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Religion
Tooth Filing

Called
'mapandes' in High Balinese, 'matatah'
in Common Balinese. The reason
for filing is to control evil
human characteristics (sad ripu):
greed, lust, anger, confusion,
stupidity, jealousy, ill-will,
and intoxication by either passion
or drunkenness. This important
life-cycle event usually occurs
when a Balinese boy or girl reaches
puberty-at a girl's first menstruation,
when a boy's voice changes. If
not then, it must definitely take
place before marriage; sometimes
filing is incorporated into the
marriage ceremony. After filing,
a father's duties to his female
children are generally regarded
as complete.
Before
a cremation the teeth of a cadaver
may be filed. Why? Pointed teeth
are likened to those of ferocious
witches, demons, wild animals,
savages, or, almost as bad, dogs.
A person's canine teeth, regarded
by the Balinese as animalistic
fangs (caling), are filed flat
so the child may become fully
human, able to reign in the emotions.
It's believed a Balinese may be
denied entrance into heaven if
the teeth are not filed because
s/he might be mistaken for a wild
creature. In the old days the
teeth of adolescents were also
blackened with betel nut to distinguish
them from the white teeth of animals.
'Mapandes'
is a costly affair; invitations
must be issued, musicians are
hired, the fee of the 'pedanda'
is paid, elaborate offerings are
carried out, and a banquet is
prepared for guests and villagers.
Because of the great expense,
it may be delayed until enough
money has been saved. A number
of families may participate in
a mass toothfiling in order to
share costs, or it may be held
simultaneously with some other
costly ceremony such as a cremation
or wedding. The 'banjar' often
determines that financial help
should be extended to the lower
castes to enable them to participate.
To view the maximum pomp and ritual,
attend a toothfiling ceremony
sponsored by a Brahman family,
where as many as 14 people may
participate and expenses could
top Rp35 million.
Toothfiling represents the evening
out of the extreme and 'kasar' (rough)
aspects of one's personality as
one enters adulthood. Toothfiling
also adds the person of the six
evil animal passions that Balinese
believe everyone possesses to some
degree: laziness (alus), love of
sensual pleasures (raga), love of
luxury and splendor (dewasa), love
of worldly goods (tresna), indifference
(indra), and resoluteness (baja).
Though representatives from each
caste are in the toothfiling ceremony,
a girl of the lower caste will be
asked to lie on a platform at a
lower level than her upper-caste
sisters, and she wears less lavish
ceremonial clothing. The most important
event of adolescence, Balinese endure
it with not a sound of complaint.
After the filing, youths of all
castes can go on to lead healthy,
well-adjusted lives as a part of
Ball's tightly knit family, clan,
community and society.
Filing
is scheduled on an auspicious
day and performed by a specialist
Brahman priest on a special platform.
For the occasion makeshift bamboo
shrines with gay, colorful offerings
of rice, sweet cakes, flowers,
and fruits are erected within
the compound. All attendees dress
in traditional clothing, and the
customary white cardboard box
of snacks and bottle of sweetened
tea is handed to all that enter.
Having
spent the previous two or three
nights praying while confined
in bale built for the occasion
within the high-caste family's
compound, from two to 100 initiates
are assembled, dressed in white
and yellow to signify holiness.
Girls wear precious 'kemben' (breast
cloth), the finest the family
can afford, with garments as ornate
as those of legong dancers. Boys
wear a 'songket' from the armpits
to the knees, a 'kris' protruding
from a yellow sash in the back.
The
ceremony begins with the 'pedanda'
sprinkling holy water and blessing
the group with mantras. Offerings
are placed before the gods of
sexual love. The initiates lie
down on the richly draped bamboo
platform wide-eyed and frightened,
clutching their pillows as close
relatives ring around. Incense
is lit, mouthwash placed at the
ready, files and whetstones blessed
to cleanse them and render the
operation painless. Magic symbols
(aksara) are inscribed on the
teeth.
The
"dentist" (sangging)
first places a small cylinder
of sugarcane in the corners of
the mouth to prop the jaws open
and prevent gagging. The front
two upper canines are filed so
they're even with the upper incisors;
it's important to effect an even
line of short teeth. The actual
filing requires about five to
10 minutes. A mirror is provided
to allow the patient to observe
the progress of the ritual. Filings
are spit into a yellow coconut.
Tears may roll down their cheeks,
but the filees seldom cry out.
Sometimes members of the family
sing a 'kekawin' about Arjuna,
the brave young hero of the Mahabharata
epic, to bolster the spirits of
their loved ones, someone else
may recite Kawi translated into
vernacular Balinese. To lighten
the atmosphere, the 'sangging'
may joke with the filee as he
files.
After
consulting with his girlfriend,
wife, or mother, a boy may decide
he still possesses too much animality
and lie back down on the bed for
more filing. Occasionally, there
are requests for just a few token,
symbolic strokes of the file.
When
the filing is finished, the astringent
betel pepper leaf (base) is rubbed
on the ends of the teeth, then the
'pedanda' places various other soothing,
healing tinctures on the end of
the initiate's tongues. The coconut
shell receptacle of filing debris
and saliva is then buried behind
the ancestral shrine lest it be
occupied by evil spirits.
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