Cakalele dance
Native name | Tari cakalele |
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Inventor | Eastern Indonesia |
Origin | Indonesia |
Cakalele dance |
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Burma |
Cambodia |
Indonesia |
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Laos |
Malaysia |
Philippines |
Singapore |
Thailand |
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Vietnam |
Cakalele dance (pronounced "cha-ka-leh-leh", spelled tjakalele by the Dutch) is a war dance from North and Central Maluku in Indonesia.[1] Hybrid versions also exist among the natives of Sulawesi (Kabasaran dance or Sakalele of the Minahasan),[2] East Nusa Tenggara (Abui Cakalele from Alor),[3] and the Tanimbar Islands.[citation needed] The dance is performed by men, two of whom represent opposing captains or leaders while the others are the warriors supporting them. After an opening ritual, the captains engage in a mock-duel with a spear (sanokat) and long knife (lopu) while their supporters use a long knife in the right hand and a narrow wooden shield in the left hand.[4] The shield is referred to as a salawaku, or by a local name such as the Tobelo o dadatoko.[5] The cakalele originated as a way for the warriors to celebrate after a successful raid. Dancers dress in full warrior costume and are backed by the rhythm of the drum, gong (tifa), and fife (sulin).
Gallery
[edit]- Cakalele dancers wearing traditional clothes
- Cakalele dance performances in Maluku
- Salawaku, the shield used in performances
- Cakalele dance performances in the 1900s
- Two cakalele dancers
- Cakalele performance
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ Qurtuby, Sumanto Al (2016-05-20). Religious Violence and Conciliation in Indonesia: Christians and Muslims in the Moluccas. Routledge. ISBN 9781317333289.
- ^ "Tari Kabasaran, Tarian Ksatria Minahasa". Indonesia Kaya (in Indonesian). 2023-02-03. Retrieved 2024-06-13.
- ^ Arba, Hastuti Milinadya Nuhardi; Dominikus, Wara Sabon; Udil, Patrisius A. (2023-12-10). "Eksplorasi Etnomatematika pada Tarian Cakalele Suku Abui di Kabupaten Alor dan Integrasinya dalam Pembelajaran Matematika". Haumeni Journal of Education. 3 (2). Universitas Nusa Cendana: 26–33. doi:10.35508/haumeni.v3i2.12220. ISSN 2798-1991.
- ^ Albert G Van Zonneveld (2002). Traditional Weapons of the Indonesian Archipelago. Koninklyk Instituut Voor Taal Land. ISBN 90-5450-004-2.
- ^ P. E. De Josselin De Jong (1984). Unity in Diversity: Indonesia as a Field of Anthropological Study. Foris Publications. ISBN 90-6765-063-3.
External links
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