Kai Islands
The Kai Islands of Indonesia are a group of islands in the southeastern part of the Maluku Islands, located in the province of Maluku. The Moluccas have been known as the Spice Islands due to regionally specific plants such as nutmeg, mace, and cloves that originally intrigued the European nations of the 16th century.
Though originally Melanesian, many islanders were exterminated in the 17th century during the spice wars, particularly in the Banda Islands. A second influx of Austronesian immigrants began in the early 20th century under the Dutch and continued in the Indonesian era.
Administrative divisions
The Kai Islands consist of the two distinct second-tier administrations, both in Maluku Province. The Southeast Maluku Regency is sub-divided into six districts. Though geographically in the Kai Islands, the city of Tual forms a regency-level administration and is not in the Southeast Maluku Regency. It includes a number of islands in the geographical Kai Islands, and it is itself sub-divided into four districts.These two entities, with their administrative capitals, are listed below with their areas and their populations at the 2010 Census and at the latest estimates:
Regency | Capital | Area | Population 2010 Census | Population 2014 Estimate |
Tual City | ||||
Southeast Maluku Regency | Langgur |
Geography
The Kai Islands are a part of the Wallacea, the group of Indonesian islands that are separated by deep water from both the Asian and Australian continental shelves, and were never linked to either continent. As a result, the Kai Islands have few native mammals and are a part of the Banda Sea Islands moist deciduous forests ecoregion. Kai Besar in particular is mountainous and densely forested. Kai is famous for the beauty of its beaches, notably in Pasir Panjang.The indigenous inhabitants call the islands Nuhu Evav or Tanat Evav, but they are known as Kai to people from neighboring islands. The islands are on the edge of the Banda Sea, south of the Bird's Head Peninsula of New Guinea, west of the Aru Islands, and northeast of the Tanimbar Islands.
The Kai islands are made up of numerous islands, including:
Within southeast Maluku Regency:
Within the city of Tual:
- Kai Dulah or Du
- Dulah Laut or Du Roa
- Kuur
- Taam
- Tayandu Islands groups
Climate
The Kai Islands reside in a topical zone in close proximity to the equator, leading to an average temperature of, and an average low of. During the months from April to September, the islands experience a dry season where rain is scarce.Culture
History
Local history holds that ancestors of contemporary Kai islanders came from Bali, part of the expanding Majapahit kingdom from the western archipelago. The village of Ohoi-Ewur on Kai Kecil or Nuhuroa island was the arrival point for the Balinese royal family and their army. They stayed in the village with local residents. As a result, Ohoi-Ewur became a seat of government, where the local law – Red Blood and Balinese Spear – was developed at the initiative of the royal princess D it Sakmas.Evidence for these stories include an inheritance and a harbor named 'Bal Sorbay' on Kai Kecil which is, presumably, the harbor at which the royals arrived.
It is recognized by Kai islanders that some of their ancestors came from other places such as Sumbawa island, Buton in Sulawesi, Seram and Gorom islands in the Central Moluccas, and the sultanates of Jailolo and Ternate as well.
The tiny island of Tanimbarkei is not part of Tanimbar, as the name might suggest, but is one of the Kai Islands. It is inhabited by fewer than 1000 very traditional people. Half of the population call themselves Hindus, but are more or less practicing ancestor worship.
After the 1999 clashes between the Muslim and Christian populations in Ambon, similar inter-communal clashes swept through Kai but quickly calmed down.
All of the islands depend on 22 ratshcaap, or traditional local leaders called Rat or Raja, as kings of customary law.
Languages
The official language in the Kai Islands is Indonesian, although local languages exist between regions.Three Austronesian languages are spoken on the Kai Islands; Keiese is the most widely spoken, in 207 villages on Kai Kecil, Kai Besar, and surrounding islands. Kurese is spoken on Kur Island and nearby Kaimeer, where Kai is used as a lingua franca. Bandanese is spoken in the villages of Banda-Eli and Banda-Elat on the west and northeastern side of Kai Besar. Banda speakers originally came from the Banda Islands, but the language is no longer spoken there.
There is no native writing system for the Keiese language. Dutch Catholic missionaries write the language using a variation of the Roman alphabet.
Musical instruments
Some Kai musical instruments include:- Savarngil: A small native flute from 10 to 20 centimeters long, open at both ends with six fingerholes placed along the pip. It is made of bamboo and keyless.
- Tiva: Single headed drums, consist of a calf skin membrane which is stretched over an enclosed space or over one of the ends of a hollow vessel.
- Dada: A medium-size gong in size, with a crashing sound and a raised boss or nipple in the center.
Religion
A primary minority in the region consists of non-native Muslims, who generally follow a milder form of Islam where the women are rarely veiled.
Half of the people who live on the small island of Tanimbarkei practice a variant of the Hindu religion, which involves a form of ancestor worship.
Mythology
Their story of creation is an earth-diver myth that involves sending a dog down to the earth, who brings up his sandy paws.There were three brothers and two sisters in the upper sky-world. While fishing one day, Parpara, the youngest of the brothers, lost a fish-hook which he had borrowed from Hian, his oldest brother. Angered by the loss of the hook, Hian demanded that it be found and returned to him. After much fruitless search, the Parpara met a fish who asked him what his trouble was, and who, on learning the facts, promised to aid in the search. At length they discovered another fish who was very ill because of something stuck in its throat. The object proved to be the long-lost hook, which the friendly fish delivered to Parpara, who thus was able to restore it to its owner.
Parpara, however, determined to have his revenge upon his brother, and so he secretly fastened a bamboo vessel full of palm liquor above Hian's bed in such a way that when the latter rose, he would be almost certain to upset it. The expected happened, and Parpara then demanded of his brother that he return to him the spilled liquor. Hian endeavoured, of course fruitlessly, to gather it up, and in his efforts dug so deeply into the ground that he made an opening clear through the sky-world.
Wondering what might lie below, the brothers determined to tie one of their dogs to a long rope and lower him through the aperture; and when they had done this, and the dog had been drawn up again, they found white sand sticking to his feet, whereupon they resolved to go down themselves, although the other inhabitants of the heaven-world refused to accompany them thither. Sliding down the rope, the three brothers and one of the sisters, together with their four dogs, safely reached the world which lay below, and which was thus discovered for the first time. As the second sister was descending, however, one of the brothers chanced to look up, at which his sister was so ashamed that she shook the rope and was hauled up by the other sky-people. In this way the three brothers with their sister were the first occupants of the world and became the ancestors of the human race.