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Welcome to Paradise!!

Thursday, August 07, 2008

Celcom promo show

We did a show in Sibu last month for Telco Giant,Celcom..something like ambassador or spokeperson,or they call it Celcom Power Icon.Here are some of the pics.

 
  

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Bukit Sadok

Bukit Sadok...the Ibans sacred mountain and the last frontier

Few weeks ago,me and two friends paid a visit to this mountain for a miring ceremony.Accompanied by few people from the longhouse of Muman and Perdu of Ulu Spak...the journey was so memorable.

Part of the team

Take a rest..

The most friendly dinner i ever had !

Batu Rentap,the remaining of Rentap's fortress.

View from the top.

After went down from Sadok,chill out at the river

Posing time....

Nanga Sumpa,Delok,Batang Ai,Lubok Antu


Up the Batang Ai electric dam,into Sungai Delok,about 1
hour 45 minutes boat ride.


The pilot



Landing time


Errr....



Communal hall



Semah hunter


The catch


Semah fish



'Nyala'


Introduction to survival


Next rapid


Wong Enseluai


Kini Jim?


Tummy control


The team

Wednesday, April 18, 2007

VANISHING TRADITIONS

 Today, Orang Ulu tattoo is a dying, if not already dead, traditional practice. Disruptions to indigenous culture as a result of missionization and modernity continue to pave the way for a relinquishing of ancient customs. One Lahanan man said, “This generation of Orang Ulu are not interested in old ways. They have no desire to get the older traditional tattoos” and are drawn to urban centers, logging camps, or frontier towns where they can find work and become more open to other cultural influences, including fast, accessible and less painful Western tattoos like eagles, dragons and hula girls. Missionaries continue to convert and compel people to discard their traditional customs, and the Malaysian government is in the process of building the largest hydroelectric damn in all of Southeast Asia on the Upper Rejang River. The Bakun Dam project has already has displaced 10,000 Kayan and other Orang Ulu living in a dozen or more longhouses; longhouses that have stood on ancestral lands for centuries, if not millennia. Eventually the Bakun Dam will flood a tract of virgin rainforest that supports over 40 species of endangered mammals and birds. Understandably, and poised on a fragile prelude of change, the Orang Ulu have not yet folded to modernity, but as the jungle slowly disappears underneath the ensuing canopy of water, so too will that which gave life – and tattoos - to all of its peoples. Article Lars Krutak