. A cabalistic symbol is inscribed on wax. The
wax is moulded in the form of a man. Then the eyes of the figure are pierced
with a needle or its belly stabbed, while a purely Arabic charm is recited to
call down upon the victim the anger of Allah! To rob an enemy of power to harm,
it suffices to draw his portrait in the dust of crossroads, grind one's heel
on his navel, tread on his pictured heart, beat the face with a stick, and recite
a short imprecation. Symbolic charms and Arabic formulae are also prescribed
to cause impotency. Every good Malay Muslim views with horror these black practices
and Satanic incantations.
The contribution of Islam to Malay magic is not interesting. Flotsam and jetsam
from the Talmud, the works of the Gnostics, the science of Indian astrologers
and the practices of Hindu sorcerers, it came to Malaya third-hand.
XI. MAGICIAN AND MYSTIC
ONCE more the Malay magician sat at the feet of Indian teachers, this time as
a student of Muslim pantheism.
To India have been traced the first use of the Sufi term fana for loss of the
individual self in God, and the Sufi's acquaintance with the practice of "watching
the breaths" as a means of worship. The Sufi legend of Ibrahim bin Adham,
the hunter prince of Balkh who gave up his throne for the beggar's bowl, is
modelled upon the story of Buddha.
The Malay has two versions of the tale of Ibrahim, prince of Balkh. Long before
he got them, India had taught him to fast and practise austerities in order
to acquire invulnerability and other magical arts. Brahminical mantra, to which
even the gods were subject, would have prepared his mind for the audacities
of popular Sufism. Like the mantra, too, Sufi secrets and charms were fascinatingly
esoteric, to be revealed only to the initiated. The doctrines that the disciple
must honour and obey his teacher above all men and pass through several initiatory
stages were not new to a race that had been under Hindu influence for centuries.
Teachers of Sufisrn came to the Malay Peninsula more than four hundred years
ago. Before the end of the fifteenth century a Sultan of Malacca sent an embassy
to Pasai, a small Sumatran port famous as a religious centre, offering a present
of gold and two slave girls to any theologian who could say if those in heaven
and those in hell remain in their respective places for ever. A Pasai pundit
replied openly that they did, quoting the authority of the Quran. But the Sultan
of Pasai summoned him, hinted that an embassy could not have come for such an
obvious answer and suggested giving in private an interpretation of the problem,
communicable only to the chosen few. The pundit took this advice and won the
prize offered by Malacca. There is little doubt that his answer was on lines
suggested by a work that has left its impress on many Malay charm books, the
Insanu'l-kamil or "Perfect Man" of al-Jili. "You may say, if
you like," writes al-Jili, "that hell-fire remains as it was, but
that the torment of the damned is changed to pleasure," or, again, "the
power of endurance of the sufferers in hell continues to grow-God never takes
back His gifts and these powers come from God-until there appears in them a
Divine power which extinguishes the fire, because no one is doomed to misery
after the Divine attributes become manifest in him." The author of the
Malay Annals, writing at a learned court, was not so indiscreet as to reveal
this mystery to all and sundry. Nor does he give the Sufi answer to another
problem propounded by Malacca to Pasai, the paradox that both the man who believes
and the man who disbelieves that God created and bestowed His gifts from all
eternity is an infidel. Theological discussions like these are above the head
of the magician. Moreover, he has left to the foreigner to practise occasionally
in Malaya that orgiastic Sufism which degrades the famous cry of Abu Sa'id,
"There is nothing inside this coat except Allah." Village magicians
that refrain from the black art are popular, while the Arab teacher is respected,
feared and disliked, and the Indian often despised. The Malay Annals cynically
record how when the Sultan of Malacca took his Arab teacher into battle against
the Portuguese in 1511 A.D., the theologian clung with both hands to the howdah
and exclaimed, "Let us return! This is no place to study the unity of God.
"
The Shi'ah heresies and the "rash mystic pantheism" to be detected
in many Malay charms has not received the attention of English students. "Such
mysticism," remarks Snouck Hurgronje, "is found also in Arabian lands
but only in small circles of the initiated as half secret doctrines of the Sufis,
cautiously concealed on account of the hunt of official theologians for heresy
and of the suspicious fanaticism of the vulgar. In the East Indies, however,
it formed woof and warp not only of learned speculation but of popular belief.
Tracts with drawings and tables were used in the endeavour to realise the idea
of the Absolute. The four elements, the four winds, the four righteous Caliphs,
the four founders of the schools of law, the four attributes of God in dogma,
the four grades of progress in mysticism, the four extremities of the human
body, and many other sets of four were for popular mysticism revelations of
the one indivisible self of man. Through the names of Muhammad and Allah, each
in Arabic spelt with four letters, were symbolised the One Being."
Every Sufi who is one with God is a saint with supernatural powers, and already
it has been said that Malaya is strewn with the graves of miracle-workers. An
eighteenth century history of Perak records how when a Sultan of that State
fell ill vows were paid to "prophets and saints and the Poles," who
stand at the head of the Muslim hierarchy and are each in his generation the
axis whereon the sphere of existence revolves. The founder of the orthodox Qadiri
order was among the saints invoked, but while the invocation of saints is allowed
to Sunnis, it is commonest in India and among the Shi'ahs. Again, the Sufi holds
that the esoteric teaching of the Quran was revealed by the Prophet to 'Ali,
his son-in-law, to whom according to the Shi'ahs was transmitted the Light of
Muhammad. The name of 'Ali, our "Lord 'Ali," occurs in innumerable
Malay charms.
It has been remarked that the conception of the tears of the Archangel Michael
creating countless cherubim in his likeness to control the rain and guard the
fruits and plants of the earth exhibits a pantheistic tendency. The same may
be said of the diagnosis of the Kelantan medicine-man, who finds a hundred and
ninety demons for smallpox, each operating on a selected part of the body, His
Lordship Buzz on the ear, His Lordship Peg on the joints, and so on. In Patani
there are elders and midwives who believe that all evil "spirits were really
one, pervading the whole world, only called by different names according to
the environment in which the universal spirit of evil was considered for the
moment. . . . As one old man expressed it, ' It may be hot here and at Mecca
at the same time, and the spirit is the same.' He went on to explain that the
spirit could break itself into one hundred and ninety parts, and that the great
medicine-man was the person who could cause it to do this and could keep all
the different parts under his control. "
Elsewhere it has been noted how the Malay magician's idea of an archetypal "world
of the breadth of a tray and a sky of the breadth of an umbrella" reminds
one of Ibn 'Arabi's saying that all the universe lies potential in God like
the tree in the seed.
Drums and wild singing of interminable chants helped the shaman to fall into
a trance wherein he trafficked with the world of spirits, just as Malay village
mystics seek union with Allah by roaring His praises in chorus and swaying head
and body in giddy contortions. The Brahmin ascetic attained hypnotic slumber
by counting his inhalations and exhalations and concentrating his gaze on some
object. Before completely losing consciousness and gaining deliverance from
the cycle of existence with power (like Habib Noh of Singapore) to transport
himself anywhere at will, he "hears within his body (in the heart and throat,
between the eyebrows and in other parts) various sounds, those of a drum, the
roaring sea, the thunder, a bell, a shell, a reed, a lyre and a bee."
The religious ascetic uses his trance to lose himself in God; the Kelantan magician
to discover if a warrior will win a fight or a villager live another year. The
warrior is to invoke thrice the four Shaikhs at the corners of the world, the
four first Caliphs of Islam and the four archangels, the blessed saints, all
miracle-working rulers dead and alive, and pray them to intercede with God to
reveal the issue of the coming battle. Then he gazes at his followers. If he
sees them headless, they will perish. If he sees them armless, they will suffer
greatly in the fight. Or he may listen three times. If he hears no sound, his
men will perish; and so on. Again: the four Caliphs have their seats in the
human frame, Abu Bakar in the liver, 'Omar in the spleen, 'Usman in the lungs,
'Ali in the gallbladder. Each of them passes to his seat along different parts
of the right or left nostril. "If one wants to cross a river without a
boat, one consults Abu Bakar through one's breath, inhaling and then exhaling;
if there is a heavy sensation, the water is deep and a boat required; if there
is a feeling of lightness in the inhalation, the water is shallow." There
are a number of ways of divination from observing the breaths. One more charm
of which breathing forms a part must suffice:-
"To marry body and spirit draw all your breath into your heart and recite
the following:- "I am the true Muhammad. It is not I that say it. It is
Muhammad. First spirit was created, then the body. Only if this night be destroyed,
can I be destroyed. My being is thy being. My being is one with thy being. I
vanish in the fold of the attestation, 'There is no God but Allah-He!' in the
fold of my mother the Light of Muhammad until dawn." If the charm is for
protection by day, then it commits the reciter to the fold of his "father
the Light of Allah." "Between the two eyebrows," said Hamzah
of Barus, a famous heterodox mystic of Sumatra, " that is the spot where
the servant meets his God," and unconsciously he was quoting yogi ritual.
Hamzah visited Pahang on the east coast of the Peninsula about the beginnning
of the seventeenth century. So it is less surprising to find in a Kelantan charm
book the above assertion by the Malay villager of his participation in the Islamic
Logos, though it is only a mundane expedient for protecting his skin!
Less learned but equally pantheistic is the magician who, forgetting the terrific
appearance of the archangels for the orthodox, cries:-
I attest there is no God but Allah!
I attest that Muhammad is His Prophet!
Ho my brethren, Gabriel, Michael, Israfil and 'Azrail!
Ye are four but with me five!
I sit on the Seat of Allah!
I lean against the pillar of His Throne!
Is this a debased interpretation of al-Jili's description of the Perfect Man?
"his heart stands over against the Throne of God, his mind over against
the Pen, his soul over against the Guarded Tablet, his nature over against the
elements, his capability of receiving forms over against matter. He stands over
against the angels with his good thoughts, over against the genies and devils
with the doubts that beset him, over against the beasts with his animality.
. . . To every type of existence he furnishes from himself an antitype."
A literal interpretation of mysteries is all that a mind utterly untrained in
metaphysics can compass. An extraordinary mixture of Hindu sentiment and imagery
and of Sufi metaphysical speculations on the Perfect Man occurs in an old Perak
charm for giving a person a dominant personality:-
I sit beneath the Throne of Allah;
Muhammad my shelter is beside me,
Gabriel on my right, Michael on my left,
All the company of Angels following me.
Vicegerent of Allah . . .
Only if Allah suffer harm,
Can I suffer harm:
Only if His Prophet suffer harm,
Can I suffer harm.
A hooded snake is my loin-cloth,
A musty elephant my steed:
My ear-posy the lightning,
My shadow is that of a fierce tiger.
By virtue of this charm of Awang the Preeminent
In seated assembly
Preeminent I;
Erect, walking or talking
Preeminent I;
I, lord of all mortals,
Precious stone of the Prophet,
Pearl of God.
The same manuscript contains a tremendous love-charm to be recited over seven
blossoms, that must then be handed to the object of one's passion:- "There
is no God but God. I am God, the Divine Reality, ruler who blesseth all the
worlds. There is no God but God, the King, the Divine Reality, the Revealed.
There is no God but Allah, lord of the heavens and the earth and of the great
Throne." Thirty years ago a Perak Malay was sentenced to gaol for teaching
an obscene form of pantheism based on the creed-"There is no God but God.
I am God. God Most High is only this self of mine."
The claim of the magician that he is God or that he is the brother of the four
archangels seems hideously blasphemous to the orthodox Malay villager, a claim
allied with the blackest magic of the spirit-raising shaman. But to the disciple
the Malay exponent of this crude popular pantheism explains and establishes
his doctrine by many far-fetched analogies. The invocations used by the Kelantan
magician are full of them. He calls, for example, upon four winds of disease
to go forth from the patient's body by the four doors of the organs of the mystical
life. Wind in skin and pores corresponds with the first of the four steps towards
union with God, that is, with the observance of the law, which is the outer
mark of the religious and about which there is no secrecy. Wind in sinews and
bones corresponds with the second stage, that is, the mystic path enjoined by
his spiritual guide for the Sufi novice. Wind in the flesh and blood corresponds
with a third stage, the plane of truth. Wind in the breath of life and the seed
of man corresponds with the plane of perfect gnosis. Or again, analogies are
discovered between the worlds of Sufi metaphysics and parts of the physical
frame. The material world is in the tongue; the invisible intelligible world
in the windpipe; the world of power (wherein lie hidden the processes of the
divine nature) in the first stomach of ruminants! All this is abracadabra to
civilised men, even metaphysicians. But the process of thought is clear. The
archangels are four; the first Caliphs were four; the elements out of which
the human body is composed are four; the limbs of the body are four. Therefore
man and the archangels are one! Adam, Muhammad, and Allah can each be spelt
in Arabic with four letters. Still the ever recurring number four! Therefore
God and man are identical! Other mystic numbers are three, founded on Sufi speculations
on the trinity of the lover, the beloved and love, and seven, the number of
the stages in the Neo-Platonic theory of the emanation process of being, exemplified
also in the number of the Pleiades and the days of the week. All this is puerile,
but a charm from the Kelantan manuscript tract already quoted so largely, a
charm called "The Fortress of the Unity of God," will show that it
is wrong to suppose the Malay had no serious intellectual interests until European
protection provided him with schools and colleges. The charm should be recited
four times a night from one Friday to the next "with a sincere vowing of
the heart to unity with Allah and the vision of Him implanted in one's heart,
until His Being permeates one and one has faith: 'I am lost in the universal
and absolute Essence of God'; and one is lost to self and one's self becomes
absolute and universal too:-
"In the name of God, the Merciful, the Compassionate. Oh God! grant peace
to our lord Muhammad and the household of Muhammad who watcheth over my self
and my friends and all my children and all the contents of my house and my property
and the possessions of my hands with a sevenfold fortress from the fortress
of God Most High; its roof-'There is no God but God,' and my wall 'Muhammad
the Apostle of God,' and my key 'the might of God,' which may not be opened
for ever save with His permission. Muhammad is like man and unlike man; he is
like a chrysolite among stones.
"Now the meaning of the term 'fortress' is that we know we come from not-being
and to not-being shall return. For there is nothing evidently save the Being
of God. And of a surety the Being of God never parts from His absolute essence,
which carries out all His will, according to His word: ' His desire is accomplished
by Himself and goes forth to no other than Himself save to not-being.'
"The meaning of the term self is 'spirit,' one of the attributes of God
Most High, which parts not from His essence and it becomes an individualized
idea and is called man. Now the spirit is particularized and fettered. Always
the spirit yearns towards God.
"The meaning of 'the house ' is the body. The body is the place of the
spirit and so the veritable place that reveals God according to the saying of
the Prophet, on whom be the peace of God: 'Whosoever knows himself, knows his
Lord.' The house was built of itself and though it will pass away, yet He Whose
house it is, is the Reality Who with His absolute essence is eternal.
"The meaning of our 'property' is the liver and heart and lungs and gall
and all that God Most High has created: according to His word:-'There is no
strength in any one save the strength of Allah, lord of all the worlds both
as regards things revealed and things hidden.'
"The meaning of our 'possessions' is the ten senses, firstly the outward
and secondly the inner. The outward arc five: the sight of the eyes, the hearing
of the ears, the taste of the tongue, the smelling of the nose, and the touch
of the hand. The inner also are five: consciousness, faith, memory, perception
and judgment.
"The meaning of the sevenfold 'fortress' is the creation by God Most High
of man with seven attributes: life, knowledge, power, will, hearing, sight and
speech. And seven parts of the body must be bowed to God in prayer: the forehead,
the palms of the hands, the knees and the soles of the feet.
"The meaning of the 'lock' is because we have utter trust and union by
surrendering ourselves to God Most High, according to His word: 'Hold yourselves
fast to the cord of God which breaks not neither is there concealment of His
will from mystical knowledge'; as said the Prophet on whom be God's peace:-'Nothing
at all moves save by permission of Allah.' For we cannot behold aught if the
cord break and it cannot break save by the will of God Most High, and there
is no substitute for that cord.
"And the meaning of the 'key' is Muhammad Apostle of God. For God is utterly
hidden; none knoweth Him save in His own person. Therefore to cherish His glory,
God Most High was revealed in the spirit of Muhammad our Prophet and from that
spirit God Most High created all this universe, and all the attributes of His
secret wisdom were revealed. So it is that Muhammad is called the 'key,' because
he opened the treasure-house that was hidden, according to His word:-'I opened
that which was closed.'
"And the meaning of the protection of God is according to His word: 'God
Most High is with thee wheresoever thou art,' according to His word:
God is nearer to thee than the muscles of thy neck.' "And the meaning of
'roof' is the power of God to cover any of His servants with mercy according
to His will, so that he be locked away from all enemies and danger in this world
and the next, neither shall the lock be opened by genie or man save with the
permission of God Most High."
Was it to test the efficacy of some such charm as this that that novice on the
Sufi path, Sultan Mahmud of old Malacca, took his spiritual guide with him into
battle against the "white Bengalis," descendants of genies, the first
European invaders of Malaya?