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The Toba Batak of Indonesia


Article # : 13573 

Section : CULTURE
Issue Date : 4 / 1988  1,244 Words
Author : Thomas Tarleton and Claudia Simms
Thomas Tarleton and Claudia Simms are freelance photojournalists. This article is a reedition of Lake Toba: Legends of a Crater Lake, which appeared in Ancient magazine in Singapore in 1985. It is reproduced by permission of the authors.

       Stiff winds sweep unchecked across Lake Toba as early morning sunlight spreads across the water. Fishermen in dugout canoes have been out casting their nets for hours. The cool temperature on the water is surprising, considering that the lake is only two degrees north of the equator.
       
        Samosir Island draws steadily nearer, its tall peaks shrouded in swirling mists, its past, in mystery and legend. Here and there, bright patches of blue appear in the gray skies over the island. The narrow coastline glistens in a green patchwork of terraced hills and valleys. On one side are low coastal hills marked by an occasional building; on the other, mountains rise steeply up into the clouds.
       
        Lake Toba lies in the heart of what the indigenous Toba Batak call Tapanuli (beautiful shore) in north Sumatra, Indonesia. The Batak are a collection of clans: the Toba, Mandailing, Simalungun, Angkala, Kora, and Pak-Pak. As all Batak legends can be traced back to Samosir, the Toba are believed to be the oldest clan, from which all the others probably descended. The earliest ancestors of the Batak came to Sumatra from Burma and Thailand around A.D. 500.
       
        The first European to visit this area was probably Marco Polo. He visited Sumatra and later wrote of a people in the interior who "devour their enemies." But it was not until 1783, when an explorer named Marsden trekked into the jungles, that an accurate account became available. Marsden wrote of a "land of extraordinary natural beauty" but also of the "paradox of [a] cannibalistic people with a real culture and a written ... (1905 of 7389 Characters)
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