Tenganan Village
Deep in the beautiful hills of Bukit Kauh in the west and Bukit Kangin in the east, near the divine volcano of Gunung Agung, a unique village of Tenganan is located, consisting of two smaller villages of Tenganan Pegeringsingan and Dauh Tukad. From the top of the hills, the views of boundless array of vegetation like coconut, sugar palm and breadfruit trees with extensive customary forests and rice field terraces are evidence of limitless prosperity.
Tenganan is one of the three oldest villages of Bali Aga or Bali Kuna. The Tenganan people still continue to preserve the heritage of an ancient Balinese Hinduism that has existed long before the Majapahit era, worshipping Bhatara Indra, High God in the temple of Tenganan and Creator of Kaung and Keling, their original pair of ancestors. They truly embrace the traditional values and religious teachings of their ancestors in their daily life.
A reflection of a palatial sacred world, the village gives an immense sense of undisrupted purity to tradition and way of life that have been maintained from generation to generation. Awig awig, a preserved 11th century customary law that is renewed in 1842, regulates the life of the village and its people, such as in determining the form, size and location of its temples, roads and long houses.
The craftsmanship of Tenganan people are unparalleled technically and aesthetically, using only their local resources. Their dynamic and skillful hands and inherited knowledge that have proven the test of time from generation to generation, have made them more adept in making impeccable pieces. Their paintings on roasted lontar or palm leaf show their acute creativity, while their mastery in making and playing gamelan selonding, a sacred musical ensemble made of iron, is impressive.
According to the local fable, on a clear night, Bhatara Indra was sitting on the hills overlooking Tenganan to admire the beautiful landscape of the village in a sky full of bright stars. He asked the Tenganan women to weave the most beautiful constellation as patterns into the cloth on his honor. Then, he began to paint the patterns on shadow images onto the sky. This pattern is later known as Geringsing.
Geringsing, a worldwide famous traditional cloth, is an exclusive Tenganan tenun textile made from very complex traditional double weaving method using threads from one seeded cotton trees grown in Nusa Penida. The threads then soaked in candlenut oil to get a stronger, darker, softer and long-lasting threads. The three natural colors of Geringsing are red, black and yellow. It takes months even years to make it. It is such a precious family heirloom and sacred cloth that it is only used for specific religious rituals and lifecycle ceremonies, like tooth filling and weddings. There are about 24 beautiful patterns of Gerinsing and each of them has a certain philosophy that relates to the use of it and who is fit to wear it.
The craftsmanship of Tenganan people are unparalleled technically and aesthetically, using only their local resources.
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