The Jakarta Maritime Museum highlights the struggles of Indonesian seafaring tribes

JakartaPost-Jan 4

The song “Nenek Moyangku” (“Our Ancestors,” Ibu Soed, 1940) echoes throughout the halls of the Jakarta Maritime Museum on Dec. 2. For many, the music brings back memories of our school years, where we learned about our ancestors; seafaring people who built many sturdy ships that navigated them through storms and explored deep oceans of faraway continents. Yet, in this modern era, few young Indonesian urban people can relate to the life and struggles of the seafaring tribes. Their stories have become legendary tales with vague details. Now, we can truly delve into the life of the seafaring people of Indonesia at Museum Kebaharian Jakarta (Jakarta Maritime Museum) in North Jakarta. From Dec. 2, 2022, to Mar. 2, 2023, the museum hosts an exhibition themed Art.The.Fact! Suku Bangsa Bahari Nusantara (Art.The.Fact! The Archipelago’s Seafaring Tribes) in its temporary exhibition hall. “Indonesia is blessed with more sea than land,” Mis’ari, head of the Jakarta Maritime Museum, said at the opening of the exhibition on Dec. 2. “Our seafaring tribes have impressed people from many different countries with their ship-making technology, immense knowledge, expertise and rich cultural traditions. The young Indonesian urban people should learn about them and their great contributions to the country.” Indonesia has over 3.2 million square kilometers of sea; about 62 percent of the archipelago’s total area. Approximately 1,300 of our indigenous tribes are seafaring people. Their know-how, laws and cultural traditions have contributed to our current existence. The exhibition, which is open from Tuesday to Sunday from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., features some of the ships, fishing gear, cuisines and cultural rites of the seafaring people of South Sulawesi and Madura. Four Indonesian scholars curated the exhibition, including an archeologist, a museologist, a sociologist and an independent researcher. Read more at:

  https://www.thejakartapost.com/culture/2023/01/03/the-jakarta-maritime-museum-highlights-the-struggles-of-indonesian-seafaring-tribes.html.