Gawai Dayak


Gawai Dayak is an annual festival celebrated by the Dayak people in Sarawak, Malaysia and West Kalimantan, Indonesia on 1 and 2 June. It is a public holiday in Sarawak and is both a religious and a social occasion recognised since 1957.
Gawai Dayak was the concept of the radio producers Tan Kingsley and Owen Liang taken up by the Dayak community. The British colonial government refused to recognise Dayak Day until 1962. They called it Sarawak Day for the inclusion of all Sarawakians as a national day, regardless of ethnic origin.
On 1 June 1963, Datuk Michael Buma, a Betong native, hosted the celebrations of the first Gawai Dayak at his home at Siol Kandis, Kuching. On 25 September 1964, Sarawak Day was gazetted as a public holiday acknowledging the formation of the Federation of Malaysia. The holiday was first celebrated on 1 June 1965 and it became a symbol of unity, aspiration and hope for the Dayak community. It is an integral part of Dayak social life. It is a thanksgiving day marking a bountiful harvest and a time to plan for the new farming season or other endeavours ahead.

Introduction

Gawai Dayak comes from Gawai meaning festival and Dayak a collective name for the indigenous peoples of Sarawak, Indonesian Kalimantan and the interior of Borneo. The population estimate is two to four million people. The Dayaks, previously known as the Sea Dayak are mostly Iban people. Other ethnic groups such as the Bidayuh people and Orang Ulu are recognised. The Orang Ulu include the Kayans, Kenyahs and Lun Bawangs. There are over 200 riverine and hill-dwelling ethnic subgroups in the region. Although these peoples have common traits, each have their own dialect, customs, laws, territory and culture. Dayak languages are categorised as part of the Austronesian languages. The Dayaks embraced animism and paganism but in recent times, many have converted to Christianity.

Preparation

As the festival day approaches, everyone will be busy with general tidying up, grave visiting, paddy drying and milling, collecting and preparing food and final house decoration, where necessary. The mode of celebrations of Gawai Dayak vary from place to place and preparations begin early.

Food and drink

When a longhouse agrees to host Gawai Dayak with big ritual festivals, they may need to plant extra paddy and organise labour exchange. Rice may be purchased from the towns if the festival is in a place where paddy farming is absent or insufficient. The traditional Dayak liquor is Rice wine called tuak. It is brewed at least one month before the Gawai Dayak. The drink is brewed from the glutinous rice from a recent harvest mixed with home-made yeast called ciping. Traditionally, tuak was made with rice milk only but is now cut with sugar and water in a process called mandok. A stronger alcoholic beverage made by the Ibans is "langkau". This drink is made by distilling tuak over a fire.
Traditional cake delicacies are prepared from glutinous rice flour mixed with sugar. The cakes include sarang semut, cuwan and kuih sepit. The cakes can last well whilst kept inside a jar because they are deep-fried until hardened. Penganan iri are made just prior to the festival day because they do not keep well. This is because the cake is lifted from the hot frying oil while not fully hardened. The sugar used can be the brown nipah sugar or cane sugar.
Before the Gawai eve, the longhouse residents may organise a hunting or fishing trip to gather wild meats and fish. Both can be preserved with salt in a jar or smoked over a firewood platform above the hearth. Any wild animal parts like the horns, teeth and claws, and feathers are used to decorate and repair traditional costumes.

Decoration of the longhouse

The longhouse is cleaned, repaired and repainted by co-operation amongst its residents. The longhouse is constructed as a unique place of living and worship. Its main post is the designated starting point of all the building materials and must remain intact. Timber and wooden materials for repairs are obtained from nearby reserve forests or purchased in towns. A "pantar" may be built along the upper area of the ruai. The seat is raised and the tanju is used as the back rest. Some old wooden longhouses are renovated with concrete and bricks to make a terraced structure.
The inside walls of the longhouse are decorated with "ukir" murals portraying tree and wild animal motifs. Men with decorating skills make split bamboo designs. Women decorate living room walls by hanging their handwoven ceremonial clothes called pua kumbu and other handycrafts. Orang Ulu are famous for their colourful paintings of the tree of life on their house walls and their house posts are elaborately carved. Highly decorated shields are displayed near the family room door. Heirloom jars, brassware and old human skulls obtained during raids or trade sojourns, if still kept, are cleaned and displayed. Deer horns may be secured on the longhouse posts in order to secure highly decorated swords and other household items.

Gawai Dayak eve

On Gawai Eve, people gather sago, aping, sawit or coconut palm shoots which are used for making soup mixed with meats. Vegetables such as wild midin fern, fiddlehead fern, bamboo shoots, tapioca leaves and Dayak round brinjals from nearby jungle, farms or gardens are also gathered.
After the gathering of plants and vegetables early in the morning, the poultry is slaughtered. Enough meat is cooked in mid-aged thin-walled bamboo logs to make a traditional dish called "pansoh". The meat is first mixed with traditional herbs like lemon grass, ginger, bungkang leaves and salt. Any remaining meat is preserved in salt and mixed with kepayang leaves and detoxined seeds. Animal heads are roasted over an open fire to be served hot with tuak. Wooden cooking implements are made from small tree logs.
Some glutinous rice is cooked in bamboo logs to soak up the bamboo aroma. Normal rice will be cooked in pots at the kitchen hearth. The addition of pandan leaves gives a special aroma. Smoke from the fire wood also gives a distinctive aroma. Some Dayaks, especially Orang Ulu, will wrap rice in long green leaves before steaming it inside a pot. Rice may also be cooked using a gas stove or rice cooker.
Highly decorated mats with motives for guests to sit on are laid out on the longhouse gallery which runs the entire length of the long house building. The act is called "beranchau" which marks the opening of the gawai. The Dayaks make various types of traditional hand-woven mats. There are reed mats woven with colourful designs, lampit rattan mats, bidai tree bark mats and peradani mats. The walls of most family rooms and galleries are decorated with traditional blankets such as the woven Pua Kumbu and the tied cloth blankets which are made with unique Dayak designs. During the festival, women are keen to display the products of their skills and hard work at mat-making and hand-weaving. Some traditional baskets are also seen. Some sets of traditional musical instruments are also shown in the gallery.

Traditional dress

Men and women may wear "nigepan", the traditional costume, especially when guests are arriving. The traditional dress of men is a loincloth, animal skin coat, peacock and hornbill feathers headware, chains over the neck, silver armlets and anklelets along with a shield, sword and spear. Men are decorated with tribal tattoos which signify their life experience and journey. A frog design on the front of the man's neck and or tegulun designs on the backs of the hand indicate the wearer has chopped off a human head or killed a man in military combat. However, some designs are based on marine life which are meant for protection and rescue of the wearers when on the water.
Women wear a hand-woven cloth worn around the waist, a rattan and brass ring high corset around the upper body, selampai worn over the shoulders, a woven bead chain over the neck and shoulders, a decorated high-comb over the hair lump, a silver belt, armlet, anklet and orb fruit purse. In the past, it was customary for Dayak women to have the breasts bare as a sign of beauty. In Bidayuh Dayaks society, Dayung Boris are the maidens of the Gawai Festival.

Offerings and sacrifices

Celebrations begin on the evening of 31 May with a ceremony to cast away the spirit of greed. Two children or men, each dragging a winnowing basket will pass each by family's room. Every family will throw some unwanted article into the basket. The unwanted articles will then be tossed to the ground from the end of the longhouse.
At dusk, a ritual offering ceremony will take place at every family room, one after the other. Before the ceremony, ritual music called gendang rayah is performed. Old ceramic plates, tabak or containers made of split bamboo skins are filled with food and drinks to be offered to the deities.
The Iban Dayaks believe in seven deities whose names are Sengalang Burong ; Biku Bunsu Petara, Menjaya Manang, Sempulang Gana with Semerugah, Selampandai, Ini Inee/Andan and Anda Mara. Iban Dayaks also call upon the legendary and mythical people of Panggau Libau and Gelong, and some good helpful spirits or ghosts to attend the feast. The entire pantheon of gods is cordially invited to the gawai feast.
Offerings to the deities are placed at strategic spots ie the four corners of each family room for protection of souls, in the kitchen, at the rice jar, in the gallery, the tanju and the farm. Other highly prized possessions such as precious old jars and modern items like rice milling engines, boat engines or a car may also be placed with offerings. Any pengaroh will be brought out for this ceremony to ensure its continuous effectiveness and to avoid madness afflicting the owner. Wallets are placed among the offerings to increase the tuah or fortune of the owners.
Each set of offerings usually contains specified odd numbers of traditional items: the cigarette nipah leaves and tobacco, betel nut and sireh leaves, glutinous rice in a hand-woven leave container, rice cakes, sungki, glutinuos rice cooked in bamboo logs, penganan iri, ant nest cakes and moulded cakes, poprice, hard-boiled chicken eggs and tuak rice wine poured over or contained in a small bamboo cup.
After all the offering sets are completed, the chief of the festival thanks the gods for a good harvest, and asks for guidance, blessings and long life as he waves a cockerel over the offerings. The cockerel is sacrificed by slicing its neck. Its wing feathers are pulled out and brushed onto its bleeding neck after which each feather is placed as a sacrifice onto each of the offering sets. The offerings are then placed at the designated locations..

Dinner

Once the offering ceremony is completed, the family sits down for dinner, the "makai di ruai" or makai rami" in the gallery of the longhouse. Each family member has contributed something. All the best traditional foods, delicacies and drinks that have been prepared are displayed.
Just before midnight, a spirit-welcoming procession is performed several times up and down the gallery. A beauty pageant to choose the festival's queen and king is sometimes conducted. The winners are chosen for completeness of their traditional costumes and beauty. The chief and elders hold a "begeliga" to remind everybody to keep order, peace and harmony. Heavy fines are imposed on those who break the customary "adat" and festive ground rules with fighting, quarrelling, drunkenness or vandalism.
At midnight, a gong is rung to call the inhabitants to attention. The longhouse chief or host will lead a toast to longevity and the new year with a short prayer. The festival greeting, "Gayu Guru, Gerai Nyamai, Senang Lantang Nguan Menua" is repeated to each other. Mistakes and quarrels are forgiven. Where a bard is available, he may be asked to recite a short chant called "timang ai pengayu" to bless the longevity water before the chief says the short prayer.

After dinner

After dinner, celebrations are less formal. A tree of life is erected in the centre of the gallery to symbolize the ritual shrine with valuable fruits. Around it, performances of the ngajat dance, sword dance or self-defence martial art are performed after some symbolic traditional activities. The first order among the activities after dinner is the badigir, a lining up of elders and/or guests if any according to their social rank. A "tabak" of food and drinks is offered to each elder in the line up by a few women of high social rank in the longhouse, normally a wife offering to her husband. A group of women in costumes led by an expert sings a honouring pantun befitting the status of each elder while offering a bowl of tuak and some tabas to several key elders with some outstanding life achievement.
The chief among them will then be requested to symbolically split open a coconut which symbolize the head skull trophy which is traditionally much-treasured by the Iban Dayak because the head skull is believed to present various types of valuable seeds for men, be they for farming or procreation purposes. In more elaborate events, the chief warrior will perform the symbolic act of clearing the pathway. He is then followed by his warriors in performing the symbolic act of handrailing the pathway.
Next, follows a procession by men and women, ladies, youths and kids in traditional costumes along the gallery in honour of the elders in the line up, normally three rounds depending on the length of the longhouse. One outcome of this procession is the anointing of a kumang and a keeling. After this, some of the procession participants may go for the tuak contained in several medium-sized jar after paying a token of their appreciation to the respective owners who are normally expert brewers. This tuak is normally the pure liquid from the glutinous rice which tastes sweet but it contains a high concentration of alcohol. Tuak is normally drank after food, just like the grape wine. Some foods and drinks have been served for all presents. Rice cakes are eaten as deserts.
Another important activity is the singing of traditional poems. These include pantun, ramban, jawang, sanggai and pelandai. Any honoured guests to longhouses may be asked to break up a coconut to symbolise the actions of Sengalang Burong during the Iban timang incantation which is called "ngelanpang". In the actual cleansing of the freshly taken heads, the troop leader would eat a bit of the brain with a piece of a glutinous rice before proceeding to throw away the brain using a rattan swirled by him inside the skull and to slice out the flesh using his war sword. This coconut splitting ceremony is a sign of respect and honour to the guests being offered to do so.
Other merry-making activities which may extend to the next day include contests and traditional games such as arm-wrestling, small log pulling, rope pulling and foot-banging. Some engage in cockfighting. in modern settings, mini sports include football, sepak takraw and futsal. Other games are egg-rolling, plate passing according to the taboh music, running in gunny sacks and balloon blowing and karaoke and joget dance.

Dances

There are many variations of the traditional "ngajat" or "ajat" dance. The male and female dances consist of graceful, precise and surprise movements of the body, hands and feet with occasional shouts of a battle cry. Examples are the freestyle ajat male dance, warrior dance,ngajat lesong, "ngasu" hunting dance or comical "muar kesa" dance for men. Women perform the freestyle female ajat dance or the ngajat pua kumbu. The male dance shows strength and bravery and may imitate the movements of a hornbill which is regarded as the king of worldly birds. The ngajat dance is accompanied by a traditional band consisting of an engkerumong set, tawak, bebendai and bedup. The Orang Ulu music is played using the sape. Recordings of the tunes may be used instead of a band nowadays.
Bidayuh Dayak dances include the tolak bala, a dance performed before the harvest to ask for blessing and protection of the community; the totokng dance that is performed during the harvest festival to welcome the paddy soul and guests; the langi julang which is performed at the closing of the harvest festival to thank gods for bestowing good health and a rich harvest; and the eagle-warrior fight dance performed after the harvest season. Hands are held outstretched imitating the movements of the eagles as they flap their wings in flight. The eagle eventually falls unconscious so leaving the warrior as the winner. It is performed by men seeking a female partner.

Ngabang

On the first day of June, Dayak homes are opened to guests. This practice is called "ngabang". Open houses may also be organised by Dayak associations or non-government organisations. This will continue until the end of June where the gawai will be closed in a ngiling bidai ceremony.
When guests arrive, tuak is offered and women line up in two rows on each side of the ladder "nyambut pengabang". The welcoming drink is followed by the thirst-quenching drink. Then, when the guests are seated, further rounds of tuak as a washing drink, profit drink and respect drink are given. This activity is called the watering of guests or "nyibur temuai".
Speeches are made such as the jaku ansah which introduces the guest of honor. The guest of honor is received with a "miring" offering ceremony outside the longhouse. Upon approaching the longhouse ladder, the guest of honor is asked to open a fort. This is represented by the slashing of a bamboo fence with a sword and a poem. Then, at the foot of the longhouse ladder, an animal is speared.
In ngalu pengabang, guests led by ngajat dancers and followed by the band, process to their seats in the longhouse gallery. After that, a guest prayer is recited by a talented speaker like the headman or the lemambang bard while he sways holding a chicken over the heads of guests. Before the guests are offered foods, a special speech to open the traditional cloth covering over food containers is recited.
After eating, the families of the longhouse are visited by guests. A short longhouse may have ten to thirty family rooms while moderately long may have thirty to fifty family rooms. A very long longhouse may have fifty to one hundred family rooms. It is common for Dayaks to recite and discuss their genealogy to reinforce kinships. In the activity called bantil, women offer drinks to men to help them overcome shyness. Men traditionally reject the first offers as a sign of respect to the host. Women sing a traditional poem called pantun while offering tuak. In the activity called uti, a special guest is asked to open a coconut placed on a ceramic plate using a blunt knife without handling the coconut or breaking the plate. The coconut offered to be split open by ordinary guests tells of someone's heart and fate: white flesh is good and black flesh is bad.

Pregawai and Closing of Gawai Dayak

In town areas, pre-gawai are held in May in advance of the gawai proper before the city dwellers return to their respective villages.
Gawai ends around the end of June. The closing ceremony is signified by symbolically rolling back a miring ceremony mat called a bidai by each family within the longhouse. It is known as Ngiling Bidai among Iban Dayaks.

Authentic ritual festivals

Gawai Dayak celebrations may last for a month. It is during this time of year that many Dayak hold authentic ritual festivals and weddings take place.
Most Iban will hold minor rites called bedara which can be bedara mata inside the family bilek room or bedara mansau at the family ruai gallery. Berunsur is performed at the family tanju. Rituals called gawa are the Sandau Ari ; Tresang Mansau ; and Gawai Kalingkang.
Ritual feasts of the Saribas and Skrang region include Gawai Bumai which comprises Gawai Batu, Gawai Benih and gawai basimpan ; and Gawai Burong. The bird festival is performed earlier in the festive period to avoid spoiling of rice wine by the spirit Indai Bilai if the entombment festival for the dead is also held within the same longhouse.
In the Baleh region, the Iban ritual festivals include the Gawai Baintu-intu ; Gawai Bumai ; Gawai Amat ; Gawai Ngelumbung and Gawai Mimpi.
Fortune related festivals include a Gawai Mangkong Tiang for any newly completed longhouses.; Gawai Tuah which comprises three stages i.e. Gawai Ngiga Tuah, Gawai Namaka Tuah and "gawai nindokka tuah" and Gawai Tajau ;. The health-related festivals which may be performed are the Gawai Sakit which takes place if the belian rituals, "sugi sakit" or "renong sakit" are unsuccessful.
For most of these traditional festivals, sacred invocation and incantations called pengap or timang are performed throughout the night by a bard and his assistants or a "manang".

Christian celebrations

Christian Dayaks replace the traditional offering ceremony with a prayer session within the family room. The associated church service leader is called tuai sembiang.