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Barong
& Rangda
The natural world to the Balinese is one held in balance by
two opposing forces: the benign, beneficial to man, and the malign, inimical to humanity.
The destructive power of sickness and death is associated with the latter force and the
evil influence of black magic. If black magic prevails, a village fails into danger, and
extensive purification ceremonies become necessary to restore a proper equilibrium for the
health of the community. Dramatic art is also a mea of cleansing the village by
strengthening its resistance to harmful forces through offerings, prayers and acts of
exorcism. Such is the symbolic play of the two remarkable presences-the Barong and Rangda.

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Barong, a mystical creature with
a long way back and curved tail, represents the affirmative, the protector of mankind, the
glory of the high sun, and the favorable spirits
associated with the right and white magic. The widow witch Rangda is its complement.
She rules the evil spirits and witches who haunt the graveyards late at night. Her habitat
is darkness and her specialties lie with the practice of black magic, the destructive
force of the left. Both figures are of the same earthly substance, possessing strong
magical prowess. Somewhere in a mythical past, the Barong was won over to the side of
humanity, and, in the play, fights on behalf of the people against the intruding death
force of Rangda.

Often the struggle occurs within the framework of a popular
story; for instance, an episode from the Mahabharata. Yet the essence of the Barong
and Rangda play remains the eternal conflict of two cosmic forces symbolized in the two
protagonists. Because the play is charged with sorcery and magic charms, extensive
offerings are made beforehand to protect the players during the performance.

Usually the Barong enters first, cleverly danced by two men
who form the forelegs and hindlegs, the first man manipulating the mask. A Barong's
appearance varies with the kind of mask it wears, which may be stylized version of a wild
boar, a tiger, a lion, or occasionally an elephant. The most holy mask and the one used in
the play is that of the Barong Keket,
"The Sovereign Lord of the
Forest", a beast representing no known animal. In the extreme coordination of the
lively Barong, one forgets the fantastic creature isn't acting on its own accord, as it
mischievously side steps and whirls around, snapping its jaws at the gamelan, and
swishing flies with its tail. After the Barong's dance, everyone falls silent. From behind
the temple gate appear the splintery fingernails that fore shadow the dread full vision of
Rangda. From her mouth hangs a flaming tongue signifying her consuming fire and around her
neck, a necklace of human entrails falls over her pendulous breasts. How ing a low,
gurgling curse she stalks the Barong while waving a white cloth from whence issues her
overwhelming magic.
They collide in a desperate clash of witch.
craft. In the protection of the Barong lies the preservation of the community, represented
by the "kris dancers", men armed with kris daggers. At one point in the fight,
when the victory of the Barong is threatened, the kris dancers rush to the Barong's
assistance by violently attacking Rangda. The witch's spell reverses their fury back into
themselves, and they begin to plunge the blades of their krisses inward against their own
bodies. But the Barong, with its own powerful charm, protects the crazed men
from, inflicting self-harm.
In most plays, this phenomenal
self-stab. bing is enacted when the kris dancers are in trance. No matter how forcefully
they plunge the daggers against their chests, the tips of the blades do not puncture the
skin. At the end of the play, the kris dancers are revived by the pemangku, who
sprinkles them with holy Water which has been dipped in the beard of the Barong. (The
beard, made of human hair, considered the most sacred part of the Barong). A final
offering is made to the evil spirits by spilling the blood of a live chicken.
Complete
about Barong click here |