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Change and Resilience Punan Vuhang EastSarawak PDF

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Henry Chan

SURVIVAL IN THE RAINFOREST


Change and Resilience
among the Punan Vuhang of Eastern Sarawak,
Malaysia

RESEARCH SERIES IN ANTHROPOLOGY


University of Helsinki

Academic Dissertation
Research Series in Anthropology
University of Helsinki, Finland

Distributed by
Helsinki University Press
P.O. Box 4 (Vuorikatu 3A)
00014 University of Helsinki
Fax + 358 70102374
www.yliopistopaino.fi

Copyright Henry Chan


ISSN 1458-3186
ISBN 978-952-10-3918-8 (paperback)
ISBN 978-952-10-3919-5 (PDF), http://ethesis.helsinki.fi
Helsinki University Printing House
Helsinki 2007

Contents

List of Tables
List of Maps
List of Figures
Acknowledgments

vi
vi
vii
viii

Chapter One: Introduction


Introduction
An Overview of the Chapter Contents
Literature Review
The Hunter-Gatherer Dependency Debate
Previous Writings on the Punan Vuhang
Fieldwork

1
2
4
4
10
16

Chapter Two: The Rainforest Environment, the Former Mobile Economy and
Early Punan Vuhang Responses to External Events
Introduction
The Borneo Rainforest
The Punan Vuhang Synchronized Calendar
The Mobile Economy
Oral History of Punan Vuhang Responses to Expansionist Shifting Cultivators
The Early Period of Regional History
PrehistoryIntra-Tribal Spirit Warfare
Pre-Nineteenth CenturyConvergence at the Balui Headwaters
Migration Out of the Balui, Early Twentieth Century
Murder at the Kahei
Revenge and Retreat into Kalimantan
Return to Sarawak
The Era of the Second World War (1941-1945)
Conclusion

21
21
23
32
48
49
49
50
58
60
62
64
66
67

Chapter Three: The Hunting and Gathering Economy


Introduction
Sago Processing
Hunting Wild Boar
Hunting With Dogs, Nagak or Tet Ahu
Hunting Without Dogs, Kusi
Wild Boar
Blowpipe Hunting, Mupit
Noose Trap, Ovet
Fishing
Supplementary Activities

69
69
80
80
91
92
103
112
117
122

iii

Firewood Processing
Collecting Medicinal Plants
Conclusion

126
128
129

Chapter Four: Sharing, Trade and Resource Tenure


Reciprocity and Sharing, Putulat
Barter Trading
Resource Tenure
Sago
Fruit Trees
Blowpipe Poison, Takjem
Firewood
Conclusion

130
136
143
143
149
152
155
155

Chapter Five: Leadership, Consensus and Autonomy


Introduction
The Kejian and the Kotokek as Community Leaders
Legitimization of Authority
Prominent Punan Vuhang Leaders
Origin of Punan Vuhang Leadership
Egalitarianism: Punan Vuhang Pursuit of Individual Autonomy
Conclusion

157
157
160
162
164
170
175

Chapter Six: Cosmology, Rituals and Religious Beliefs


Introduction
Cosmology
The Nyangen and Nalau Rituals
The Roles of Shaman and Spirits
Death Related Belief System
Adet Behok Augury Belief
Conclusion

177
177
189
193
201
208
212

Chapter Seven: Settling Down and Adapting to Change


The Era of Indonesian-Malaysian Confrontation, 1963-1966
Chronological Development of the Adoption of Cultivation
Permanent Settlement at Laput Lidem (Long Lidem)
Adet Bungan and Christianity
Conclusion

214
219
224
226
231

Chapter Eight: Demography, Household, Marriage and Kinship


Longhouse Demography
Longhouse Layout
Household Composition
Courtship, Marriage, Childbirth, Temporary Separation and Divorce
Kinship
Conclusion

232
235
236
249
259
267

iv

Chapter Nine: The Contemporary Economy


Introduction
Preference of Cultivation to Sago Exploitation
Shifting Cultivation
Reciprocal and Individual Labor
Hunting
Fishing
Other Crops
Collecting Activities
Barter Trading
Conclusion

268
268
270
278
281
283
284
287
288
291

Chapter Ten: Resource Tenure Sedentism and the Current Crisis of Legal
Recognition
Introduction
Perennial Crops
Short Term Crops
Arenga Undulatifolia Sago, Nyamakoh
Cultivation of Eugeissona Utilis Sago, Tajuk
Materials for Building Houses
Land Tenure
The Resource Tenure Crisis of Legal Recognition
Conclusion

292
292
293
294
295
295
297
299
302

Chapter Eleven: The Punan Vuhang Response to Logging and Their Sense of the
Future
Introduction
The Punan Vuhang Response to Logging
Physical Impact of Logging
Economic Response to the Changing Landscape
Indirect Social Impact of Logging
Impact on Resource Tenure
Relationship with the Company
Conclusion

303
303
306
307
312
314
316
317

Chapter Twelve: Conclusion

319

Bibliography

327

Index

397

APPENDICES
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9

Glossary
Genealogy of Thirteen Kin Groups
A List of Some Plants used by the Punan Vuhang
Terrestrials Animals
Tree Dwelling Animals
Birds
Fish
Other Animals Eaten by Punan Vuhang with Scientific Names
Other Types of Animals According to Punan Vuhang Names (without Scientific
Names)

345
362
376
383
384
386
395
396
396

LIST OF TABLES
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22

Economic Activities According to Month, Season, and Resources During


Nomadic Times
Ground-Dwelling Birds that can be Trapped
Civets and Porcupines that can be Trapped
Medicinal Plants and their Uses
Primary Level Sharing Network among the Punan Vuhang, 1995
Rules for Sharing Wild Boar among Participating Hunters
Essential Goods During Nomadic Times
The Spirit Realms and their Spirits
Games Played by Otu Tulik During Nyangen in the Likun Avun
Roles of Spirits during the Rituals of Nyangen and Nalau
Some Spirits, related to Shamans, Known to the Community
Auguries for Daily Activities
Population of Long Lidem according to Age and Gender, January 1995
Married Population of Long Lidem according to Gender, Current Marital
Status, Parenthood and Child Adoption, 1995
Household Composition, 1995
Animals Taboo to Newly Married Couples
Taboo Food Prohibited to Boys
Punan Vuhang Consanguineal Terms
Punan Vuhang Affinal Terms
Commonly Traded Goods and Price Sold among the Punan Vuhang, 1994/95
Price of Fish in 2002.
Order of Egos Genealogy according to Household Residence

27
113
113
128
132
135
142
179
191
196
198
209
233
234
240
252
253
262
265
289
308
362

LIST OF MAPS
1
2
3

Island of Borneo
Sarawak and the Adjacent Territory of Kalimantan
The Balui Area, 1995
vi

18
19
20

4
5
6
7
8
9
10

Ancestral Areas of the Punan


Punan Terkalet and Punan Nuo Movement Caused by Iban and Kayan
Pressure
Migration Out of the Upper Balui and Return
Revenge and Retreat: Within Sarawak, into Kalimantan and Back
Punan Vuhang Exploitation Grounds During Nomadic Times: The DanumLinau-Kajang-Bahau-Kihan Basins
Sedentary Punan Vuhang Regular Exploitation Grounds: The Kajang Basin
Topography of Sedentary Punan Vuhang of Regular Exploitation Grounds:
The Kajang Basin

52
53
54
55
56
227
228

LIST OF FIGURES
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27

Punan Vuhang Calendar Synchronized with Major and Minor Fruiting Seasons
Exploration into a new area
Descending and ascending stretches on a slope
Nyeliou to the top stretch of slope during descent
The Lapo Bono Lean-to Shelter
The Lapo Le Lean-to Shelter
The Lapo Porah Shelter
The Lapo Jungap Shelter
Cutting Tools
Sago Processing Tools
Sago Filtering Platform, Pokan
Hunting Tools
Noose Trap (front View)
Noose Trap (side View)
Individuals Inheriting the Takjem Uhu
Lineage of Leadership
Punan Vuhang Cosmology
Population Profile of Long Lidem According to Age and Gender, January 1995
Population Profile of Long Lidem according to Gender, Marital Status,
Parenthood and Child Adoption, 1995
Longhouse Settlement Layout 1995
Principal Relationship between Different Households
The Closest Kin of Three Individuals
Punan Vuhang Consanguineal Terms
Punan Vuhang Affinal Terms
Angle for cutting a tree during slashing
Chain Reaction Felling
Direction of Tree Felling

vii

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39
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46
46
47
47
73
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75
109
114
114
154
166
180
234
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238
261
263
266
273
276
276

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
I thank the Punan Vuhang community of Long Lidem, Sarawak, Malaysia for being
a wonderful host to me over the two years fieldwork. I am especially grateful to my foster
parents, Naro Pua and Vihing Milang, and other family members, i.e., Milang Ruyong, Jimol
and Kudun for taking good care of me. I am also thankful to Luhat Tehin, Nyinyang Enang,
Uji Lating, Sayun Liwan, Ngarik Liwan, Kuyang Surau, Langin Nyuwei, and Tawing Agek for
their assistance. Others who helped me in Belaga are Pastor Ajan Gau, my various foster
families as follow: Johnny Pukan of Long Tanyit, Bang Jok of Uma Daro, Abat Kebing of
Uma Kahei, and Chan Mau Ping @ Apan of Belaga.
I have also benefited from the support of various individuals, amongst others: Alan
Wee, Jayl Langub, Lim Teck Ghee, Tan Chee Beng, Wan Zawawi Ibrahim and Zainal Kling
in Malaysia; Arto Sarla and and Timo Kaartinen of the University of Helsinki; my colleagues,
Nigel Lim, Sia Puon Chiew, and Wong Ting Chung of Sarawak Forestry Corporation, and;
members of my home fellowship groups in Petaling Jaya and Kuching, Malaysia.
The Sasakawa Young Leaders Fellowship Fund, University of Malaya and
Universiti Malaysia Sarawak provided grants to carry out the fieldwork. Karen Armstrong and
Jukka Sikaala have been instrumental at the Department of Social and Cultural
Anthropology, University of Helsinki in providing travel funds for the write-up and public
defence of the dissertation in Helsinki. The Research Funds of the University of Helsinki
funded the publication of the manuscript.
The completion of the dissertation has not been possible if not for the unfailing
support of my thesis advisor Clifford Sather. Cliffs wife, Louise Klemperer Sather proof-read
the manuscript and provided many invaluable comments. I am most grateful to Cliff and
Louise who hosted my stay in Portland, United States where I finally completed the write-up
of the dissertation. I am also thankful to Sylvia Webb and Valerie Mashman who edited the
earlier drafts of the thesis. I acknowledge and appreciate the thorough reading of the
dissertation by Alberto Gomes of La Trobe University and Victor T. King of the University of
Leeds in their capacity as official examiners.
Finally, I thank my wife Elley Lina and our children Ruth and Jonathan, and
members of my family for putting up so much patience and support in helping me complete
the thesis.
This dissertation is dedicated to the memory of my parents John Chan and Mary
Kong.

To God Be the Glory

viii

Chapter One: Introduction


Introduction
This thesis is about the Punan Vuhang, a former hunting-gathering people, often
known in the ethnographic literature as the Punan Busang, who once lived in an area of
remote rainforest in the Malaysian state of Sarawak. I first came across their name when I
was doing fieldwork among Kayan shifting cultivators for my Master of Philosophy degree.
When I was participating in Kayan farming, they remarked that there are Punan Tana
(Forest Punan) who do not farm at all. When on the rare occasions someone mixed sago
starch with rice to augment the food, they sheepishly said they were hungry (lien), did not
have enough rice and therefore had to eat hunger food, unlike Punan who eat it as their
staple. When Kayan dogs successfully hunted wild boar, they said Punan dogs were better
and hunted down pigs all the time. Such remarks stirred my interest and I became
determined to study these hunter-gatherers. When I told Kayan of my interest, however, they
laughed and warned me:
Assum! Lauh. Masi dahin ikak. Dahak
ni lien avin jan tek pare. Ee!

Dont! You will become hungry. Pity on you.


They are always hungry because they dont
have rice. Ee!

Seek nunan. Sayukah. Dahak mele


alah but avin asok Punan Busang
meran-meran sayu. Dalih nong ni,
lebak bavui.

No, it is not really like that. Its alright. There


will be lots of pork. Punan Busang dogs are
really good. Besides, there are lots of wild
boars in the remote forest.

When I first reviewed the literature on hunter-gatherers and on the Punan Vuhang,
who have recently adopted farming, I decided to take up two issues in my study. The first
concerns a debate among anthropologists and human ecologists on the ability of huntergatherer communities to rely completely on the rainforest environment for their food, without
any dependence on food traded from farming societies. The second issue concerns how
hunter-gatherers adapted to sedentism. When logging came into the Punan Vuhang area, I
examined how the community has been affected and has responded to the drastic changes
that have come with logging, and my thesis expanded to include these data as well. Upon
contemplating the relationship between my various topics, I changed the main theme of my
thesis to an examination of how the Punan Vuhang have lived and how they have adapted
to a changing environment.
The debate on hunting-gathering gives rise to several questions:

What food sources were available to Punan Vuhang hunter-gatherers?

How did the Punan Vuhang hunt and gather these foods?

How did they cope with periodic food shortages?


The location of the Punan Vuhang in remote areas separated by impassable rapids
from downriver people would have provided me an opportunity to study a hunting-gathering
economy in considerable isolation. However, since the Punan Vuhang have settled down,
the chance to directly observe hunting and gathering activities, as they occurred in the past,
is no longer possible. So, based on memories of informants, and, where relevant, from
participation-observation of present-day hunting-gathering activities, I intend to reconstruct
1

their past economy, history and social organization. I shall then review the events that led
them to adopt sedentism and briefly describe their process of settling down. The
characteristics of a settled hunting-gathering people will also be examined to see how their
life has changed. Later, when logging reached their area, I briefly studied the problem of
forest degradation and how the community has responded to it.
An Overview of the Chapter Contents
This thesis focuses on a small interior community, consisting today of a single
longhouse with a population in 1995 of 70 persons, located on the Kajang River, an upriver
tributary of the Rejang River, in the Kapit Division of eastern Sarawak. The members of this
community describe themselves as Punan Vuhang. Historically, as we shall see, they
represent an amalgamation of three formerly separate, but related, hunter-gatherer groups.
In this study I trace the changing pattern of Punan Vuhang adaptation to the rainforest
environment. For nearly all of their known history, the Punan Vuhang have lived as huntergatherers. In 1968, however, they adopted cultivation. My own research among the Punan
Vuhang began in 1993 and continued through 1995, with a more brief follow-up period in
November 2002.
As the study explores the questions of adaptability to a changing environment, it
points towards the Punan Vuhangs ability to rely completely on the rainforest for their food.
The findings of this thesis support the debate position that hunter-gatherers have been able
to survive on their own without the need to depend on farming societies for food. Setting this
examination in context, in the first chapters, I reconstruct in some detail the hunting and
gathering economy of the Punan Vuhang, the rainforest ecology, and Punan Vuhang
knowledge of the forest and modes of exploiting its resources. Even after adopting
cultivation, the Punan Vuhang did not entirely cease forest gathering, and, even now, hunting
remains an important element of community survival. My reconstruction of the mobile,
hunting and gathering economy is therefore based, not only on interviews and the stories of
elderly informants, but also on direct observation and participation in still extant community
hunting and gathering activities.
Later chapters discuss the introduction of cultivation and the social, cultural, and
economic changes that occurred as a consequence. Also examined is the effect of
increasing commercial market relations. Finally, at the end, I look at the recent intrusion of
logging into what was once a remote rainforest region that the Punan Vuhang still inhabit,
and describe their response to the current destruction of their traditional rainforest
environment.
Chapter One sets forth the main issues of concern in this dissertation, reviews the
literature pertaining to hunter-gatherers, and, in particular, those of Borneo, and discusses
the conditions of fieldwork.
Chapter Two consists of two major sections. The first describes the mobile,
hunting-gathering economy in relation to the natural conditions of the rainforest. It begins with
an overview of the natural world, particularly in relation to the availability of food resources. It
shows how the Punan Vuhang conceptualized the natural world and its major properties in
terms of a synchronized calendar linked to seasonal variations in the abundance of food and
longer periods of food scarcity. This provides the basis for understanding the importance of
2

mobility for the Punan Vuhang, giving us the contextual argument that the rainforest
environment can support a hunting and gathering way of life. The methods the Punan
Vuhang used to explore new areas are also examined.
The second section deals with the history of the Punan Vuhang community during
the period they lived as hunter-gatherers, roughly from the beginning of the nineteenth
century to 1968. It begins with an account of their response to expansionist shifting
cultivators. It also offers evidence suggesting that the Punan Vuhang were able to survive in
the rainforest independent of agrarian communities.
Chapter Three provides a detailed description of the former, and in some cases,
present, food acquisition methods and Punan Vuhang knowledge of the fauna, flora, and
other features of the rainforest environment. It describes hunting and trapping processes and
Punan Vuhang knowledge of the reaction of animals under pursuit. The chapter begins with
a description of wild sago processing. This is followed by an account of the significance of
wild boar and the various methods that were used to hunt this important animal. A section
focuses on hunting dogs. This is followed by a description of the use of the blowpipe, while
the last section describes Punan Vuhang trapping and fishing methods.
Chapter Four examines social relations of production, sharing, reciprocity and
barter-trading between the Punan Vuhang and outside visitors. It also examines Punan
Vuhang resource tenure, describing restrictions on the use and exploitation of forest
resources as a means to conserve food for times of scarcity. Chapter Five describes
leadership and community social relations with emphasis on Punan Vuhang egalitarianism.
Chapter Six outlines the Punan Vuhang former conceptions of the cosmos and
relations between humans and the spirits. Also described is the former role of shamans in
cultivating intimate relations with helpful spirits. From a reconstruction of the past, Chapter
Seven moves into events that occurred during the period in which the Punan Vuhang took
up shifting cultivation and began to settle down. It begins with the time of the IndonesianMalaysian Confrontation (1963-1966) and it also describes new belief systems and how they
were adopted in the process of settling down. Chapter Eight examines household
demography, in particular, marriage, kinship, and family relations, and the former
socialization of the young in the acquisition of survival skills.
Chapter Nine focuses on the contemporary economy and the consequences of the
shift from hunting-gathering to a more sedentary economy. It begins by examining why the
Punan Vuhang preferred to cultivate food crops rather than gather wild sago. This discussion
also draws attention to how continuity with the traditional economy has been maintained
through present day hunting, gathering and fishing. An examination of barter trading shows
how current economic activities have become partially geared to producing materials for
trade in return for outside goods.
Chapter Ten describes land and resource tenure and shows how restrictions on
the use of natural resources have changed with the development of new rights resulting from
sedentism. Concluding this exploration of Punan Vuhang relations to the environment,
Chapter Eleven surveys the impact of recent developments on resource tenure
government legislation that denies them rights to their land and forests and the effects on
their way of life of the recent loss of forest habitat due to logging.

Chapter Twelve provides a brief summary of findings and in comparison with other
Southeast Asian, in particular Borneo hunter-gatherers, discusses some general
conclusions.
Literature Review
The review shall focus first on the general debate concerning hunter-gatherers
independence from outside communities for food, as this is related to the dissertations main
theme in examining how the Punan Vuhang have lived and adapted to a changing
environment. Concluding this section, the argument on the same subject in Borneo is
presented. After that, we briefly look into studies of Borneo hunter-gatherers, with the last
section discussing previous writings on the Punan Vuhang.
The Hunter-Gatherer Dependency Debate
Ethnographic studies from the early 1960s of hunter-gatherers emphasized the
economic and social advantages of hunting and gathering. This was a complete reversal of
an earlier notion that hunter-gatherers are marginalized people on the perpetual verge of
starvation, constantly pursuing food, and failing to develop forms of social organization
associated with supposedly more advantageous means of production (Barnard 1983:197).
Lee (1965, 1968, 1969, 1972, 1979) and Marshall (1961) were the main
proponents of a model that maintained that the environment sufficiently provides for the
needs of hunter-gatherers. Marshall argued that the redistribution of wealth among the !Kung
of the Kalahari ensured that all members had enough, while Lee found that a !Kung
individual spends only two or three hours per day in subsistence related activities. They
argued that the !Kung are an autonomous people with a cultural identity different from that of
their neighbors, and perceive themselves as a pristine people, isolated and having a
socioeconomy that has persisted from time immemorial. Even though they face rapid change
in the twentieth century, and despite being encapsulated by neighboring farmers, the !Kung
as hunter-gatherers have remained resilient in the face of external forces.
This model of environmental sufficiency was influenced by Sahlins (1968a, 1968b,
1972:1-39) who formulated an original affluence theory. This theory suggests that huntergatherers can satisfy their needs and wants with comparative ease. As hunter-gatherers do
not value accumulation of material goods, they become affluent because they have few
needs and therefore these can be easily satisfied with a relatively small amount of labor time.
Subsequent studies later challenged this model, leading to a series of debates that
persisted into the 1990s. These debates pitted against each other two schools of thought
commonly known as the traditionalists or isolationists, and the revisionists or
integrationists. In contrast to traditionalists view of the ease in obtaining food, the
revisionists documented the difficulty of some hunter-gatherer societies in obtaining
carbohydrates (Altman 1984; Bailey et al. 1989; Griffin 1984; Hart and Hart 1986; Headland
and Reid 1989; Milton 1984). Further, the revisionists maintained that the perception of
hunter-gatherers as isolated is erroneous and is an external view imposed on them by

anthropologists (Wilmsen 1989:3; Wilmsen and Denbow 1990:519; see also Bird-David
1
1992a:20-1).
Most revisionists accept the world systems political model, first formulated by
Immanuel Wallerstein (1974, 1979), as applicable to the analysis of past and present huntergatherers. They argue that the devotion of ethnographic attention to hunting and gathering is
itself spurious, and that researchers should instead study how people relate to the forces of
capitalism and colonialism (Bird-David 1992a:20). Lee summarizes two components of the
revisionist critique:
First there is the argument from history (see, e.g., Myers 1988:262-264;
Headland and Reid 1989) that accuses past ethnographers of misreading
or ignoring history and political economy and hence of treating the society
in question as more bounded, more isolated, and more pristine than it
really is. Political-economic revisionism argues that foragers have been
integrated into larger regional or even international structures of power and
exchange for so long that they can reveal nothing about a hunter-gatherer
way of life. Evidence of trade and political domination is cited in this thesis
(1992:34).

The traditionalists defended the view that the !Kung are an autonomous huntergatherer people, who despite rapid changes surrounding them between the 1960s and
2
1990s have shown little change in their way of life. This view maintains that interactions with
surrounding societies take many forms and not all contacts lead to dependency and an
abandonment of the hunter-gatherer socioeconomic formations. Studies among African
Pygmies and Southeast Asian hunter-gatherers show that they have remained resilient and
have developed stable forms of interaction with their agricultural neighbors (Kent 1992:44;
Leacock and Lee 1982; Endicott 1988; J. Peterson 1978; Solway and Lee 1990:110; Yellen
1985, 1990a).
The debate extended beyond the !Kung, and questioned the validity of general
models and interpretations based on ethnographic studies of modern hunter-gatherers (Kent
1992:46). The portrayed autonomy of other hunter-gatherer societies was questioned, as
they were thought to have had considerable past interaction with outsiders. This interaction
involved trade in minor forest produce and other economic pursuits. These hunter-gatherers
include South Indian groups (Bird-David 1988; Fox 1969; Gardner 1972; Morris 1977);
various African groups (Bahuchet and Guillaume 1982; Blackburn 1982; Woodburn 1988);
and hunter-gatherers in Southeast Asia (Endicott 1983, 1984; Griffin 1984; Headland 1987;
Headland and Reid 1989; Hoffman 1984, 1986).
Supporting the position taken by the traditionalists, Bird-David (1988; 1992a)
argues that contemporary hunter-gatherers, the South Indian Nayaka, for example, despite
maintaining contact with adjacent societies for centuries, show dual social characteristics
reflecting both adaptation to and interaction with outside forces and a continued adherence to
1

See also Bird-David (1992b), Buege (1996), Guenther (1995), Headland (1991), Kottak
(1994), Kuper (1993a, 1993b), Shott (1992), Spielman and Eder (1994) and Stiles (1992).
2

For example, Bicchieri 1990a, 1990b; Eibl-Eibesfeldt 1991; Guenther 1990a, 1990b; Kent
1992; Lee 1979; Lee and Guenther 1991, 1993, 1995; Silberbauer 1981, 1991; Silberbauer and
Kuper 1966; Solway and Lee 1990; Tanaka 1990; Wiessner 1990; Yellen 1985, 1990a, 1990b.

internal social institutions among themselves. Similarly, Woodburn (1988:61-2) stresses that
the Tanzanian Hadza hunter-gatherers are descendants of a people with a long history of
hunting and gathering and are generally independent of neighboring peoples despite being
encapsulated by them.
Revisionists have argued that in the tropical rainforest, hunter-gatherers maintain
contacts with farming societies and rely on them for cultivated food. Their studies show little
recognition of the possibility for human populations to subsist in a tropical environment
1
independent of domesticated plant and animal resources. Bailey et al. (1989:60) examine
this hypothesis of independence by going through records searching for current-day huntergatherers who live isolated and independent of other communities. They found none and
instead found all hunter-gatherers having considerable contact with other societies and
relying on them for various needs.
Dentan (1991:422) argues against the revisionist hypothesis and asserts that its
foundation based on the Green Desert theory is flawed. The Green Desert theory asserts
that despite the greatest biomass and the greatest species diversity among all ecosystems
(Sponsel 1986), most tropical rainforest plants exist in the form of inedible woody tissue
(Golley 1975), with edible components mainly found high up in the tree canopy and therefore
difficult to obtain (Bailey et al. 1989:61; Mc Elroy and Townsend 1985:185). Edible species
are widely dispersed and it involves a high expenditure of energy to travel to reach these
food sources.
In contrast to the Green Desert theory, Dentan (1991) maintains that the tropical
rainforest is an ecosystem that contains a great diversity of resources sufficient to sustain a
hunter-gatherer population. Using the same argument, Colinvaux and Bush (1991) assert
that, instead of forest vegetation consisting mainly of inedible woody tissue, foliage
production is maximized, providing food for primates to thrive both in the tree canopy and on
the ground (Jordan 1983 in Colinvaux and Bush 1991:154). Hunter-gatherers use missiles
with poison to shoot primates and birds living high up the tree canopy and other methods to
hunt ground-dwelling animals (Colinvaux and Bush 1991:155),
Dentan further refutes the Green Desert theorists use of the Liebig Effect, or Law
of the Minimum, in dismissing hunter-gatherers ability to survive independently in the tropical
rainforest (1991:422). According to the Liebig Effect, the survival of an organism requires a
critical minimum of certain materials essential for growth and reproduction. When the
availability of materials barely reaches the critical minimum, the species can barely survive.
The long tropical dry season causes declines in food availability and animals may migrate
out of a stricken area, nullifying the effect of seasonal abundance at other periods of the year.
In addition, even when available, most wild animals are extremely lean and lack calorie-rich
fat and prolonged consumption of their lean meat can put a physiological strain on the body
(Speth and Spielman 1983 in Bailey et al. 1989:61).
Dentan disputes the relevance of the Liebig Effect of food scarcity, because huntergatherers can consume a great diversity of food sources, for example, berries, fish, rats,
1

For example, Bahuchet and Guillaume 1982; Bailey et al. 1989; Bailey and Peacock 1988;
Fox 1969; Hart and Hart 1986; Headland 1987; Headland and Reid 1989; Hoffman 1984;
Hutterer 1983; Rambo 1985.

mice, snakes, bats, frogs, lizards and snails (1991:426). Contrary also to the applicability of
the Liebig Effect, another main carbohydrate source not affected by seasonality are wild
sago palms found in Southeast Asia (Strickland 1986:126 in Dentan 1991:427).
Comparatively, sago has more calories than dry rice (Strickland 1986:131), the main staple
in Borneo. Despite this, many communities in Central Borneo apparently switched from sago
to rice production, a switch that Rousseau attributes to prestige and taste factors rather than
solely economic motives (1990:125).
A special issue of Human Ecology (Vol. 19, No. 2, 1991) was devoted to this
debate on the independence or dependence of hunter-gatherers and foragers upon
cultivated food. Stearman (1991) argues that Yuqu foragers in the Bolivian Amazon can
survive independently. They consume a great variety of food as snacks while pursuing game
and mark out keystone resources for future use during lean periods. Bahuchet, McKey and
de Garine (1991) provide ecological evidence that the tropical rain forest in the western
Congo basin has high densities of wild yams and other edible tubers, which were heavily
exploited in the past. These wild plant foods allowed pure subsistent foraging before the Aka
pygmies picked up cultivation. Aka now cultivate plants only because they are more easily
available and less seasonal compared to wild tubers. Endicott and Bellwood (1991) report a
wide range of seasonal and non-seasonal wild plant and animal resources that are utilized
by the Batek hunter-gatherers in Peninsular Malaysia. Brosius (1991) argues that the Penan
of Sarawak live in a rainforest environment which contains aseasonal carbohydrate sago
palm and protein meat rich in nutrition. Wild sago is available in large amounts. Three
persons, for example, can process over 100 lbs. of starch per day. The bearded pig (Sus
barbatus) provides much meat with a high fat content.
In Borneo, the debate has focused on the ability of the Penan and Punan huntergatherers to survive independently. In addition, the debate also relates to the contention of
Hoffman (1984, 1988) that the Punan hunter-gatherers were originally agriculturalists who
became hunter-gatherers in order to trade forest produce for agricultural products. Brosius
(1991:130) dismisses this notion and argues that despite vigorous trade relationships
between Penan/Punan and outside traders, no agricultural products entered into the trading,
and so maintains that these hunter-gatherers could survive independently by acquiring food
resources exclusively from the forest.
Hoffman (1984:142) asserts that Punan hunter-gatherers in Borneo have always
been involved in trade, citing Needhams observation that they need to trade with the settled
people . . . in order to remain nomads (Needham 1972:177-178). Hoffman develops his idea
further by suggesting the opposite:
They do not trade in order to remain nomads, but rather, I suggest, they
remain and possibly even became nomads in order to trade. . . . Punan do
not collect forest products to support themselves while hunting; they hunt,
gather, and fish to support themselves while collecting forest products.
Trade is not just another thing the Punan do; it is the thing that Punan do
most. The collection and trade of forest products, not hunting, is the historic
raison dtre of nomadic, primary-forest groups known as Punan. Both the
demand for these forest products and the local need for goods they bring in
exchange have led to the hunting and gathering adaptation that modernday Westerners observe in groups called Punan (1984:143).

The demand for forest products came from sedentary people who needed these
products from outside trade but did not have the means to obtain them themselves (Hoffman
1988:109). Besides, Hoffman argues (1984:137-139; 1988:107-108), the collection of
various valuable forest products, such as aloe wood, edible birds nests, bezoar stones,
porcupine stones, etc., for trading caused the Punan to go into the forest, so that the
existence of Punan groups in Borneo arose initially from the demand for various products
desired by Chinese (1986:102).
Hoffmans assertion that the Punan became forest collectors to trade is explained
by his theory of the ecological-economic dilemma of trade. Various forest products such as
resins, rattan and gutta-percha, besides those obtained for trading with Chinese traders,
were also utilized by sedentary village-dwelling swidden agriculturalists themselves. These
people found it difficult to exploit the forest by themselves because of the great distance
involved in getting there.
More often than not, their villages are surrounded by gardens and
swiddens, and these in turn are surrounded by broad expanses of
secondary forest. Primary forest is usually found only at the outer
boundaries of a villages lands, and this may give way to another stretch of
secondary forest belonging to some adjoining village. Many of these
sedentary peoples would thus be forced to travel great distances from their
villages to gather forest products in quantities sufficient for trade. The
undertaking of such long-distance journeys involves an expenditure of time
that these sedentary agriculturists cannot often afford. . . . [and] necessarily
divert time from the annual cycle of activities associated with swidden
agriculture. . . . This ecological-economic dilemma is the key to the origins
of the Punan. I suggest that it was precisely this inability of sedentary
agricultural groups to adequately exploit two distinct ecological
nichesnamely, tropical forest horticulture and tropical forest hunting and
gatheringthat led to the evolution of a separate hunting and gathering
culture that is found in Borneo today (1988:109).

In short, Hoffman contends that the existence of peoples such as Penan [and also Punan] in
Borneo is explained exclusively with reference to their roles as providers of forest products in
local trade networks (Brosius 1991:137). Brosius, who studied the Penan hunter-gatherers
of Sarawak, partially agrees with this contention, it is indeed the case that Penan and other
Bornean foragers have long occupied a specific niche in the economies of interior Borneo.
Such people have been a major source of forest products which are traded to longhouses
and thence to the coast for consumption or export (1991:137).
Beyond that, however, Brosius dismisses Hoffmans claim that Penan/Punan exist
primarily to trade, that trade is their raison detre. He further argues that Hoffmans
arguments about the ethnogenesis of Bornean foragers are entirely misinformed and add up
to little more than an exercise in conjectural history. He elaborately details the methods and
1
methodology of Hoffmans fieldwork that he insists have led to the flaws in Hoffmans work.

Hoffmans work has also been criticized by scholars who worked among hunter-gatherers in
Borneo (Brosius 1988a; Kaskija 1988; and Sellato 1988, 1994). I shall not dwell on these
critiques as that of Brosius under review (1991) explains the principal sources of contention
involved. See also Sellato (2002:105-135) for a reconstruction of the culture history of forest
nomads especially on the origin of various hunter-gatherer groups in Borneo.

For that reason, his appraisal of Hoffmans work is not a matter of disagreement over
interpretations, but a critique of the factual foundation upon which those interpretations are
based (1991:142).
Besides disagreeing with Hoffman that Penan/Punan are retrograde agriculturalists
who became hunter-gatherers in order to trade, he suggests the opposite viewpoint might
actually be the case. He asserts that many contemporary agricultural societies derive from
hunter-gatherer populations, as is mentioned by Whittier (1973), and that a number of former
hunter-gatherers are known to have settled in historical times (Brosius 1991:139). According
to Brosius, Hoffmans flawed research caused him to assume that the Punan are not
ethnically distinct from sedentary agriculturalists, whereas the opposite is the case. He further
disagrees with Hoffmans completely fallacious statement that the word Punan was far more
commonly a term of reference applied to nomads by sedentary peoples than an actual label
of identity for the nomads themselves (1991:140 citing Hoffman 1986:17). According to
Brosius, Among . . . Penan in Sarawak, the autonym they apply to themselves is Penan,
and the Punan Busang refer to themselves as Punan (1991:140).
Apart from that, Brosius further criticizes Hoffmans assertion that Punan huntergatherer communities dwell in deep forest areas for accessibility to forest products collected
for trade. Instead, Penan/Punan locate themselves close to areas of abundant Eugeissona
sago palm, their main staple food. Penan/Punan explicitly and consistently state that it is the
relative abundance of sago in various locations in the forest that determines the location and
duration of settlements (1991:142 footnote 18). The use of sago as the staple food is what
enables the Penan/Punan, as we shall see, to be independent forest dwellers.
As a contribution to the debate, this dissertation provides ethnographic details in
support of the argument that hunters-gatherers could survive without relying on farming
societies for food. The data presented here show that the rainforest, as an ecosystem that
contains a great diversity of resources, is capable of sustaining a hunter-gatherer population.
These data also support Dentans argument that the Liebig Effect of food scarcity did not
apply as the Punan Vuhang had both adaptive and social strategies to cope with long
periods of food scarcity. The case of the Punan Vuhang lends some support to Sahlins
original affluence theory that suggests hunting and gathering people are able to easily
satisfy their needs and wants because they have few needs. In fact, of the things they need
the most, food, the Punan Vuhang show little concern if no one succeeds in obtaining food
for any particular day. They know that someone will get something the next day and share it
with everyone else. So long as every hunter explores a field further away and is diligent,
there are lots of little things to be found.
Unlike some hunter-gatherers who are encapsulated by neighboring farmers or
have close contact with them (see Woodburn 1988; Bird-David 1988, 1992a), the Punan
Vuhang live in forests located at a great distance from farming societies. In the period when
the Punan Vuhang were nomadic, traders would deplete their food ration by the time they
reached Punan Vuhang camps and then relied on food collected by their hosts. As such, the
study supports Brosius position (1991) against Hoffmans argument (1984, 1988) that
hunter-gatherers traded forest produce for agricultural foodstuffs. Tobacco was the sole
agricultural product traded, and it was a luxury item, only a little of which could be brought
9

along on the long and difficult journey. The Punan Vuhang, after having a little, would ignore
their further cravings for tobacco.
Leaving this debate, we then look at the issue of sedenterization in Borneo. Sellato
(1994:171-175) pointed out that before the intervention of the government, pressure by
farming societies to settle around trading centers appeared to be the cause of huntergatherers taking up sedenterization. Initially, only a few families lived around the trading
center and they cultivated hardy plants such as bananas and cassava that could be
harvested all year round. For most of the time, they ventured out into the forest to collect
forest products for trading. In the second phase, some families attempted rice cultivation.
With small swiddens and poorly maintained farms, they had poor harvests and continued to
rely on sago and on the collection of forest products. From this commencement of
agriculture, hunter-gatherer groups then built longhouses and cultivated a variety of other
plants. In the third phase, they devoted more time to their crops, and in the process became
farmers. Other hunter-gatherers stopped at the second phase of horticulture, to continue their
reliance on wild sago and collect forest products for trade.
During the initial phase of a few families taking up simple agriculture, it was farming
societies that often took the initiative to settle them (1994:172-173), for it was advantageous
to have forest collectors living around trading centers. Farming allowed a sort of gender
division of labor in which the engagement of women in farm work enabled men to focus on
collecting commercial forest produce. Furthermore, settlement around a trading center
ensured that the collected products would not be traded elsewhere. However, when the
irreversible shift of the third phase of sedenterization occurred, and hunter-gatherers
became farmers and no longer collected forest products for trade, the supply of forest
products dried up. According to Sellato (1994:174-175), for that reason, there were cases
when farmers disapproved of Punan taking up agriculture, even to the extent of opposing
government efforts to convert them to rice farming.
Previous Writings on the Punan Vuhang
Today, the Punan Vuhang live at Long Lidem, the name given to the junction of the
Lidem tributary with the main Kajang River. Punan Vuhang is an endonym that the
community members use to refer to themselves. Punan Busang is an exonym, and the
name that they use to refer to themselves when talking to other people. It is also the name
that outsiders generally call them. I was told that the name Busang derives from the Kayan
word for an island which is located in the Balui headwaters where these people once lived.
Hendrix Tillema (1938/1989:121-134), in his travels through Central Borneo in
what is now Kalimantan, was probably the first man to publish an account of the Punan Aput
1
and the Punan Musang. The first recorded visit to the Punan Vuhang was by Donald Owen

Both the Punan Aput and Punan Musang were related to the Punan Vuhang and lived
together on common ancestral lands before their migration out of the upper Balui of Sarawak.
While the Punan Aput remained in Kalimantan, the Punan Musang migrated to Sarawak in the
late 1970s where they are now called Punan Long Unai, following the place-name of their
settlement at Long Unai.

10

in 1924, a Brooke officer in pursuit of Iban who had gone up the Linau headwaters in
defiance of a government order (1924:169).
I.A.N. Urquhart was the first person to write on the Punan Vuhang, and based his
writing on information provided by his fellow travelers (1951). He made an expedition to the
upper Linau to take a census of the Punan but only encountered three Punan Vuhang
passers-by. W. Huehne (1959), a medical doctor on an anti-malaria expedition, was the first
writer to camp with them when they were at Long Petjawah. Lim Poh Chiang, a shop owner
from Sibu took some pictures of the people in 1962. Tom Harrisson (1965a, 1965b) flew in
by helicopter to where the Punan Vuhang were camped during the Indonesian confrontation
and wrote about their bird names and a fascinating account of their secret communication
system. D.B. Ellis (1972a; 1975) led a research team in a short study of this people in 1971.
Other writers who briefly mention the Punan Vuhang are Jayl Langub (1973; 1974) and
Peter Brosius (1988b).
I will now briefly comment on these reports on the Punan Vuhang, drawing from
my experiences in the field, but will leave the details for inclusion in later sections of the
dissertation. Despite reliance on outsiders for his information, I.A.N. Urquharts description of
the Punan Vuhang is generally accurate. The main text is reproduced here:
I have seen three Punan Busang. They were quite differently tattooed from
any people I have seen before, including a tracery pattern across the
chest. They abhorred the sun and as they were travelling out of the jungle
when I saw them, they carried kajangs (woven leaves to give protection)
around with them. They would put their kajangs over their heads and
shade their bodies even if going only five minutes in the sun. . . .
For the rest of what I write I have had to rely on Kayans, Punan
Lusong and Belaga Malays and Ibans, who all agree to the correctness of
the information given below, unless I mention the information as coming
from one specific source only.
The Punan Busang are supposed to be somewhat cleverer at
jungle lore and more able and energetic at hunting than Punan Lusong.
They will rarely give up until they have caught their quarry. They build up
stocks of mats (and carry them around with them if they decide to move)
and thus are not caught unprepared by the unexpected arrival of traders.
Following on this they are less indebted to the settled tribes than are the
Punan Lusong for instance. The Punan Busang are not ashamed to bathe
naked and uncovered when amongst their own sex only, and a man may
have as many as three or four palangs. Their shelters are far inferior even
to those of the Lusong Laku and are so small that the Punan Busang
themselves cannot all lie out full length. Everyone remarks on how these
peoples, their houses and dogs all stink pronouncedly. The people are very
prone to korap (eczema) and their dogs to mange. The dogs are loved as
children and sleep inside the mosquito nets, and Penghulu Taman Lihan
relates he once met a woman who was suckling a puppy because her baby
had died. They have more children than the Punan Lusong, and are very
fit. The Punan Busang revolt other races by the food they eat but attribut
[sic] their good health and strength to this same food. They cook pig with
fleas, leeches and bristles still on and eat the intestines and eyes. If they
have a surplus of meat, they hang it on a tree but do not cook it until they
need it and are perfectly prepared to eat it three days later when it has
gone bad and is covered with maggots and worms. Their normal food is
sago, which they often eat in a watery mash. When a death occurs the
Punan Busang pull down all their huts and burn them and decamp quickly
leaving no trace of where they have gone to. The Punan Lusong say the
Punan Busang burn their dead, and they also say they have bird omens

11

quite different from those of other Punans. The Punan Busang are
supposed to be akin to the Punan Aput now in Indonesian Borneo. There
was a fairly recent case of a Punan Busang who came to Belaga hospital
but could not stay there because he so hated rice that he vomited it all
back and there was no sago available for him. The Punan Busang appear
to stand less nonsense than other Punans, and if they are offended at all
they straightaway disappear into the jungle and are not heard of again until
their need for salt, tobacco and bangles drives them once more to regain
contact. . . . The Kayans say the Punan Busang have long known how to
negotiate rapids and long ago used to go as far as Kapit to trade by river
(1951:531-532).

I include here some of my observations to substantiate this account. His only


encounter with the Punan Vuhang showed them to abhor the sun. It is still true even today
that they avoid, when possible, the suns heat. When the river was low, the people would
seek shelter under a big tree and sit on the dry shoal by the river bank. If the river was high,
they would sit underneath a tree with a thick canopy to escape the heat. However, the men
had adapted well to the sun. During the whole day-long river journey from Long Tanyit to
Lusong Laku, they could travel exposed to the sun without wearing a hat.
The men continued to bathe naked although most women wrapped a sarong
around their waist. As a participating researcher, I also bathed like the men, using my palm to
cover my private parts until my waist was submerged in the water. After we were in the river,
we did not have to cover ourselves anymore. Bathing naked, however, was only done
among the same sex. Old men continued to bathe in that manner in the presence of the
women. It is true that all the adult males have the palang, or penis pins, although the number
1
of pins per person I could never substantiate. The younger generation, however, no longer
wear penis pins.
Concerning the dogs, I suppose the mangy dogs mentioned to Urquhart were
those old dogs which the people continued to keep. Dogs are part of the households and are
well taken care of until they die of old age. In some households, the dogs were still being
provided with their own mosquito nets and blankets. Harrisson, as reviewed below, wrote
how the people took great care of their hunting dogs. The reference to the revolting food
with maggots and worms is accurate. When I first reached the field site, I was nauseated
when I saw the maggots on the meat kept in the shelter for later cooking (a day or two later).
I did not say anything about the meat to avoid offending them, but instead put a covering
over it. After that, the meat was always covered by my household to prevent the flies from
laying eggs on it. My foster household initially prepared the meat by burning and scraping the
bristle before cooking it. One day, I almost vomited when I saw an old couple having their
meal with the bristle still on the meat. Eventually, however, I realized I should eat as they did
and one day I took the initiative to cook the meat without removing the bristle. During
mealtimes, I just peeled the skin off and gave it to the dogs. From then on we cooked our
meals the traditional revolting way.
In 1959, a medical officer led an expedition to eradicate malaria mosquitoes. The
Punan Vuhang recalled him as Tuan Nyamok or Mr. Mosquito. W. Huehne (1959) reported
1

The penis pin is a pin that is inserted in a hole made in the penis prior to sexual intercourse.
Its purpose is to provide more stimulation to the woman (Rousseau 1990:27). See also Reid
(1988:149-51) and Brown (1991).

12

that the medical department had been mistaken about the lack of malaria among the
nomadic hunter-gatherers. They had assumed that the nomadic life gave no time to build up
an infected mosquito population in the jungle. They found they were mistaken when a high
incidence of malaria was discovered: 50 percent of all children having enlarged spleens, and
in 30 per cent of all children malaria parasites [were] found in the blood (1959:196). The
Punan Vuhang (Punan Musang as written by him), seem to be dying out rapidly. Out of a
population of 128 people only twenty-six were children between the ages of one and fifteen
years; no birth had taken place within the last year (1959:219-200).
Huehne reported on the extent of trade and found that the Penan (he also studied
the Penan) and Punan were seriously indebted to traders and believed it to be a form of
economic slavery. He was exasperated with the bondage; It was impossible for the writer
to buy even one mat from the Punan, even though offering five times as much as the Kayan
traders. The reason for this was not ill-will, but merely that everybody is in debt to the Kayan
traders (1959:200). He also reported on the exchange value of the barter trade,
One mat is two cheap sarongs ($1.50 each) and three pots (about 18
ounces) of Kayan tobacco, grown in the traders own plantation. Other
commodities like needles, thread, soap, hair oil, lighters, matches, fuel,
1
etc., are used (1959:200).

Besides trading directly with the Punan, he reported that several Kayan chiefs employed the
Punan as porters. The services of the Punan Vuhang and the Penan Apau, a group of
Penan staying by the Linau headwaters, were used to transport goods from Sarawak into
Indonesia where commodities fetched extremely high prices. His traveling companions told
him:
This is quite lucrative business, since the price of one gong [brass-ware] in
Indonesia is about the piece of cloth value $1.50, the price in Sarawak
anything up to $20.00. Bezoar stone costs two or three pieces of cloth and
fetches about $200 in Sarawak. The profiteers out of this business are the
2
Kayan chiefs.

Just before the 1963 Indonesian-Malaysian Confrontation, a photographer visited


the Punan Vuhang when they were camped in the Belaup area. Lim Poh Chiang (1989)
published a pictorial study of his travels and the Punan Vuhang were included in his work.
Several people shown in the book were still alive when I went to the field site in 1993.
According to informants, this was the first time that traders accompanying Lim introduced fish
nets to the people. They were amazed at the abundance of fish that could be caught, filling
up to three-quarters of their boat. Lim showed a photo of two men laboriously carrying a lot
of big fish over their shoulders (1989:40).

Huehne reported that in Sibu, the mats were sold for not less than $30 each.

In fact, Taman Bulan who organized the expedition and is recognized by the nomadic people
as a trustworthy person in negotiations between them and the government, was at one time the
richest man in Belaga.

13

In 1965, Tom Harrisson stayed with the Punan Vuhang for a considerable period.
During that era of the Indonesian-Malaysian confrontation, the Punan Vuhang were
accompanied by the Commonwealth Forces wherever they went. Harrisson wrote on the
subject of the peoples remarkable secret communicative system. In addition, he described
the relationship with their hunting dogs as something unseen among other people. The
Punan have a special dog platform or bed, nicely made . . . well inside the warm shelter
(1965b:69). He also included their story of the origin of their dogs and their rules regarding
dogs.
Concerning their communication system, he wrote about how closely related
household members used whistling to communicate with each other.
[I]f you are sitting at the edge of the temporary clearing, talking to
somebody, he may suddenly interrupt a sentence by whistling. If it is a boy
or a girl, probably the parents will be whistling them to eat or do some
small job about the family shelter . . . every Busang has a distinctive double
syllabled name, exclusive to his or herself. Every such name has its
whistling equivalent. If a mother wants to call her son, she does so with his
whistle. This can carry a hundred yards . . . . I have sat and listened to
such a conversation between a mother and son, where it has afterwards
been explained to me that she told him to come back to the hut, he
refused, she insisted, he whistled acceptance but in a very disobliging
tone, before he went off (1965b:72-73).

Harrisson described the three reasons why the Punan used the whistle language instead of
calling out loud.
Firstly, it is not desired to attract loudly the attention of adjacent spirits to
individual persons. Secondly, these nomads are extremely secretive about
their movements . . . . The whistle language is a method of maintaining
contact and even detailed communication without the use of the human
voice. . . . Thirdly, these whistled conversations do not frighten wild animals
or disturb the jungle environment as a whole, in the way that human voices
definitely do (1965b:73). [Emphasis original].

He offered an explanation of how the whistling and the secret communicative system
blended with the environment. Enemies unfamiliar with forest wildlife would not be able to
identify the source of the sound:
The several jungle calls are not necessarily of two syllables. They are
mostly similar to those of birds, squirrels, insects and certain frogs. These
people have an unrivalled knowledge of the natural history of their area,
can imitate hundreds of call notes accurately. They roam the sub-montane
and montane fauna regions. Encroaching lowland Iban, Kayan or Kenyah,
however jungle-wise, will meet many unfamiliar animal sounds as they go
above the 2,000 foot contour (sub-montane) and into the 3,000 foot levels
(fully montane fauna) in which the present community freely moves. It
would therefore be extremely difficult for any outsider to guess that the
whistle he now heard was not truly of animal, non-human origin.
Among the standard special calls by whistle are come here, coming,
cant move, pig ahead (to right, left, etc.), possible danger ahead,
something ahead, I dont know what it is, help me quickly, stay still,
dont move, run for your life, as well as signals for special animals,
features, distances (1965b:73-74).

14

The Punan Vuhang stopped using this whistling around the time they became
Christian in the early 1970s. Nonetheless, it took time for them to stop using the system
completely. Only the children below four years of age do not possess whistle names. When
I asked my informants about this subject, they said that whistling was also an intimate form of
communication among adults. For example, a wife whistled to her husband who was in a
gathering to return for his meal. It would be very embarrassing for her to walk in front of the
people and call him back. As an intimate call, nobody would be aware of the call as it
sounded similar to birds calls. (In the chapter on bird hunting, we will see how hunters imitate
bird calls to draw birds to them). Upon hearing the call, he would carry on the conversation
and then excuse himself to return. If he could not return, he would not whistle back and the
wife would not keep on whistling for him. In this context of intimate communication, the
Punan Vuhang would feel embarrassed calling for adult members, especially the spouse, to
return for a meal. During my fieldwork, whistling was no longer practiced and a mother would
simply call out loud her childs name to inquire of his whereabouts. I frequently heard children
calling back Hoi! to indicate their presence. If a child did not hear the call, other people
would tell him or her of the mothers calling.
The third feature that Harrisson wrote about was the sign communication system to
indicate a message in the forest. The sign system used sixteen types of message sticks
implanted in the ground to convey a message. For example, a hunter who did not see any
sign of sago, fruits or animals, would plant a stick to inform other hunters. Consequently,
when a hunter saw the sign, he would not explore that area again and this therefore saved
his time instead of searching in vain for something that was not available. Unlike the whistling
language, the Punan Vuhang continue to practice the message stick system, although some
types have fallen out of use.
In June 1971, a research team led by D.B. Ellis conducted a months research
among the Punan. According to the Punan Vuhang, Ellis was a British army captain who
was stationed with the group that accompanied them during Confrontation. Captain Ellis
must have been fascinated with the Punan Vuhang and therefore organized a research
expedition after Confrontation. The findings were first published in the Sarawak Museum
Journal (1972) and repeated in the Malaysian Nature Journal (1975). The study focused on
five subjects, namely: social aspects (Ellis 1972a; 1975); compilation of a word list (Wilson
1972; 1975); hunting methods (Sloan 1972; 1975); medical reports (Oldrey 1972; 1975); and
music (Martin 1972; 1975). The study also includes a checklist of bird names (Ellis 1972b).
The contents of the papers are similar in both journals. Nonetheless, the 1972 Sarawak
Museum Journal includes a section on tattoos (Ellis and Ellis 1972:281-282) and the 1975
Malaysian Nature Journal does not, but does contain a list of plants found within their locality
(Ellis 1975:170-172). This plant list, however, does not include Punan Vuhang
ethnobotanical names of the plants.
Further notes include: Jayl Langub (1973, 1974) who provided his opinion on the
Penan/Punan nomenclature and wrote that the Punan Vuhang are noted for their unique
tattoo designs. He found that they are a very gentle people who have fair skin and are lightly
built. It was Jayl Langub who suggested that I study the Punan Vuhang when I consulted him
on studying hunter-gatherers in Sarawak (see below). Johannes Nicolaisen (1976) visited
them in 1973, and reported that the people were very keen hunters, although they had
15

settled a few years before his visit. He mentioned that the Punan Vuhang claimed they are
related linguistically to the Ukit and Sihan, and the Punan Bah (Nicolaisen 1976:43). My
informants also told me they have linguistic similarities to the Punan Bah. In fact, when I
visited the Penan Talun, who have Sihan men married into their community, they were
surprised that I could speak a smattering of Sihan.
Peter Brosius (1988b) briefly wrote about the people in a confidential report to the
Sarawak State Government.
Fieldwork
Fieldwork lasting for twenty-one months was carried out from June 1993 to
February 1995, with a follow-up study in November 2002, in Long Lidem. During the first part
of my fieldwork, I was able to participate in and observe activities associated with times of
food scarcity. In 1994, a flood swept away most of the communitys newly harvested rice,
forcing them to fall back on sago processing. Participation in and observation of their
activities during the long lean period with intermittent periods of minor fruit seasons and
migratory wild boar provided me with a glimpse of the past when the Punan Vuhang were
still nomadic. In-depth interviews enabled me to gain a better understanding of the mobile
economy in addition to information on their history, social organization and a range of other
issues.
I lived in the household of Naro Pua and Vihing Milang who became my foster
parents. Besides taking care of me, as a knowledgeable and articulate individual, Naro Pua
narrated and shared with me information that forms a substantial part of my dissertation.
Frequently, after eating dinner, we sat by the fireplace, drank coffee, smoked cigarettes and
talked. Our conversations did not merely involve me learning from him; he was inquisitive
and asked about the affairs of the world. In such a relaxed atmosphere, I did not take down
notes, for doing so would transform the mood into a serious discussion. Only when Naro was
in a very good mood and contented with the days work would he want to hold formal
interviews by narrating stories into a tape recorder.
As a member of his household, I participated in many of his activities, with the
exception of hunting. The community forbade him to bring me along on his hunts, concerned
that bears could attack me. I had to convince the community that as an ethnographer, I must
participate in their activities, regardless of the potential danger. To overcome their worry, I
wrote a letter relieving them of any responsibilities should harm befall me. It was only then
that Naro and other hunters would bring me on their hunts. Even then, when Naro hunted
alone with his hunting dogs, I could not follow him. Hunting with dogs required a high level of
endurance running through the thickets. As I could not keep up with the rapid pace of pursuit,
I could only join hunts that involved more than one hunter, with one person slowing down his
pace to guide me.
My other main informants were Uji Lating, Nyinyang Enang, Luhat Tehin and
Sayun Liwan, who were recognized as knowledgeable individuals in the community. Uji
Lating is an expert storyteller. According to Naro Pua, many of the stories that Uji recited
were precisely what storytellers had narrated in the past. During social gatherings, Uji was
the person who narrated legends and folklore. In addition to stories, Uji provided me with

16

much of my information pertaining to hunting, trapping, fishing and gathering when they were
still nomadic.
Nyinyang Enang, the last surviving shaman, had been my main informant on the
cosmos. As a headman, he possessed much information on political leadership, and much
of the information in the chapter on politics is attributed to him. Nyinyang died a few months
before I returned for my second fieldwork in November 2002. Luhat Tehin, who claimed that
he was born before the era of the First World War, was my other main informant on oral
history. He died in 2000. To cross-check some of the information, I consulted with Sayun
Liwan. On matters relating to gender and the household, I consulted with Vihing Milang, my
foster mother, and Ngarik Liwan, a midwife and an articulate woman.
Participation observation was my other method to gather information. I was
fortunate to have a glimpse of the past when the Punan Vuhang relied on sago. The flash
flood that washed away their newly harvested rice in early 1994 led the Punan Vuhang to
revert to sago collecting. So I participated in sago processing, an activity they usually no
longer do after successfully practicing cultivation. As mentioned above, I hunted and
gathered with them. Concerning farming, I participated in two shifting cultivation seasons: of
1993/94 and 1994/95.
Concerning data gathering, a substantial amount of information was obtained
during informal situations. Periods of social interaction provided much information in
response to particular events, such as an occurrence of a death (the passing of Langin),
camping away from the longhouse, collecting rattan, hunting, processing sago, fishing, or
doing farm work. The period immediately after dinners was most relaxing, and sitting beside
the fire provided the most conducive atmosphere for conversation.
My main research methodology is qualitative. Initially, I gathered quantitative
information. However, for various reasons, some members of the community were only
willing to share what foods they had obtained on a daily basis on condition I would not make
use of some sensitive data in my thesis. As I could not fully use the information, I then
chose to omit entirely the quantitative data on their economic activities. It was only then that
the people were relaxed in my presence.

17

18

19

20

Chapter Two: The Rainforest Environment, the Former Mobile


Economy and Early Punan Vuhang Responses to External Events
Introduction
The Punan Vuhang today live in a single longhouse settlement called Long Lidem, at
the estuary of the Lidem, a small tributary of the Kajang River. In the past, they moved about
in a wide area, encompassing some 1500 square miles that covered the headwaters of the
Balui River (the name given to the upper part of the Rejang River, the longest waterway in
Malaysia), and its tributaries of the Danum, Linau, Kajang, Bahau and the Kihan, tributary of
the Iwan River of Indonesia (see Map 8 Page 56). Rapids and waterfalls along the upper
parts of these rivers inhibited traveling and discouraged shifting cultivators from living here,
and in the past, only hunter-gatherers occupied this region. Until recently when logging
intruded, the area was covered with pristine rainforest vegetation. It was in this isolated
region that the Punan Vuhang lived from time immemorial.
This chapter is intended to provide an overview of the physical environment of the
Borneo rainforest in which the Punan Vuhang lived, and the way they had adapted to this
environment through the practice of their mobile economy. It concludes with an account
based on their oral history that shows how they responded to the external expansion of
hostile shifting cultivators into these environs.
Except for the first part describing the rainforest ecology, where I have made
references to the literature to complement the Punan Vuhangs knowledge of the
environment, my informants provided the rest of the information. Having experienced,
firsthand, life as it was when they were still mobile hunter-gatherers, they could recall in detail
much of what I have reconstructed and written here. Older informants narrated the oral
history while other knowledgeable informants helped to weave the fragments of this history
into a cohesive picture.
1

The Borneo Rainforest


The island of Borneo consists of an area over 270,000 square miles and is the third
largest island in the world. It lies across the equator and stretches from about 4 south of the
equator to 7 north. The climate is equatorial and the amount and pattern of rainfall varies
from place to place with most areas receiving 200 to 400 centimeters per year. While the
average rainfall is at least 10 centimeters in most months, the period from June to
September is considered a relatively dry season (Sellato 1994:9; Payne et al. 1985:26-28).
The natural vegetation consists of evergreen rainforest which is fabulously rich in both plant
and animal species (Whitmore 1990:58; 1995:5). The rainforest of Borneo contains
hundreds of animal species, many of them edible. Included are more than 200 mammal
species (including bats), about 350 species of birds, more than 200 species of reptiles and
more than 80 species of amphibians (Payne 1995:54).
The natural vegetation in tall lowland and hill forests up to 1000 m. altitude is
dominated by trees of the Dipterocarpaceae family which supports the highest diversity of
1

A detailed description of the rainforest can be found in Rajindra Puris ethnography of hunting among the
Penan Benalui in East Kalimantan (Puri 2005).

21

mammals (Payne et al. 1985:28). According to the rainforest ecologist and botanist,
Whitmore:
The Dipterocarpaceae are a family of numerous tree species centered in
Southeast Asia. . . . The greatest concentrations of dipterocarp species are found in
Sumatra, Malaya, and Borneo (Ashton 1982). Borneo alone has 9 genera and 287
species of dipterocarps. No tropical rainforests anywhere in the world are so
dominated by a single family of trees (1995:10-11).

The Dipterocarpaceae plant family provides a super abundance of fruit that feeds
wildlife during the major fruit season. Whitmore gives a further unique characteristic of this
plant family:
In addition to their abundance and species-richness, western Malesian
dipterocarps have another unique property, namely, gregarious flowering and
fruiting two or three times per decade. Across a large area, many, if not most,
dipterocarp species will flower within a few weeks of one another, even if no
1
flowering has occurred for several years (1995:11).

During the dipterocarp fruiting season, in various regions, the whole rainforest canopy is
covered with flowers and fruits, and the forest floor is littered with fruits (fieldwork). Besides
these abundant dipterocarp species, there are several other plant families that produce
edible fruit. According to another botanist, Soepadmo (1995:28), no fewer than 120 species
of wild trees in the tropical rainforests of Malesia produce edible fruits and often many fruit
trees in the same genus are found together. Notable examples are species in the genera
Artocarpus (Moraceae), Bouea, Mangifera (Anacardiaceae), Durio (Bombacaceae), Garcinia
(Clusiaceae), Lansium (Meliaceae), and Nephelium, Pometia and Xerospermum
(Sepindaceae). Citing Jensen et al. (1991), Soepadmo says that there are 389 kinds of
edible fruits and nuts in the tropical rainforest.
When these seasonal plants are not fruiting, according to Payne (1995:59), the wildlife
survives on keystone plant resources that do not fruit seasonally, but are available
throughout the year:
Trees and climbing plants of the Legume family (Fabaceae) are particularly
important in Malaysian forests in supplying foodincluding fruit, leaves, shoots,
flowers, and barksfor primates, squirrels, and possibly other mammals,
especially when fruits are scarce (Chivers 1980, Marsh and Wilson 1981). The
term keystone has been used to refer to plant resources, such as figs and
legumes, that play this type of prominent role in sustaining plant-eating animals
through periods of food scarcity (Terborgh 1986).

From these accounts, the Bornean rainforest may be seen as a resource base
containing food enabling the survival of its numerous species. This is in contrast to the Green
Desert theory (Dentan 1991:422), which asserts that despite the greatest biomass and the
greatest species diversity among all ecosystems of the world, most tropical rainforest plants
exist in the form of inedible woody tissue. The availability of keystone resources, therefore,
challenges the applicability of the Liebig Effect or Law of the Minimum that argues that during
1

Malesia is the name given to the heartland of a large area in Southeast Asia known to botanists as
stretching from the Malay Peninsula to Papua New Guinea (Whitmore 1995:5).

22

a period of great decline of vegetable food resources, most animals may migrate out of a
stricken area, thereby causing hunter-gatherers great difficulty in surviving, since both plant
foods and game are in decline. I will say more about this in later chapters, particularly when
discussing wild sago.
The Punan Vuhang Synchronized Calendar
From the viewpoint of food availability, an understanding of the former Punan Vuhang
mobile economy requires an analysis of the tropical rainforest from a human ecological
perspective. During the occurrence of a major fruit season when a great many forest trees
bore fruit, the Punan Vuhang experienced a season of fruit and game abundance. Outside
this major fruit season, only a negligible amount of forest vegetation bore fruit, and this
resulted in a much lower population of wildlife. Thus, the period of seasonal abundance
provided a time of high food yield, while, on the other hand, scarce food resources during
lean times required an intensified effort to survive.
The following is a description of how the seasonal aspects of rainforest resource
availability affected the Punan Vuhang economic system. It entails an observation of their
synchronized calendar in correspondence with the major fruit season, in which the Punan
Vuhangs methods of food acquisition were adapted to temporary resource abundance. In
contrast, the long lean period outside the major fruit season made necessary more strategic
and diversified methods of acquiring food.
The first month of the Punan Vuhang calendar began with the start of the flowering
season. Subsequently, the months that followed corresponded with further seasonal
changes in forest vegetation. A brief description of the tropical rainforest ecology helps to
show how the two phenomena are interrelated.
According to Whitmore, the abundance of food is associated with the animal breeding
season, and the lean period of low food production is correlated with minimum breeding
(1984:72). Studies by ecologists have shown that drought is associated with the gregarious
and synchronized flowering of forest trees which results in heavy fruiting, and the production
of new leaf flush (for example, Burgess 1972; Leighton and Leighton 1983, Longman and
Jenk 1987; Ng 1977, 1981; Whitmore 1984).
The fruit season is related to drought, as a long period of dry weather results in
waterstress that induces the shedding of leaves to reduce water loss in mature forest
vegetation. It is common for deciduous species to flower and fruit while the crown is bare
during the dry season (Whitmore 1984:66; Longman and Jenk 1987:186). On the other
hand, peak flowering in evergreen species occurs during the transition to the wet season
(Longman and Jenk 1987:186).
Besides drought, other factors contribute to this seasonal change of forest vegetation.
These include the concomitant rapid increase in the hours of sunshine with clear blue skies
(Whitmore 1984:69). The rapid drop in temperature that normally accompanies a sudden
tropical thunderstorm. . . or the relieving of water stress by the rain, can trigger flower opening
after a dry spell (Longman and Jenk 1987:189). With a sudden rainstorm, the bud initial is
chilled during its formation thus triggering blossoming (Whitmore 1984:70). Most of these
factors, as seen later, were signs observed by the Punan Vuhang to indicate the occurrence
of a major fruit season.
23

Another ecological factor is the phenomena of the major and minor fruit seasons.
Generally, a major fruit season occurs once every two years with heavy fruiting throughout
the region. In the following year a minor fruit season occurs with fruiting only occurring
intermittently across the land. Among the forest vegetation, the Dipterocarpaceae are
notorious for their infrequent fruiting and gregariousness. Whitmore writes that dipterocarps
in general fruit heavily every 2-3 years with occasional intervals of up to 5 years (1984:68).
This non-occurrence of fruiting every year suggests that a given tree may need a prolonged
period of physiological preparation before it is ready to respond to an external stimulus to
flower (1984:68-69). The Punan Vuhang regarded the season when most trees bore fruit as
a major fruit season, and the intervening years of few fruiting trees as minor fruit seasons. A
folktale that explains this irregularity of seasons appears later in this chapter.
Although it seems that periodic flowering is probably the rule for most tree species,
there are some tree species that flower continuously (Whitmore 1984:70). Leighton and
Leighton (1983) list some aseasonal plants that provide animals with major resource patches
during low fruiting periods. These plants, called keystone mutualists, permit the
maintenance of animal populations that have fixed home ranges and do not escape
unfavorable periods through migration. Such plants include the Melastomaceae and
Rubiaceae families as well as the Ficus species, the Annonaceae, the Meliaceae and the
Myristicaceae.
The description above, in particular the correspondence between drought and
flowering, fits the beginning of the cycle of what I call the Punan Vuhang synchronized
calendar. According to the Punan Vuhang, a long period of continuous drought, which the
Punan Vuhang called bohok unyat or bohok magahan (very long drought) would result in
barak bua (fruit flowering).
Besides the long drought, the Punan Vuhang believed the appearance of several signs
was necessary to assure that a major fruit season would come about. The first sign was
when the rising sun lit up the horizon with red sunlight, thus causing the day to start with a
warm morning. If the period of these days with intense sunlight was long, the fruit bearing
would be heavy. To initiate a major fruit season, the duration of this period of intense sunlight
should last for at least a month. The second sign was a result of the continuing dry season
that caused the lowering of river levels (pongehok) to expose shallow river beds. The third
indication was the presence of a kind of worm making deposits on submerged stones that
the Punan Vuhang called barak batuflowers on the stone. They believed that the more
deposits that were found on the stones, magahan barak batu, the greater the extent of the
flowering season.
They believed that at the end of the drought, the occurrence of a thunderstorm
(nyalapen) with flashing lightning (luru palati) would have a strong effect in inducing trees to
bloom. The strong wind (bayu) and heavy rain (hujan tohon) that accompanied the
thunderstorm, according to the Punan Vuhang, caused the flowers to open (muxit barak).
Following the thunderstorm, various types of mushrooms, especially the kulat bua,
flourished. Without an abundance of these mushrooms, the fruit season would be less
1
heavy. Two to three weeks later, the forest vegetation would begin to bloom.
1

The flowering of the lukukun fruit tree also indicated a major fruiting season. If it did not bloom, then the
year was a minor fruit season.

24

The appearance of flower buds marked the beginning of the cycle of a new year. The
Punan Vuhang considered the moon (langane) that appeared during this appearance of
flower buds as the first month (langane jik). After that, a numerical sequence recorded the
subsequent appearances of the moon, the second month was langane duo, the third month,
langane telo. This went on until the tenth month, langane pulo. Following that was a period
of unspecified length when the Punan Vuhang no longer marked the passing of the moon,
for they were then at the end of the cycle.
The sequence from the beginning of the flowering season (ngebarak) was as follows:
The flowers turned into full bloom and then petals dropped off during the second month. A
month later, the flowers turned into fruit buds (patup bua) and then matured into fruits in the
fourth month. Flowers matured at different rates, according to the tree species. From the
Punan Vuhangs experience, among the plants that first ripened were the oriu, tobo and
1
terbulu.
The ripening of oriu, terbulu and tobo, followed by molang and pusong in the fifth
month, marked the beginning of the fruit ripening season. Various types of fruit ripened
gradually, culminating in the peak fruit season during the seventh month, when most types of
fruit edible to humans (kun linau) were ripe for eating. Eventually all types of edible fruit
ripened, including avong, lapaun, lengakja, luyan, oit, pangin and the punuk. The edible
fruits that ripened last were the bavet, bua eh yin, keramu, mahak and opai. As the following
month passed, most fruits became overripe and began to drop at a very fast rate. This
indicated the passing of the edible fruit season. However, the eighth month was also the
beginning of the inedible fruit season, when fruits that only wild boar could consume (kun
bavui) began to ripen. These included the bayit, bua upak, kavakob, tason and terkalet. Two
months later, in the tenth month, all types of fruit became overripe. From then through the
following season of drought, the forest vegetation did not show any significant change to
indicate the passing of the seasons. This was the period which, unlike the others, was of
indefinite length and so the months (i.e., passing of the moons) were not counted. Counting
only began at the beginning of the next major fruiting season with the appearance of flower
buds.
In addition to the abundant flowering, another sign that indicated a heavy fruiting
season would come was the singing of the kali kevoh bird (Malacopteron affine; plain
babbler). Its melodious song at dawn signaled the bearing of fruit about three months later.
As the forest bloomed, honey bees (Apis dorsata; singot) began to arrive. Not long after, they
built massive beehives to contain honey from nectar and pollen that they had gathered from
the abundant flowers. At the height of the flowering season, many flies (languh) also
appeared.

Scientific names are provided in the text whenever available. The collection of plant specimens for
species identification was beyond the scope of this field study, but will be done in a future project.

25

Figure 1: Punan Vuhang Calendar Synchronized with Major and Minor Fruiting
Seasons

lean times begin

very small
game

small game

1
no time frame
big game 2 - 6 months
wild boar
migration
season
ends

10

affluent
times
end
fat wild
boar

trees
begin to
bloom

bearable
times
begin

drought

flowering

thin wild
boar

all fruits
season ends

flowering

honey
bearable
times

late
flowering

peak of inedible
fruit

festive
times

wild
8
boar
migration
season
begins

small
game

fruit
bearing

inedible* fruit
season begins /
edible fruit
season ends

peak
fruit
seaso

fruit
beginning
to ripen

5
ground
dwelling
game

good
times
begin

localized wild boar

good
times

affluent times begin

Note: In this calendar, the beginning of flowering after a long drought season and the appearance
of the first moon, mark the commencement of the first month. After that, a numerical sequence
records the subsequent appearances of the moon. However, due to irregularities in the time of
flowering during a minor fruiting season, the Punan Vuhang could not reliably determine the
beginning of the flowering season when their calendar would start, and so could not determine
when the end of their calendar would come.

26

Table 1: Economic Activities according to Month, Season, and Resources


During Nomadic Times
Month

Season

Resource

Main Economic Activities

st

appearance of flower
buds which then open
into full bloom

small game

sago processing, hunting with


blowpipes, fishing, trapping

nd

flowers mature and


petals drop off

returning wild boar


/ honey

sago processing, hunting with


dogs, honey collecting

rd

flowers turn into fruit


buds

small game

sago processing, hunting with


blowpipes, trapping

th

fruit buds turn into fruits

small game

sago processing, hunting with


blowpipes, trapping

th

fruits ripen

fruit / ground
dwelling game/
localized wild boar

sago processing, fruit


collecting, hunting with dogs,
trapping

th

mid-fruit season

fruit / localized wild


boar

fruit collecting, hunting with


dogs

th

peak fruit season

fruit / localized wild


boar

fruit collecting, hunting with


dogs

th

end of edible fruit


season

wild boar migration


season begins

hunting with dogs, lard


processing

peak of inedible fruit


season

peak of wild boar


migration season

hunting with dogs, spearing,


lard processing

10

season ends for all fruits

end of wild boar


migration season

hunting with dogs

beginning of
unspecified
time-period

beginning of lean time

Medium size
game: monkeys
and birds

sago processing, hunting with


blowpipes, fishing; trapping

end of
unspecified
time-period

seasonal drought begins

small game

sago processing, hunting with


blowpipes, fishing; trapping

beginning of inedible
fruit season
th

th

Usually, during the year following a major fruit season, only a few isolated areas had
trees bearing fruit. Even after a period of drought, the location of trees bearing fruit was
uncertain and the Punan Vuhang might not find fruit again for an entire year. Sometimes they
were fortunate and came across flowering or fruiting trees in their forest explorations. Then
they planned the timing of their movements to coincide with the ripening of the fruit. However,
the actual period of fruit ripening could not usually be determined with certainty. By merely
looking at the flowers or fruits, it was difficult to estimate the actual number of months that
27

had passed since the beginning of flowering. Only when the community happened to be
present at the earliest stage of flowering could they identify the first stage that indicated the
first month. Consequently, unless the Punan Vuhang witnessed the initial period of flowering
during a minor fruit season, they could not measure time according to their synchronized
calendar. For that matter, measured time ended at the end of a major fruit season. Due to
this uncertainty and unpredictability of encountering the early stage of flowering, the Punan
Vuhang did not bother giving a numerical sequence to the months after the end of the fruit
season.
The occurrence of the major and minor fruit seasons was a common and constant
phenomenon. The Punan Vuhang explained this situation with this version (shortened here)
of the suket story of Buring Besing Mek Tupok Meligoh (Buring Besing Quickly Pounding
Paddy).
One day Buring Besing went to fetch water by the river bank and she found the
river full of dead fish floating on the water surface. She quickly returned to her farm
house to pound paddy so that she could eat rice with a dish of the dead fish.
Because she was impatient to eat the fish, she pounded the mortar so furiously
and at such a fast speed that the pounding produced a loud thundering sound. The
loud sound startled a deer and it ran for its life. The deer ran so fast that it knocked
a vine that was entangled around a tree branch. The blow shook the vine which
snapped the tree branch and caused it to break. When the broken branch fell, it
dropped onto the son of an otter. When the otter found that its son had been killed
by the falling branch, it bit the branch.
The branch cried out, Why do you bite me?
Why wouldnt I bite you? You fell on my son and because of that he died.
So I am biting you to punish you! the otter countered.
Iah! Who wants to drop on your son? I broke from the tree because the vine
shook me, thus causing me to break. So it is not my fault that your son died.
Then the otter bit the vine and the vine cried out, Why do you bite me? The
otter answered that the vine deserved punishment for causing the death of his son.
So the vine blamed the deer for causing it to shake. Then the otter bit the deers
bottom. The same line of passing the blame continued and the otter bit Buring
Besing. Buring Besing explained that it was the dead fish that caused her to pound
the paddy so furiously so that she could eat the fish with rice. The otter then bit the
dead fish. As the suket story is told, the dead fish asked,
Iah! Why do you bite me?
Why wouldnt I bite you? You died and floated on the river. Then Buring
Besing saw you and wanted to eat you right away. She then pounded rice so
furiously that her loud pounding startled the deer. Because of that, the deer ran for
its life and knocked into a vine which shook and caused a branch to snap. The
branch dropped on my son and it killed my son. So you are the cause of his death.
Iah! Who wants to die? It is the palajeu tree that bears so many flowers.
When the flowers dropped on the river, we were hungry and so we ate the flowers.
It is the flowers that poisoned us and so we died. We didnt die on purpose, it
wasnt our intent to die.
Then the otter bit the tree. The tree put the blame on Kun Kakap, the name of
a bird. The tree said it was the bird which caused it to bear so many flowers. So the
otter scolded the bird. He blamed it for his sons death and demanded that the bird
return to its place of origin. The bird tried to explain but the otter refused to listen. In
shame, Kun Kakap flew back to its home.
Then there was no fruit for a long, long time. All the animals then gathered and
discussed what they should do. The otter was remorseful and explained that it was
his fault for chasing the bird away. Finally, a butterfly volunteered to fly all the way
across the seas to plead for the birds return. So the butterfly flew day and night.
When it became tired it hitched a ride on a piece of driftwood and floated on it.
Finally after flying for many days, it came to the land of the bird.

28

The butterfly pleaded with the bird to return and help make fruit. Kun Kakap
explained that he created fruit in the world because he was sympathetic to all lives.
Unfortunately, his action was not appreciated and instead he was blamed for the
otters death. He became so ashamed of being chased away that he swore never
to return to the world again. However, he changed his stance because of his
sympathy for the world. He decided to give his son to the world to help create the
fruit. He gave an egg to the butterfly and instructed the butterfly to bring it back.
When the bird had hatched, the butterfly would bring him up and tell it to create fruit.
However, Kun Kakap warned that because the young bird would grow up without
any instructions on how to create fruit, it would not be able to create fruit all over the
world.
So the butterfly flew back with the egg. When the bird hatched, the butterfly took
care of it. When it became big, the butterfly explained the reason for being with him
and informed him of his role in creating fruit. As the young bird did not know how to
make fruit properly, it could only make fruit in a few places. After a few years, Kun
Kakap would fly back to the world to help create fruit, thus resulting in the major fruit
season. For this reason, in some years, only one or two rivers have fruit trees
yielding fruit. It is only in certain years that trees bear fruit throughout the region.
This story explains the occurrence of the major and minor fruit seasons (see Jayl
Langub 2001: 9-17, 18-24 for a Penan variant of this tale).

The Punan Vuhang synchronized calendar also showed the types of non-fruit
resources that were available during each phase of the cycle. As can be seen in Table 1, the
types of these resources conformed to the seasonal stages of flowering and fruit growth. An
examination of how these two factors interrelate shows that the seasonal availability of fruit,
in turn, determined the non-fruit resources available to the Punan Vuhang, especially game.
From the first to the fourth month, when the trees were in full bloom, the Punan Vuhang
1
were only able to hunt small game if they had already been in an area for a long time.
Meanwhile, during the third month, beehives contained the highest yield of honey, as the
bees had collected nectar for several months. After that, the flowers dried and then turned
into fruit buds which deprived the bees of nectar. From the fifth to the tenth month, the Punan
Vuhang took in a variety of fruit and game, although their main hunting focus was on wild
boar whenever it was available.
In the tenth month, when most fruit trees had stopped bearing, the animals began to
disperse widely to forage for increasingly scarce food. Until the following fruit ripening
season, very little food was available. The animals then had to rely on a diversity of foods, for
example, leaf shoots, roots, berries, insects, worms, snails and crabs. This scarcity of food
continued until the following fruit season.
The occurrence of a fruit season determined the availability of wildlife as well as the
former foraging activities of the Punan Vuhang. Fruit collection became the main task of
every community member during the fruit-ripening season. Hunting for wild boar became the
principal occupation of all men during the wild boar migration season. On other hand, during
phases of food scarcity, the Punan Vuhang used a variety of strategies to acquire sparse
food resources in order to survive.

The fourth month was an exception, as returning wild boar passed by the Punan Vuhang territory, see
page 100.

29

To better understand how their economic activities depended on seasonal factors, I will
describe these former practices starting from the fruit ripening season, that is, during the third
1
month. At the beginning of the season, most types of fruit that ripened initially were sour
and had thin layers of flesh. The Punan Vuhang ate these fruits as snacks. Fruit that ripened
later consisted of two types, sugar-rich fruit that contained high levels of carbohydrates, and
lipid-rich fruit with high fat content that provided much nourishment. Fruits that fell into this
nutritious category were, for example, luyan, beliti, punuk and keramu. As these fruits
ripened and matured in increasing abundance, the Punan Vuhang began to rely on fruit as a
source of staple food other than the usual sago starch. For about four months, fruit became
the major source of food. This period therefore was the beginning of an affluent time with
food in abundance. Members of the community jointly collected fruit and camped at locations
with concentrations of fruit groves. Households on their own, or individuals by themselves,
collected fruit in areas where fruit was less prolific.
At the same time as the fruit was ripening, various types of ground-dwelling animals
came to feed on the overripe fruit that fell to the ground. The presence of so many animals
provided the Punan Vuhang with a great opportunity to trap them. This game included a
population boom of juvenile animals whose births were triggered by the flowering season.
The setting of noose traps provided meat to supplement their diet of carbohydrates. At the
same time, the fallen fruits enabled wild boar to concentrate their foraging in small areas
scattered over a wide territory. By using hunting dogs, the Punan Vuhang could easily hunt
these wild boar.
In the eighth month, the edible fruit (kun linau) season ended, but the inedible fruits
(kun bavui) then began to ripen. These fruits of the Dipterocarp family, that included the bua
manator and tason, provided abundant food for the migrating wild boars that soon arrived.
These wild boars were very fat as they had been abundantly feeding for several months
since they began their migration from distant forests. From the eighth to the tenth month,
during the wild boar migration season, hunters killed fat pigs and processed them into lard
(lanye a preserved form of oil). When a hunter killed a fat pig, he sliced off the thick slabs of
fat to take back to the camp, and then abandoned the remains of the carcass. During the
season when the migration was at its peak, a hunter could kill up to six or eight usually
juvenile pigs in a single day. The amount of lard that a hunters household could process
limited the number of wild boars that a hunter would kill (see Footnote, page 98).
With the abundance of fat wild boar, hunters enjoyed a hunting sport called kusi. For
this, a hunter tracked down a wild boar without the aid of hunting dogs. This required special
skills, and an even greater ability to spear the wild boar at a very close range before the pig
detected the hunter. As a sport, a hunter would hunt as many pigs as possible, but chose
only the big and fat ones, and then carry back only a few slabs of fat. As proof of the number
of pigs he had killed, he would take back all their tails. A month or two later, depending on the
years amount of fruit, the inedible fruit season ended. Then, the animals which migrated (as
opposed to the ones which stayed in one location, feeding on keystone species) moved on

For the sake of clarity, I begin my description with the third month of the major fruiting cycle. The
availability of food during the first two months was similar to that of the unspecified time period during the
previous cycle.

30

to other areas where the fruit would ripen later. This marked the end of the affluent time of the
year.
After the ending of the food abundance season, the unspecified time period began.
This could extend for more than a year if the Punan Vuhang were unfortunate enough to
entirely miss the minor fruit seasons that took place only in some areas. Otherwise, they
could hunt fruit-foraging wild boar (bavui tone) for a short period and consume some fruit. Not
long after this, the Punan Vuhang were forced to fall back on sago as their staple food. As
they faced difficulty in hunting wild boar, hunters began to search for varieties of game they
did not hunt earlier. Initially, medium size game such as monkeys and birds were the focus of
their blowpipe hunting. However, these animals later became cautious (usam) and escaped
before less skillful hunters had the chance to shoot them. They even developed avoidance
habits to elude hunters who attempted to track them (see page 108). Then the hunters
shifted their strategy and used blowpipes to hunt smaller animals that they had ignored
earlier. These included tree shrews, squirrels and various types of small birds. These small
animals provided a little nutrition until the people soon moved on to areas where animals
were unfamiliar with human hunters and could be more easily killed.
Although mainly using blowpipes, the Punan Vuhang also set noose traps across the
low hill ridges to trap ground-dwelling animals. To supplement their diet, they fished. After
torrential rainfalls had caused rivers to swell, they set fish traps in the subsiding tributaries.
On the main river they also set fish traps when the water had subsided for a few days. In dry
weather when the river was low and the water was clear, they speared larger fish with
harpoons, while women used lines and hooks to catch small fish. Some men who were
diligent (bahik) in seeking food looked around, lifting logs to search for pythons or pangolins,
or looked for sago worms. During this period of scarcity, the Punan Vuhang had to put in
great effort to hunt for game spread out over a large area.
On the fourth month after the flowering season, the return of migrating wild boar that
had gone upriver during the previous season broke the monotonous scarcity of food. After all
the fruit trees along their migration route had finished bearing, these wild boar returned
downriver to their places of origin. They quickly passed through Punan Vuhang territory as
too little food was available on their way back to prolong their foraging. By then they had
become very thin. Despite this, the pigs gave an opportunity for hunting, thus providing some
meat during this lean period. The Punan Vuhang then turned to gathering honey when it was
at its peak yield. Then, they went through a month of scarcity. Shortly after, however, the fruit
bearing season began. A few months later, the fruit ripening season started and the Punan
Vuhang experienced again a period of abundance.
This account of the Punan Vuhangs synchronized calendar is at variance with what
Sellato reports: In this equatorial environment, where seasons are hardly perceptible, most
resources are available all year round, and those which are not (fruits, wild pig) are
unpredictable. There is no recurring annual event, no cycle, to give a rhythm to the passage
of time for the Punan (1994:144).
Not only are there clear seasons, the Punan Vuhang recognize events leading to
major fruiting and the new cycle of abundance following the period of scarcity which is of
varying duration. The accounts of thunderstorms preceding flowering and the creation of

31

flowers by the Kun Kakap bird are similiar to the stories of the Batek hunter-gatherers living in
the rainforest of Peninsular Malaysia:
This distant rumbling [thunderstorms] is supposed to be the thunder-god, Gobar,
signalling the superhuman beings to drop the fruit blossoms on to the earthly fruittrees. . . . where they enter the limbs of fruit-trees and cause flower buds to burst
out (Endicott 1979:56).

The Mobile Economy


We have seen how the Punan Vuhang viewed the natural world they inhabited and the
way they organized themselves around the seasonal availability of foods, and the
relationship between the rainforest ecology and the nomadic economy of the Punan Vuhang
based on their mobility. This information provides the foundation for our understanding of
their hunting and gathering system which depended on the natural occurrence of resources.
The characteristics of the Bornean rainforest ecology described show the existence of a wide
variety of seasonal foods, and the depiction of the synchronized food calendar elaborates the
Punan Vuhangs view of this natural phenomenon. Integrating these two features, the
seasonal availability of food and the synchronized calendar, enables us to reconstruct their
mobile economy, providing the basis to understand how these hunter-gatherers were able to
rely exclusively on the rainforest for food. Building on this, later chapters provide some idea of
the social aspects of production and details on various methods of food acquisition.
The Punan Vuhang today no longer practice many of the economic activities described
here. The community has been settled permanently for the last two and a half decades, and
has now adopted a chiefly horticultural economy with rice cultivation as a vital component.
This horticultural economy, as it now exists, is discussed separately in Chapter 9.
Nonetheless, the Punan Vuhang, remain, to some degree, a hunting and gathering people in
that they continue to hunt and to collect wild plants for food, although the extent of their
hunting and gathering is no longer as significant as it was in the past. For clarity, all their
hunting and gathering practices are here described in the past tense, although it is to be
understood that some have continued through to the present, although now the foods
collected by hunting and gathering merely supplement their cultivated rice, tapioca and
bananas.
Based on the tropical rainforest ecology and their dependence on the natural
occurrence of food resources, the former hunter-gatherers practiced a nomadic economy
rooted in mobility. The following description is a reconstruction of activities that, prior to 1968,
1
characterized this nomadic economy. In the past, the Punan Vuhang moved from one river
system to another after consuming the resources of each system in turn. The account that
follows focuses on the thorough exploration and exploitation of resources carried out in each
river system.

This description mainly applies to the lean time during the non-fruit season when food was scarce and
the Punan Vuhang had to rely on a great variety of resources, in particular, sago. During affluent times
when food was in abundance, they did not have to move about so frequently. Instead, they stayed in an
area with a concentration of fruit trees or along major wild boar migration routes.

32

When the nomadic community occupied a river system for an extended period, from
several weeks to a few months, they in time exhausted the available food in the area. The
community members then found it increasingly difficult to obtain sago and game. Frequently
members searched far and wide for scattered sago groves, including camping overnight
(misan luq) to process sago in distant locations. Hunters ventured far away from their usual
hunting grounds, going up to highland areas and mountain ranges to search for game. With
increasing frequency, hunters faced low hunting yields. Even when successful, they usually
obtained only small game that barely sustained their own household.
Then, the elders called attention to the deteriorating conditions and the intense effort
needed to acquire food. The community leader (kejian or kotokek) called for a meeting
(putuhok). He expressed his concern that the river system could no longer sustain them and
asked his followers to consider moving to a new area. Members were likely to agree and
support the idea to move.
After reaching a consensus to leave, they chose the new area to which they would
move. Although the community preferred to go to a river system with maximum resources,
the health of community members and the distance were overriding factors in the selection of
a new location. The decision had to take into account the weak members and the old. If
anyone could not undertake a long and difficult journey, the community chose a location that
avoided climbing and crossing high mountain ranges. Nonetheless, if there was no choice
but to go far away, young men would take turns carrying the infirm in their kalong baskets.
There was a case in which an old infirm man who had no relatives was abandoned at
the camp when the community had to go to a very far land. Later, when young members
went back to give him food and then carry him to the new site, he was already dead. The
man had died with dignity, as he did not finish the food left for him. The Punan Vuhang
believed that he chose an early death for he did not want to further burden the community. If
he had remained alive they would have had to carry him whenever they moved camp.
During these periods of food scarcity, the community divided itself into two groups in
order to go to different areas. This division into groups with fewer members put less pressure
on the limited resources. One group moved into its usual territory in the upriver regions of the
Kajang, the Linau, and the Kihan rivers. The other group covered the lower Kajang and midLinau areas. In lean times, this strategy provided them with a wider base for food. The fission
was mutual and as stated by Sellato, It is probable that an increase in population within a
band, making the search for food more difficult, often plays a role in band fission (1994:146).
This is in contradiction to Elliss statement that the Punan Vuhang, after discussing the
increasing scarcity of sago palms in their region, could come to no consensus as to a
solution and separated into two bands (Sellato 1994:146 citing Ellis 1972a: 237).
Observation of Taboos in Mobility
When the community decided to separate, they observed the adet terkakjeh taboo
(see page 202). According to this taboo, the community could only separate into different
groups by each group leaving on a different day, so that all would never leave at the same
time. The group that possessed less food, hence having a more urgent need to leave, would
go first. Auguries (behok) were taken into consideration at this point. Along the way, if they
met any unfavorable augury, they would return to camp for a night. Consequently, the
33

second group would also have to delay their departure. On the next day, if the first group
again met an unfavorable augury, they would have to return once more. However, the
Punan Vuhang seldom met with bad omens a second time. If there were still another
unfavorable augury on the third attempt, they would abandon their journey and follow the
second group that had yet to leave. The Punan Vuhang believed that the occurrence of so
many bad omens indicated an ill-fated journey.
With the first group successfully gone, the second group would take their turn to leave.
Similarly, they also observed auguries. If auguries prevented them from carrying out their
journey, they would abandon it and follow the first group. The observation of auguries
continued once they had set out. Even after both groups had successfully left the camp, if
one group later repeatedly faced unfavorable auguries, they would abandon their journey
and follow the other group. The Punan Vuhang did not mention the occasion of both groups
similarly experiencing such unfavorable auguries. Usually, it was one group that faced
obstacles along the way with the other having a smooth journey.
Exploration into a New Area, Nasok Tanok Lehik
This section continues the description of traveling to show how the community moved
into a new territory to continue their quest for food resources. The decision to go to another
area involved the choice between moving into one that had been occupied before, or moving
somewhere entirely new. As the Punan Vuhang have lived in the present region since the
dawn of the 20th century, they are now familiar with the territory. However, as the
ethnohistory section later indicates, the community had originally migrated from their
ancestral grounds over a long distance. To be able to travel to a new and unfamiliar area, the
Punan Vuhang used two methods of exploration which I have reconstructed below on the
1
basis of narrative descriptions by my informants.
The first way was a gradual exploration by hunters who explored an entire river
system before the community entered to live in the area. They obtained detailed information
about the physical layout of the ground, tracing access routes and looking for collecting and
hunting areas to identify suitable locations for later encampments. The other way was exactly
the opposite. In the second method, the communitys movement to a new area followed the
tracing of access routes by scouts. The community immediately moved to a new place to
camp for the night while the scouts would find a new route for the next leg of the journey.
Even in the midst of others setting camp, the scouts would continue their exploration further.
In this way, the Punan Vuhang were able to travel a long distance over a short period by
camping overnight at locations progressively closer to a new river system. In contrast, the
method of gradual movement allowed the community to exploit an area for a longer time
before moving. The gradual method was preferred because it assured the community a
much greater degree of certainty regarding the availability of food. They only used the
second way when there was pressure to leave a place in which they had long lived, such as

The ethnohistory section describes the various watershed systems that they used to travel from the
Balui headwaters into their present territory (see Map 6, page 54 and Map 8, page 56). Map 8 shows
some major access routes between river systems.

34

when fleeing from hostile people who had come close to their territory. These two methods of
moving were similar except that the time taken to complete a move differed.
The following is a description of how a hunter, or a group of scouts, explored the land
as they went into a new area. For clarification, a list of terminology that the Punan Vuhang
used to describe the landscape and their journey is found below (see page 38). Also
included are diagrams. Figure 3 shows the concepts used to indicate traveling up a slope
that contained short lengths of descending and ascending stretches (berkatih). Figure 4
shows the terminology used in the nyeliou method.
From their experience, the Punan Vuhang knew that across the other side of a
mountain range lay another river or drainage system, sharing the same watershed. They
traveled up the range (interfluve), crossed over at the top (divide) and then descended down
1
the other side to the river below.
At the starting point of a journey, a scout first would select a tributary that had a
wide estuary (laput). The width showed it to be a main tributary that led to the top of the
range (tup paknyat). Depending on the physical characteristics of the river, he could choose
to begin exploration along the river or by starting overland. If the river was small and shallow,
the person trekked upriver in the shallow riverbed 1 (the numbers refer to Figure 2, page
39). Usually the stretch of a stream near the mouth of a big tributary contained many
meandering bends (tunyui) that wandered over the landscape.
At the bend of a meander, he would walk overland (kea ulong 2) to the other portion
of the river, thus bypassing the bend. Facing another meander, he crossed the river and
again bypassed the overland loop. On a long bend that curved around a slope, he climbed
the hillside to descend to the other bend, thus making the journey much shorter. On a
straight section of the river (luang tutu), he merely walked in the riverbed until he faced a
meander again.
When he reached a confluence of the stream that forked out into two equal sized
streams (palaput bongok 3), he would ascend (kea nyat 4) the slope that rose between
them. From there he ascended (nakarong) the slope (bulukuk) that became the main access
route to reach the top of the hill (lemakje bulukuk 5). He went on until he came across
obstacles that hindered his movement, such as a steep slope (tanok terkaket) or rocky
surfaces (tanok batu). At that point he shifted his trekking by walking by the stream (if the
stream had a gentle gradient to allow an easy walk) or would cross the slope on the other
side of the valley to continue the climb. By this walking along the river and up the slope, he
would go up all the way to the top of the ridge or range.
The slope that led to the ridge was not a stretch that led straight there, but contained
short lengths of descending and ascending stretches (berkatih, See Figure 3). After going
down the descending stretch (6 and 7), he continued to climb the rising slope, called pun
berkatih 8 to differentiate it from the bulukuk the stretch of slope that rose from the
lowland by the river (bulukuk pun berkatih 5). On this stretch of higher slope, the scout

Following Gabler et al. (1994:427), [t]he higher lands separating one valley from the next are called
interfluves or interfluvial ridges.... On an interfluve that separates two stream systems, there is an
imaginary line called a divide. On one side of the divide all surface runoff flows toward one stream
system, while on the other side runoff flows toward another stream system. [Emphasis original].

35

continued his walk up (nakarong) and down (marun). He maintained his uphill journey on the
top of the slope (lemakje bulukuk or pun nyat 9) until he reached an elevation that was
nearer or the same height as the top point of the range (10), and that formed the topmost
1
part of the stream.
Instead of continuing to climb from that place, which would entail a longer journey, he
changed his direction and walked on the edge of the slope (nyeliou koh-10a) which was
usually of a quite gentle gradient. As the ascending degree of slant had decreased
considerably, the trekking was now more relaxed as he made for the head of the stream
(latung laut sungei). This part of the range was also the section that met the head of the
stream that flowed on the other side of the range, thus forming the watershed (soak) of both
streams (11). On top of the range, the scout chose which of the two streams to follow to get
down to the river below.
(1) He could cross the range (nukuvok tanok) and go directly (kapen irab) down. To
do that, he first would explore the surrounding area to identify the best way to descend.
Usually the top of a watershed (latung laut sungei) had a low gradient, thus allowing him to
easily descend directly from the range marun tupuit koh vak. Then he would walk down
into the catchment or run-off area of the stream that has no running water except during
2
torrential downpours. The dry basin, called bisirok (12), eventually led down to the top part
of the stream with flowing water. He continued his journey down the stream (nyovu lanum)
until he faced obstacles such as a waterfall (oven) that made it difficult to continue downward.
From that point he would walk on the side of the slope, at the same elevation (nyeliou) until
he reached the top stretch of the declining slope, and then continued his descent (See
Figures 3 and 4). In this way, he went down, walking on top of the slope when it provided a
better way. He followed the stream when it had a gentle gradient, thus alternating the route
until the confluence of the stream with the main river was reached.
(2) On the other hand, if the uppermost part of the stream had many obstacles, the
scout descended down one of the two adjacent declining slopes. These slopes that cradled
the stream provided a much better way to descend than walking on top of the range to
search for another stream. Therefore, he headed toward the slope, walking on land that was
of almost the same elevation as the headstream (nakarong pun tanok-11a). This method,
called nyeliou, allowed him to reach the top stretch of the declining slope without need to
climb further. From there onwards, he descended to the river below (kuvuk koh sok bisirok12), alternating moving down along the stream or the slope, whenever he met obstacles.
While the scouts and hunters were exploring the land, they established a mental map
that encompassed all the river systems and their tributaries, as well as access routes that
criss-crossed the region. This mental map not only enabled them to travel all over the region,
but also provided information for telling people how to go to a particular place. For example,
when the Punan Vuhang were at the Laput Ase River on the Kajang River, a group of
1

Continuing on the slope would lead them to the meeting point between the slope and the range, called
pun sap nyat bongok, which was usually the higher part of the range. From there, if they had descended
to the head of the stream, they would have wasted both time and energy.
2

During normal rainfall, the runoff was intercepted by vegetation cover such as roots, absorbed by humus
and filtered into the ground.

36

hunters wanted to hunt leaf-moneys for bezoar stones at the Lesong River of Kalimantan.
They had never been there and the old men who had been there were too weak to
undertake the long journey to go with them. Consequently, the old men recited the access
routes (pukulap nuo) every night for an entire week until the young hunters had memorized
the information. When the hunters returned from their hunting expedition, they affirmed the
accuracy of the information which had been given to them, as they had reached the distant
Lesong with ease. The surviving members who had participated in the hunting expedition are
Nyinyang, Riyek, Kilat, Sabung, Langat and Rahut.
In creating a map, they identified distinctive features of the land as reference points
(talanak) that led to different routes or to specific locations. Besides the features mentioned
above, landmarks noted in the mental territorial map which had permanent distinguishing
1
features were as follows:
batu orun
pun kayu
batang
oven
peluru
lalit guat

boulders
a huge tree with a big buttress
a fallen log of hardwood across or along a path
waterfall
a steeply descending stretch of river where water flows
smoothly on the river bed
exposed roots on the embankment of a river

As they traveled, the scouts looked for signs of resources especially sago that the
community could harvest later. The community remained at a location for some time if a
particular river system had abundant sago, such as, for example, the Peluan tributary at the
Linau, the Betlaup-Sulen watershed at the Kajang, and the Kihan in Kalimantan. From areas
2
lacking sago, like the Bahau River, they soon moved on.
The Punan Vuhang also established access routes to evade pursuing enemies. They
walked in shallow rivers with river beds which had been formed by pebbles, gravel and
boulders so that their trekking would not leave any footprints that could be traced by
enemies. Also, they preferred routes that were accessible to other escape routes leading to
several places, to give them a range of choices. They would select a strategic spot for
camping that was difficult to trace and access. If the camp location was discovered by
enemies, it should be easy to defend, such as a slope surrounded by cliffs or a ravine. When
they came across a cave, they explored its suitability as a hiding place, preferring one with a
small mouth concealed by heavy growth. It should also have contained separate
passageways to different exit points. Otherwise, if the enemies were to find them hiding in
the cave, they would make a big fire and smoke out the Punan Vuhang.

Due to the collective sum of memories of the elder members, mistakes were seldom made.
Nonetheless, there were a few individuals who were especially skilled in tracing access routes to distant
areas.
2

However, they took note of the vegetation in the Bahau as comprising many fruit trees, including those
that bore fruit which only wild boar consumed. Consequently, during the wild boar migration season, they
could go there to hunt wild boar that had become extremely fat, eating the abundant fruit.

37

Terminology for Trekking Overland


laput
kabai
kejuai

nakarong
ke nyat

bulukuk
pun nyat

lemakje pun
nyat
pak nyat
botak
paknyat
botak ayok

estuary of a tributary
land on the downstream side
of the tributary
land on the opposite side
the upstream side of the
tributary
ascending
the place of intersection
between the tributary and the
river
slope that rises to a higher
slope
higher part of a slope that
converges with a ridge or a
range
top stretch of a slope
ridge between two rivers, e.g.
Kajang and Bukor
range between two main river
systems
mountain range separating
two major river systems

tup tanok
berkatih
tukgah
berkatih

peak of a hill or mountain


a stretch with descending and
ascending gradient
descending part of the slope, in
relation to the river

matan
berkatih
pun
berkatih

lowest point of the berkatih

marun

descends

nukuvok

crossing (verb); terms for crossing,


e.g. the matan berkatih and the
range
very steep slope

tanok
terkaket
kelikit

stretch of ascending slope

changing direction of trekking

nyeliou

trekking on the side of a slope

soak

Interfluves, the stretch of higher


lands separating one valley from
the next

Terminology for Trekking Along a Watercourse


laput

estuary

kelipah

murik

toward upriver

tuvak

toward downriver

makeh
ulong pak
nyat
palaput

luang tutu

a considerable straight stretch


of river

palaput
bongok

tunyui

a meandering part of the river

bisirok

kea ulong

to bypass the meandering


section by walking over land
to the other section of the river
heading downriver

latung laut
sungei

nyovu

38

to cross the river to the opposite


bank
to cross a slope and bypass a long
stretch of river bend
confluence of a side stream into the
river
confluence of the river that
branches out to form two equal
sized rivers
lowest part of the valley, between
slopes, that is usually dry
land on top of a river, below the
range

39

40

41

Exploration in a New Area


Now we turn to how the Punan Vuhang explored a territory in detail to gather
information on the physical layout of a new river system. Even though hunters might have
already identified major sites where sago palms were present, they continued mapping out
the entire river system. This detailed information facilitated a thorough utilization of minor
resource locations.
Upon arrival at the river, the community immediately set up camp near a sago site that
1
the scouts had discovered during the initial exploration. The next day, various households
set out for the main sago ground to process food. When the sago was abundant, the sago
starch that they had newly acquired would last for a few days.
While the community was consuming this sago starch, the men explored the territory
surrounding the camp to search for more sago and to establish hunting grounds. Each man
systematically explored a specific area. Based on the demarcation of considerable-sized
tributaries, each person explored an area situated within two parallel tributaries. From the
camp, the explorer trekked up along the tributary by walking on top of a slope that led to the
ridge. As the ridge lay parallel to the main river below, the ridge and the river confined his
exploration area. Along the way, he looked for sago palms or a tree that monkeys would
forage for foliage. He made marks by cutting vines and thorns and some undergrowth to help
trace his way back. Otherwise, in unfamiliar territory, it would take more time for him to find
his way back. To return, he used the same route that he had tracked earlier. When the
distance he covered was significantly far, he turned around soon enough to reach camp
before sunset.
Over the next one or two days, he would continue his travels along the top of the ridge
to look for an average size watershed. This watershed would form a tributarys drainage
system that would discharge rain water into the river below. Then, using the tributary as his
landmark, he walked down the slopes towards the river. On arriving at the river bank, he
walked along the river to go back to his camp, thus circling the area. Within that circle, he
continued exploring the land and hunted at the same time. On each track that he made, he
left marks to establish trails. Eventually he created a series of jungle paths that criss-crossed
the entire area. He formed a mental map of the region and resource locations in it. For major
landmarks, he memorized their features in his mental map. When the community would
return to this location years later, he would not have to explore the site again by going
through another tedious and time consuming exploratory procedure.
Similarly, other men systematically explored their areas to establish their own mental
maps. Each man shared vital information on major landmarks, such as main tributaries and
hill slopes that could serve as main routes. They also described important landmarks to
indicate reference points. These marks included hill tops, the convergence of tributaries and
ridges, waterfalls (oven), salt-licks (tasapan), huge hardwood trees, mature fruit trees and big

Along the way, depending on the distance, the community required a few days to travel. They camped
overnight as they traveled.

42

boulders (batu orun). All these routes and reference points became permanent features of
their shared mental maps.
Through this method of exploration, memorization, and shared information, the Punan
Vuhang established a detailed network of routes that covered the entire river system. Their
knowledge not only covered the tributaries names, but also included the side streams that
constituted the watershed of each tributary. For example, the side streams of the Sengayan
River are the Sik and Lavavang. They knew the access routes into the hinterland and the
exact locations of major resources. The details of the landscape became so precise in their
mental maps that hunters could even predict the fleeing direction of wild boar pursued by
1
their hunting dogs.
From the mental maps of these landscapes, the Punan Vuhang established major
routes that connected the entire headwaters region of the Bahau, Kajang, Linau, Danum and
Kihan Rivers. Up to the present day, despite never having ventured into those areas again,
elderly informants claim they can still trace routes into the Danum River. For areas like the
Kihan, the Linau and the Bahau, informants still retain a clear mental map of the main routes
that lead there, even though the community has been settled permanently for the last two
decades and has seldom returned to those places (see Brosius 1986:173-84) for a detailed
description of the Penan perspective on the landscape).
Mobility within a River System
While the previous section dealt with general exploration of a new area and then
exploring within it to establish resource grounds, this section describes mobility and resource
utilization within a river system. Each time the community arrived at a new river valley, they
would begin a new cycle of resource consumption. Not long after, they would again deplete
the sources of food, especially sago, within the vicinity of the camp. Then the community
moved to another campsite to continue obtaining food.
The decision to select a direction of movement and the location of campsites within a
new river system required little consideration as the community naturally moved in one
direction. Only the location of the second camp at the new area would require planning. The
determining factor was deciding whether land upriver or downriver of the camp had better
resources. As the hunters had already explored the valley to identify major resource sites,
the choice of direction was not a difficult one to make. If the upriver areas showed better
potential, they then moved in that direction in all future camp relocations; otherwise they
moved downriver.
The community reached the next selected campsite within a day as the distance
between the old site and the new camp was usually less than a days walk. As such, there
would be no need to camp overnight before reaching the next site. From the knowledge of
the details of the landscape, the community easily determined the location of each camp site.
It should have been in a spacious flat area to accommodate all the shelters, and near a
stream with flowing water for cooking and washing. The campsite should also have been

According to informants, when a wild boar fled from the hunting dogs, it would flee uphill. Eventually, due
to its weight, it could not outrun the dogs and then would turn downhill, and heads towards a stream or a
river.

43

near a source of abundant thatch leaves so that the people could easily gather leaves for the
roofs of their shelters.
Before the day of moving, adult members first sent (pulujuk) their belongings ahead to
the new campsite. These belongings included sago processing tools, clothes and sago
starch, if the household still had much sago. The household head carried these belongings
inside a sago filtering basket (yut) that he put inside a larger carrying basket (kalong). Upon
arrival at the campsite, the members cleared the undergrowth, and cut trees with dead
branches. These trees posed great danger as dead branches might break and fall on the
camp. After clearing the undergrowth, the men collected tree trunks of about two inches in
diameter (kayu laroh) for making the frames of the shelters (lapo). The women, meanwhile,
1
went in groups to collect thatch leaves for the roofs (ingoh). Depending on the structure of
the shelters, they made several trips to collect these building materials. While the men
constructed the shelters, the women wove and plaited the thatch leaves into a sheet of
rainproof roofing. After a man completed the structure, he put the thatch cover over the roof.
He then tied a few pieces of heavy wood on top of the leaves (oram batang) to keep the
thatch from being blown away by any strong winds. After they completed the new shelters,
the men and their spouses returned to the old campsite.
The Punan Vuhang constructed types of shelters based on the availability of sago at
the campsite. When it was limited and the campground was level, they built simple lean-to
huts (lapo bono) with platforms on the ground. On a slope, they would make a partially raised
platform with one end resting on the ground (lapo le). The other roof end also lay on the
ground. These simple huts (lapo bono and lapo le) required merely a few hours to build. If the
food sources were abundant and sufficient to sustain the community for up to two or three
months, they constructed more durable shelters (lapo luek), making a resting camp that
allowed them to stay put for the entire duration of resource exploitation there. The lapo luek
had elevated flooring covered with tree bark (pupak). It was larger than the two simple
shelters and so had much more space in which to move around. The lapo luek consisted of
two types, the lapo porah, with only one roof (muvung) and the lapo jungap, in which a lower
portion of roof (jungap kabai) was connected to the main roof. With the extended roof, the
lapo jungap was the more spacious of the two. These spacious and more complex shelters
required a few days to build. Consequently, the men would build the lapo bono first and then,
when they had acquired sufficient food, construct the lapo luek.
On the night before the community moved, the household heads and their spouses
made plans for the next day, when the main group of community members would travel to
the new campsite. Since they had already completed the shelters and taken their belongings
ahead, the adult members did not have to travel immediately to the camp. Instead, they
could do other things such as search for food along the way. If the starch for the household
was in short supply, the household head and his spouse processed the sago they found
near the traveling route. Sago processing on the day of departure was called navan basak.
On the other hand, if the starch was sufficient for one or two days consumption, the women

The main leaves used were the Licuala valida Becc. (silat). Others included Licuala orbicularis (no);
Areca borneensis (butek livang); Ganua spp. (tagagau, kehep, tatapup); Johannestysmannia (silat
koyan) and Pinanga mirabilis (livang).

44

traveled to the camp with the rest of the community. The men left at daybreak to go hunting.
These hunters ventured into areas beyond the new campsite where few people had gone
before. While hunting, they added new information about the landscape to their mental
maps.
At daylight, the community left (ngakat or buvut). Households whose members could
travel light (ligang) started first for the new campsite. Households with small children and old
members left later as their pace was slow (berkaku). The by-then well-trodden path enabled
the slower groups of travelers to move more easily.
When members of each group reached the camp, all able-bodied members
performed their share of work to improve the condition of the shelters. Each woman and her
children collected more thatch leaves to construct a wall (liring) to screen the shelter from
peoples peering eyes. Meanwhile, an old household member, such as the father-in-law
(boson le) of the household head, cut out any bumps such as roots or stumps if the shelter
was situated directly on the ground. These protruding roots would have been uncomfortable
to sleep on. Then the old man collected dry wood (kayu maram) for firewood and built a
fireplace (puhuk pui) for drying the firewood. If there was insufficient dry wood, he cut fresh
wood from the trees that were suitable for firewood. After chopping a tree, he cut the trunk
into portions and then split them into kindling. Following that, he placed the pieces of firewood
inside the fireplace. Then the old man cut a tree and stripped its bark. He used these pieces
of bark (pupak) to cover the ground to make a more comfortable sleeping place.
In the evening, the first man who returned made a fire. He took a dry rattan strip
and rubbed it against a piece of dry wood. As the rubbing caused friction, it produced sparks.
An old man assisted him by putting dry trunk fibers (nyamu) close to the friction point. When
a spark flew out, the fibers ignited and then the old man gently blew on the little fire to create
a bigger flame. Then he placed shavings of dry wood (punguhut) on the flame and this made
a bigger fire. He next put small pieces of dry kindling over the fire and these became the
foundation upon which to place the bigger pieces of firewood. After that, the fire was shared
with all other households who came to ignite their firewood. After their piece of wood was
burning well, they brought it back to their shelter. At nightfall, each household cooked their
dinner. If they had fresh meat, they had a late dinner as meat required time to cook.
Otherwise, they had a hearty meal of sago paste, the first meal at the new campsite.

45

46

47

Mobility Based on Sago Consumption


During lean times when sago was the only main food, the Punan Vuhang generally
harvested it in four stages. The first stage involved gathering sago close to the campsite,
including from the surrounding areas on both sides of the main river, and the land along the
tributary where they were camping. In the second stage, they exploited resources farther
from the camp, including from sites up the tributary. Despite the considerable distance, they
could still return on the same day (puklik-ulik). In the third stage, they harvested sago growing
still farther away from the campsite. In abundant times during the fruit season, when fruit was
plentiful, the community only needed to go to the third stage. As fruit was readily available,
there was less need to pursue sago far from the campsite. In contrast, during lean times
when sago was their sole food, they had to go to very distant sago clumps. Nonetheless,
they did not have to camp overnight at these places and could still return by nightfall.
For the fourth stage, they harvested sago patches that occasionally required camping
(misan lug) to process the sago. These sago patches consisted of isolated sago clumps
found all over the forest, but usually in highlands at a considerable distance from the
campsite. When they reached this stage, it was time for the community to break camp and
move to a new place to begin another cycle of sago gathering.
To conclude this section on mobility, we have shown that the Punan Vuhang practiced
relocation of the entire group to a new area in times of food depletion instead of
expeditions from a permanent base camp, as Sellato described (1994:132) [emphasis
mine]. This description broadens our knowledge of mobility as briefly described by Sellato
(1994:132):
We have only a very limited understanding of the patterns of Punan movements. As
Urquhart notes, the Punan are unable to explain the rules that dictate their relocations
(1951:509). The essential for them is that they should always be within a reasonable
distance of a grove of sago palms that they can exploit. Harrisson reports for one
group a nomadic round lasting four months and covering a distance of fifty kilometers,
using fifteen successive camping sites (1949:135). . . . Kedit speaks of more or less
circular movements around a point central to the territory (1982:256). Brosius notes
that a camp may be used for a time varying from a few days to six months
(1986:176), according to availability of sago palms. My own data suggest an average
period of residence in any given camp of two to four weeks (see also Harrisson
1949:136).

Oral History of Punan Vuhang Responses to Expansionist Shifting Cultivators


Having now examined in some detail the Punan Vuhangs former mobile economy to
see how they had adapted to life in the forest, we shall now see how in the past they
responded also to expansionary agriculturalists and external events by constantly moving
away to avoid conflicts. Besides providing an ethnographic account of the past, the material
that follows provides a background for the analyses of other sections in the dissertation.

48

The Early Period of Regional History


In the period from about the 16th to the 18th century, the people who would later have
the greatest effect on the Punan Vuhang were still in their own ancestral homelands. The
Kayan, who later dominated the Balui, were still in the Apau Kayan, at the headwaters of the
Kayan River in Kalimantan. The Iban, who were to later expand into the Balui at the expense
of the Kayan, were originally in the Kapuas region also in Kalimantan. According to oral
history, the Iban had already begun to move into Sarawak by the middle of the sixteenth
century (Pringle 1970:39 citing Sandin 1967). The Iban were then in the Batang Lupar region
of what is today the Second Division of Sarawak. The Kayan migrated into Sarawak and
populated the whole Balui by about 1800 (Rousseau 1974a:76). The Kayan then left the
lower Balui when the Iban began to expand into the Balui. By 1862, the Iban had already
spread into the Katibas (Pringle 1970:254). The Brooke administration pacified the Kayan
with the 1863 Great Kayan Expedition and confined them to the headwaters of the Balui. By
1874, Iban began to populate the Baleh which the Kayan had earlier abandoned (Pringle
1970: 255).
This historical outline seems to fit well with Punan Vuhang oral history, as the first
tension between the Punan Terkalet and outside people was with the Iban. This did not
develop into large-scale conflict as the Punan were not pushed out of the area. It was only
with the expansion of the Kayan into the Balui that the Punan Terkalet and the Punan Nuo
were forced to leave the area. From this chronological description of Iban and Kayan
expansion, it can be deduced that the Punan Terkalet and the Punan Nuo lived in their
original homeland well before Kayan expansion in 1800, but when the Balui was populated
by the dominant Kayan, the Punan could not challenge them and remain in the area.
Consequently they fled and sought the protection of the Punan Vuhang who had a close
relationship with the Kayan. From then on, an amalgam of Punan groups lived at the Balui
headwaters for close to 100 years before they were forced to leave the area early in the
twentieth century. Living under the protection of the Punan Vuhang, the amalgam of these
groups since then has been known also as the Punan Vuhang.
PrehistoryIntra-Tribal Spirit Warfare
We shall first briefly consider why originally these Punan groups lived separately.
Before the fusion, the names of the three Punan groups derived from their places of origin:
1
the Punan Vuhang originated from Vuhang, or an island located in the Balui headwaters;
the Punan Nuo came from the Gaat tributary of the Baleh Riverthe tributary the Punan
called Nuo; and the Punan Terkalet came from the Terkalet, a tributary of the Katibas River.
All these areas, headwaters of the Balui, the Baleh and the Katibas tributaries, are separated
by a considerable distance. However, they share a common watershed, thus placing the
three Punan groups within a common physical domain. The Katibas is accessible to the
Baleh through the Nuo or Gaat, a right hand tributary of the Baleh, as the two rivers share the

Island in Punan Vuhang is vuhang. Because their original home was believed to have been located
near an island, they called themselves Punan Vuhang to differentiate themselves from the Punan Aput
who originated from the Aput tributary. This is where the Kenyah Badeng Long Busang settlement is
located today.

49

same watershed. From the Baleh, there are several series of river systems that share the
same watersheds with those of the Balui headwaters. Although the distance from the lower
Baleh to the Balui headwaters is great, the river systems provided access routes on
waterways and tops of watersheds that criss-crossed the land and so allowed the Punan to
meet one another.
Despite this commonality, the Punan Terkalet were on bad terms with the Punan
Vuhang. According to my informants, both groups used spirits to attack each other since time
immemorial. They said shamans from both sides had ordered their patron-spirits to kill
members of the other group. At the height of their conflict, the Punan Terkalet were thought
to have caused a major drought in the Punan Vuhang territory. This long drought caused
many trees to wither, and dead branches fell on the Punan Vuhang. It was thought that the
Punan Vuhang retaliated by causing a big flood that drowned many of their foes. Informants
did not mention any other major conflicts. After these two serious incidents, informants
thought it likely that hostility was so intense that the situation called for efforts to be made in
peace-making to bring an end to it. A major Punan Vuhang shaman who had great powers
eventually managed to do this. Nyuvuhan, the shaman, was said to have been assisted by
patron-spirits of great influence. However, he did not misuse his power but, instead, through
his kindness, he brought peace to the people. He eventually became the first leader among
the Punan Vuhang and his descendants have since then provided leadership for the people
(see page 164).
As the warfare was conducted by spirits, the conflict was confined to shamans.
Consequently, the scope of warfare between the two peoples was limited and ordinary
people were not involved. It was important that physical warfare by ordinary people had been
averted because the distance separating the two groups was not far enough to prevent a
cycle of retaliation.
Human-waged war was usually waged against a people who lived a great distance
away to hinder their revenge. Thus, war parties would travel to distant locations that required
many weeks trekking into enemy territories. Being far, it would be difficult for the victims to
pursue the attackers. If wars were waged between people who lived close by, the war could
become endless, it was thought.
Pre-Nineteenth CenturyConvergence at the Balui Headwaters
While the Punan Terkalet were said to have waged spirit war with their own Punan
people, informants mentioned that they also, in the physical world, assaulted Iban who lived
across the watershed of the Katibas River. With the benefit of a map showing the details of
the whole area (see Map 5), we can speculate that Kalimantan Iban of the Kapuas River,
which shares the same watershed with the Katibas, were their enemies. The hostilities could
have escalated when the Iban later migrated into Sarawak. Those living in the Skrang River,
the Batang Lupar system and the surrounding rivers which also share the watershed with the
Katibas could have been similarly involved. The clashes could have happened on both sides
of the watershed, with war parties crossing the dividing mountain ranges to attack the other.
These conflicts could have occurred during the sixteenth century when Iban crossed from the
Kapuas River in Kalimantan to populate the area known today as the Second Division of
Sarawak. Informants stressed that conflicts during this period were confined to fighting
50

between the Punan Terkalet and the Iban, as the latter had yet to expand into the Balui
1
basin. It was the Punan Terkalet who first attacked the Iban, who then retaliated.
From the informants account, I think it is possible that the Punan Terkalet lived for a
long time in the Katibas without any intrusion by outsiders. When the expanding Iban
infiltrated into Sarawak and then populated the Second Division, they could have crossed
over to the Balui basin for various reasons, such as exploiting forest resources. Probably not
knowing the aggressive nature of the Iban, the Punan Terkalet could have tried to repel Iban
intrusion by becoming hostile towards them. The level of conflict might have been of low
intensity as the hostility did not reach the extent that the Punan Terkalet were pushed out
from the Katibas. They remained there until the arrival of the Kayan, another expansionist
people from the Balui headwaters.
The oral history stated that over the years, the Kayan migrated down the Balui and
resided further downriver than the Katibas tributary. As the Kayan intruded into the area of
the Punan Nuo and the Punan Terkalet, conflict flared up between the immigrants and the
original inhabitants. Although the Kayan, as an agrarian and riverine-based people, did not
intrude far into the hinterland to exploit resources used by the nomadic people, they were
under attack by the Punan. According to informants, the Punan even attacked Kayan who
went to visit them on peaceful terms for trading. As a result of their hostility, the Kayan
retaliated to avenge their dead. By virtue of Kayan political cohesion and strength in
numbers, it seems likely to me, based on my study of the Kayan (Chan 1991), that they
would have conducted systematic warfare to eliminate the Punan.
Over the years, the Punan Terkalet became sandwiched between the two hostile
peoples, the Kayan at the Balui, and the Iban from the other side of the Katibas watershed.
According to informants, the safest option open to the Punan Terkalet seemed to be to seek
refuge with the Punan Vuhang, who had a close relationship with the Kayan. The Punan
Terkalet planned to offer their women to the Punan Vuhang in marriage so that the Punan
Vuhang would be bound to protect them. While under Punan Vuhang protection, the Punan
Terkalet hoped that, bound by the threat of supernatural punishment, the Kayan would not
2
attack them.

See Sellato (1994:136-142) for a review of defense of the territory and aggression among nomadic
groups, and between them and farming peoples.
2

A legend tells that the father of Lake Dian Lulo Kasut, the paramount chief of the Kayan who unified all
the Kayan, had a baby born with the umbilical cord wound round him. This was a bad omen of the worst
kind, and the parents abandoned the baby in the forest. The Punan Vuhang found the newborn baby and
despite the bad omen, adopted him and named him Sigoh Garing. Later Lake Dian realized that Sigoh
was the baby his parents had abandoned. Because of the Punan Vuhangs adoption of Sigoh, the two
brothers made an oath that the Kayan and the Punan Vuhang led by Nyuvuhan would always be blood
brothers. Breaking the vow would bring death and destruction to the community. Another version says
that Sigoh Garing was the son of Lake Dian Lulo Kasut who was abandoned for the same reason. Sigoh
grew up to be a great warrior and a wise man. Knowing his origin, his real parents wanted to take him
back but because they had abandoned him when he was a baby, they could not. Lake Dians brother
Garing then adopted him, therefore the name Sigoh Garing followed the uncles name.

51

52

53

54

55

56

Nevertheless, as mentioned above, the Punan Terkalet had always been enemies of
the Punan Vuhang due to the spirit warfare between their shamans. So, they resorted to
drawing in the Punan Nuo, who had had no problems with the Punan Vuhang, to join them in
seeking refuge with the Punan Vuhang. By seeking protection through the Punan Nuo, the
Punan Terkalet were assured that the Punan Vuhang would not retaliate against them. To
avoid retribution by the Kayan, they immediately moved up the Katibas and crossed overland
into the Baleh to meet the Punan Nuo. They informed the Punan Nuo of Kayan-planned
attacks against them, and informants mentioned that the Punan Nuo felt that they
themselves would now become the target of Kayan revenge with the escape of the Punan
Terkalet. Consequently, the Punan Nuo also fled with the Punan Terkalet to the Balui
headwaters to seek refuge with the Punan Vuhang.
The fleeing Punan crossed overland by using the Merirai routes into the Balui
headwaters (see Map 5). During the move, they were in great danger of being pursued, and
so they did not stop to consume food during daylight. The dearth of sago palms made things
even worse. Consequently, they had to depend on the lisi, a type of palm with very little
starch. If they happened to find a lisi palm while on the run, they would immediately fell the
tree and then process it. They would then resume their journey without immediately eating
any food, and would only eat when they stopped for the night. The Punan called this flight
from an enemy and only eating meals at nightfall, sarap.
After a few weeks, they reached the Balui headwaters and went on to meet the Punan
Vuhang. In order to settle their conflict with the Punan Vuhang, the Punan Terkalet offered
their unmarried women for marriage to the Punan Vuhang. The Punan Vuhang accepted the
women and this strategy then compelled the Punan Vuhang to protect and defend their
affinal kinsmen, the Punan Terkalet, from the Kayan. The Kayan on their part, as mentioned
above, could not force the Punan Vuhang to fight the refugees because of their relationship
with the Punan Vuhang through Lake Dian and Sigoh Garing.
When the Kayan learned of the two Punan groups seeking refuge with the Punan
Vuhang, they requested permission from the Punan Vuhang to take revenge against their
enemies. The strategy by the Punan Terkalet succeeded as the Punan Vuhang refused to
give them up. The Punan Vuhang were adamant that if the Kayan insisted, they would offer
themselves to be killed on behalf of their affinal kinsmen. Consequently, the Kayan backed
down and could not take revenge against their former enemies.
The offer of the Punan Vuhang to sacrifice themselves showed their commitment to
protect the Punan Terkalet. This ended the hostilities between the Punan Terkalet and
Punan Vuhang. Consequently, young men and women from these two groups voluntarily
married each other and this further deepened the relationship. For a time, peace ensued, as
the Punan groups lived in harmony with the Kayan people.
As the population increased, the Punan exploited all the tributaries of the Balui
headwaters. These included, for example, the Pahung, Kunei, Tasak and the tributaries of
the two Payau Rivers. Although it was a time of peace, this era was also marked by the total
1
absence of wild boar for many years. Over time, the Punan had hunted all the game in the
1

The Punan attributed this to the killing of wild boar by the otu laput lanum. They believed that wild boar in
their original spirit state were spirits that were enemies of the otu laput lanum spirits. In that state, the wild
boar spirits always defeated their enemies. During the major fruiting season, the spirits turned into wild

57

forest and depleted the animal population. During that period, they had to rely on frogs as
their sole protein-based food. Things were so bad they could barely catch one frog, and if
they did, they would share the small frog with other people, giving only a quarter of a limb to
each household. The little meat was cooked in sago paste to enhance the otherwise bland
flavor of sago. According to informants, the Punan Vuhang had never experienced such
prolonged periods of absence of wild boar that spanned over several major fruiting seasons.
After many years of peace, intertribal warfare returned. When the Kayan left the Apau
Kayan, the area became devoid of human inhabitants. When the land had regenerated into
mature forest, it was ready to be populated again. Over time, the Kenyah tribal people
moved in and filled this vacuum. Some of these Kenyah groups, in particular the Badeng and
1
The
the Bakong, were archenemies of the Punan Nuo and the Punan Terkalet.
convergence of the Kenyah people into the Apau Kayan, which shared the same watershed
system with the Balui brought the Punan into contact with their traditional archenemies again.
According to informants, the Punan Vuhang did not want to be involved in warfare. However,
when their affinal kinsmen became embroiled in the conflict, they had no option but to be
drawn into the foray. They had to defend their affinal kinsmen when they were under attack
and to participate in raids for revenge. Through time, the warfare became uncontrolled, with
small groups of headhunters constantly on the prowl searching for victims in the forest.
Life became increasingly difficult as the Punan could not go out into the forest to search
for food without encountering enemies. Frequently, hunters and food collectors failed to
return, obviously killed by headhunters. Everyone was constantly on guard, carrying their
shields, swords and blowpipes, looking out for enemies. At the same time, the Punan
retaliated by conducting spirit warfare and sending their spirits to kill their enemies right in the
heart of enemy territory. Informants said that this increased the hostilities and the Punan no
longer felt safe to remain in the Balui headwaters.
Migration out of the Balui, Early Twentieth Century
The hostility between the various Punan groups and the agrarian Kenyah in the Apau
Kayan caused the Punan Vuhang and Punan Aput to look for new places to live. As the
Apau Kayan was the only region that was populated, the Punan Vuhang knew that the
headwaters of the Kayan River, in particular the Iwan, were not inhabited. The Punan Aput,
however, went directly to the Kayan Ok, a major tributary of the Kayan, and have remained
there ever since. The Punan Vuhang entered the Iwan part of Kalimantan to survey the land
before re-entering Sarawak. As the people explored the land, they surveyed the rivers for
resources and identified places suitable for prolonged dwelling. While the main group led by
boar and migrated upriver to feed on the fruits. In this form, they were no match for the otu laput lanum,
who easily killed them. It was during this era at the Balui headwaters that it was thought that the massive
killings occurred and only a single wild boar could reach the headwaters over many decades. Over time, it
was said that a spirit accompanied and protected the wild boar during migration. Ever since, although
many small wild boar continued to be killed, incalculable numbers of wild boar managed to reach the
headwaters during each major fruiting season.
1

Informants did not mention the origin of these conflicts and the situation could have occurred too far back
in time to be recalled in oral history. Alternatively, the more probable explanation was that the Kenyah
were a warlike people, always on the move to conduct headhunting. They would include the Punan
people as a target in their quest for human heads.

58

Lean returned to the Balui, one other group chose the Kihan as their dwelling place and
1
another turned to the Kajang. It was after their return to the Balui that Leans group fell prey
to Iban headhunters, an event that drastically changed Punan Vuhang history.
On their journey to explore the region, the Punan Vuhang traveled up the Kahei, a left
hand tributary of the Balui and crossed over to the Bahau (see Map 6) which is a major
tributary that meets the Lesong of Kalimantan. From the Bahau they crossed the watershed
to the Lesong with its confluence meeting the Iwan, the headwaters tributary of the great
Kayan River. They went down the Lesong and then traveled up the Iwan until they reached
the Kihan, a left hand tributary of the Iwan that leads to the Sarawak side of Borneo. They
trekked up the Kihan and went up the Sungai We to re-enter Sarawak through the Danum
River, a tributary with its confluence at the middle section of the Balui. They journeyed down
the Danum and walked up the Lahang stream to cross over into the Betiu and then into the
Peluan. The Peluan is a tributary of the Linau which is another major tributary of the Balui
that flows parallel with the Danum. At the Linau they crossed the river and went up the right
hand tributary of the Poho and crossed the Linau-Kajang range into the Bangan, a left hand
tributary of the Kajang. The Kajang is one of the longest tributaries of the Linau that flows
parallel to the main Linau River. At the Kajang, they crossed the river to travel up the Bukor,
the right hand tributary of the Kajang. From there they crossed the watershed to re-enter the
Bahau which they had left earlier in their migration to enter Kalimantan. They traveled up the
Bahau and crossed overland in the right hand direction and returned to the Kahei, thus
making a huge circle to return to the remotest region of the Balui River.
Along the way, a band of Punan Vuhang led by Panak decided to stay at the Kihan as
there was an abundance of sago there. This band had many members who had originated
from the Punan Nuo, and Punan Terkalet who had been hostile towards the Kayan.
Therefore, informants thought they wanted to stay as far as possible from their enemies to
avoid retaliation. They found the Kihan basin to be sufficiently far from the Kayan
communities settled along the Balui. Another group led by Narin decided to dwell in the lower
reaches of the Kajang and the middle part of the Linau. Since Leans group members had
mainly originated from the Punan Vuhang and had no quarrel with the Kayan and the
Kenyah, they decided to return to the Balui headwaters. They lived at the headwaters while
the lower part of the river was inhabited by the Kayan, and the Apau Kayan Plateau across
the mountain range was populated by the Kenyah.
With this regional exploration, the Punan Vuhang spread all over the headwaters of the
Balui and the Kihan. This separation of the nomadic people into subgroups covering a vast
area allowed them to exploit extremely large resource bases. Each group had more than
enough land that covered several river systems to exploit the forest resources. Leans group
had the biggest land area covering the headwaters of the Vuhang, Aput, Kahei, Pahung,
Kunei (Unei), the right and left tributaries of the Payau, Tasak and along the main Balui River.
Narins group had the Danum, Linau, Kajang and the headwaters of the Bahau for food
exploitation. Panaks group inhabited the Kihan which had an abundance of sago. They also

It is likely that Leans group was not directly involved in any intertribal warfare as they had no hostility
towards other tribal people. Consequently, the other groups had to travel under this groups protection.

59

had the Iwan basin for further resource exploitation. The Punan Aput, as mentioned earlier,
1
resided at the Kayan Ok in Kalimantan.
Murder at the Kahei
The Punan Vuhangs hopes for having such a beneficent environment with vast
resource bases were dashed when some Iban killed some Punan Vuhang at the Kahei.
After returning to the Kahei, Leans group had found Iban men tapping gutta purcha in the
forest. The Iban seemed genuine forest exploiters and tapped the rubber for a long period.
They appeared harmless, friendly and peaceful and the Punan Vuhang eventually let down
their guard to befriend them.
The Iban even held servilak swearing ceremonies to seal the friendship and bind them
as blood-brothers. Most tribal people believed that with the servilak ritual the participants
became blood-brothers who should help each other in times of need. Anyone who betrayed
the friendship would be punished by the spirits with his family and kinsmen being
exterminated by supernatural retaliation. With the servilak, the Punan Vuhang accepted the
Iban into their community and regarded them as brothers and sons. One Iban man courted
and slept with a Punan Vuhang girl. Believing they had a close relationship, the Punan
Vuhang had no idea that the Iban were scheming to kill them when they were most
vulnerable.
According to an informant, it was through this nyalakoh, or deceptive scheming, that
2
3
the Iban had also killed the Lisum and the Penan Bunut. Working in the forest for gutta
percha like real forest exploiters, people who met with these Iban eventually threw away their
caution. The Iban were also sago exploiters and both my informant and I speculate that the
hunter-gatherers probably developed an attachment for the people who ate the same food
as they did. Friendship was established and the Iban were a jovial people who encouraged
their hosts to dance and sing poetic songs. Ultimately, to overcome any anxiety, they held
the swearing ceremony to seal their friendship. Due to this turn of events, the Punan Vuhang
hosts put down their defense against any possible enemy attack. They feasted and danced

This development fits with written accounts of central Borneo. By the turn of the century, these Punan
groups were reported in Kalimantan. According to Rousseau (1990:217), van Walchren (1907:797)
reported that the Punan Vuhang (Punan Busang) lived in the upper reaches of the Iwan and the Punan
Aput between the Kayan and Kayan Ok. When Tillema visited the Apau Kayan in 1931-3, he made a
special trip to the Punan Musang (most likely Panaks group who remained in the Kihan), who were
found on a tributary of the Iwana left hand tributary of the Kayan (Tillema 1938/1989:123).

This corresponds to a Sarawak Gazette report: This act [of killing Lisum] was committed by a party of
mischievous young Dyaks [Iban] who were supposed to have been on a gutta hunting expedition
(1907:135).

Concerning the massacre of the Penan Bunut, the Penan people until today had not been aware of this
deception. During my study with the Penan Talun who are descendants of the Penan Bunut, this event
was mentioned in their oral history. The Penan were led to believe that it was the preference for human
heads over forest produce that eventually tempted the Iban to kill the Penan. The Iban leader tried to
dissuade his followers but they insisted upon carrying out the plot despite the supernatural punishment
believed to result from back-stabbing their hosts (Chan 1995:24-25). For the Saribas Iban, it is believed
to be a source of busong or ill-fortune to kill someone with whom there is no animosity. On the other hand,
deception is much admired (Clifford Sather, personal communication).

60

through the night. They then fell into a deep sleep, exhausted from the nights celebrating. It
was then that the victims were slaughtered by the Iban.
It was through this scheming that the Punan Vuhang were killed at the Kahei. On the
night of the attack, the Punan Vuhang were holding a nyangen rituala singing session in
praise of the spirits, that the people enjoyed. This singing went on until the small hours of the
morning. Apparently, one of the assistant-spirits to the performing female shaman had
warned her of the plot to kill them but she had ignored the warning. The spirit felt slighted and
did not warn the shaman again. At dawn, when most of the Punan Vuhang were deep
asleep, the Iban attacked and killed fourteen of them.
There were three groups of survivors, each having their own tale to tell. The saddest
story was that of the Iban man who had slept with the Punan Vuhang girl. Kana, the Iban
who slept with Nalim, had on the eve of the attack managed to persuade her household
members to camp away to process sago. Having loyalties to both sides, he could not betray
his own people and reveal the attack. Nor could he, having slept with his lover and been
treated so well by her family, allow them to become victims to his own peoples scheming. So
he saved them by persuading them to camp elsewhere. Consequently this group was safe
from the attack. Towards dawn, Kana revealed the plot and tearfully explained that it was
Grinang, their leader, who had schemed and insisted that they take the Punan heads as
trophies. The rest had not wanted to go along with this because of their close relationship
with their hosts. Grinang scolded them for having put aside their primary objective of
obtaining human heads through deceitful strategies and for not obeying his orders as their
war leader. He further warned that if they refused to follow suit, he would have to kill one of
the followers to compensate for his loss of a victims head. Having no choice, the other Iban
had to follow Grinangs order. When this plot was revealed by Kana, it was too late to inform
the rest of the Punan Vuhang, for the killings had already taken place. Realizing Kanas
predicament and being grateful for his effort in saving them, Nalims brothers helped him to
escape for they knew the Punan Vuhang would have killed him in revenge for the attack.
The second group of survivors were Dongas family. Donga had had the habit of
waking up before dawn to eat breakfast. This had been the Punans practice as a measure
to ward off enemy attacks. Being awake, they could be alert to defend themselves if they
were under attack. Having eaten in the morning, they would then have the energy to fight
and flee for a whole day. As Donga was awake, he was able to fend off the attack and his
household survived. Because of his precautions and ability to defend his family, his name
lived on even among the Iban. An informant who had listened to Iban tales found that Donga
was mentioned in their stories as the Punan who defended his family. The Iban respected
him for being such a courageous hero even though they lost potential heads by failing to kill
him and his family.
The third story involves that of Abok surviving his Iban blood-brothers attack. Abok had
a pain in his hand and asked Selaku, his servilak or blood-brother, whether he had any
remedy for it. Selaku said he had and would bring it for him the next day. At dawn Selaku
appeared to kill Abok and his family, but Abok happened to be awake. Because of his hand
1
pain, he could not fight back, but escaped by jumping down a waterfall. From the top of the
1

The Punan Vuhang were camped at the top of a waterfall along the Kahei River.

61

waterfall, Selaku flung a spear toward Abok but missed him. He jumped down to continue
attacking Abok. However, Abok managed to retrieve the spear and thrust the spear into his
opponents thigh. When the opponent succumbed, Abok killed him. Two other Iban men
followed suit and Abok defended himself by flinging the spear at them. The two tried to avoid
being hit, and instantly Abok fled under cover of the night.
Although the attack was a complete surprise, the Iban also suffered casualties.
However, the death of fourteen persons was an overwhelming loss for the Punan Vuhang.
The surviving Punan Vuhang joined their kinsmen who were camped at the Peluan River
and they decided to take revenge against the Iban.
Revenge and Retreat into Kalimantan
A group of men took off downriver to take revenge against their enemies. From Kana
who had slept with Nalim, they knew the attackers were from the Baleh, a tributary of the
Balui, which had been inhabited by Iban. The war party went down to Long Linau where the
Kayan were congregated. They told the Kayan of their intention and the massacre of their
kinsmen was reported to the Brooke government by the Kayan. The Brooke administration
reacted by launching a punitive expedition against the Gaat Iban. These Iban were in a
rebellious mood and they were suspected of being the culprits who had killed the Punan
Vuhang. I speculate that it was probably their headhunting celebration that revealed the
identity of the attackers. The Brooke force, assisted by the Punan Vuhang and 200 soldiers,
1
punished the Gaat Iban. The expedition was a success but the Punan Vuhang felt the
victory belonged to the Brookes and decided to continue taking revenge themselves.
They returned to Long Linau and requested the Uma Jalan Kayan to bring them by
boat up the Balui to enter Iban country. They were transported to the Taman, the true left
hand tributary of the Balui that leads to Iban country (see Map 7). Reaching the Taman, the
Punan Vuhang trekked by themselves, traversing up the Taman to cross overland into the
Mujong. They came across an Iban family staying in a farmhouse, killed four of them and
took their heads. They retreated to the Balui and were brought back by the Uma Jalan Kayan
to Long Linau.
At Long Linau, they celebrated their success and gave two heads to their hosts for
providing them assistance. It was a major feast as the Linau area was a place where all
Kayan, Lahanan and Kenyah communities congregated in defense against Iban attack. After
the celebration, the Kayan brought them back to the upper Linau by boat and from there they
walked back by themselves.
Meanwhile the Iban retaliated. By noting the pattern of attack and retreat, they
identified the killing as the work of Punan. The Iban went overland into the Balui, crossed the
river and trekked upstream into the Benalui until they came to the Bunut, a tributary of the
1

This punitive expedition was reported in the Sarawak Gazette (1916:78), but there was no mention of
Punan Vuhang involvement. According to an informant, the Punan Vuhang people participated in the
expedition. The event was, by no means, an isolated incident. At the turn of the twentieth century, the
Sarawak Gazette recorded headhunting expeditions between Iban and other tribal peoples of the Kayan,
Kenyah, Kejaman and others (in chronological order, Hose 1894:207-208; Pearce 1894:64; 1895a:178179, 1895b:194-195; 1896a:23, 1896b:42; Deshon 1900:227; Cunynghame 1902a:12; 1902b:76;
Kirpatrick 1905:92; Hose 1907:59; Page-Turner 1908a:27; 1908b:88; Sarawak Gazette 1908:88,
1913:188, Applin 1918, Gifford 1919:312-313).

62

Linau. Coming across unsuspecting Penan Bunut, they used the nyalakoh friendshipbetrayal scheme and killed some of their host after staying with them under the pretext of
collecting gutta percha (see footnote 3 page 60). Despite having several Penan Bunut
heads, the Iban were not satisfied and went to the Linau to seek revenge against the Punan
Vuhang who had killed their kinsmen.
When the Punan Vuhang heard of the Iban attack on the other Penan people, they
went further up the headwaters into the Peluan tributary and camped on top of a ridge to
avoid detection. They constructed fences for a defensive camp. Scouts spotted Iban
continuing their pursuit but the Punan Vuhang could not be detected and remained in the
hideout for a long period until they depleted the surrounding food resources. They then
retreated further upriver and decided to seek refuge inside Dutch Kalimantan.
They trekked up the Linau and traversed through the true left hand tributary of the
Kelawit to cross overland into the Kihan, inside Kalimantan. Across the other side of the
watershed, they gathered and preserved food in preparation for a long journey into the Apau
Kayan. They went down the Kihan and met Panaks group who had decided to flee with the
fugitives. This group suspected that they would become the target of the Iban if they
remained where they were. They went further downstream along the Kihan and entered into
the Iwan, the headwaters of the Kayan River. As they fled, the Iban pursued them, but three
of the Iban were intercepted and killed by some Kenyah Lapo Tapu men. Despite that, the
Iban continued to chase them, but twelve more Iban were killed by the Kenyah. These
killings posed greater dangers to the Punan Vuhang as the Iban were even more aggrieved
and had even higher motivation to seek revenge. As a result, the Punan Vuhang decided to
go into the Apau Kayan to seek protection with the Kenyah. The Punan Vuhang used the
Kenyah as a buffer against the Iban so that their enemies could not penetrate the Kenyah
defensive line to pursue them. As they further retreated, the fugitives went up the Suhen, the
true left hand tributary of the Iwan, and went over the watershed that divides the Suhen and
the Panah. The fleeing people traveled down the Panah, changed course and entered the
Lupuwon Iman where they continued their journey down the Nyelunuk. They crossed the
Bakong and went downriver into the Besahan headwaters. From there, they pushed on
down the Pujungan until they reached Long Kayan. At the great Kayan River, they used the
Iban tributary to bypass a long bend of the river that consisted of the impassable Brem-Brem
Rapids, and reached the area downriver of Kenyah country.
1
The Kenyah were enemies of the Iban and had had clashes with them. The Iban
were on the other side of the mountain range at the Balui headwaters in Sarawak and
needed to bypass the Kenyah people in Dutch Kalimantan in order to reach the Punan
Vuhang. From the Linau-Kajang route, the Iban also had to encounter Kenyah staying at the
Pujungan region before they could reach the Kayan river. With buffers on both sides of the
river, the Punan felt safe under Kenyah protection.

Pringle reported that at the turn of the century, the Iban repeatedly raided the Kenyah who were living in
Dutch Borneo (1970:261).

63

Consequently the Punan Vuhang sought refuge among the Kenyah and stayed at
1
Data Dian. They remained for about five years until there was no more news of Iban forays
into Kalimantan to attack the Kenyah. As the hostile situation at the Balui had calmed down,
the Punan Vuhang wanted to return to Sarawak, for they missed their homeland.
Return to Sarawak
The Punan Vuhang used the same route by which they had come to the Apau Kayan
to return to Sarawak, except, instead of going by way of the Kihan, they went further up the
Iwan and went directly into the Danum through the Dang watershed. They went downstream
and camped at Laput Pakeng. Upon reaching Sarawak, the Punan Vuhang craved tobacco
and eight young men walked downriver for a month to reach Laput Mavu at the Murum, the
2
downriver stretch of the Danum. There, they saw boatloads of people paddling downstream
to transport rattan. Recognizing the leader of the group as Lake Lewih, headman of Uma
Nyaving at Long Linau, the Punan Vuhang approached him. Lake Lewih was surprised to
see the Punan Vuhang, for he had recently heard they were still in the Apau Kayan. Lake
Lewih told them of the new peace at the Balui and advised their leader to go to Belaga to
meet the Brooke Administration. He then gave the Punan Vuhang some rattan vines that his
slaves had collected. They parted, and the Punan Vuhang returned to inform their people of
the new peace and Lake Lewih went on to Belaga to inform the government of the return of
the Punan Vuhang into Sarawak.
Upon their return, they informed another group of Punan Vuhang led by Donga of the
peaceful conditions in Sarawak. For safety, this group had remained in the Pujungan basin.
Consequently, Dongas group also returned to Sarawak, but another group led by Tut
3
wanted to remain in the Kihan because of its abundance of sago and fish. As the Punan
Vuhang congregated at the Linau headwaters, a group of men led by Bakup went downriver
to Belaga to meet a Brooke official named Tuan Brian. Upon reaching the Belaga post, the
officer had gone to Sibu (then known as Busang Malin) and the Punan Vuhang were
requested to go to Sibu to meet him. According to informants, in Sibu, Brian told Bakup of the
Ibans intention to have peace and that he planned to bring Bakup to the Baleh to test the
Ibans sincerity. Since Bakup was one of the Punan Vuhang who had killed Iban at Mujong,
he might become the target of their revenge as the Iban had not yet avenged their dead. If
Bakup were to be killed, Tuan Brian assured him that the Brooke government would seek
revenge.
They left Sibu for Gaat, a true left hand tributary of the Baleh. Some Iban who had
joined the rebellion against Brooke rule had remained there. At the Gaat, they made a
1

At Data Dian, some Punan men went down the almost impassable Brem-Brem rapids and found an
extremely lethal takjem blowpipe poison. The poison, called takjem tipluk, caused the instant death of a
victim.
2

The Murum and the Danum are the same river. The lower portion of the river that consists of many
stretches of impassable rapids and waterfalls is called the Murum. The upriver stretch which is
meandering and gentle is called the Danum.
3

Whittier (1974:44) reported that this Punan group who were called by the names of Punan Musang and
Punan Busang lived at Long Ikeng of the Iwan River. Long Ikeng is the official name while the Punan call
it Long Kihan. In the 1970 census, the population was 98 persons.

64

peace-swearing ceremonypetutong mek pelar moripin which many pigs and chickens
were slaughtered. The Punan Vuhang believed the slaughtering of the animals was a show
of strength of Brooke power, and a commitment to kill enemies who went against the
government.
Bakup was appointed Penghulu for his role in offering himself to test the Ibans
sincerity. His role was to become an official representative of the Brooke government in
Punan country and to guard the Linau basin from Iban intrusion. Since Bakup was involved
in the peace-making ceremony at Gaat, there was no need for him to be involved in further
peace-making ceremonies. He was then sent back to the Linau with his men. According to
Luhat Tehin, my main informant on oral history, the Gaat Accord was instrumental in
inspiring the Brooke government to arrange the 1924 Peace Making Ceremony in Kapit.
However, a drastic event occurred before the main peace-making ceremony. The
Iban, in learning that the Punan Vuhang had returned to Sarawak, could not resist taking
revenge against them. In violation of their peace accord with Bakup and the Brooke
government, a large group of Iban went up the Linau (116 individuals according to the
Sarawak Gazette (Owen 1924:168-9). According to Luhat, they posed as gutta percha
collectors, and schemed to attack the other Punan Vuhang group living in the Kihan. Luhat
Tehin and other informants believed that the Iban had developed and improved on their
friendship-betrayal ploy by bringing along women and children. The presence of the women
and children relaxed the defenses of people who came across them. Nonetheless, the
Punan Vuhang remained cautious and camped up the mountain ridge between the Linau
and Kajang. The Iban scheme was to eventually let the group with the women and children
travel behind the front group that consisted of the war party. At the appointed time of attack,
as the war party moved to attack, the second group with the women and children would
quickly return by a different route to avoid detection. Fortunately, Penghulu Grinang, a
government-appointed penghulu, got wind of the plot, as the dissident Iban had used an
overland route to travel into the Balui instead of using the customary boats, in order to go
undetected by the government. He promptly informed the Brooke government and Tuan
1
Tuninghum and Tuan Belayar then led a pacifying party to force the dissidents back. The
party comprised a force led by three Iban PenghuluGrinang, Jugah and Sibat, the two
Kayan penghuluAkam Dian and Akam Avun, and Bakup, the Punan penghulu.
The government party went right to the Linau headwaters at the Kajang and
intercepted the dissident Iban war party which was on its way into Kihan. The defiant Iban
were brought downriver to meet the Brooke representatives at Laput Kebuhor, just upriver
from where the Punan Vuhangs settlement is now located. In the meeting, the Iban were
ordered to return to Kapit for further deliberation. The ringleaders were later fined and jailed in
2
Kapit for breaking the law that prohibited Iban from going into the Balui headwaters. With
1

This event was reported in the Sarawak Gazette (Owen 1924:168-9).

Pringle (1970:264) reported that the Iban were not allowed to settle above the Pila tributary, a short
distance above Kapit. After that was the territory inhabited by upriver peoples. He also reported that the
Second Rajah set markers in critical Iban rivers, beyond which settlement was prohibited. The Rajah also
situated the most trusted Iban leader in the neighborhood nearest the marker where the leader enjoyed
access to upriver farmlands. The leader was to ensure that no one else ventured beyond the markers
(1970:279).

65

these events, peace was sustained as every party, including the Iban, aligned with the
Brookes and cooperated to maintain peace.
The Kapit Peace Making Ceremony was held in 1924 following a similar ceremony in
Long Nawang, Kalimantan. All tribal chieftains in Sarawak and Kalimantan who had been
involved in warfare against the Iban, together with Brooke and Dutch officials, participated in
the event. After this, peace was finally achieved for both Sarawak and Kalimantan, and the
Punan Vuhang were able to move about a large area to hunt and gather food (see Map 8,
page 56).
With peace, the Balui region began to be opened up for people to move freely, and
trade flourished. As headhunting, heroism and prowess in warfare no longer were avenues
to achieve fame and status, people resorted to accumulation of wealth. Traders went to
Punan Vuhang country to obtain rhinoceros horns and other forest products such as bezoar
stones, gutta percha and woven rattan products. While the women remained at the camps to
weave rattan mats, the men explored the forest to search for rhinoceros and other products.
Several hunters successfully obtained rhinoceros horns which they barter-traded for bales of
cloth, and ornaments of brass and copper and other adornments in addition to the allimportant tobacco, as the Punan Vuhang increasingly became addicted to it.
The Era of the Second World War (1941-1945)
In the subsequent years after the peace-making until the Japanese Occupation in
1941-1945, there appear to be no events of major significance. At the height of the Second
World War, the Japanese Army advanced into the region of the headwaters, occupying Long
Nawang in the Apau Kayan in Kalimantan. Before the arrival of the Japanese, traders had
warned the Punan Vuhang of the impending war. However, being so remote, the Punan
Vuhang were not directly affected. Their only direct experience was hearing the roar of
aeroplanes engines and then seeing the planes fly overhead. At first, they thought the
planes were powerful spirits flying toward them to kill them. The women and children cried
fearfully for their lives. However, I was told that protector-spirits informed their shamans that
the flying objects were not spirits as they were very hot. The spirits tried to enter the planes
but could not, due to the extreme heat. The spirits were convinced that the flying objects
were not supernatural beings, as spirits could not endure fire and heat. They saw that the
1
flying objects contained human beings of a different race who lived on land. The Japanese
did not advance into the Punan Vuhang country, and the only consequence of the war
experienced by the Punan Vuhang was the lack of trade goods. Barter-trading ceased and
people had to revert to the use of tree bark for clothing for a few years and eat bland food
without any salt for flavor.
After the war, the Punan Vuhang left the Peluan at the Linau headwaters and went
down the Linau. From the Linau they crossed into the Kajang and then returned to the
Peluan after making a circumambulation around the territory. It was on their return to the
Peluan that the first group of Kayan traders led by Lake Idot reached the Punan after the
1

Twenty years later, the Punan Vuhang had their first direct encounter with planes. The planes that
appeared during Indonesian-Malaysian Confrontation in 1963-66 were helicopters which were used to
bring supplies to the British Forces stationed with the Punan Vuhang.

66

war. After that, no event of major significance occurred until the arrival of the photographer
Lim Poh Chiang in 1962.
Ulok Imang, the trader who guided Lim, brought along fishing nets for trading with the
Punan Vuhang. With the fishing nets, the Punan Vuhang caught so many fish that two-thirds
of their boats were filled. It was the first time that they had used fishing nets and this would
become a common fishing method in the future. Not long after these visitors had left, the era
of the Indonesian-Malaysian Confrontation, which had a great impact on the Punan Vuhang,
began.
This ends the first part of the narration of the oral history as subsequent events related
to the Confrontation would result in the Punan Vuhang adopting sedentism and cultivation.
The later part of the oral history will be provided in the chapter related to cultivation (see
Chapter 7).
Conclusion
In the first part of this chapter, by examining the resources of the rainforest and the
Punan Vuhang mobile economy, we can appreciate how Punan Vuhang were able to exist
independently of shifting cultivators. From the Punan Vuhangs perspective, we can
reconstruct three cycles of abundance followed by scarcity. In the first cycle, the Punan
Vuhang recognized that seasonal drought triggers flowering. This is followed by fruiting and a
momentary abundance of fruits and game. Such was the seasonal certainty that their
calendar, covering the only period for which they measured time, started with the
appearance of mass flowering, and ended when food scarcity began. The second cycle
revolved around ease followed by difficulty in hunting. With fruit abundance, animal
populations exploded from new births and arrival of migratory animals, providing easy prey
for hunters. After the fruit season ended, food scarcity caused animals to forage far and wide,
making it difficult for hunters to locate them. During very long periods of food scarcity, the
Punan Vuhang searched for a variety of food. When the river was low, they caught or
trapped fish. So long as one was diligent, the forest would bare its yield to the hunter who
made an effort to search for the foods.
The third cycle related to mobility. When food in an area was exhausted, a band would
simply move to a place with food abundance. When the food there was depleted, they again
left it for another place, thus beginning another cycle of mobility. Although the forest was not
a Garden of Eden, the Punan Vuhang had successful coping strategies to overcome food
shortages, thus refuting the revisionists argument that according to the Law of the Minimum,
long periods of scarcity make human growth and reproduction impossible.
In the second part, a synopsis of their oral history strongly suggests that the Punan
Vuhang had been independent of farming societies for food due to the fact that they lived in
areas too distant for trading of food to have taken place. We have shown that the frequent
movement into distant forests was to avoid hostile farming societies. This was not to gain
accessibility to forest products, supporting Brosiuss (1991) argument against Hoffmans
notion that hunter-gatherer communities dwell in deep forest areas for accessibility to forest
products to exchange for agricultural products (Hoffman 1984, 1988). As will be shown in
Chapter Four, transportation of food was not a feasible option when trading expeditions
required hauling laden boats over rapids, and then walking and crossing mountain ranges to
67

reach Punan Vuhang camps. So being the only people living in an area not populated by
shifting cultivators, they had to rely on their own efforts to obtain food. This concurs with
Sellato (1994:119):
The primary forest, in particular the lowland and intermediate forest, constitutes
what I will call an economic niche, rich in animal and plant resources. It is this niche
that the nomadic hunter-gatherers occupy its location is always beyond the world
of the farmers, farther upstream. . . . the Punan are permanently dependent upon
the forest for their daily subsistence. Most writers have stated that the Punan live
exclusively off the produce of the forest, which permits them total autonomy as far
as diet is concerned; and this is confirmed by the most recent serious studies on
the Penan of Sarawak (Brosius 1992).

68

Chapter Three: The Hunting and Gathering Economy


Introduction
Having described in the previous chapter the Punan Vuhangs adaptation to the
physical environment through their former mobile economy, this chapter provides a detailed
account of Punan Vuhang food acquisition methods. It describes hunting and trapping
processes, stage by stage, and Punan Vuhang knowledge of the reactions of animals under
pursuit. I begin with a description of the processing of wild sago, the primary source of starch
or carbohydrates during the time when the Punan Vuhang were still hunter-gatherers. This is
followed by an account of the significance of the wild boar, the animal viewed by the Punan
Vuhang as their most important source of protein, and their methods of boar hunting. Also
included here are myths and local knowledge about wild boar. A section focuses on hunting
dogs, the practice of selective breeding, and the use of rituals to protect dogs from being
harmed by spirits. This is followed by a description of blowpipe hunting for birds and other
arboreal game. The last section describes Punan Vuhang trapping and fishing, and the
collecting of firewood and other inedible forest products.
Many of the activities described in this chapter are no longer being practiced and
my descriptions cover several time periods. Some are accounts of activities that I observed
when I accompanied the Punan Vuhang to process sago, hunt with dogs and guns. To
enhance my understanding, informants often explained how other processes had been done
in the past. These included activities that the Punan Vuhang no longer practice today, for
example, kusi hunting without the use of dogs, blowpipe hunting, trapping, and some fishing
methods. Here, I distinguish between activities I actually witnessed and those that were
described to me as having been done in the past.
In describing the Punan Vuhang hunting and gathering economy, we shall see that
the Punan Vuhang, like the Batek Negrito of the Malay Peninsula (Endicott 1979:22), were a
practical people with little reliance on magical means. Instead, individual hunters relied on
knowledge and skills to locate and track down game. They only invoked spirits for help when
they needed to alleviate the ineffectiveness of their hunting dogs.
Sago Processing
Sago was the staple food of the nomadic Punan Vuhang and the sole food
resource available throughout all seasons of the year. Except during the season of
abundance, the nomadic economy closely followed sago exploitation. Without sago, the
people could not have survived in the forest. Old people repeatedly impressed this fact upon
me, with Luhat Tehin, the oldest man in the community, aged about 90, saying:
In the past, we were a people who moved about in the forest in search of sago and
animals. When an area had no more sago, we moved to a new place to look for
more sago. Our people have done like this since our forefathers times.

As sago was the basic and most important food source for the nomadic Punan
1
Vuhang, I will describe in considerable detail the activities that related to it.
1

See also Sellato (1994:121-122) and Puri (2005:155-159) for a description of hunter-gatherers use of
sago in Borneo.

69

Sago is a plant that contains much starch inside its palm. The community relied on
starch as their staple food for most of the year, especially when there was no other available
carbohydrate source. Sago consists of two types, tajuk (Eugeissona utilis), which is the more
common species, and nyamakoh (Arenga undulatifolia).
Eugeissona is found throughout their area but is particularly abundant in the
headwater regions. It thrives in huge clumps of aerial roots that contain many palms. It is a
type of vegetation that sometimes dominates an entire river valley, although it may also be
found in isolated concentrations spread throughout the forest. The diameter of the
Eugeissona trunk at its base is about one and a half feet. It is difficult to harvest because the
palms grow in clumps raised above the ground on aerial roots that are more than ten feet
high, and the trunks are covered with thorns. The other type of sago, Arenga, is more
widespread. Unlike Eugeissona, it is a solitary plant, although it also grows in clusters with a
few palms growing together. Arenga is smaller, up to a foot in diameter, but it does not have
thorns and grows right on the ground, thus making it easier to process compared to the
Eugeissona. Due to the predominance of Eugeissona over Arenga, however, the Punan
Vuhang considered Eugeissona their main food source.
1
Sago processing involved four major stages:
1) searching for mature sago palms and determining their starch content;
2) felling a palm and cutting it into logs;
3) mashing the sago pith into a fibrous pulp; and,
4) filtering the starch from the pulp.
The first stage involved a man exploring (ngelela) the forest in search of sago
palms. To do this, he walked along the top of slopes and ridges to look down at the
surrounding areas for palm leaves that protruded through the forest canopy. When he saw a
palm or a cluster of palms, he went there to check their suitability. He looked for mature palm
trees that were flowering or bearing fruit. For the Arenga sago, the protruding horny growth
on the trunk also marked its maturity. Then the man would check (paklug) the starch content
of each mature tree. For a Eugeissona sago trunk that grew in a huge clump containing
many palms, he constructed a simple ladder (ogak) to reach the top of the clump. Avoiding
the thorns, he cut and cleared any obstacles that hindered his work. Then he tested the
starch content.
To do this, he used a knife to notch through the hard shell of the trunk and cut into
the pith. He then chipped the pith into a fibrous pulp and took some out to press against his
knife blade. The presence of a white tinge on the knife (tinu koh) indicated a sufficient
amount of starch in the tree. A watery pith indicated the plant was in poor condition and the
tree was left. However, if the pith was dry but did not show any starch, the tree was still
young and he reserved the palm for future use. He covered the exposed notch with mud or
clay so that the wound would not infect the plant. He continued to test as many trees as
possible to find out the number of quality palms. If they were more than sufficient, he returned

During the 1994 period of fieldwork, I actively participated in sago processing with my foster household.
In early February 1994, a flood swept away the newly harvested rice kept at temporary rice stores by the
river bank. So, for that whole year, we had to fall back on sago. The processes mentioned below are
therefore based on my participation and observation, with additional information given by informants.

70

to lead his siblings who lived with his band to harvest the sago together. If the resource was
only adequate for his household, he merely brought his wife to process it. Following that, he
either would return to the camp or immediately chop some more palms so that he would not
have to do too many tasks the next day.
The second stage involved felling the sago tree and cutting the long and heavy
trunk into logs for carrying to the processing site. After he felled the palm with an axe, he
measured the trunk into four feet long logs (palet). The last was the top end of the trunk, just
below the crown where the fronds protruded. Depending on the tree length, he could obtain
three or four portions from each palm. At the tip of the last portion, he again examined the
starch content. If the pith had starch, he then severed (mutu) the portion from the trunk. If the
starch content was meager, he tested the portion lower down the trunk. Usually this portion
contained some starch and so he would sever it from the trunk. Then he cut up the trunk into
1
the log sections that he had marked earlier.
The next step involved cutting away the bark that covered the inner shell (masap).
For Eugeissona, the bark forms the base for thorn growth and, in the case of Arenga, it
retains the bases of dead fronds that remain attached to the trunk. The task of cutting away
the bark on flat land was simple. If the access route to the stream for processing was located
below the sago growth, the man let the logs roll down the slope. On the other hand, if the
access route was located above the sago plants, he ensured that the trunk did not roll all the
way down to the bottom. Otherwise, it would require a great effort to bring back the logs to
where the palm was felled. So, he stuck a line of cut wood onto the slope to stop the logs
from rolling. Then he cut away the bark. After that, he stuck a second line of wood about one
and a half feet below the log to hold it in position when it rolled down a little to expose the
bark on the other side of the trunk. On a very steep slope, the weight of the heavy portion
made the work more strenuous and challenging. With Eugeissona sago, the work was made
even more complicated by the presence of thorns.
Transportation of Sago Trunks
The third stage, transporting the heavy logs to the processing site, was the most
laborious part of sago processing. The man had to carry one portion at a time and usually
had to transport seven to nine logs in all. If the processing site was located below the palm
growth, the man could simply roll down the logs (puluvit). In many areas, however, he had to
carry the logs on his shoulder (yun), walk along flat ground and then up a slope. If the uphill
route was steep, he would tie a strap around the trunk and carry it like a backpack with
shoulder straps. Only young men did this heavy work. An old man would select sago that
was located above or close to a stream. All these stages together, from felling the palms to
dividing the trunks into short portions and then transporting them to the processing site,
required a few hours. Usually the man used the first half of the morning for these tasks.

In the case of a mature Eugeissona sago tree that bears fruit (kavangoh), the highest starch content is
found at the trees top just below the crown of leaves. There was no need to test this type of mature sago
tree.

71

Mashing Sago, Mahap


The fourth stage, sago mashing, involved crushing the hard sago pith into a fibrous
pulp and detaching the starch from the fiber. The man performed the mashing work at a site
near a stream for filtering. While the man was preparing and transporting the sago, his wife
readied the mashing platform (apan). The apan location should be close to the palms in
order to facilitate the transport of the heavy trunks. She chose a flat place that was near a
stream so that she could easily carry the mashed pulp to the stream for filtering. At the
mashing site, she cleared the undergrowth and vines that might hinder the work of her
husband. She then covered the ground with several layers of leaves to prevent the mashed
fibrous pulp from dropping and touching the ground. The leaves chosen were broad and long
enough to effectively contain the sago pith. These leaves included the kelepang, lawang,
lujuk, orak and tajuk and, in mountainous areas, the tuket. Nowadays, with the availability of
plastic sheets, she places a plastic sheet on top of the leaves. Then she arranges a few
more layers of leaves to protect the sheet from tearing due to the rough mashing work. After
completing this, she constructed the filtering platform.
When the site was ready, the man split all the logs in half to expose the pith found
inside the hard shells. He placed a half portion on the mashing site with the pith facing
upwards. Then he began his work by standing on the sago pith. He used a hammer (palu) to
hack the middle of the entire length of the hard pith into a straight groove (tupat). Following
the groove, he hacked and pounded the pith from one end to the other, increasingly
enlarging the groove until the hacking reached the shell. Following that, he scraped the pith
from the shell: a process called git git. After that, he pounded the fibrous pith into a very fine
pulp (peyak) until it became almost powdery.
To crush the hard sago pith into a fibrous pulp, the man used a hammer (palu) that
was specially designed for this. The hammer head had a sharp wooden edge to hack and
chip the sago pith, and a striking surface to pound and crush the hard pith into pulp. The
hammer was about a foot and a half long, with a diameter of two inches. It was made of the
hard palu root which was heavy and gave weight for a strong striking force. The head was
connected to a shaft and handle (see Figure 10, page 74).
Mashing was extremely monotonous work requiring a rhythmic coordination of the
body. He struck down the heavy palu hammer with a simultaneous contraction of the
muscles of his arms, shoulders, chest and stomach to provide maximum strength. This
coordination yielded great strength to wield the hammer, as well as great force to pound the
pith. When he pulled up the hammer, the muscles of his legs, hands and back reacted
simultaneously to spread the effort throughout the body. As he pulled up the hammer, one
hand lifted up the shaft close to the heavy hammerhead to lessen its weight, while his other
hand held the handle. When he stretched his body to a striking position with the hammer
upright over his head, he clasped his hands together on the handle to whack down the
hammer. Strong young men, however, simply pulled up the hammer with both hands on the
shaft as the weight did not tire them easily. Another important posture during this striking
motion was to fully stretch the body upright. This avoided causing the backache that would
otherwise result from a partially stretched body.

72

73

74

75

Pounding required a few hours. By the time the man completed it, it would be early
afternoon. If there was much more pulp for filtering, he would go hunting while waiting for his
wife to complete her part. If his hunting was successful, they would eat fresh meat and sago
for the day.
An important factor was the correlation between the degree of pith hardness and
starch quality. The Punan Vuhang believed that the harder the pith, the higher the starch
content. This was because the more mature the palm was (harder pith), the higher the
content of sago starch. A fully mature palm contained black or brown colored fibers that were
usually found at the base of the trunk. On the other hand, a young palm consisted of orange
fibers which were quite soft. The Punan Vuhang also preferred a harder pith because the
starch in a hard pith detached more easily from the fibers during filtering. Furthermore, a hard
sago pith did not require much pounding while the soft pith required pounding until the pulp
had turned into a powder for maximum starch extraction during filtering. Similarly, the Arenga
sago contained a much harder pith that did not require much pounding. Therefore, although
the harder pith required much more strength to pound, it required less work to filter.
Filtering, Mok
The filtering process was the last stage before the sago became edible starch. This
involved dissolving the starch from the fibrous pulp, filtering the fibers from the solution, and
draining the water to strain out the starch. The tools used were a basket that functioned as a
filter (yut), a container to scoop water (pengivu), and a platform on which to work (pokan).
The water-scooping container (pengivu) consisted of a shaft tied by three pieces of string to
the container. The strings length was the same as the length of the shaft so that the woman,
with one hand gripping the handle, could simultaneously use the same hand to grab hold of
the container for pouring out water.
Filtering Platform (pokan) Before the woman began filtering, she had to construct the
platform (pokan) over a stream or on the side of a riverbank. In the hinterlands where
streams are small and sluggish, she might deepen and enlarge the stream, creating a small
pool to gather more water for the filtering. She removed the soil and stones by digging at the
bottom and sides of the stream. Then she piled them into a dam to block the flow of the
stream and create a pool (1: uhuk, following numerical sequence in Figure 11), of about four
to five square feet.
This ability to utilize a very small stream and block it to form a small pool enabled
the Punan Vuhang to harvest a vast area of sago. This skill was vital during drought seasons
when few streams in the hinterlands contained flowing water, and, it was during droughts that
the community had to rely on sago as their main food resource.
In constructing the platform, the woman placed two trunks (2: ikgong uhuk) the size
of a forearm perpendicular to the bank of the stream, slightly downstream from the dam. She
planted the trunks firmly in the bank. She laid two wrist-sized trunks (3: also called ikgong
uhuk) on top and perpendicular to the two previous trunks. These four beams functioned as
the main frame of the platform. Then, within the frame, she arranged a few layers of leaves
(4: samak pokan) on the river bed to produce a flat base. Following that, she put a piece of
square cloth (5: uhuk) on top of the leaves and fixed it over the platform by fastening each
76

edge of the cloth to one of the four corners of the platform. 1 She folded the four sides of the
cloth over the beams and then placed stones around the edge of the cloth to keep it on the
platform (6: ikgong pok). The cloth functioned as a strainer for retaining the starch while
draining the water. Then she attached two pieces of hardwood (7: pangatang) on top of the
two side beams (3).
The beams (pangatang) supported the platform. On top of the two beams, she put
a few pieces of hard sago shell (bengo) to function as a small platform (8: takgong). Then, on
top of the takgong she put a layer of broad leaves (9: samak takgong). The purpose of these
leaves was to slow the flow of water from the filtering basket during the processing so that
she needed less water. The erecting of the small takgong platform completed the pokan
filtering platform, and she then began to filter out the sago starch.
The filtering process, mok, required various coordinated body movements, and
there were special terms to describe each sequence. She performed a set of actions
simultaneously, resulting in a rhythmic motion of her body. First, she gathered some fibers
(peyak) into a basket (yut) and she then placed them on the platform (pengatang).
Rinsing Fibers with Fresh Water (makit lanum) After she had rinsed her feet in the
stream, she stepped into the yut basket. Then, she used the container (pengivu) to scoop
water for pouring (makit lanum) into the basket. As she pulled up the containers shaft, the
same hand that held the shaft caught the container to pour the water into the basket while
the other hand held the basket. To use the container, she had to make a coordinated
rhythmic motion of scooping and pouring water which now only the elderly women can
2
perform gracefully.
Trampling the Pulp (mok) She simultaneously poured the water onto the pulp, and used
her legs to trample and thrash (mok) the pulp to loosen the starch. The water then dissolved
the starch from the fibers. The solution that flowed out from the basket was deep orange in
color which indicated its rich starch content.
Rotating the Pulp (tokut) After that, she turned over (tokut) the pulp for an even thrashing.
As she used one hand to scoop and pour the water, she used the other hand to pull the
basket towards her legs so that she could rotate the pulp at the bottom. She did this with all
four angles of the basket to ensure the rotation of all the pulp. She thrashed and rinsed the
pulp with water until the solution turned transparent. The woman rhythmically bent her body,
knees and back, and then stretched her body to pull the basket, all at the same time as
scooping and pouring the water into the basket. It was extremely tiring, especially for her
back, as it required endurance and skill using her legs to churn and turn the fibrous pulp.
After the starch was dissolved, she stuffed the leftover pulp into an edge of the pokan frame.

Before cloth was available, the Punan Vuhang used a fine, very tighly woven mat for this purpose.

Most of the women were still young when the Punan Vuhang adopted rice cultivation. Since they no
longer rely on sago as their staple food, they missed the opportunity to acquire the skill of doing this task
gracefully.

77

This pulp then functioned as the ikgong pok to help hold the cloth in place, for by then it was
filled to the brim with starch solution.
Rinsing Fibers with Starch Solution (lupoh) Then the solution inside the cloth (uhuk)
was used to dissolve a new basketful of fibers. Instead of scooping water from the pool of
water, she scooped the solution from the cloth which was filled to the brim. If she used fresh
water from the pool, the cloth would overflow. Consequently, she used the solution to
dissolve the new starch until a considerable amount of water was drained from the cloth.
Then she resumed dissolving the starch with fresh water (makit lanum). She kept trampling
and thrashing until the water flowing out of the basket became transparent.
Sanok In this stage, the starch solution settled. By midday, the man and his wife began to
feel hungry and stopped work to let the starch settle. The woman waited until her feet were
dry, thus indicating that the starch had fully settled.
Tising This was the final stage of draining the settled starch. A corner of the cloth of the
pokan frame was untied and the water drained out. Care was taken to ensure that the water
did not gush out, draining some starch away. What then remained was a white layer of floury
pastethe sago starch (lug)the final product of sago processing.
She gathered a little of the paste and shaped it into a round dough. Then she tied
the cloth up again to resume another round of filtering. While the woman continued her work,
her husband started a fire to cook the starch. When the fire was ready, she diluted the starch
with water, and cooked it into a paste. After eating the sago paste for lunch, they resumed
their work. The man continued to pound the sago pith and she to filter the sago pulp. When
he finished pounding, he would go hunting.
By late afternoon, she would have finished filtering. She then waited for her spouse
to return from hunting. Unless he was pursuing large game, he would return by then, roughly
estimating the time that she needed to process all the sago. On his return, she drained out
the water, and together they folded the cloth that contained the starch. The folding of the
cloth followed a pattern. First they folded the cloth from the downstream direction (tet lalat)
toward upstream (tet laut) over the sago starch. She pressed down the dough and unfolded
the cloth. Then they folded the cloth from the upstream direction towards downstream over
the paste. This rolled the starch into a long piece of dough in the middle of the cloth. If the
dough had abundant starch (ayok lug), it could measure up to one and a half feet wide, a foot
thick and about two and a half feet long. A dough with much less starch (icik lug) only
measured less than half of that. Then they folded both edges of the cloth together and rolled
it up. They folded up the other two ends into a bundle, and then put this bundle of starch into
the basket (yut) which the man had earlier put into the larger basket (kalong) for immediate
transportation back to camp.
Upon arrival at the camp, and after resting for a short while, she distributed (tulat)
the starch to all the households in the camp. This distribution was exclusively a womans
work and her daughters could assist her. She opened the cloth and broke the dough,
keeping about half of the starch for her own household. Then, with the help of her daughter,
she molded, pressed and rounded (nuluvei) each piece of starch into a small ball of dough.
78

Depending on the starch quantity and number of households making up the camp, the size
of each ball of dough would be about three inches in diameter. For immediate kinsmen
(panak), she molded the dough into a bigger ball (nakayok-nakayok koh), up to half a foot in
diameter. Then her daughter helped to distribute the starch, first to close relatives who were
members of the primary sharing network, and then to all other households. The remaining
starch was then kept for their own consumption, in addition to that put aside earlier.
After distributing the sago, she prepared the first meal of the day for the household.
She mixed some starch with water and then poured boiling water into the mixture. As she
poured, she stirred the solution continuously until it turned back into a paste. Then she kept
stirring the paste until it was evenly cooked. This sago paste (linut) was the basic staple food
of the Punan Vuhang, although there were a variety of sago dishes.
Sago-Related Taboos
While the above describes sago processing activities, the following relates to
taboos that the Punan Vuhang observed when processing sago. For the thorny Eugeissona
utilis sago (tajuk), the community did not observe any taboos. It was for the Arenga
undulatifolia sago palm (nyamakoh), which did not have thorns, that the strict observance of
taboos applied. The Punan Vuhang believed that Arenga sago possessed a sensitive spirit
that feared sharp objects so, in the presence of an Arenga palm, the mentioning of thorns
(dui) was forbidden. Violation of this taboo caused the spirit of the Arenga starch to flee.
Consequently, even though the testing of starch had indicated a high starch content, the
1
violator would obtain very little starch from his sago processing. If one had to mention the
word tajuk, he referred to it as bareh laun which means fine leaves, as the Eugeissona sago
has long fine leaves in contrast to the wide and rough Arenga leaves. The reference to the
Eugeissona sago was connected with the following:
The Punan Vuhang believed that the Arenga spirits fear of sharp things, including
the Eugeissona sago palm, could be manipulated to their advantage. When they processed
Eugeissona and Arenga sago together, they would filter the Arenga first. After they had
completed filtering Arenga, they then would filter Eugeissona sago so that its starch would
settle on top of the Arenga starch. Afraid of the Eugeissona starch, the Arenga spirit tried to
escape, but found its way blocked by the filtering frame. Thus, it had no way to flee except
upwards. Consequently, the spirit would push the Eugeissona upward to escape. However,
to prevent the spirit from escaping, the Punan Vuhang would request the Arenga spirit to
push up and thicken the entire layer of starch by chanting:
I filter you nyamakoh first

Ok mok koh nyamakoh ni mon.


Gon koh nyuvuwat luq tajuk nyi,

so that you will push up the tajuk starch,

mek in ayok koh!

make it bountiful, please!

According to an informant, some young men did not believe this and tested it. A group selected a high
quality Arenga palm and tested it, finding it to contain much starch. Then they took thorns and poked them
into the trunk, supposedly causing the starch spirit to flee from the thorns. True enough, after processing,
they obtained very little starch. Since then, the community has become even more observant of the taboo.

79

Another belief not related to the Arenga spirit concerned filtering sago in muddy
water. The Punan Vuhang believed that filtering Arenga in muddy water improved the taste
of the starch and increased its amount. In comparison, filtering in clear water resulted in a
bland and less copious starch.
Hunting Wild Boar
Hunting was an extremely important activity for the Punan Vuhang, equal to sago
processing. Wild boar (bavui; Sus barbatus barbatus) were the Punan Vuhangs most
important game. Compared to all other types of game, a wild boar provided the most flesh.
Even more important, it contained fat, a rich source of energy. While the Punan Vuhang
occasionally did hunt without the aid of dogs (kusi) for sport, hunting with dogs was the only
method that gave a certainty of success.
I will start by discussing the methods, rules and regulations that applied to hunting,
based on my observation of the activities in which I participated. Informants provided detailed
information on how the activities were done, some of which were no longer performed due to
their having settled down in one area. Then I will describe the characteristics of wild boar.
Knowledge of animal traits was vital for successful hunting. This knowledge of wildlife is
common among hunter-gatherers. According to Bahuchet (1992:209), the location of game
can be, to some extent, predicted by hunters: with their knowledge of the habits and
behavior of the animals species they may visit the places where the animals feed or sleep,
for instance the fruiting trees or the dense thickets. The details are amplified by Puris study
of hunting among the Penan Benalui:
Penan hunters rely on their knowledge of the forests, mountains, and rivers to
locate animal prey, plants and other resources. They respond to spatial and
temporal variation in the abundance and distribution of animal prey, fruiting trees,
and other forest resources by altering the tools, techniques, and strategies
employed in hunting and collecting. Switching to more compatible subsistence
activities can occur seasonally as well as on a daily basis in response to some
change in the environment, such as the weather, the fruit season, or the migration
of animal prey (2005:73).

Hunting with Dogs, Nagak or Tet Ahu


Using hunting dogs (nagak or tet ahu) was the main technique employed to hunt
wild boar. Before bringing his dogs to a hunt, a hunter explored the forest floor for fresh signs
of wild boar. During the fruit season, when various types of fruit had ripened, he would go to
locations where there was an abundance of fruit for wild boar to forage. The Punan Vuhang
called these fruits tone, and among the choice fruits were the oil-rich seeds of the Anisoptera
spp., Shorea spp., (bua upak; manator); Cotylelobium spp., Dipterocarpus spp., oaks and
1
chestnuts of the tree families Fagaceae (bua terkalet), and the okar kalei. In the off-fruit
season, wild boar were found in sago groves with Eugeissona palms that still bore overripe
fruits. The search for these fruits was called ngelela or pujuak. When the tone fruits were not

See Appendix 3 for the various Anisoptera, Dipterocarpus and Shorea species which bear fruit
consumed by wild boar.

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in season, the hunter searched for fresh wild boar tracks (ivah) or for their resting places
(salah bavui). When the hunter saw any of these signs, he took care not to disturb the tracks
as the wild boar would return to the area and he could bring his hunting dogs. With any signs
1
of disturbance, the wild boars were likely to flee. The sighting of these fresh marks indicated
a high probability of success in hunting down the wild boar, as the game had not gone far
enough to avoid the dogs detection. The hunter then returned to camp and informed the
community of his finding. This reserved for him prior right to hunt in that place.
Generally, however, a hunter failed to come across any signs. If his household
was in urgent need of meat, he would then bring his dogs to hunt on a trial basis without any
certainty of acquiring game. Chances were that he would not come across any trails in the
vast forest. Then it was up to the dogs, using their keen olfactory powers, to track down
game.
On the night before hunting, hunters informed the community of their selected
hunting locations. Those who had seen fresh signs had prior right to the areas selected. The
rest went on a trial basis to hunting grounds that nobody else had chosen. The community
did not hold any formal meeting to do this selection, whoever first mentioned his selected
area obtained the right to go there. Some hunters only decided to go hunting on the morning
of the hunt, as they could not make up their mind any earlier where they planned to go. Only
before going out hunting did they inform other hunters who similarly had yet to go.
This planning and selecting of hunting grounds prevented different groups of
hunting dogs from meeting in the forest. Dogs from different households tended to fight when
they met. In the forest, out of reach of the hunters control, there were no means to stop them
and there were cases of dogs that fought to the death and of many others being crippled. To
avoid this, hunters took turns (suquak-quak) leaving the camp. The hunter who was going
the farthest departed first, followed by the person who was going to the next farthest ground.
The person going to the nearest location was the last to leave. When all these hunters had
gone, those who had chosen their hunting territories after the first group had spoken would
leave the camp.
By daybreak, the first hunter left without taking any food, only his knife and spear.
He whispered softly to his sleeping dogs and they instantly responded to his call. As he left
the camp compound, he called out softly nyeh nyeh so that the dogs headed in his
direction. Other hunters recognized his voice and waited in their shelters for their turn. The
next hunter waited a moment for the earlier hunters dogs to go a safe distance. Then, he
called his dogs to go hunting. All the other hunters continued to space out their departures in
a similar fashion.
Along the way to the chosen hunting grounds, the hunter repeatedly called out to
his dogs to ensure that they followed him. Although the dogs were spread out over a wide
area, the hunters calling of nyeh-nyeh kept them within hearing range. When he headed in
a different direction, they responded accordingly and changed their direction of exploration.
The synchronization of the direction of the dogs movement according to the
hunters position was vital. In most major tributaries, different hunting grounds that shared a

However, during the off-fruit season, a wild boar did not return to the same area again, as it moved on in
search of food in other areas. In this case, the hunter had no worry of disturbing the tracks.

81

tributarys watershed system were separated by a great distance. Each hunting ground
stretched far up the valley of a smaller stream. As a hunter usually tracked along a ridge
parallel to a stream, his position served as the focal point for his dogs which were spread out
in different directions. Although the dogs were at a great distance from each other, they
moved in the same direction. Eventually the hunter and his dogs arrived at the site where he
had spotted signs of wild boar during the previous days exploration. Instead of calling softly,
he then would call out in a high pitched voice, he-he, to encourage the dogs to spread
farther to seek the scent of the wild boars tracks.
As the dogs fanned out, they frequently came across mousedeer (pelanuk) and
barking deer (telau) that were found in abundance in the forest. While well-disciplined dogs
would ignore these animals, most average dogs chased after them. The hunter recognized
the type of game by the kind of barks the dogs made. The barking that sounded like Hoh!
Hoh! Kok! Hooh! indicated that the dogs were chasing small game. The Punan Vuhang
called this unwanted chase ahu mukgak. Barking after a deer or a wild boar sounded like
Hoar! Hoar! The people called the chase for big game mangin.
The barking for a small animal (mukgak) drained the dogs strength. Then, when
they would later chase a wild boar, they would become easily exhausted. More seriously, if
the pursued game was a fully grown male barking deer with long and sharp canine teeth, it
was capable of killing the dogs. Besides, a wild boar that heard the barking would run away.
So, the hunter called out Hoo! Hoo! to call them back. Usually they obediently returned to
their master.
The hunter called out Nyeh Nyeh, and then He He, to encourage them to fan
out again. When a dog scented a large game animal, it barked and chased it. The other dogs
that had spread into other areas then joined the first dog. After hearing the barking sound,
Hoar! Hoar! Hoar! (mangin), the hunter waited to identify whether the animal was a deer or
a wild boar. Initially a pursued animal ran uphill to avoid the dogs that usually chased after it
from the foot of the hill. If it were a deer, it would outrun the dogs, causing the pursuit to
continuously head uphill. If it were a wild boar, the leaner and lighter dogs would soon catch
up with it. When the wild boar could no longer outpace the dogs by running uphill, it then
turned around to run downhill.
By this change of direction, the hunter differentiated wild boar from deer. A
continuous chase uphill indicated a deer. If the dogs were strong and had caught deer
before, the hunter encouraged them to continue the pursuit. Otherwise, as was the case for
most dogs, the hunter would call them back.
The moment the chase changed direction by going downhill, the hunter called out,
Rooo! Rooo! to encourage the pursuit. Meanwhile the hunter merely walked at a faster
pace to follow the chase and assessed the direction of the wild boars flight. As the wild boar
headed towards a stream, the hunter mentally charted out the landscape to locate the wild
boar. He identified the stream and its location within the watershed, and the likely direction in
which the wild boar would head. Then he went to a slope that formed a part of the streams
watershed system so that he could follow the pursuit from a high position. Also, as slopes
were usually straighter than meandering streams, he merely walked at a fast pace to keep
up with the chase below.

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As all the dogs caught up with the wild boar, the barking became intense. The
hunter continually called out to the dogs to encourage their pursuit. At this point, he ran
quickly towards the quarry, leaping, jumping, and running and sliding down the slopes,
brushing aside obstacles such as thorny vines without any caution to prevent injuries.
Soon, the dogs surrounded (paung) the wild boar and the barking seemed to focus
on one spot, becoming even more intense as the wild boar tried to fend off and escape from
the dogs. The hunter would quickly run to the site before the wild boar was able to escape.
Once he reached the surrounded wild boar, he would decide how to tackle it. A fully grown
temanyit male with long tusks that turned round and round to attack the dogs was extremely
fierce (mesek en). The aggressive wild boar in desperation might even attack the hunter. If
the hunter was brave and experienced, he would stab the wild boar without releasing the
spear (napalu). A less experienced hunter was likely to hurl his spear from a safe distance
(nokjou) of about fifteen feet. However, when a wild boar possessed short tusks, the hunter
would stab (napalu) it.
Before spearing the boar, the hunter positioned himself carefully to target the
boars vulnerable parts in order to pierce right into its heart and lungs and cause instant death
(nok hun sun). The target spots are around the shoulder blade which shields the most
vulnerable organs of the body. The hunter aimed at the front point (sung); the point just
behind the shoulder blade (bitong), and above the shoulder blade (bavang). If the hit was not
accurate, he jabbed again and again until the boar dropped. If the spearing was ineffective
and the wounded boar managed to run away, the dogs resumed the pursuit. As the bleeding
was profuse, the quarry eventually weakened and was surrounded by the dogs again. The
hunter then could kill the boar without further difficulty.
The hunter cut a short slit on the abdomen to pull out the internal organs for
1
feeding the dogs. This feeding also reinforced and strengthened the dogs intention to
focus their sniffing for wild boar and not simply chase any game found along the way. He
stitched (nyikot) the cut on the boars abdomen with a strip of rattan or a fig vine (okar lunuk),
then searched for buluvuh, pingitan or nyokat tree bark to make a strap (oii) for carrying back
the carcass. These trees bark retained the shape of the straps, while other tree bark
stretched into small pieces and would cut into the hunters shoulders, becoming painful. The
weight of a very big wild boar was lessened by cutting its head and limbs below the knees. If
the distance was very far, he cut away its bones too, and brought back just the meat.
The hunter then cut short slits through the tough skin to pull the straps through the
carcass. This ensured that the straps remained in position to provide a balanced load. After
tying the strap tightly over the carcass, he carried it on his back with the straps bound over
his shoulders, carrying it to the camp like a backpack.
When he reached the camp, the first person who saw the returning hunter would
ask a child to make a long call, Koo! Koo! (puklung). Every child who heard the long call
reacted instantly and ran towards the hunter while calling out to produce a rhythmic cooing
that resounded throughout the camp. In the wild boar migration season, this cooing

As dogs returned to camp before the hunter, it was through this bulging of the dogs stomachs that
members in the community knew in advance of a successful hunt.

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resonated through the camp several times each day, informing of the return of the successful
hunters.
Problems in Hunting Wild Boar
Hunting with dogs was not always easy and hunters frequently encountered
problems, such as weak dogs, a strong wild boar that could endure a long distance run, or
difficult physical terrain. The dogs endurance and strength were important factors in
determining the success of the hunt. It was difficult for weak dogs to outrun and corner a wild
boar, especially a mature male boar (temanyit) which could escape (takul) after a long chase.
On the other hand, dogs that were strong and capable of outrunning a mature deer did not
face much difficulty in chasing a boar.
Exhaustion, lehik litang At times, even strong dogs became exhausted and might give
up after a long chase. Even when they had successfully surrounded the wild boar (alum jian
paung), they might no longer chase it and so it would manage to escape. At times like this,
the hunting failure rate was high despite many incidents of dogs meeting wild boars. Despite
this, a hunter had to persevere and continue hunting to maintain the dogs stamina and
endurance. When the dogs recovered from being off-form, they easily regained their
prowess. Also, if the dogs did not run sufficiently, their toenails grew too long, making it
difficult and awkward to run during the pursuit of a wild boar.
Another problem was the ability of a wild boar to run a great distance, resulting in a
long chase. When the bua taret fruit was in season, if the wild boar had consumed the fruit, it
could run with great endurance. Frequently during that season wild boars managed to
escape from the dogs despite long chases and the Punan Vuhang attributed this to their
having eaten the fruit.
A Long Chase The nature of the landscape was another factor that affected the success
of the hunt. When a wild boar fled from the dogs, it would eventually dash downhill, running
into a stream and then along a tributary. As it ran following the pull of gravity, a strong boar
could run a long distance before it was finally subdued by the dogs. On a meandering
tributary that was gentle in its flow, the wild boar could run on without facing any physical
obstruction. In contrast, on rivers with waterfalls, the sudden drop prevented the game from
running further, and the dogs could easily catch up and surround the boar. For example, in
the Kajangs tributary of the Kebuhor that contained a series of waterfalls, the sudden drop in
the streams frequently prevented the boars escape. Consequently, hunters preferred to hunt
in such rugged terrain, as the success rate was considerably higher than along rivers that did
not have waterfalls.
On some major tributaries, the access routes entering into them were shortcuts
from other river systems. Instead of starting from the tributarys confluence, the shortcut
directly led a hunter into its hinterland. When the wild boar ran past the entry point into the
tributary, it would run very far down the river, thus resulting in a long period of hunting.
Furthermore, after killing a wild boar downriver, the hunter had to carry the carcass over a
long distance to reach the entry point that led to the main access route. For example, the
access route into the Lumunung hinterland was through an overland route from the
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Sengayan rivermouth. From the Sengayan, a hunter could walk directly into the headwaters,
entering the Lumunung at the convergence of the Sik tributary. The wild boar that fled past
the Sik confluence had to be carried over a long distance upriver back to the Sik.
On the other hand, entrance points into many short tributaries were from their
confluence with the main river. Consequently, after the Punan Vuhang had become
sedentary and had access to boats with outboard motors, they preferred killing wild boar
near the confluence to killing them far upstream. Near the riverbank, a hunter only needed to
carry the heavy boar carcass a short distance to reach his boat.
Wild Boar Running into a Different Watershed Occasionally, the dogs met a wild boar
near the top of a ridge or on a mountain range. To escape from the pursuing dogs, the wild
boar would run uphill to the top of the ridge and then down the other side of the ridge.
Pursued by the dogs, it ran further and further away from the hunter. For example, if the wild
boar ran into the Linau side of the valley, the hunter had to cross the dividing range that
separated the Linau from the Kajang. This required a very long journey. For that matter, if he
had killed the wild boar in the morning, a hunter would only reach the camp shortly before
nightfall, after carrying the carcass all day.
Dog Taboos, Ahu Pali
The Punan Vuhang observed a few taboos (lalik) that regulated practices when
hunting dogs were used. It was believed that good hunting dogs (ahu larkin) possessed
sensitive spirits that could be easily harmed, resulting in the dogs losing their adeptness or
even causing their death. According to the taboo, all the animals that a hunter caught with
the skill of his dogs required proper treatment. If someone broke a taboo, they performed a
ritual to restore the dogs ability. Under the adet lalik taboo belief system, the community was
prohibited from doing any of the following to carcasses obtained by dogs:
1)
Removing flesh from the skull and lower legs, (mangahin) During lean times
when meat was scarce, the community consumed all edible parts of a wild boar. If the wild
boar was too big and the distance too far for carrying it back, the hunter would cut away the
bones and take back only the meat and the offal. However the hunter could not cut the flesh
away from the skull or the limbs below the knees. He had to chop these parts off the carcass.
2)
Cutting bindings (sikot) and shoulder straps (oii) The binding that stitched the
cutting on the wild boar and the straps for carrying the carcass could not be severed. The
binding had to be unfastened slowly, regardless of the difficulty in untying it. To avoid this
difficult task of unfastening the binding, the hunter systematically tied the vines when he
stitched the carcass in such a way that with a tug, the binding became loosened.
3)
Cooking the buyun dish The internal bleeding caused by a spear produced an
amount of blood that was used as an ingredient for the delicious buyun dish. This consisted
of a mixture of the blood, minced internal organs, fat and lean meat, and sago starch. This
dish was delicious, but it could only be prepared from a wild boar obtained through the kusi
method without the aid of hunting dogs. A buyun dish made from a wild boar obtained by the
dogs produced a negative effect on the dogs that could not even be alleviated by a healing
ritual.

85

4)
Carrying internal organs across a stream During meat distribution, internal
organs could not be carried across a stream for distribution, even to closely related
households. Even a stream that had dried up during a drought was considered an obstacle
to the distribution of internal organs.
5)
Chopping the liver (ate) and cutting cooked internal organs The Punan Vuhang
did not chop raw liver (mapet), but sliced it into smaller pieces with a blade (yu). They could
not cut internal organs that had been cooked, although they could use their hands to break
and tear them into smaller pieces.
6)
Hitting cooked meat The Punan Vuhang believed that if cooked meat was
beaten (natek) with a knife or an axe, the dogs that had obtained the wild boar would swell
up and then die. If the dogs did not die, they would become even more skillful. However, the
taboo would affect the dogs owner, instead, causing his eyes to pop out and him to die. The
community believed that this act was only performed by someone extremely jealous of the
dogs prowess. The offender himself would face negative consequences throughout his life
due to retaliation by the affected dogs spirits (buruan ahu). When this happened, no cure
could alleviate the offenders suffering. Despite the severity of this punishment, there were
said to be such cases that had occurred in the distant past.
7)
Eating tortoise (kalop) The household of the dogs that obtained a tortoise
(kalop) could not eat its flesh. The hunter had to give it away to other households. If this
taboo was not observed, the dogs would suffer from mishaps and their lives would be short.
8)
Taking back the first hunted deer The hunter had to abandon the first deer that a
dog obtained in the forest. If he brought back this deers carcass, the dog would not live long.
This prohibition probably signified a rite-de-passage for a dog that achieved the ability to
hunt a deer, a prowess which marked its adeptness to hunt even extremely strong male wild
boar (temanyit).
9)
Concerning Newly Acquired Dogs Occasionally Punan Vuhang bought dogs
with proven hunting prowess (larkin) from traders. They also bought puppies that showed
indications of potential, especially the offspring of proven dogs. If the new dog entered the
owners shelter and urinated inside the shelter, it was a bad omen. Consequently, the owner
had to return the dog to its original owner without any refund. If the dog remained with the
household, the owner would die shortly after. On the other hand, if nothing happened to the
owner, the dog would soon die.
Dog Healing Ritual
When the community broke any of these taboos, the dogs would lose their hunting
prowess or even die. Frequently when chasing wild boar, they would fail to outrun the game,
although in normal times this seldom happened. When no one had broken a taboo, but the
dogs still frequently failed during hunting, the community would perform the following ritual:
The dogs owner requested an old man to do this ritual; it was not necessary for a
shaman to do it. In the evening, the old man made a fire, either on the platform of the shelter
or on a stone in the camp compound. He burned a big bamboo with both ends of its
internode intact. While he turned the bamboo for an even burning, he chanted to request the
augury birds spirits (otu behok) for assistance:

86

mut mulong tau,


mut pee-it tau,
mut legehek tau,
telajan vulei, iak assee tau.
mut dari kejian ahunya,
mut dari ciu palik ahunya,
mut bulunya latup, tovih latup bulunya palik
ahu tei ovow,
gon kejian di tuai mulet ahunya tiu.

Calling the right* mulong,


Calling the right pee-it,
Calling the right legehek,
Left telajan and *right assee.
* (direction from the right)
Calling them to restore the dogs,
Calling them to rid the taboo,
Calling the bamboos explosion to take the
palik away,
so that prowess returns to the dogs.

As the fire heated up the bamboo, the intense heat inside the bamboo tube produced a
strong pressure. This caused the big bamboo to explode with a loud bang like a cannon.
Instantly he chanted:
Nah! Tovih latup bulunya,
palik ahu tuei ovow,
latup bulu mapat mirat ciu palik ahunyi
gon kejian gon kelarkin nyatuei mulet ahunyi
tiu.

Nah! With this bamboos explosion,


the dogs apathy goes away,
the bamboo explosion grabs and throws the
dogs apathy away,
so that the dogs prowess returns to them.

Then the old man repeated (pokolong) the ritual, burning and turning the bamboo while
chanting to request the augury spirits to continue offering their assistance:
mut behok duri kejian ahu dunah,
mut behok tulong ahu mek in larkin tiu.
mut behok duri kejian ahu dunah,
mut behok tulong ahu mek in larkin tiu.

Calling the augury spirits to restore these


dogs,
Calling the augury spirits to help make the
dogs adept again.
Calling the augury spirits to restore these
dogs,
Calling the augury spirits to help make the
dogs adept again.

The bamboo exploded again and immediately he chanted:


Nah! With the bamboos explosion
the dogs apathy flees and is gone
so that their prowess returns.

Nah! Tovih latup bulunya


Palik ahu nyi tei uvow, tei ngakat
Gon kelarkinnya tuei.

Next, he continued the ritual by tying a wooden hook (gait) to the bamboo that had exploded,
and chanting:
gon gaitnya ngait kejian ahu yi,
ngait kelarkin ahu gon in larkin tiu,
gon bavui ngajoh dei uvow,
gon bavui ngajoh dei mojuk nek in mangin,
gon igek-igek koh bak, beh makah in paung
sok nya.

Let the hook take hold of the dogs ability,


hook the adeptness so that they become able
again,
so that the wild boar wont run away,
so that the wild boar will not run faraway upon
pursuit,
so that the chase will be short to allow the
dogs to surround the wild boar from nearby.

With this, the ritual was completed. Early the next morning, the hunter would bring his dogs
to hunt. At the beginning of the hunt, he chanted for favorable bird auguries:
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right pee-it
right mungulung
left telajan
right assee.

pee-it tau,
mungulung tau,
telajan vulei,
assee tau

The call requested that these bird auguries fly from the favorable directions and so
enable the hunter to hunt without any obstacles. Before long, the dogs would surround a big
male wild boar. The success in out-running and surrounding the wild boar indicated that the
dogs had regained their effectiveness. Usually the ritual successfully cured the dogs from the
ill effects of taboo breaking. However, if the dogs failed to regain their ability, they were no
longer useful, but were still kept and cared for until they died natural deaths.
When a hunter first returned to the camp with game, after his dogs had been made
effective again, he had to treat the carcass with great care. Customarily, he did not cut the
bindings and straps, but unfastened them slowly. The platform in the shelter where the
hunter cut the carcass then became a forbidden place for all further cutting activities. For as
long as the community remained in the camp, they had to refrain from cutting on that
platform. Otherwise the dogs would become palik again.
The Punan Vuhangs Treatment of Hunting Dogs
Because of the importance of good hunting dogs, the Punan Vuhang treated their
1
dogs extremely well. They considered the dogs as their spears (ucuk) without which, even
if they could stalk close to a wild boar, they could not kill it. Based on this analogy, it is to be
understood that even if there were an abundance of wild boar in the forest, it was extremely
difficult to obtain game.
The Punan Vuhang fed their dogs food of good quality. Whether it was a season of
2
abundance or scarcity, the dogs had their fair share of food at meal time. When meat was
plentiful, the dogs were fed large chunks of cooked meat before and after meal times. At
times when the meat was barely sufficient for the household, the hunter would mix a little
meat with soup and sago starch to feed the dogs. During periods of meat scarcity, a little
soup was mixed with the starch to give flavor to the food. When no meat was available, they
3
fed sago paste to the dogs.
At meal times, the dogs were also fed. Household members would give pieces of
meat or bones to the dogs. When someone took a chunk of meat that had skin and bristle
attached to it, he or she would peel off the skin and give it to the dogs. Consequently, when
the Punan Vuhang ate their meals, the dogs waited by their sides, hoping to be given some
1

Today, the Punan Vuhang continue to treat their dogs very well, and they still practice selective breeding
as described below.
2

This contrasts with the Penan people who only feed their dogs upon the success of acquiring a wild boar
at the hunting site. Consequently the Penan dogs are very thin compared to the stout Punan Vuhang
dogs.
3

During the lean period, the human community themselves lacked meat for consumption. When the pigs
were extremely thin, the meat was so unpalatable that even the dogs refused to eat it. Both the human
community and their dogs were very thin during this period.

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skin. 1 As mentioned, in the forest, when a hunter killed a wild boar with his dogs, he cut open
the abdomen and pulled out the internal organs to feed them.
Each household not only fed their dogs well, but also took very good care of them.
At night, the dogs slept by the fireplace where huge logs of firewood (okgong) were
continuously burning to provide warmth for them. When the night was very cold, kindling was
added to the logs to make big flames to heat up the sleeping place. If there was no fire, the
dogs would stare pathetically at their master, as if requesting fire. Out of concern and
sympathy (mahik), he would make a fire for them. Some people gave blankets to their dogs
for warmth and mosquito nets to keep them comfortable. When the day was hot, they carried
the dogs to the river for a dip to cool them.
Another way the Punan Vuhang took good care of their dogs was connected to
their belief that each person should symbolically own a dog for the benefit of the dog. Like
human beings, dogs possessed spirits. The dog spirit was linked to a household member to
ensure the dogs spiritual well-being. The age of the human owner was unimportant and
dogs were even given to babies to maintain a relationship between a human and the dog.
Selective Breeding of Dogs
The Punan Vuhang believed they could identify a dogs hunting prowess by
looking at the location of the dogs nipples. Good dogs possessed certain nipple patterns,
they thought. Unless they could hunt, dogs were considered useless so the community
practiced selective breeding of the best females and males to achieve a better chance of
producing good dogs.
When a good female hunting dog was in heat, its owner would request that an
owner of the best dogs lend a male to sire the offspring. Such a dog would give the female
the best potential to produce superior pups. However, owners who had very good males did
not freely allow their dogs to mate with any females. This control of breeding was a complex
matter that was connected to the selective process of choice of hunting grounds.
Theoretically, the fewer the number of households that owned hunting dogs, the more
choices of hunting grounds there would be. Conversely, when there were more hunting
groups, the availability of better hunting grounds became limited. This was particularly
significant when wild boar were scarce and few hunting grounds were suitable for hunting.
So, to gain better access to more hunting grounds, dog owners limited their dogs mating
partners, and would only allow their dogs to mate with dogs belonging to closely related
households unless there was some item of reciprocity that another household had to offer.
Kinship relations and past reciprocal exchanges between the female dogs
household (the receiver) and the male dogs household (the provider) determined the ability
to obtain a good male dog for mating. This meant that the receiving household had in the
past given a male dog to mate with the female dog of the provider, or given them a puppy.

Probably, this was one of the reasons why the Punan Vuhang did not remove the skin or fur from the
meat when they cooked it. During meal times, a person peeled the skin off and gave it to the dogs.

89

However, this rule was discarded when the community experienced a lack of dogs due to
1
starvation or diseases, so that the dog population would be maintained.
To ensure that only the selected dog mated with the female in heat, both were kept
in the family area of the female dogs owner. This prevented other dogs from interfering with
the mating, or fighting over the female. After the heat period was over, the dogs were allowed
to freely mingle again. When the female gave birth, a person skilled in identifying good dogs
made the selection. The owner only kept the puppies that possessed the desired location of
nipples, and abandoned those that did not (see Puri 2005:245-252 on how a good dog is
chosen and the characteristics of good and bad dogs). Before the mother dog suckled them,
the unwanted pups were removed, as once the Punan Vuhang allowed the puppies to be
fed by their mother, the Punan Vuhang developed an emotional attachment to the pups. If
unwanted dogs had been kept and grew up, they would be useless and would strain the
communitys resources during lean times. To forestall forming such attachments, the owner
immediately took unwanted puppies across the river and abandoned them in a distant area.
Removed from the warmth of their mother and food, the pups would immediately die.
Through this selective process, only five or six pups were kept, and at times only
one or two. If there was only one pup chosen for training, the owner retained the right to own
it. It would grow up to be a very good dog with great potential. This was most likely due both
to its breeding and the lack of competition for its mothers milk, thus providing all the nutrients
it needed to achieve healthy growth. If there was more than one pup, the male dogs
household was given one in return for allowing it to sire the pups. Then, depending on the
number of pups kept, the owner would reciprocate to those households who had given him
pups in the past. After that, the pups were shared with closely related households based on
the Punan Vuhang food sharing system of giving priority to siblings households. For a
household to fully reciprocate to all the households to which it was indebted, it often took
several dog generations to acquire enough pups to give away.
Although the custom of observing reciprocity in giving away the puppies followed
the above sequence, the actual distribution depended on the immediate need of the
households that held reciprocal rights to the pups. If a household had no need for the dogs,
they would bypass this round of reciprocity in favor of a future return. There was no time limit,
and future generations would be obliged to honor it. Due to this longterm reciprocity, it was
the task of the hunters spouse to determine the distribution of pups because the practice of
uxorilocal post-marital residence made the man unfamiliar with the earlier exchanges that
had taken place between his spouses household and others.
The Punan Vuhangs selection of puppies with favored traits and abandonment of
those that did not show promise of hunting ability resulted in the production of only effective
hunting dogs. Also, the selection of adult male and female dogs for breeding of proven
adeptness established several generations of dog pedigrees from different dog
genealogies. For that reason, only good hunting dogs were found in the Punan Vuhang
community. All of them, both male and female, were capable of obtaining wild boar, a fact

On the other hand, when the number of dogs in the community was sufficient, female dogs were not
allowed to mate.

90

recognized by distant communities.1 Informants mentioned that they continue to do pup


selection, although this did not occur during my fieldwork.
Hunting Without Dogs, Kusi
The method which was used by a hunter to hunt alone (kusi), without the aid of
hunting dogs, to track a wild boar was an esteemed hunting practice among the Punan
Vuhang. Hunters, however, only did this during the peak wild boar migration season which
corresponded with the peak of the Anisoptera kostermans (tason) ripening season. During
this period, the ripened fruits that dropped to the ground provided plentiful food for the wild
boar to consume. This abundance caused wild boar to concentrate so much on foraging that
they did not detect a hunter stalking close by. While most hunters practiced kusi on some
wild boar, only young men ventured out into the distant Bahau watershed to hunt the fattest
boars found in their territory. The community treated this distant hunting as a sport. Married
men, however, found it sufficient to hunt fat wild boars that were easily available within the
river system where they lived.
Kusi hunting required great patience and skill to stalk a boar without alarming it. A
hunter usually had to go a distance from his camp to forest grounds that had not been
disturbed by hunting dogs. Without any disturbance to their foraging, the wild boar focused
only on eating. As the hunter explored for signs of a wild boar, he searched for a fruiting
tason tree so that the chance of encountering boar was greater.
While exploring, the hunter had to walk against the breeze that blew down from the
cool highlands. By going against the breeze, his scent would be blown away from the
direction in which he was heading. Otherwise, his scent would be carried forward, towards
the boar if it were foraging there, thus alerting it.
When the hunter saw a fruiting tason tree, he quietly walked towards it while
ensuring that the breeze was blowing against his face. If he saw a wild boar foraging there,
he took extra precautions as it was extremely sensitive to approaching sounds. To minimize
breaking twigs on the ground that could produce a cracking sound, he tiptoed (tupunying).
When he got into visual range of the boar, he hid behind a boulder or big tree. He moved
from one hiding place to another, always closer to the boar, but remained unseen as long as
possible. As he approached nearer to the boar, he finally could not avoid being seen.
However, for as long as the game did not see the hunters eyes and face, it would not
become alarmed. Each time that the boar looked at him, the hunter froze.
Eventually he got into spearing range at about thirty feet away from the boar. He
positioned himself to stand sideways (lingit koh) to the wild boar so that his face did not get
directly into the wild boars front view. Also, this position allowed him to throw the spear into
the wild boars chest. Using his spear shaft to conceal his eyes from the boars view, the
hunter hurled (nokjou) his spear at the most vulnerable parts of its body (bavang, sung and

Throughout my visits to various longhouse communities along the Balui River, I was told of the
superiority of Punan Vuhang dogs in hunting compared to the dogs owned by other communities. In my
fieldwork at a Kayan longhouse in 1989, I noticed that there was no control of dog breeding. The dogs
were let out in the open, including the female dogs in heat. In terms of dog hunting prowess, not all dogs
were good even though the Kayan did practice pup selection based on the nipple layout pattern.

91

bitong). The spear could penetrate deeply and often pierced the boars heart and lungs,
killing it instantly.
However, if the aim was not accurate, the spear would only produce a deep
wound, not sufficient to cause instant death. The boar would then instantly flee and the spear
would be dislocated by its running. Blood would ooze from the wound and leave a trail for the
hunter to follow. After a short distance, the blood trail would lead to a pool of blood. Then
there would be less and less blood until there was no more trace of it at all. The hunter then
would look for flies and ants that became very active along the wild boars trail, as well as
looking for fresh tracks that the wounded wild boar had trampled. Following the trail, he
listened intently for the brushing sound of swaying branches caused by the staggering boar.
If he heard this, he was very close. He tiptoed towards the game and upon reaching spearing
range, he again hurled his spear into the boars vulnerable spots. Simultaneously, he lunged
toward the boar to pull out the spear and thrust it into the boar again, and sometimes even
again, until it dropped to the ground.
If the killing site was very far from the camp, which was usually the case, the hunter
had to lighten the weight of the carcass. He sliced off the thick fat from the carcass for
transportation back to the camp. He put the blood that had resulted from internal bleeding,
and the brain, into the pigs stomach. The blood and brain were used for the delicious buyun
dish (see note 3, page 85). After stitching up the carcass, he carried the boar on his back like
a backpack.
When he approached the camp, he blew into his palm to make a nyupopok popok
popok sound. This sound signaled his success in getting a wild boar by the difficult kusi
method. As usual, the children made the cooing sound (puklung) to greet his return.
Success in kusi hunting enhanced a mans social standing as a good hunter. This
differed from hunting with dogs which relied on the dogs prowess to determine the hunters
success. In contrast, kusi solely depended on the hunters ability to track and stalk close to
an extremely sensitive wild boar. His accuracy in spearing the boars vulnerable spots also
determined the number of boars that he could kill. If the spearing produced an instant death,
he could kill many boars in a single trip. In comparison, a hunter who could only inflict
wounds had to track the wounded animal before he was able to kill it. Consequently, the
number of wild boars that he could kill was a measure of his hunting mastery. In addition,
how fat the pigs were that a hunter obtained also indicated his skill. This was because the
fattest wild boar were mainly adult males, which were difficult to stalk due to their being very
alert. Because of the status gained in acquiring big fat boars, young men who did not have
much responsibility in their households liked to go to distant areas to search for big and fat
wild pigs. Due to the distance, they would bring back only slices of fat of one or two
carcasses, but retain the pigs tails to show the number of boars that they had killed.
Wild Boar
Because of the importance of wild boar to the Punan Vuhang in the past, I take up
here some issues related to wild boar hunting. The first section is on the former sharing of

92

wild boar meat.1 The second describes varieties of wild boar; information that was vital to the
hunters survival as the seasonal availability of a particular kind of wild boar determined the
type of hunting methods as described above. The last section is on the ecological
perspective of wild boar based on the Punan Vuhangs former worldview, which serves to
explain the importance that wild boar had for them.
Sharing Wild Boar Meat
When a hunter killed a wild boar on his own, he held rights to the whole carcass
and his household had the absolute right to share and distribute it. This is in contrast to some
hunter-gatherers, particularly in Australia, who practice demand sharing. In demand sharing,
the hunter loses all rights to the game, and the distribution process is initiated by persons
2
other than the hunter (Testart 1987:287). When the Punan Vuhang hunter brought back a
carcass, however, either he or his spouse cut up (sapah) the boar and distributed (tulat) the
meat to the community. The close kinsmen (paknak) who made up the primary sharing
network were given portions of the chest, waist and offal, and small portions of hind and
forequarters, and limbs. There was a prohibition against giving offal to non-kinsmen. All of
these kinsfolk, including the hunter himself, were given an equal share of meat. The amount
given did not vary according to the number of household members. Even if the household
had only one member, the amount of meat given would still be the same. However, usually
smaller households would inform the hunters not to give them so much meat, and after a few
such requests, their share would consistently become smaller than the others. Also, although
the share should have been equal, a generous hunter would give more meat to households
that had many mouths to feed. When a sibling also had obtained game, each hunter would
inform the other not to give him any meat since they both had extra. Nonetheless, they still
gave each other a little as a gesture. Eventually, after the distribution, if the game was a
mature pig, the remaining meat would still fill a large two-feet diameter pot, an amount
sufficient for two or three days meals.
Distant kinsmen and non-kinsmen were only given smaller portions from the hind
and forequarters, and limbs. As mentioned, kinsmen were also given these portions.
Because the number of households at this sharing level was large, the amount of meat that
was distributed to each household was only a little. When the game was a mature boar, the
share was about three inches thick and six inches long. If the game was small, the share
could be half of that, barely enough for those households consumption, but served as a
token of generalized reciprocity.

I deliberately separate sharing wild boar meat from the main sharing section to provide a continuity of the
description. In the sharing section, I provide more details, including the rights of hunters who participate in
a hunt (see page 133).

Peterson (1993:860-874) discusses demand sharings role in the constitution of social relations in
egalitarian societies. According to Peterson, other hunter-gatherer people who also practice this system
include the Nayaka (Bird-David 1990); Guayaki (Clastres 1972:170); Batek (Endicott 1988:117); Dogrib
(Helm 1972:80); Kaingang (Henry 1964:98, 101); Siriono (Holmberg 1969:88, 155); and !Kung (Marshall
1976:288, 303, 310). This system is also found in Borneo among the Penan Belangan (Chan 1995:118119), although the hunter is given a bigger portion than the rest of the community. Since the Punan
Vuhang do not practice this system, I shall not dwell on it here.

93

The hunter kept the head of the wild boar and would cut it for cooking two or three
days later. Usually by then, the raw flesh had decayed and produced a strong odor and
pungent taste. When the hunter did not obtain any wild boar in the days immediately after the
hunt, the head provided a substantial meal. More often than not, however, another pig was
obtained on the third day of hunting, and the head was thrown away or given to a household
that lacked meat.
Varieties of Wild Boar
Among all types of animals found in the tropical rainforest, wild boar was the most
1
important protein-based food resource for the Punan Vuhang. Besides providing the most
meat, it was the only large animal that was and still is found in abundance in the forest. Also,
its meat has the highest fat content, a food component of vital importance to the huntergatherer community. When wild boar was not available, Punan Vuhang said that they were
hungry, despite having an abundance of other foods. They did not really feel hungry; in fact,
an informant called the situation okjob sanik loosely translated happy hungry although
another informant disputed that anyone could be happy during hungry times. As the wild
boar was such an important animal, I will describe it in considerable detail.
The Punan Vuhang recognized two types of wild boar (bearded pig) with
distinctively differing characteristics, although they were of the same species (Sus barbatus
barbatus). The first type was the sedentary wild boar that did not migrate and was available
throughout the year. The other was the migratory wild boar, which was seasonal and only
came to the Punan Vuhang territory during a major fruit season.
Sedentary Wild Boar
The sedentary wild boar remained in an area. The community believed that the
same group of wild boar occupied a territory for a considerable time without moving into
distant areas. In the sedentary wild boar category, there were three types: the circling wild
boar (bavui celeyon); the resting wild boar (bavui luek); and the fruit-foraging wild boar (bavui
tone).
The first two types were found in locations experiencing food scarcity, especially
during non-fruit seasons. They mainly ate the fruit of the Eugeissona sago (called the
kavangoh) and the fig (lunuk) that bore fruit throughout the year. They also foraged for any
2
other kind of food (angkun manan-manan), for example, earthworms and tubers. When
nothing else was available, they foraged on the tubers of the logak, long and tatang babang.
When the wild boar came to rely on these three types of tuber, they became extremely thin. If
they had to depend on this diet for a long period, they became so thin that their meat was
unpalatable not only to the human community but even to the hunting dogs. This extreme
emaciation, however, rarely occurred as only an especially long period of drought would

For a more comprehensive account of the wild boar or bearded pig, see Caldecott (1987:64-85).

Caldecott (1987:66) reported that the diet of the bearded pig consists of roots, fungi, invertebrates in the
soil and rotting woods, small invertebrates, carrion, and fallen fruits.

94

cause such an extreme paucity of food. Such a very long drought usually happened only
once every several years.
The foraging wild boar, (bavui tone), on the other hand, was found during the minor
fruit ripening season in which only fruit trees in some areas bore fruit.
Circling Wild Boar (bavui celeyon)These wild boar foraged from one place to another
and then returned to an area in which they had foraged earlier. Thus, they fed in a circle
within the confines of a territory. When hunters encountered these boar, they knew they
could obtain more in adjacent territories. Following that, they hunted even further away from
the first hunting ground. Then, when the animals had made a circuitous loop and returned to
previously foraged areas, the surviving pigs could still be hunted.
Resting Wild Boar (bavui luek)The resting wild boar foraged over a large territory. They
did not move away to forage in other places unless they faced danger, and if so, they did not
return to the same area again. The resting wild boar, as the name implies, were wild boar
that went up a mountain to rest. They were reclusive animals that were solitary or
accompanied by only one other pig. After scavenging, they retreated to a high place faraway
from their foraging sites to avoid predators that might have tracked them to their resting
ground. They were extremely sensitive and alert while resting, and fled instantly when they
heard any sound of something approaching.
Another important characteristic of this boar was that it fled into a very remote area
when threatened. A hunter knew that his quarry was a resting boar when he failed in his first
attempt to hunt it and his dogs could not track it in adjacent territories. The hunter could only
hunt down a resting boar in a location very far from the first place. As a result, during the lean
period when signs of wild boar were rarely found, hunters had to go very far away to search
for these resting boar.
Foraging Wild Boar (bavui tone)Informants mentioned that during minor fruit seasons, in
which only certain areas had fruit-bearing trees, sedentary wild boar went to these places to
forage. If the Punan Vuhang happened to come across a site with these fruit-bearing trees,
they traveled there to set camp and hunt.
Wild boar, being diurnal, foraged both day and night. During the daytime, they
foraged in the morning and again in the afternoon and rested in between. While foraging,
they were constantly on the move exploring and consuming food. This was the best time for
hunting them as their frequent movement allowed hunting dogs to track them more easily.
During the resting period, they went up to highlands to avoid detection by the hunting dogs.
At this stage, a dog had to rely totally on its ability to scent the tracks that led to the wild
boars resting ground, and the long distance from the foraging grounds to the resting sites
made it difficult for the dogs to track them. Consequently, hunters only brought their dogs for
hunting during the early part of the day when the boar were on the move. During a minor
fruit-ripening season, on the other hand, a hunter would go to check for the presence of fresh
wild boar tracks around fruit-bearing trees. As ripened fruits continued to drop, the wild boar
tended to return to forage. When the hunter returned to the site with his dogs the following
day, the wild boar would be tracked down by the dogs.
95

Migrating Wild Boar


The Punan Vuhang believed that the other class of wild boar, the migrating wild
boar, originated from downriver during the fruit ripening season and returned to their place of
origin after the season was over. Because of this, the Punan Vuhang called these pigs
returning wild boar (bavui ulik). They only appeared during the major fruit season to take
advantage of the abundance of fruit. The Punan Vuhang also called these migrating wild pigs
bavui murik because the direction of their movement was upstream (murik), hence the term
1
upriver migrating wild boar (bavui murik).
Upriver Migrating Wild Boar (bavui murik)The migrating wild boar that arrived in the
Punan Vuhang territory had distinctive features that differentiated them from the sedentary
wild boar. Besides being extremely fat, they possessed smooth soft fur as compared to the
rough bristle of the sedentary wild boar. The fur of the young boar was thick and clean. The
extreme obesity of the migrating boar resulted in their becoming almost white, while the local
boar were a dull gray. As mentioned earlier, their fat measured up to eight fingers thick
compared to the maximum thickness of three fingers for sedentary wild boar.
The bavui murik traveled in big packs into the Punan Vuhang territory. As the wild
boars were not familiar with the presence of human predators, they simply moved by
following their long-standing migration routes, some passing close by the Punan Vuhang
camps. In contrast, sedentary wild boar, familiar with human predators, never went near
Punan Vuhang camps.
Myths were told of the origin of the migrating wild boars:
The Man Who Married a Wild Boar
According to this story, long ago, during the wild boar migration season, a
man went kusi hunting. He speared a wild boar, the spear shaft broke and the
spear remained imbedded in the boar, but it managed to survive. The hunter
followed the wounded boar and eventually came across a big lake with an island in
the middle. The wild boar swam across and the man followed suit. When he
reached the island, he found it populated by a human community. He visited the
headman, was treated well and was then told of a very sick woman. He was asked
whether he could help heal her. The hunter agreed to help and when he went to
the woman, he was surprised to see his spear imbedded inside the womans waist.
He pulled it out and eventually the woman was healed. Being too polite to ask after
the spear, he forgot the matter.
They fell in love and married. One day, the hunters wife told him that it was
the fruit season and the entire community on the island would cross the lake to eat
the fruit. The wife asked him to remain but he insisted on following. Then she told
him that they were all wild boar. He refused to believe it and was told when they
swam across the lake, they would step over a fig root (lunuk) and then they would
turn into wild boar. The transformation from human beings to wild boar took place
1

Along the Balui River, the Kayan call these pigs river-crossing wild boar (bavui nyatong), as they cross
the river in great numbers during their migration. There, hunters hide at certain spots on the river bank
(sidah) with their boats while waiting for the wild boar to swim across the river to continue their migration.
From the perspective of river flow, the wild boar travel from the left side (true lefthand bank) to the right
side of the Balui basin. Crossing the river, they head toward the tributaries that flow from the right into the
Balui basin. See Puri (2005:252-262) for a detailed description of this activity among the Penan Benalui
and Kenyah Badeng of East Kalimantan.

96

as predicted, and the man tried to do the same by stepping on the root but he could
not turn into a wild boar. So the wife reminded him of his human origin and that he
could not turn into a wild boar. She explained that they were human beings only
when they were on the island but were transformed into wild boar to forage on the
abundant fruits during the major fruit season. That was why the Punan Vuhang
believed that wild boar are actually spirits that came from another realm.

The Mother Pig and Migrating Wild Boar


During the major fruit season, the mother pig (hinan bavui) asked her children to
travel upriver to forage on the abundant fruit. She told them that they would face
danger as they would be killed by human hunters and their dogs. However, they
should not worry about their death, as she would give life back to them. She
advised the wild boar to run toward a stream whenever they were being chased. If
they were killed in a stream, their blood would flow to the river mouth and there she
would turn the blood back into a wild boar. Consequently, according to Punan
Vuhang, wild boar always run toward a river upon being chased. Also, because the
mother pig gave life to all the dead wild boar, the migrating wild boar can never be
over-hunted.

The Protector-Spirit traveling with the Wild Boar Migration


During the wild boar migration, the Punan Vuhang believed that a protector-spirit
(man bavui) traveled with the boar. Besides being seen by shamans, the spirit left a
trail of clay on the trees along his walking path. When that happened, the Punan
Vuhang would not go hunting for fear of the spirits retaliation. A day or two after the
spirit had traveled past their territory, they could resume hunting.

Warfare Between Wild Boar and the Enemy Spirit of Otu Laput Lanum
During the migration season, hunters frequently came across juvenile wild boar
carcasses in the forest. The Punan Vuhang believed that the wild boar were killed
by the wild boars archenemy (otu laput lanum). In their spirit form, the wild boar
always defeated the enemy spirit, but become helpless as wild boar. That also was
the reason Man Bavui traveled with them to protect them. However, he could not
protect those which were migrating far behind him.

Pact Between Rigai and the Otu Laput Lanum


As the enemy spirits otu laput lanum traveled to attack the wild boar, they would
also kill any human beings that crossed their path. To prevent this, as Punan
Vuhang hunters enter into the forest, they chant that they are the descendants of
Rigai who made a blood-pact with the spirits. With that, they believe they can be
recognized by the spirits and will thus be safe.

The arrival of the wild boar migration followed the end of the edible fruit season
when fruit that was inedible to human beings, especially fruits of the dipterocarps (for
example, Anisoptera spp., Dipterocarpus spp.) began to ripen. The Punan Vuhang
associated the ripening of the bua balong and the bua ehyin growing on the mountains as
an indication of the impending arrival of the boar migration. When they arrived, the dropping
of the ripe bua tason (Anisoptera kostermans) provided food for the massive numbers of
wild boar.

97

The sighting of a pair of big wild boar hoof prints was taken to indicate the actual
arrival of the migration. The two sets of prints were the marks made by two huge male boars
(bavui duo polongan). This pair of wild boars went ahead of all other migrating wild boars
and so this sighting commenced the beginning of the migrating wild boar hunting season.
Hunters who owned hunting dogs then went to the major migration routes, each hoping to be
the first person to return with a fat boar.
The first person to return with a fat wild boar, besides the usual cooing greeting
sound of puklung, would be greeted with a loud announcement that the fat wild boar had
now arrived. This thus marked the beginning of the seasonal enjoyment of food abundance.
Everyone became very excited and came to inspect the carcass, poking his or her fingers
through a slit on the boars back to feel how thick the fat was. Children hugged the carcass
and the men carried it to feel the weight bearing down on their shoulders.
When the excitement was over, the hunters wife cut up the carcass, distributed the
lean meat and then processed the fat into lard. After the oil was drained from the fat and
made into lard, what remained was dry fat (luhieng). Members of the community came to
savor the delicious dry fat. Then, when the lard was fully cooked, it was distributed to the
various households in the community.
After this first wild boar, every hunter who returned had his game inspected to
determine how fat it was. If a wild boar was exceptionally fat, that is, up to four or more
fingers thick, the community would marvel at the carcass. After that, the wild boar would be
cut up, processed and the lean meat distributed. After processing the fat into lard, each
household was obliged to distribute the luhieng and lard to the entire community. Within the
next few weeks, there was no longer any necessity to distribute food, as every household
1
had its supply of fresh meat and fat.
During the first days of the hunt, if several very fat wild boars were obtained at the
same time, the community celebrated the arrival of the wild boar with the lolong ook festival.
The meat and the fat were minced together with sago shoots (langik) and then mixed with
sago starch (lug). Then they stuffed the mixture into a bamboo cylinder (bulu hor). The
delicacy (lolong ook) was eaten by the assembled community at night and then the
community listened to the singing of the nyangen ceremony conducted by the shamans (see
page 189 for a brief description on the nyangen ceremony).
Following the major migration routes, the initial arrival of wild boar in the Punan
Vuhang territory was concentrated in downriver areas, especially in the Bangan-Bahau River
system. For the first two weeks of the hunt, hunters could not light fires at these locations as
the smoke would deter not only approaching wild boar, but also those following behind.
After these initial precautions, the entire community set up camps at locations close
to the major migration routes. The camps were also near to sites with abundant sago
resources so that the community could cook a variety of dishes consisting of starch, lean
meat and fat. As the wild boar moved through the territory, hunters did not have to go far to

Due to just a few pots being owned by a household, usually only one and at the most two, the amount of
fat that could be processed was limited to about ten liters per day. Per season, the amount processed
could be up to three hundred liters.

98

kill game. During an average day, a hunter could obtain up to six boar, but these were
usually young pigs that were easily pursued with the hunting dogs.
The Punan Vuhang found it easy to hunt these wild boar as every day new groups
of boar arrived to forage in the surrounding territory. These animals, having traveled a long
way without encountering human predators, became easy targets for hunters. Consequently,
hunters were able to make short hunting trips to obtain a few wild boars almost every day for
the entire duration of the wild boar migration season, a duration that ranged from one to two
months, depending on how long the fruit season lasted.
There were four major migration routes in the Punan Vuhang territory, with all wild
boar migrating upriver against the river flow of the four main river systems. These routes
were the Danum, the Linau, the Kajang, and the Bahau Rivers. All these routes led into the
Kalimantan part of Central Borneo, which was a vast, sparsely inhabited area. The virgin
forest there produced such a rich abundance of fruit that the Punan Vuhang believed it to be
the meeting point for all migrating wild boar.
The wild boar that migrated through the Danum and Linau watershed eventually
converged on the Peluan watershed. The Peluan is a tributary of the Linau River that joins
the Danum watershed. From this convergence, the migration moved on into the Iwan River
in Kalimantan. At the Peluan, there were so many wild boar that the Punan Vuhang had to
camp on hill slopes that were too steep for the animals to climb. On the Kajang, the wild boar
moved on to the Kihan and the Nyamok, and those on the Bahau moved on to the Lesong,
both tributaries of the Iwan River.
The thickness of the fat varied among the wild boar from the four migration routes.
Most wild boar from the Danum, Linau, and the Kajang had fat that measured up to three
fingers (ben telo). On the other hand, the boar from the Bahau were much fatter, with their fat
measuring up to four and five fingers (ben pat-ben limo), and some temanyit males had fat
1
even up to eight fingers thick (ben heyan).
Many young men, given the incentive of the high-quality fat boar, made expeditions
into the Bahau without their dogs to hunt in the kusi manner. For the sheer thrill, each person
attempted to kill as many boar as possible to test his hunting and stalking skills. Meanwhile,
the rest of the community remained at the other areas where there were many wild boar to
satisfy their needs.
Following the movement of wild boar from down to upriver, the Punan Vuhang
initially camped at downriver locations. They gradually moved camps to upriver areas as they
followed the migration. In each campsite, the main activities were hunting and processing the
fat of the wild boar into lard. Each household put the lard inside containers and buried them
1

An assessment of the migration routes that these four differing wild boar groups had earlier traveled
helps explain this phenomenon. The wild boar that moved into the Danum, Linau and the Kajang passed
through river valleys that contained agrarian human settlements. The farmers had converted considerable
tracts of forest lands into farmland along the rivers and the main tributaries. While most land had
regenerated into secondary forest, the shifting cultivation system that continually used land that had
regenerated did not allow trees to mature into fruit bearing trees. Consequently, when the wild boar
passed through secondary forest land, there was little fruit for foraging. In contrast, the Bahau wild boar
originated from a vast primary forest land that was little disturbed by human activities. The wild boar had a
continuous supply of fruit for foraging as they traveled across this land, allowing them to acquire very thick
layers of fat.

99

(oku lanye) in the banks of small tributaries. In lean times, they could return to these camps
to retrieve it. Informants mentioned that the lard buried in the cold underground could last for
more than a year. This Punan Vuhang practice of food preservation is in contrast to Sellatos
observation of the Punan:
The almost total lack of any possibility of long-term preservation of foods means
that every edible produced must quickly be consumed. Many writers have
described how the Punan gorge themselves with food when it is abundant and go
empty thereafter if food is scarce (1994:148).

During nomadic times, when the community lived in the Kajang valley, they first
camped at the Bangan, a major tributary of the Bahau that meets the Sengayan, a tributary
of the Kajang. Then they camped at the Lumunung watershed. After that they moved into the
Betlaup of the Kajang to hunt the wild boars that migrated into the Kajang. At the Betlaup,
there was abundant sago which was used for the lolong ook celebration. The lolong dishes
were prepared to celebrate the season of abundance. As the wild boar migration moved on,
the Punan Vuhang camped in the Kajang headwaters at the Batu Ayok, below the mouth of
the Sepayan.
Following that, they went into the Linau to continue hunting, and finally camped at
the Peluan. If the community had been in the Linau since the wild boar migration began, they
would usually camp at Laput Tanyit, Laput Pejakah, Vuhang Panyin and Vuhang Belawan,
although they might also camp at various other locations. Eventually, they camped inside
the Peluan tributary, the site of the convergence of the wild boar from the Danum and the
Linau before they migrated into the Kihan of Kalimantan.
The Punan Vuhang did not pursue the wild boar beyond this point into Indonesian
Kalimantan because that was the territory of the Punan Kihan. Just as the Punan Vuhang
remained within their territory, the Punan Kihan did not cross the mountain range to hunt the
migrating wild boar on the Sarawak side. Consequently, once the migration moved on to that
part of Central Borneo, the season of abundance was over. Then, the Punan Vuhang had to
revert to hunting other animals, especially the sedentary wild boar and medium-sized treedwelling animals.
Returning Wild Boar (bavui ulik) The returning wild boar, bavui ulik, as the name
implies, were wild boar that were on their way back to their original homeland after foraging in
the Kalimantan part of Central Borneo. These wild boar had been foraging forest fruit for
several months in the vast undisturbed forest and returned via the same routes as their
upriver migration.
These wild boar usually passed by the Punan Vuhang territory during the flowering
season, that is about the fourth month of their synchronized calendar. During the entire
period of their return, little food was available and gradually they became thinner and thinner.
Nonetheless, the animals that passed by the Punan Vuhang area were not as thin as the
sedentary wild boar, as they had had an abundance of fruit for a long time in Kalimantan.
These wild boar traveled at a fast pace as there was no food to prolong their foraging.
Therefore, the Punan Vuhang had only a short time to hunt them.

100

Wild Boar Population: The Ecological Perspective


The size of the sedentary wild boar population was determined by the timing of the
major fruit season. To better understand this, it is important to consider once again the
Punan Vuhang synchronized calendar. According to this, the flowering season marked a
change in the biological behavior of all animals, including wild boar. The extensive flowering
throughout the forest induced the female animals to come into heat which then resulted in a
mating season. During this period, lasting for about a week, hunters frequently heard the
sound of wild boar howling and some even saw wild boar mating (popoya; papangab). When
the female boar were in heat, the male boar (temanyit) developed swollen chins (lovangoh
irab), a condition the Punan Vuhang called bavui maton.
During this time, the male boar became extremely fierce (meseken). They posed
great danger to hunting dogs as they tended to attack the dogs with their brute strength and
long sharp tusks, and they even attacked hunters. Consequently, only the bravest hunters
hunted during this dangerous period. However, only those brave hunters who also owned
hunting dogs skilled in avoiding the boars would do so. A week or so later, the swelling on
the male boar gradually subsided and their fierceness began to mellow. After that, the
dangerous situation was over and all hunters resumed hunting again. At the same time, the
migrating wild boar which had earlier moved into the headwaters were on their way to return
to their places of origin. These returning wild boar also provided game for the hunters to hunt.
Not long after, most female wild boar of the sedentary type hunted by the Punan
Vuhang were pregnant with fetuses (bertayit). The Punan Vuhang considered the fetuses a
delicacy and they encouraged young children to eat them. Gradually, the flowering season
progressed into the early fruit season. From the size of the fetuses they obtained from hunted
boar, the Punan Vuhang could predict the time of seasonal birth of piglets. Soon after,
hunters frequently obtained newly born piglets (kekah). In each hunt, they killed a few piglets
after the mother had fled, leaving behind the defenseless piglets. These piglets remained
within the surrounding area and as they did not know how to escape, they became easy prey
to the dogs.
During this period, hunters frequently came across wild boar tracks (ivah) with
different sets of big and small hoofprints made by a horde of female wild boar and young
piglets. Some tracks contained a bigger set of prints made by a male wild boar that
accompanied the piglets and the mother. The Punan Vuhang called this sighting of several
sets of hoofprints nyumuwak bavui panyin (nyumuwak means sighting and panyin is a
group of animals).
With the progress of the fruit ripening season, the piglets gradually grew into the
size of a mans thigh. When the mature fruit season began, the overripe fruit began to drop,
providing much food to the increased wild boar population. With the availability of this
abundant food, the piglets began to wean from their mothers. The Punan Vuhang called
these young piglets urak in distinction to the kekah that fed on milk. Eventually the young
boar (urak) gained independence and began to forage on their own, as indicated by single
sets of small hoof prints. In areas with more fruit where big groups of wild boar foraged
together, the young urak boar returned to join their mothers. At this stage, hunting dogs
focused their pursuit on the smaller and weaker young pigs while the stronger mother boar

101

fled away. As the young pigs quickly matured, they soon became capable of running from
the dogs, and only one or two young boar would become the dogs prey.
Over time, as the sedentary wild boar fed on the bountiful fruit, they gained a thin
layer of fat beneath their skin. By the seventh month, more and more fruit began to drop,
providing much food for the wild boar. Then the Anisoptera Grandiflora (manator, called bua
upak when fruiting), which contained much fat, began to drop. As they continuously
consumed the fruit, the wild boars muscles fattened and their whole backs acquired a slightly
thicker layer of fat. The Punan Vuhang found the fatty meat of these wild boar delicious
(bavui jian kaman). Compared to the very coarse lean meat which had a very low fat content,
the rich meat had a soft texture and a sweet taste.
From the eighth month onwards, the edible fruit season ended, but this also
marked the beginning of the inedible fruit season of the dipterocarp family and the arrival of
the migrating wild boar. Among the principal fruits that the wild boar consumed was the oilrich Anisoptera kostermans (tason). Its texture was almost like pork lard and it was much
favored by wild boar. They concentrated their foraging on this fruit as it was found in
proliferation in the forest. After a month of continuous feeding on the Anisoptera, they began
to acquire a layer of fat up to one or two fingers thick (ben ji or ben duo). As the sedentary
1
wild boars continued foraging, they gained fat measuring up to three fingers thick (ben telo).
A little more than a month later, the wild boar began to become much fatter. The
Punan Vuhang considered this meat too fat for their liking. After only consuming a little of this
fat meat, they found it monotonous (ingon). The fat content was so high in the meat that
during cooking much of it dissolved into a layer of oil. Not only did the Punan Vuhang
become fed up with the meat, even the dogs consumed only a little of it.
For as long as the dipterocarp species fruit was bountiful, both the sedentary wild
boar and migrating bavui murik were found foraging together, without either type dominating
in a particular area. In the tenth month, when the fruit season was almost over, only a little
fruit was left on the trees. The migrating wild boar then continued their migration to the
headwaters and onwards to Central Borneo. As their name implies, the sedentary wild boar
remained behind to forage on the fruit remnants.
Gradually, food became scarce, and the wild boar then began to rely on any food
they could find. Since the wild boar had been very fat from several months of heavy fruit
consumption, it took them about four months to shed their fat. Then, the animals had to go
through a period of food shortage until the fruit ripening season of the following annual cycle.
Keystone species that fruited throughout the year and a variety of other foods sustained
these sedentary wild boar.
When very little food was available for foraging, these pigs were difficult to find and
the Punan Vuhang then turned to using blowpipes to hunt tree-dwelling animals and birds,
and to trapping ground-dwelling animals.

However, they could never gain as much fat as the migrating wild boar which arrived to forage on the
abundant tason fruit. In comparison to the sedentary wild boar that only foraged on the dipterocarp fruits
for about two months, the migrating wild boar consumed this fruit for several months throughout their
migration journey. Consequently the migrating boar gained a very thick layer of fat of between four to eight
fingers (ben heyan).

102

Blowpipe Hunting, Mupit


Blowpipe hunting (mupit) was the second most important method of hunting, after
hunting with dogs. The Punan Vuhang hunted with blowpipes most of the time when wild
boar were not available. They hunted a great variety of game such as tree-dwelling animals
and birds, and during lean periods, small-sized game and squirrels. Although there was not
much meat from small animals, it did help sustain the hunters household.
Blowpipe hunting used three basic components: poison (takjem) to kill the game;
darts (takgeh) that both delivered the poison and penetrated the animal to activate the
poison; and blowpipes (upit) that propelled the darts toward the target. With the dart inserted
inside the bottom of the blowpipe, the man blew a strong burst of air into the pipe. The round
cork (lili) attached to the base of the dart momentarily blocked the air, creating an intense
pressure that propelled the dart at great speed out of the pipe. The narrow long tube inside
the blowpipe, besides creating an aerodynamic force by channeling the air that shot the dart,
also caused the dart to fly straight. With the combination of these forces, a dart could hit a
1
target with pinpoint accuracy and great force.
When the dart penetrated the game, the poison on the tip of the dart dissolved in
its bloodstream. The poison was carried to its heart and then circulated throughout the
cardiovascular system, including the brain, thereby affecting the nervous system. About an
hour later, depending on the strength of the poison and the size and type of game, the victim
vomited and dropped to the ground, dead.
The main targets for blowpipe hunting were various types of monkeys usually
found in highland areas, such as headwaters of a tributarys watershed system, or the top of
2
ridges where animals tended to forage. The best time to hunt for game was the animals
feeding time, that is, from daybreak until mid-morning. The animals rested from then on until
the next feeding time, when they foraged from afternoon until sunset. When the animals
were resting, they became very quiet and cautious of predators. In contrast, during feeding
times, the animals were noisy, calling out and playing with each other.
The sequence of descriptions that follows is based on the order of Punan Vuhangs
preferences. However, it must be noted that on an actual hunt during lean times, a hunter
would hunt whatever animal he found, regardless of size, unless he was already heading
towards a big animal, or felt certain that he would come across larger game farther along.
When a hunter killed an animal too small to provide adequate meat, he continued to look out
for other game until sunset, when it would be too late to track any more game.

See Puri (2005:236-237) on how a hunter uses his blowpipe to shoot a game, and Zahorkas (2006)
description on the effectiveness of the blowpipe poison.
2

The best places to hunt these animals were the Sepayan and Bukor areas in the Kajang headwaters,
and the Peluan at the Linau headwaters.

103

Hunting Medium-Sized Tree-Dwelling Animals1


The focus of hunting larger tree-dwelling animals (laut lukjung kayu) was mainly on
varieties of monkeys: long-tailed or crab-eating macaques (Macaca fascicularis; kuyat); pigtailed macaques (Macaca nemestrina; barok); grey leaf-monkeys (Presbytis hosei; bongat);
red leaf-monkeys or maroon langurs (Presbytis rubicunda; kumom); white-fronted langurs
(Presbytis frontata; bui); silver langurs (Presbytis cristata; kucei); banded langurs (Presbytis
2
melalophos; maheh), and Bornean gibbons (Hylobates muelleri; kelavet mongo).
With the exception of the two species of macaques that commonly lived in lowland
forest, hunting these animals required a hunter to go out at daybreak (gang lau) into the
highlands. Along the way, he would listen (kelingo) for animals calling out playfully in the
morning, so he would know where to head.
In areas that had been inhabited by the Punan Vuhang for a considerable period,
the animals became familiar (usam) with human hunters. To avoid attracting hunters, they
did not make any sound to give away their position. So the hunter had to walk on top of a
ridge to look for swaying of tree branches caused by animal movements. If he explored the
lowlands or followed the valley of a tributary, he listened for the soft sound of swaying tree
branches. He had to be intent and focused in his listening as cautious animals feeding on
treetops did not make much noise. The only noise that they produced was the soft swaying
of branches when they climbed from one branch to another to feed on leaf shoots or fruits.
3
He had to listen keenly or else he would miss the sound.
At times, the male grey leaf-monkeys (bongat) would fight (patasang) and this was
noisy and could be heard from afar. Although the hunter could detect the sounds of the fight,
he had to be extra careful (pasarip), as the grey leaf-monkeys were extremely alert and fled
upon detecting the slightest movement on the ground. Frequently, the trailing (nyemuwak) of
these monkeys required an entire day before the hunter had a chance to shoot them, and
then he only had the opportunity to shoot two or three.
When the hunter heard sounds far away, he had to detect the sounds source and
the location of the game. If he were far from the animals, especially if he were on the
opposite range of hills, he had to walk down the slope and up the opposite side to get nearer.
While walking down and then up, however, he could not hear the source of the sounds.
Consequently, before heading off, to be sure that he headed in the right direction, he pointed
with his forefinger (tujuk) towards the direction of the sound or movement. Then he planted a
stick (batak) in that direction, aiming at a landmark near the source of sound. This landmark,
which was usually visible across the hill range, served as a reference point when he got
across the slope. Upon reaching the opposite side of the range, he looked for the landmark.
1

During my fieldwork, hunting with a blowpipe was no longer done. I relied entirely on my informants to
describe this activity.
2

The hunt for civet was more by chance as these predatory animals moved secretively and were
therefore difficult to track. It was only through the keen eyesight of hunters focusing their vision on the tree
canopy that they were able to spot these animals moving stealthily through the trees. See Appendix 4 for
a list of civets.
3

In most cases, he could not hear any sound until he reached the top of the watershed. He might even
have to enter another mountain range to hunt for animals not familiar with human beings.

104

If he failed to find it, he returned to the batak pointing stick, checked on his direction and
bearing, and went searching again. When he reached the landmark, sometimes an hour or
two later, he then traced the source of the sounds, by which time, the game had moved to
another area. He then listened intently again for their sounds. Applying the same method of
pointing, planting a stick and tracking, he finally reached the gamean effort that might take
a whole morning.
The hunter then walked carefully towards the animals. He had to position himself
on an elevation that was lower than the base of the tree on which they were foraging. On a
higher elevation, he could be easily spotted. As he approached the tree, he tiptoed very
slowly (tupunying koh) under the cover of the dense canopy of short trees. Going nearer, he
became increasingly careful as he entered into close viewing range of the monkeys that
1
constantly looked around and down for approaching predators.
He carefully approached the tree until he entered shooting range. In this position,
the hunter was in a precarious position as he had to hide under the cover of the tree canopy,
yet had to see through the canopy to look at the game. With his trained eyes, he focused his
vision and peered through the small spaces (minun) between the leaves.
He selected a big animal that sat still, foraging. The hunter slowly aimed his
blowpipe. It was difficult to maneuver the six and a half foot long blowpipe if the targeted
game moved because the low branches of the tree under which he was hiding hindered free
movement of the pipe. So, he would have to withdraw his pipe and move it below the
branches to take aim again at the animals new position. He inserted a dart into the hollow
bottom of the blowpipe, inhaled deeply and blew into the top, creating an intense pressure
inside the pipe that propelled the dart toward the target (see Figure 12, see page 109).
The small dart with its fine sharp point only produced a slight sting when it pierced
the victim. As the animal did not see anything unusual, it did not sense any danger. However,
it scratched the wound that was a source of irritation, thus breaking off the dart from the
2
notched tip that remained inserted in the wound. The poison smeared to the tip on the dart
then slowly took its course.
Immediately after shooting the first victim, the hunter aimed at another target. He
continued doing so until the animals became alerted to the stings affecting them. The rest of
the group, unable to see any cause of danger to raise their alarm, merely climbed to the
highest part of the tree. The hunter then stopped shooting, giving them no further cause to
flee.
The hunter then waited for the poison to take effect which took an hour or so. While
waiting for the victims to drop, he smoked a roll of tobacco. Except for the pig-tailed
macaques (Macaca nemestrina; barok), no tree-dwelling animals could detect the smell of

When a monkey threw down the skin of a fruit after consuming the flesh, its vision followed the falling
skin. Any predator moving underneath the tree could be spotted.
2

The tip of the dart had two or three slight notches. The purpose of these notches was to enable the tip to
break off easily so that it remained imbedded inside the wound. If there were no notch, the game might
pull out the whole dart, thus removing the poison before much had entered its blood.

105

tobacco smoke. The Punan Vuhang called the waiting period pangok.1 Eventually the first
animal died. Giving a loud cry, it vomited blood and then dropped to the ground. From this
point onwards, the monkeys became extremely alert. However, they remained unaware of
the cause of death. A long-tailed macaque (Macaca fascicularis; kuyat) might even come
down from the tree to check the dead monkey. The hunter, however, still remained in his
hiding place, not making the slightest movement to alarm the animals. Slowly all the
poisoned animals dropped, one by one. The surviving monkeys then became cautious and
slowly moved away, climbing slowly from one branch to another, and from one tree to
another. They constantly looked back to check for any predators following them. After a
distance, they stopped and kept still, all the time on the watch, looking back.
Meanwhile, instead of picking up the carcasses, the hunter followed the monkeys
to shoot more. To avoid being seen, he moved parallel to the direction in which they moved.
He listened to the swaying sound of the tree branches made by the monkeys movements,
and he kept track of the sound. He followed their movement, stopping when they stopped,
and moving when they moved. He had a vantage point as they kept looking backwards.
When the animals finally stopped to rest, he waited for them to calm down from the
sense of danger. He positioned himself and then shot. This time, the survivors, on seeing a
repetition of the deaths of their group members, became very alarmed and fled at a fast
pace. The hunter then collected the carcasses, broke the limbs and tied them into a bundle
that resembled a backpack for easy transportation back to the camp. He then returned to
where he had shot the earlier batch of monkeys to collect those carcasses, too.
As the hunting season progressed, the monkeys gradually became alert to the
presence of the hunters. Their movement would then be too fast for trailing and it would be
very difficult for a hunter to find the dying animals. He had to use a stick (batak) to gauge the
direction of the sound in the same way as he had done earlier to search for the animals.
Eventually he would hear the cry of a dying monkey. As the rest of the monkeys were
extremely cautious, he had to wait for them to move away before he could continue walking
to the spot to look for the carcass. Sometimes by the time he reached the site, he could not
find it. He would then return to the batak and check his position and direction again. If he still
could not find the body, he would return the next day to search for the carcass which would
by then be decaying. He would sniff for the odor, or look for flies. Although the skin would
have maggots and the dead animals would reek, the flesh would still be edible.
Hunting at the Salt Lick Springs, TasapanHunting at a salt lick spring which was
frequented by game was the easiest way to hunt with a blowpipe. It was possible to detect
the presence of monkeys at a salt lick spring by the lack of fungus on the tree trunks, and the
black color of the bark, due to their frequent climbing. Among the better salt lick springs were
those found in the Sepayan and Petjawa areas. The monkeys came to drink during the full

In the past, before the Punan Vuhang were introduced to matches or lighters, they had to use the flint
and steel method to make fire. The striking produced one or two sounds from the flint hitting the steel. The
monkeys were not alarmed as they did not know the source of the sound. As long as they did not see the
face or eyes of the hunter, the game remained unaware of the human predator.

106

moon (lagane nakui) and hunters took the opportunity to hunt them if the community was
camped nearby.
A few days before the full moon, the hunter constructed a shelter about thirty
meters away from the spring. He covered it fully with leaves and twigs to resemble a bush,
but left some holes out of which his blowpipe could protrude. Then, he waited for the full
moon. At the peak of the full moon, soon after daybreak, a group of monkeys would come to
drink. At first they would be extremely cautious (terpakgau) and look around for any signs of
predators. For more details of hunting at a salt lick, see Puri (2005:240-243).
When they felt safe, a juvenile monkey would climb down to test and drink the
water. It would return to the tree and a short while later another juvenile would climb down to
drink. Slowly, a few of them climbed down. Eventually, all followed suit. Up to this stage, the
hunter had been waiting without making even a slight movement. When all the monkeys
were at the salt lick spring drinking the water, he shot as many as possible until they all
climbed back up the trees. About half an hour to an hour later, all the monkeys killed by the
blowpipe poison dropped to the ground.
Since monkeys from various areas came to the salt lick spring once a month, a
hunter could attempt shooting them every month. For as long as the community was
camped in places within reach of these salt lick springs, hunting there became a monthly
activity until the arrival of the wild boar migration season when hunters focused instead on
hunting wild boar.
Hunting Macaques (Kuyat and Barok) During Full MoonThe macaques the Punan
Vuhang hunted included two types of monkeys that slept along the river banks at night.
During moonlit nights they slept on fronds of the Eugeissona (tajuk) sago palm above small
streams. In the evening they went to a place where Eugeissona grew. If a hunter came
across these animals during an evening exploration, he waited for sunset. At dusk, the
monkeys would play and climb up and down the trees. After that, groups of about four or five
monkeys sat side-by-side on different sago fronds. Before nightfall, the hunter would shoot a
row of monkeys on a frond and leave the rest for his kinsmen. He then would return to the
camp before it was too dark to find his way back. Reaching the community, he informed his
kinsmen of the find. Then they prepared their blowpipe poison and darts. To reach the
hunting site before dawn the next morning, the hunters would leave the camp early and use
glowing wood embers to light the way.
At dawn, the leader of the monkeys would snap its teeth to frighten away leopards,
which were their natural predators. But as he did so, he betrayed his location. When the
hunters reached there, by the light of the full moon, they shot all the monkeys. By daybreak,
the monkeys would be so overcome by the poison that they would become too drowsy to
move on as usual. Eventually all of them dropped.
A story (suket) explains why these two types of monkeys (barok and kuyat) sleep
on sago fronds above streams during the full moon.
The rat, musing, owed the monkeys, barok, a favor and promised to pay it back
when two moons appeared together. Of course, that never happened. After a long
time, the monkeys became desperate and could not think of a way to make the rat
pay. Finally they decided to ask advice from the mousedeer. The mousedeer

107

advised them to make their house above a river during the appearance of the
moon. Then they could ask the rat for the unpaid favor. The rat would ask since
when had the moon appeared twice and the mousedeer told them that they could
point to the image of the moon on the river. The monkeys felt happy with the idea
and they immediately followed the mousedeers advice. In due time, they
summoned the rat to their house and demanded the unpaid favor. As predicted by
the mousedeer, the rat demanded to know since when had the moon appeared
twice. The monkeys pointed to the moon in the sky and the image on the river.
Consequently, the rat could not avoid paying anymore and had to repay the favor
due. Ever since, monkeys have always made their homes above rivers, especially
on sago fronds because of better visibility of the moon and its image on the river.

Problems in Hunting Medium-Sized Tree-Dwelling Animals


When the Punan Vuhang initially exploited a new area far away from a previously
occupied area, they found it much easier to hunt tree-dwelling animals, as compared with
later phases of hunting. At first, they would come across animals that were unfamiliar with
humans. Consequently, hunters could easily stalk them. Gradually, the animals began to
realize that many sudden deaths occurred whenever hunters were seen. As a result, they
became wary of human beings as their predators. When this familiarity occurred, a condition
the Punan Vuhang called usam, it became increasingly difficult to hunt these animals as they
instantly fled upon seeing hunters.
Once the monkeys attained this level of awareness (usam), only very skilled
hunters could stalk close to them. To avoid detection, the hunter had to tiptoe extremely
slowly so that no sign of movement could be seen. He took only one step at a time, and was
motionless for awhile before taking the next step. At all times, he ensured that the tree
canopy covered him from the animals view. When he came across an obstacle, he
crouched underneath it, taking care not to brush against it, for that would cause the branches
or leaves to move. As he proceeded, he glanced up to check on the reaction of the monkeys.
If they showed signs of alarm, he would stop and wait for them to relax their guard. If they
looked down, the hunter instantly froze and remained motionless until the monkeys looked
away. To successfully reach the shooting range of the game, the hunter had to be able to
1
harmonize with the background without revealing any sign of movement. As the monkeys
became more wary, they no longer moved on tree tops. Instead of leaping from one branch
to another, thus giving away their position, they moved on the ground from one foraging
place to another. Once they developed this habit, they were almost impossible to track.
Following that, hunters had to rely on smaller-sized game that did not yet show such
adaptation to human hunters.

One time, Nyoie Sion, a hunter, was trailing these animals when they were already aware of humans
(usam). In a crouching posture, he was lifting his leg to take another step when the game looked down.
Immediately he kept still while holding up his leg. The monkey looked down for a long time until the hunter
could no longer bear the strain of crouching on only one foot. The instant he put down his foot, the
monkeys fled away.

108

109

A further problem was the ability of the grey leaf-monkey (Presbytis hosei; bongat) and
Bornean gibbon (Hylobates muelleri; kelavet mongo) to pull out the entire dart without
breaking the tip so that the poison was not imbedded in their flesh. When they had
experienced the death of their group members, they would no longer scratch the spots that
irritated them but would gently pull out the darts instead. The Bornean gibbon pulled out the
dart with its hind foot while the grey leaf-monkey used its front foot. With only a little trace of
poison remaining in the wound, they were not affected by it. To overcome this problem, the
hunter used a special dart with a finer and deeper notched tip. The very fine tip with the deep
notches would cause it to become easily dislocated from the shaft of the dart. When the dart
was pulled out, the tip, which would stick to the flesh, would remain imbedded. Because the
tip was so fine and only a little poison could be smeared on it, the Punan Vuhang used a
more potent poison (takjem uhu or takjem tipluk) to kill this game. Even a minute amount of
poison would be sufficient (see page 153). The part of the carcass where the poisoned dart
penetrated would be sliced off. The rest of the meat would then be safe to eat.
Hunting Birds
Bird hunting was an important activity that provided supplemental protein for the
community when it became difficult to hunt larger animals. I will describe it in the order of the
Punan Vuhangs preference, that is, first hunting big birds, then smaller ones.
The large hornbills were available throughout the year. However, the best time to
hunt them was during the fruiting of fig trees, where the hornbills gathered to consume their
favorite fruit. During this period, hunters would wait by a fruiting fig tree. When the birds
gathered to eat the figs, they became easy targets. Nevertheless, according to Luhat Tehin,
an expert on hunting hornbills, it was difficult to hunt the rhinoceros hornbills which had
adapted to intercepting the darts targeted at them. To avoid the birds interception, a hunter
would shoot at a bird when it was in the midst of swallowing a fig.
When no fig tree bearing fruit was to be found, a hunter would go to the highlands
where there were many birds. As the birds quickly flew from one place to another, it was
impossible to track them down to the tree where they were momentarily perching. When the
hunter would reach it, the bird would have flown away. To overcome this, a hunter attracted
the bird to him so that he could shoot it from nearby. When the hunter heard a bird calling, he
imitated the birds call to draw the birds attention. This hunting technique was called monyo.
Different types of birds reacted differently to the call. The rhinoceros hornbill (Buceros
rhinoceros borneoensis; manok otu or kuan) and helmeted hornbill (Rhinoplax vigil; terjaku),
for example, would come to challenge the caller, thinking that the imitated call was made by
a rival male. As it flew nearer and nearer, the hunter repetitiously imitated the call, thus
drawing the bird very close to him. Since he was hidden under a low tree, the bird could not
see him. When the bird flew to a lower branch to meet his challenger, the hunter shot it with
1
his blowpipe.
1

Usually the male hornbill has a female partner that accompanies him. However, instead of flying low, it
keeps at a distance resting on a very high tree. When the male is killed by the poison, the female will look
for her partner. She continues looking for her mate, constantly crying out and flying near to the spot where
she lost him. This searching for the partner is called pakgoh and the bird continues to do so for a very long
time.

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The helmeted hornbill (terjaku) was difficult to hunt. A very strong poison was
required to kill it, and even so, it took a very long time for the poison to take effect. When the
birds that were shot flew away, the hunter listened for the loud sound of flapping of the birds
huge wings in order to trace the direction of their flight. When the sound stopped, he used the
stick system (batak) to detect the direction and waited for the birds calling. Gradually he got
nearer to them. If they flew away, he followed them. The trailing took several hours. If the
1
birds were shot in the early morning, the poison would only take effect in the late afternoon.
As the bird dropped, the hunter searched for its carcass. If the flock of birds flew away again,
he trailed them until all the affected birds had dropped to the ground. Each tree from which a
bird dropped was located by the hunter on his mental map so that he could return to retrieve
the bodies.
In the highlands where the Punan Vuhang seldom hunted, hunters could get many
types of birds using bird calls (monyo). When he heard a birds call, he hid and then imitated
it. Unlike the hornbill which reacted aggressively towards the caller, these birds would come
near to make friends with the calling bird, thus providing easy targets for the hunter.
Hunting birds on a mountain required the observation of taboos. When a hunter
continually failed to get any response from the imitated call, he had to go to another highland
to try his luck. The Punan Vuhang believed that if the hunter remained at the same location,
the birds would not respond at all. Also, a hunter took care not to point his finger towards the
birds, as was done with other types of game, although he could point with his blowpipe. In
the morning, the mentioning of any of these birds names would result in a torrential rainfall,
although doing this in the afternoon was said to produce no such effect.
Hunting Small Tree-Dwelling Game
The Punan Vuhang turned to hunting small animals when they could no longer
successfully hunt larger game. Earlier, they avoided hunting these little animals as it was a
waste of blowpipe poison when the amount of meat was so little. The main small-sized
animals that they hunted were the various types of treeshrews (Tupaia spp.; ukik) and
squirrels (Callosciusrus spp.; tali), which were found in abundance throughout the forest.
Even within the Punan Vuhang camps, the hunters could obtain these animals, which they
2
had ignored previously. As the animals were found near the Punan Vuhang campsite, a
hunter did not have to venture far into the forest to search for them. Even young children
could hunt these animals by themselves. They were easy to hunt as after being shot, they
remained at the same tree until they dropped.
When the Punan Vuhang had to hunt these small animals because of the absence
of larger animals, it was time for the community to move on to another site. Because of the

Birds that were shot in the afternoon could only be retrieved the next morning. The hunter trailed the
birds until they perched on a high tree to rest for the night. Early the next morning, the hunter would return
to the tree to trace the birds flight again.
2

Squirrels and shrews did not require blowpipe poison to kill them. Due to their small size, darts without
poison sufficed. However, the giant squirrel (Ratufa affinis; mamek) required poison to be killed, and
because of its large size, could withstand the poison for awhile, and moved away to die at a distance from
the spot where the hunter had shot it.

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short duration of the hunting of these small animals, and due to their abundance, only a small
percentage of the total population was ever killed. Consequently, the treeshrews and
squirrels did not develop a strategy for avoiding hunters, and thus remained easy prey.
Hunting Big Game with a Metal Dart, Pakgoh
Occasionally while looking for other game, hunters would come across big animals
such as wild boar, deer and barking deer, and in the distant past, even rhinoceros and wild
buffalo. These big animals required special blowpipe darts (pakgoh) to kill them. The special
darts (pakgoh) were larger and had a sharp metal tip to pierce the tough hide of larger
animals and to deliver a larger amount of poison deep into the flesh. Due to the big size of a
wild boar or a deer, the poison required about two hours to kill them. The tracking of a big
game animal that had been shot required great patience. If by nightfall the game had not
died, the hunter returned to the camp. Early the next morning, the hunter would bring his
dogs to track down the game, which should have died by then.
Hunting with a blowpipe also required the observance of a taboo (lalik upit). When
a hunter left his shelter, he ensured that no one saw him on his way to the forest. Otherwise,
the Punan Vuhang believed that the game would see him before he could see them. If seen,
he returned to his shelter and waited for awhile. He then would go out again, making sure no
1
one saw him, this time.
Noose Trap, Ovet
The Punan Vuhang used a noose trap (ovet) to hunt ground-dwelling animals.
Traps were set when wild boar were out of season, and towards the later stages of blowpipe
hunting when animals had become wary of hunters. Traps caught ground-dwelling animals
that were difficult to track in the forest. Although hunters did not have to spend time
searching for game, setting traps was a laborious process that involved several days of work,
and new ones had to be made when the community moved to a new location. Animals that
were trapped included ground-dwelling birds, civets, porcupines, and small monkeys. Large
monkeys could not be trapped as they would free themselves by biting the noose string.
The Punan Vuhang used three types of traps, all with a similar basic mechanism
for ensnaring game. Following the diagrams (Figures 13 and 14): To set the trap, the tension
pole (ivun) was pulled down so that the top end of the small stick (palang) was hooked to the
top middle section of the inverted U-shaped green stick (botik). The bottom end was then
used to hold a horizontal stick (bat) connecting both the legs of the inverted U-shaped frame
(botik). A trap string (pingitan) tied to the palang was set under the inverted U-shaped frame
and was laid on the ground in the shape of a noose (matan). Numerous smaller sticks
(legereh) were placed across the bat. Dried leaves and twigs, looking like forest floor litter,
were placed on these sticks (legereh). When the weight of a small animal, usually its foot, fell
on these sticks (legereh), they would fall. This triggered a chain reaction whereby the bat

I think that this need for avoidance of being seen was one of the main reasons why the Punan Vuhang
constructed walls around their shelters. When they left their shelters early in the morning, the walls
shielded them from view.

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dropped, and the tension pole (ivun) snapped, pulling the trap string (pingitan) and then the
noose would ensnare the animals foot.
Behind the green stick (botik), two sticks (kajang) were planted in the ground to
guide the animal to step into the device. To camouflage the noose trap, a hunter put some
twigs in the back and front of it. The twigs were joined to a line of obstacles (titing). When an
animal met the line of obstacles, it would try to find a way through. When it came across the
small opening, it would go through the space, which in effect was the trap, and then would
became snared. The Punan Vuhang used three types of snare traps to trap ground-dwelling
animals: ovet bakar or ovet mongo, ovet ilet and tagalong.

Table 2: Ground-Dwelling Birds that can be Trapped


Scientific Name

Vernacular Name

Punan Vuhang Name

Argusianus argus grayi

great argus pheasant

oui latah

Polyplectron malacense
schleiermacheri

Malaysian peacock-pheasant

oui taun

Lophura bulweri

Bulwers pheasant

nyokuei

Haematortyx sanguiniceps

crimson-headed partridge

kopak

Chalcophaps indica indica

emerald dove

punukon

Lophura ignita nobilis

crested fireback

manuk latah

Rhizothera longirostris longirostris

long-billed partridge

kokah

Table 3: Civets and Porcupines that can be Trapped


Scientific Name

Vernacular Name

Punan Vuhang

Viverra tanalunga

Malay civet

besangit

Cynogale bennettii

otter civet

pukget

Artictis binturong

binturong or bear cat

ketan

Arctogalidia trivirgata

small-toothed palm civet

munim

Paguma larvata

masked palm civet

bucang

Paradoxurus hermaphroditus

common palm civet

bucang

Hemigalus hosei

Hoses civet

leheh

Hemigalus derbyanus

banded palm civet

palong

Prionodon linsang

banded linsang

sengihat

Herpestes semitorquatus

collared mongoose

tupob lanum

Herpestes brachyurus

short-tailed mongoose

tupob mongo

Herpestes hosei

Hoses mongoose

tupob mongo

Trichys fasiculata

long-tailed porcupine

teyan

Thecurus crassispinis

thick-spined porcupine

totung kelien

Hystrix brachyura

common porcupine

totung mucit

113

114

Ovet Bakar or Ovet Mongo


When the game stepped on the noose, it triggered the device which released the
string. The tensed pole snapped back, yanking the string and the animal up in the air. This
tightened the knot that caught the animals foot. After being ensnared, the game was
suspended on the long pole. The advantage of this method was that if the trapped animal
was big, it would not be held down by the device. Otherwise, the animal would break the
trap.
Ovet Ilet
The ovet ilet used a similar mechanism. However, the noose string (tali pingitan)
attached to the matan was placed beneath the green stick (botik), and not over it as with the
ovet mongo. As mentioned above, when the game stepped on the trap, it was triggered. This
released the string, and the tension pole sprung up to pull the noose. However, the noose
was held down by the green stick (botik), and the arched pole retained the tension that held
down the game. The pressure stopped the blood flow and the animal soon died. The
advantage of this method was that the game was killed immediately, thus providing it no
chance to escape. However, if the ensnared animal was big, it could not be killed. Besides,
the quarry struggled to break the trap device, and could sometimes free itself.
Tagalong
The tagalong trap involved the use of bait to attract carnivores and monitor lizards.
The snare system was similar to the spring system of the ovet ilet except it was larger and
stronger. It was set by a hollow tree base, which resembled the resting ground of various
kinds of animals. A bait of meat or offal was laid inside the hole. Pieces of wood were placed
around the trap to prevent the quarry from getting the bait without going through the opening
of the trap. Then twigs (ngiting) were set around the trap to resemble a nest. The bait
produced a strong odor that attracted scavengers such as civets, leopards, lizards,
porcupines and even wild boar. When an animal smelled the odor, it would be drawn to the
bait. When it put its head into the trap to reach the bait, the device would be set off, causing
the rattan noose to ensnare and jerk the animals neck. The tension pole produced such a
great pressure on the rattan that it snapped and broke the quarrys neck.
Trapping Strategies
In addition to these methods, the Punan Vuhang employed several other strategies
to trap game. Similar to monkeys, ground-dwelling animals became wary when they
frequently encountered traps. Initially, the animals were not familiar with traps and were
easily trapped. Eventually, whenever they came across traps, they would avoid them. The
following is a description of the strategies that the Punan Vuhang used to overcome this.
At the beginning of the trapping season, a hunter set noose traps that were linked
to several lines of obstacles (titing) which cut across animal paths. These passageways were
usually located on the top of a series of low passes (berkatih) on ridges or ranges that
separated two river systems. These low passes were natural crossing points for grounddwelling animals foraging from one place to another. As an animal crossed the low pass, it
would come across the line of obstacles. It then would search for a way through the
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obstacles to continue its journey. When it arrived at an opening (which was the noose trap),
the game went through it and was trapped. Over several weeks, as game became trapped
whenever they met with lines of obstacles along their paths, others would become cautious.
When an animal encountered a line of obstacles, it would move along the obstacles,
avoiding the openings until it came to the end of the line. Then it moved on, past all the other
obstacles. When this occurred, as indicated by increasing failure to obtain game, the hunters
adopted a second strategy.
Ovet Titing The second strategy used the same principle of traps set within a line,
employing a single long line that contained dozens upon dozens of traps. Besides setting the
line parallel to a stream, a hunter also set this line along a long stretch of a mountain pass. It
was a time-consuming task that required much manpower, but the demand for scarce
protein food motivated them. When an animal confronted the openings, which were the
traps, it would just move alongside the line of obstacles. After awhile, when it did not find any
gap large enough to go through, it would become distressed. Out of desperation to go to the
other side of the obstacles, it would eventually go through an opening, thus becoming
trapped. Over time, the animals would become aware of this deception. Instead of attempting
to continue the journey by crossing the line, they simply turned back and went another way.
Then the Punan Vuhang used the ovet puklik-ulik method to divert their attention.
Ovet Puklik-ulik Instead of making a long line of obstacles and traps, hunters set many
lines of disconnected obstacles and noose traps at different locations. When an animal met
with a line of obstacles, it moved on until it came to the end of the short line. Then it
continued on its journey until it met another line. Similarly, it moved on until it came to a wide
clearing at the end of the line. After passing a few encounters of the short lines of obstacles,
the animal eventually became off-guard. Then it was oblivious to the openings and went
through one and was snared by a noose trap. After a period of several weeks, however, the
animals became wary of these multiple lines of obstacles and were not caught again.
Once the animals recognized the dangers posed by the ovet puklik-ulik, the Punan
Vuhang had to go to still more distant places where animals were unfamiliar with them. As
mentioned in the mobility section, they might go into a distant river system where hunters had
not ventured for a long time.
Fruit Trap, Ovet Bua The Punan Vuhang set fruit traps around keystone species that
bore fruit throughout the year. These included the fig (lunuk), Parkia speciosa (patar) and
terkengan fruit trees. As these fruit trees bore fruit outside the normal fruit season, the
ground-dwelling animals foraged around these trees for fallen fruits whenever other types of
fruit were not available. To trap these animals, hunters set traps outside the dropping range
(gahah) of the overripe fruits. As the traps were placed a distance away from the tree, the
animals would go at a fast pace toward the tree and thus fall into the traps. On the other
hand, if the traps were set within the fruit falling range, the animals would not move fast
enough to be ensnared. Furthermore, if the animals saw one victim being trapped, they
would become extremely wary of anything that resembled the object that killed the animal.
Consequently, hunters set noose traps at a distance from the tree and put them far apart
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from one another. Therefore, animals approaching the fruit tree had less chance of
encountering a trapped animal.
When the fruit bearing period for these fruit trees was over, the Punan Vuhang
shaved the tree bark of the Parkia speciosa (patar) fruit tree. The exposed bark emitted a
strong smell that attracted animals. Game continued to be attracted to the tree until its leaves
dropped.
Taboos in Trapping, Lalik Ovet
Trapping also involved a taboo (lalik ovet) which was almost the opposite of the
blowpipe taboo. Instead of avoiding being seen on the way out as in blowpipe hunting,
trappers returning to the camp had to avoid being seen. They believed that when a trapper
was seen by humans, his traps would also be seen by the animals before they were lured
into them. For that reason, trappers would come back very late, after dusk, when other
community members had already returned to their shelters. Among other factors, I believe
that it was for this reason that children were forbidden to loiter around at sunset. Also, the
community believed that dusk was the period when dwarf spirits (otu dokgek) were actively
moving around in search for food. With the children staying back in the shelters, trappers
could return more easily without being seen. This waiting period at the edge of the camp until
nightfall was called jongan.
When the trapper returned to his shelter, he did not pull anything out, especially a
knife from its scabbard, or kindling wood from the firewood frame. It was believed that pulling
things out from their places resulted in tapui, that is, the ability of the trapped animal to
disentangle itself from the noose.
When setting traps in the forest, if a person happened to come along and saw the
trapper at work, the trapper had to set a trap for the visitor. This setting of the trap was like
giving him a share of the trapped game. If the trapper did not set a trap for him, his trap would
trap nothing, a situation which the Punan Vuhang called keluwar. If the trapper had no
respect (nyelupo) for the visitor, the animals would have no respect for the trapper.
Other people were prohibited from intruding into the trapping grounds. The Punan
Vuhang believed that such an intrusion would cause disruption and the game would not go
to that place anymore. To avoid that, signs pointing to the trapping grounds were placed on
access routes that passed by the area. As a result, hunters did not go there to search for
game.
Fishing
The Punan Vuhang mainly used four fishing methods: fish traps, fish harpoons,
various types of line and pull techniques, and fish poisoning. Trapping was the most
important as it produced a higher yield than the other methods. The most suitable time to go
fishing was during the drought season when fish could be easily caught. Also, it was during
this period that fish became an important food because hunters frequently failed to get
anything in hunting. This finding is in contrast to Sellato (1994:129), who in reference to Seitz
(1981:304), states that because sago and wild game were so abundant, fishing was
unnecessary. Also Punan generally lived away from major rivers and so there were few good
opportunities to catch fish.
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During the dry season, shallow river conditions produced calm flowing water that
allowed the Punan Vuhang to fish successfully. In contrast, a high river level prevented the
effective use of fish traps. The Punan Vuhang employed three types of fish traps: the ovow
civu; the ovow tutu, and the ovow malam. A fourth trap, a fish spawning trap (ovow luyuk),
was set during the beginning of the crescent moon when fish swam into small tributaries to
spawn.
Ovow Civu
This fish trap was set at high water during the drought season (bohok). After a few
weeks of continual dry weather, the river level dropped (pongehok) very low. On stretches of
rock bars (tatang) the river became very shallow (lagek), with most parts having water up to
only a few inches deep. The shallow slow-flowing water allowed very little food to be drained
into the bays, and after awhile, the fish exhausted the food inside the bay.
Heavy rainfall would cause the water level to rise (lanum civu), freeing the fish from
the bays and letting them swim far into the tributaries to forage for various types of food,
including snails, insects, crabs, caterpillars, worms and small fish that inhabited the streams
inside the tributaries. After a day of dry weather, the water level would begin to drop quickly.
The big fish then had to swim back to the main river to avoid being grounded (kalen) inside
the shallow streams. It was these returning fish that the Punan Vuhang trapped with this type
of fish trap (ovow civu). Hence, the Punan Vuhang referred to this trap by the word civu
meaning rising water.
During fieldwork, I managed to observe Luhat Tehin, the only person who still
practiced this method. When the rising water had stabilized, which happened a day after the
water first rose, Luhat went into a tributary to construct the trap. He selected a stretch of river
with a shallow rock bar as the trapping point. Using small tree branches, he blocked the
entire stream (ngaput lanum), leaving only a small opening at the edge of the river bank
(bavih lanum) to set the trap. This river blockade (ngiting) prevented the fish from swimming
past the trap. The trap was a cylinder-shaped wooden container five to seven feet long and
about two or three feet in diameter. He constructed the trap from small pieces of long straight
saplings that he bound together with rattan strips, then covered the end of the trap with
similar materials. He fastened the trap into the opening of the river blockage with its mouth
facing upstream, then used a rattan vine to tie the trap to a tree so that more rising water
1
would not wash it away.
Luhat placed the trap at the edge of the river bank. Otherwise when a fish
encountered an open space at the mouth of the trap, it would become cautious and test the
space. Instead of swimming head on through the space, it would swim backwards. As it
swam against the water current, it tested the stone formation on the river bed. As it slowly
entered the trap, it would become aware of the disturbance and then swim out of the trap. It
would not swim through the trap unless the obstacle was removed. On the other hand, when

On top of the trap he arranged three stones in a distinctive pattern. A disturbance to the trap, especially a
person stealing the fish, would disrupt the stone arrangement. To take the fish, the long trap had to be
turned upside down to pour out the fish. By doing this, the stones would be dislocated. The thief could not
replicate the stone arrangement and the trapper would therefore come to know of the theft.

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the trap was set by the river bank, the natural edge of the river bank on one side of the traps
opening reduced the fishs caution and it would swim head-on into the mouth of the trap.
According to Luhat Tehin and other informants, the Punan Vuhang could trap
many large Hampala macrolepdidota (lungan), Tor Tambroides (katu) and mature Tor
douronensis (tanguh) fish, besides many more smaller fish such as juvenile Tor douronensis
(gen bitu). As the water level continued to recede, more fish would become trapped in the
following days. Fish trapped on the second and third days were smaller because bigger fish
that had to return earlier to the river were trapped on the first day.
Ovow Tutu
Based on my informants account, this fish trap operated on exactly the same
principle as the ovow civu, but was set on the main river on a much bigger scale. It was
placed upriver from a big bay that sheltered many fish, in comparison to the ovow civu that
was set inside small tributaries. When the water level had subsided for two or three days, the
river would become shallow. When it was about two feet deep on the rock bar, the fish had to
swim back to the big bay. The blockade across the river had to be substantial, otherwise the
strong current would sweep it away. The blockage could be a fallen tree laid across the river
or a rattan rope tied with treebark stretched from one bank to the other. Swimming along the
river, the fish inevitably met the blockade and were then lured into the trap. Up to several
dozen of the big Hampala macrolepdidota (lungan), Tor Tambroides (katu) and mature Tor
douronensis (tanguh) fish could be trapped, besides the Puntius bramoides and Puntius bulu
(leverap) and various types of small fish.
Night Fish Trap, Ovow Malam
During a period of long drought, big fish frequently entered major tributaries during
the night to search for food in the shallow rivers. The cover of darkness protected them from
daytime predators. Before daybreak, they swam back to the main river. To trap these fish,
the people blocked the river after the fish had swum upstream. They made a big fire to
provide light to enable them to construct the blockade. Then they extinguished the fire to
bring darkness again. Before daybreak, up to a hundred fish would swim back to the main
river. Meeting the block, the fish became desperate and struggled to break through it. While
the fish gathered there to break through, the people clubbed them to death. For illumination,
the Punan Vuhang lit two big fires on both sides of the bank so that they could easily club the
fish. On a single night, the Punan Vuhang could catch up to a hundred big Hampala
macrolepdidota (lungan), Tor Tambroides (katu) and mature Tor douronensis (tanguh).
Because of the abundance of big fish, the night fish trap was a communal activity that
provided every member a big share of fish. With the participation of the whole community
and the setting of the night fish trap usually far upstream, this kind of fishing involved setting
up overnight camps near the trapping site.
Fish Spawning Trap, Ovow Luyuk
The Punan Vuhang used this type of fish trap to catch the Paracrossochilus acerus
(ngun ? - identification uncertain), Puntius bramoides and Puntius bulu (leverap ?) that swam
into small streams far upstream of tributaries to spawn. This trap used a method similar to
119

that mentioned above. However, it was small in scale, as the size of the targeted fish was
only two to three fingers wide (less than two inches wide). The spawning fish usually entered
the tributaries on the second night of a new moon. After spawning they returned to the
deeper river if the water level in the stream was too low. If trapped in the shallow stream, the
fish would be exposed to predators. Therefore, although the spawning was monthly, the
Punan Vuhang only set traps during the drought season to trap the returning fish. The setting
of these traps in a tributary could not be done more than three times a year or the fish would
sense that the tributary was a dangerous place.
Fish Harpoon, Selangap
Like the trapping methods, the Punan Vuhang only used this method during the
drought seasons. Harpooning or spearing was done at the bottom (downstream) of a rock
1
bar (lejeb tatang). The shallow river at the rock bar kept the big fish inside the downstream
bay. Occasionally fruits would flow through the rock bar into the bay below. Big fish such as
katu and tanguh and various types of small fish would wait for the fruits to flow down. As
small fish also congregated at this spot, the carnivore Hampala macrolepdidota (lungan) fish
preyed on the small fish, and itself became the target of the fisherman.
To harpoon these big fish, the fisherman waited on a tree branch overhanging the
bay. In the primary forest, there were many Dipterocarpus oblongifolius (kuhuwei) trees
growing at the waters edge. These trees had very long and strong branches that arched
over the surface of the river. The branches provided stable platforms to spear the fish that
swam past the branches. Motionless, the fisherman waited for a big fish to come by. The fish
would stop at the edge of the bay and watch for fruit.
The fisherman waited until the fish became stationary and had its head tilted
downwards (nguin koh; ternongob). When the fishs head was aimed forward or tilted up, it
was able to see upwards and would avoid any harpoon hurled at it. Therefore the hunter had
to wait patiently for the fish to look down. The moment he felt certain that the fish was looking
down, he hurled his harpoon. The instant the harpoon hit the fish, he grasped the end of the
2
harpoons shaft before it fell out of reach. After spearing the fish, the hunter would go to
another bay to repeat the hunting process. He could no longer fish at the same site, as all the
fish there had become alerted and would swim to the bottom of the riverbed.
Line and Pull, Pohi Pamit
Pohi pamit involved putting a thin strip made from rattan or vine into the river to
attract fish. The line itself was the bait, as the hungry fish would be enticed into eating the
line. When a fish bit the line and tried to pull it away, the pulling produced a tension. Feeling

In the distant past, the Punan Vuhang used the selangap bengo fish spear that they carved from the
bengo sago trunk shell. This spear was rather fragile. If a hunter was careless and missed a fish, the
spear was likely to hit the hard bottom and break. However, being skilled hunters, this rarely occurred.
Then, early in the last century, Iban forest exploiters introduced the iron fish spear which the Punan
Vuhang called selangap titei (iron harpoon).

The shaft was made from the long, light but strong frond of the Salacca sp. (lemukjan).

120

this tug, the Punan Vuhang would instantly yank up the line. As the fish was still biting the
line, its biting grip was so strong that it was pulled out with the line.
The line and pull was a simple method that anyone could use. However, only men
who possessed sufficient strength and speed could pull out a big fish before it released its
bite from the line. If a person were slow in drawing the line, the fish would become alert and
release its bite even before it was pulled out of the water. Consequently, most individuals
could only catch fish up to one foot long. Although this was a simple method, its success rate
depended on the fishs reaction toward the line. As a result, men preferred the more
challenging method of fish spearing which depended more on skill than on luck.
Line and Hook, Mohi
The Punan Vuhang used this method with the bone of a certain animal (tekurang)
as hook, and an earthworm as bait (itpot) to catch small fish of the Elxis sabanus species
(itu). During the day, the soil on the stream bottom was dug up to make the water murky
(matuk). The fish relied on their sense of smell in this murky water and took the bait. If the
water were clear, they would not eat the bait. At nighttime, the fish similarly used their sense
of smell to search for food and as it was dark, there was no need to muddy the water.
Seketok Line and Bait
An informant believed that only the Punan Vuhang used this seketok method to
catch the toe-sized Glaniopsis gossei and Glaniopsis hanitschi (kuvulung), which were found
in streams above waterfalls. It involved the use of a small vine (pingitan) inserted through
several earthworms. The vine was tied to a rod that was put into the river. The person
twitched the rod slightly which moved the vine to attract the fish. When the fish bit the
earthworm, it sunk its teeth into the vine. When the person yanked up the rod, the fish
remained biting the worm and the vine.
Sarap Fish Trap
This fish trap resembled a shallow basket a foot in diameter that was woven from
fine rattan strips (sumin). It was used to catch the small Gastromyzon spp. (lakot),
Protomyzon (li) and letapak that hid under big stones on shallow rock bars. The method
required placing the trap underneath the stone, with the fish caught inside the trap. It was
delicate work which entailed lifting the stone slightly while pushing the sarap lightly
underneath the stone and the fish. Then the stone was removed and a few small fish were
caught in the basket.
This fishing on shallow rock bars was done in the hot sun during drought seasons.
As it was hot, it was hard work and required patience to trap the fish hidden underneath the
stones.
Catching the Little Itu Fish (Mitu)
During the period of scarcity when the Punan Vuhang camped on the upper parts
of tributary rivers, they would try to catch small fish in the shallow bays of small streams. The
reaction of the small fish, Elxis sabanus (itu), hiding under big stones when the bay was
disturbed, was what caused it to be caught. A man used a stick to poke into holes (mek
121

lekavoh) underneath tree roots and boulders to force out the fish. The fish would then swim
underneath stones. Then he took a boulder and threw it with great force on the stones. The
impact killed the fish hiding underneath the stone. Sometimes, he could obtain two or three
fish underneath a stone.
Poisoning Fish, Tubo
The Punan Vuhang used several types of tubo poison to intoxicate fish during a
long period of drought when the streams were shallow. These included Croton tiglium L.
(tubo kaling), Derris elliptica Benth. (tubo okar) and Derris sp. (tubo pari). They cut away the
bark from of these trees, or extracted the roots for pounding on a rock with a wooden stick.
This mashing turned the woody material into pulp. Following that, they soaked and squeezed
the pulp in a slowly flowing stream. This dissolved the latex and caused the water to become
toxic, thus poisoning the fish inside the stream. As the fish were numbed, they swam about
slowly and without caution. Consequently, they could be easily slashed with knives or caught
in baskets.
The amount of poison available determined the size of the stream chosen for
poisoning. If it were abundant, it could poison fish in a relatively big stream. In that case,
every community member would participate in catching many fish, both big and small. If only
a little poison were available, only members of one household would participate in poisoning
a small stream to catch just a few fish.
Supplementary Activities
The Punan Vuhang also engaged in various other activities to supplement their
livelihood. Some were done only when needed, while others were seasonal. Food collecting
activities included community honey-collecting during the peak of the flowering season.
Hunters searched over the forest for various kinds of food during the lean period and also
gathered medicinal plants when a household member was sick. Other activities included
collecting materials to make and repair tools, gathering firewood, and collecting rattan for
weaving mats and hunting leaf monkeys for bezoar stones for barter trading.
Honey Collecting (Mek Singot)
Honey collecting was a complicated process that involved many work stages. I will
give simplified accounts of the ways honey was extracted from the nest of the honeybee
(Apis dorsata; singot), based on details provided by Naro Pua and Uji Lating, and my own
1
observation of the activities. At the beginning of the major fruit season when forest
vegetation was in full bloom, honeybees arrived to gather the flower nectar. They made their
beehives on the branches of huge trees that protruded above the tree canopy. The trees
were generally of the Shorea argentifolia Sym. (manator), Dyera costulata (litok), belati and

There are three types of tropical honeybee living in Southeast Asia (Seeley et al. 1982 cited in Seeley
1993:166). The Punan Vuhang mainly exploited the Apis dosarta because of its higher yield. Individuals
who discovered the nest of Apis cerana (lowar) in tree cavities, and the nest of Apis florea built low on a
slender branch of a small tree, would harvest the honey by themselves.

122

lalo tree species.1 The Punan Vuhang called the pioneering beehives that contained only the
adult bees jangin singot. Then new eggs were laid and little bees were hatched. As more
larvae were hatched, the little bees turned into mature bees which formed swarm after
swarm that descended on flowers to gather nectar and pollen. They turned the nectar into
honey and filled the empty honeycombs with it. Not long after, the flowers stopped producing
nectar and the bees began to consume their own honey. As the season progressed into the
fruit season, the bees had consumed much of the honey. Then they began to process juice
from ripened fruits into honey. When the fruit season was over, they consumed the honey
again before flying back to their place of origin.
The Punan Vuhang gathered honey toward the end of the flowering season, that
2
is, a few weeks before the flowers turned into fruit buds. Honey collecting required a lot of
hard work that involved all the manpower in the community. As a result, they selected certain
trees that contained many big beehives which were known to have a lot of honey. It would
have been too laborious to attempt to harvest all honey trees found near a camp.
The work involved some men climbing up the honey trees and collecting the honey
in pitch darkness. In the dark, while the bees were sleeping, the men could carry out their
work without hindrance from the bees. Basically, the men constructed a ladder to reach the
crown of the massive tree and made platforms to reach the beehives attached far out at the
bottom of the branches. Then the man who was the best climber used a burning bosok
broom to brush the bees from the beehive. After that, they burned all the bees that came
down to the ground. With the absence of the bees, the climber harvested the beehive and
honeycomb.
On the appointed day, all able-bodied members and their households camped
near the honey tree to participate. While everybody constructed their own shelter, a man
prepared kindling and torches (bosok). The pieces of kindling were split wood used to
produce large flames to distract attacking bees during the beehive burning. Since the man
only had a day to turn the kindling into dry firewood, he used the wood of the orak and sarit
species which dried very fast. To make the torch for sweeping the bees, he used a young
trunk of the lubuyun ciap or lubuyun singot tree. He split the end of the one and a half inch
diameter trunk into small sticks about one and a half feet long, and with the base of the sticks
still remaining attached to the stem, the torch (bosok) resembled a broom. The pole was
hard and could burn for a few minutes the duration needed to drive away bees clinging to
the beehive. After he completed preparing the kindling and a few torches, he placed the
firewood on a frame and made a big fire beneath it to dry the wood completely. He used
dead dry wood to start the fire, and then the trunks of the lubuyun ciap and lubuyun singot
(which burn well even when green) to dry the firewood. The drying of this firewood required a
few hours and the burning had to be done some distance away from the honey tree so as
not to disturb the bees.

Christensen (2002:93) provides a list of host trees for wild honeybees found among the Iban and Kelabit.
They are Alstonia scholaris; Hopea pentanervia; Shorea platyclados; Koompassia excelsa, and Ficus sp.
2

The Punan Vuhang were not so keen on collecting the honey produced from fruits at the end of the fruit
ripening season. At that time they were more interested in hunting the migrating wild boar.

123

By afternoon, as soon as a man completed his households shelter, he went into


the forest to gather rattan vines. Then he collected straight trunks from small trees (kayu
laroh) of one and a half to two inches in diameter. By evening, while most men continued
rattan collecting, some men began constructing a ladder (ogak) up the honey tree. They
bound the trunks together with rattan strips to make the ladder. While some men worked on
the ladder, others built simple lean-to huts close to the honey tree so that the people could
rest while waiting for the honey collecting to begin. By dusk, the honeybees returned to their
beehives. The men paused in their work so as not to alarm the bees. After awhile they
resumed constructing the ladder which by then would reach halfway up the honey tree.
Meanwhile, the rest of the community waited at the camp, had their dinner and only went to
the honey collecting site after nightfall. It would take a few more hours before the first beehive
was harvested.
Gradually, the ladder construction approached the crown of the tree where the
branches spread out. All this was done in total darkness without any light as light would have
1
alarmed the bees. The leading climber selected the biggest beehive, then climbed about
ten feet out onto the middle part of the branch. An assistant passed him a strip of rattan with
a hook (gait). The gait was a long rod made of the frond of the Salacca sp. (lemukjan) with a
few rattan rings attached to it. The assistant put a rattan strip through the rings and extended
the rod to the climber. He then pulled the rattan strip from the rod and tied it around the
branch. The assistant then passed him a pole, which he tied to the lower part of the huge
branch. After that, the assistant tied the other end of the pole to the tree trunk. This process
went on until a few pieces of pole were tied firmly to the branch, making a platform on the
lower part of the branch. The lower position enabled the climber to reach out to the beehive
which was attached to the bottom portion of the branch.
Meanwhile, the men on the ground split rattan vines for binding and shaved away
the sharp edges. Up on the tree crown, the assistants used a long rattan strip to pull up poles
and rattan strips from the people on the ground. The women on the ground sang selatok
songs as encouragement to the men on the tree top. In the dark, the activity up the tree was
slow, dangerous and boring, thus the songs helped relieve their boredom and made them
more alert. Also, the women made a big fire to continue drying and heating kindling for later
use during the beehive burnings.
High up the tree, when the platform was partially completed, the climber set fire to
the torch (bosok). When the torch was burning well with a big flame, he used it to sweep
(ngepua) the bees away from the beehive. The flame burnt them and all the bees responded
instantly to attack the fire. As the bees that were swept were burnt, other bees that had
turned to attack the fire were also burnt. From the ground, the burning on the tree was a
magnificent sight as the blazing bees dropped to the ground in great numbers. When the
climber was satisfied with the burning, he hit the torch against the branch to dislocate the
burning tips. As the burning tips dropped to the ground, the surviving bees went after the fire.
Landing on the ground, the burning tips became extinguished. The bees then directed their
attacks to the flames made by the women stationed on the ground. As the bees attacked the
1

On the ground, after the bees had settled in their beehives, it was safe to have little lamps to light up the
shelters.

124

fire, they were burnt to death.1 Meanwhile, the women shook a bundle of burning kindling to
distract the bees (pipoh) from attacking the climber on the tree. There were so many bees
attacking the flame that if the women did not shake the kindling to create a strong flame, the
bees would have covered the flame and smothered it. If there had been no fire, the bees
would have attacked the people on the ground. After a short while, most bees were burnt to
death while attacking the fire on the ground.
After that the climber resumed constructing and extending the platform to the
honeycomb. When he reached it, he used a wooden blade to sever the beehive from the
honeycomb. The hive contained all the bee larvae. He used a bark bucket tied to a long strip
of rattan to lower down the beehive. Then he sliced the rest of the honeycomb from the
branch and lowered it to the people below.
On the ground, the women squeezed the honeycomb to drain out the honey. A big
honeycomb would contain up to two to three gallons of honey when the beehive was about
six feet long, three feet wide and three inches thick. The honey and beehive containing the
larvae were distributed equally. Everybody then enjoyed eating the beehive and larvae with
the honey. It was a delicacy and soon everybody had finished their own share.
Up on the tree, the climbers continued collecting honey from other beehives until
they all felt too tired to go on. By the end, they would have taken about six or seven of the
biggest beehives. A big tree often had up to fifteen beehives, but not all were big enough to
justify the laborious work of harvesting them. In terms of honey distribution, each individual
would get a big bottle full of honey. Before dawn, the people returned to the camp set a
distance from the honey tree, because at the break of day, surviving bees from undisturbed
beehives would swarm down to attack any living being below the tree.
A few days later, the community moved to another big honey tree to gather that
honey. Depending on the situation, they harvested only a few trees. This was because the
work required the mobilization of the whole community, and also, it was tiring and time
consuming. Eventually, not everyone sustained his keenness to continue collecting, but while
the participating members did all the hard work, they still had to share with those who were
absent. Therefore, honey collecting was of short duration, lasting only two to three weeks.
2

Palm Shoots, Sago Larvae, Snakes, Pangolin and Lots of Little Things
During the lean season when the hunters had great difficulty in hunting game of a
reasonable size, they searched for a variety of minor food sources. The forest was explored
for young sago palms (Eugeissona utilis) to obtain the delicious shoots (langik). This was a
reliable food source as young sago was abundant in the forest. When meat was not
available, the Punan relied on these shoots to break the monotony of the bland sago paste.
From earlier hunting trips the hunter recalled locations, or would walk about looking for fallen
logs and holes in the ground where animals might be nesting. He lifted up the logs carefully,
occasionally finding a pangolin (Manis javanica; buku) or even a python (Python reticulatus;

Some bees also attacked the women. It is for that reason that only women were involved in holding the
pieces of burning wood as it was thought they could withstand the beestings better than the men.
2

The subtitle Lots of Little Things follows Dentan (1991:420).

125

sai) hiding underneath. He looked for places that had a lot of ants to locate the ants nest
where he might have found a pangolin licking the ants. In bamboo groves, he searched for
bamboo bats (paean bulu). In areas with caves, he entered the caves to catch bats. When
he felt hungry, he looked for various kinds of edible palm and rattan shoots. Although some
palm shoots like those of Licuala valida Becc. (silat) were not palatable, they satisfied his
immediate hunger. He went back to sago palms that he had harvested a few months ago to
look for nourishing sago larvae (Rhynchophorus ferrugineus Oliv.; ciet). This finger-sized
1
sago larvae was a very nourishing food with a high protein content.
He took his household members to streams where there were snails
(Potamonidae Family; kew and sik) to gather them. Walking along a stream, he would see a
frog dart out in front of him. In the stream, the frog then became motionless trying to avoid
been seen. As the man walked in the stream looking for it, he approached it, and the frog
instantly swam away again. Focusing on the direction of the frogs flight, he walked slowly,
avoiding splashing water, to catch another glimpse of the frog. When he saw it, he pierced it
with his spear.
The Punan Vuhang called a man who diligently (bahik) hunted all these kinds of
small animals nyegehok. When he always came home with some food, his effort was known
as tapui. When a person was not lazy (baloh), there was always some food to be found in
the forest. Although he might have to search far and wide, he could find food for his
household. The amount of meat from a single tree shrew or a frog, for example, might not
have satisfied his childrens desire for meat. However, the soup from this meat cooked into
the sago paste (linut) produced a better taste than the normal plain linut.
Firewood Processing
The gathering of firewood happened regularly to obtain fuel for cooking. The
Punan Vuhang used two types of firewood, kindling (pipik kayu) for making a big and hot
2
flame, and big logs (putdong) for sustaining the fire. They used three or four logs as the
base of the hearth (tatuk) two logs placed close together were separated about eight
3
inches from the other two (or a single log). Between the space, kindling was laid to make a
strong flame. The advantage of using large logs was the ability to maintain the blaze for long
periods, while having used only three or four pieces of kindling to light the fire. When the

When these food sources became difficult to find, they consumed a kind of beetle (Rhynchophorus
ferrugineus Oliv.; koloson) that produced the sago larvae (ciet). They also ate the honeybees (Apis
dorsata; singot, Apis florea; lowar) and the insects (pau) that were attracted to fire during the night. In the
forest, when hunters were very hungry, they ate worms to reduce their hunger.

Wood that had been once submerged underwater (okgong) was dried and used for smelting iron. This
wood was extremely hard and was able to sink. Due to its hardness, it produced a very hot flame for
efficient smelting of iron. The types of okgong used were from the Dipterocarpus oblongifolius Bl.
(kuhuwei) and the belavan wood.

The tatuk also acted as the base to position the cooking pot during cooking. In a prolonged camp (lapo
luek) lasting for more than a month, they used long stones as the base. These stones had to be taken
from a riverbed permanently submerged in water. Other stones would explode when heated to a high
temperature. As it was difficult to find such stones with the proper shape, the community used the putdong
log as the tatok when they lived in short duration camps.

126

kindling was almost completely burnt, another piece was added to prolong the flame. As the
tips of the logs were in contact with the fire, they also made flames. This provided another
source of fuel for the fire, thus allowing a minimum use of kindling to make a big flame.
By placing the kindling on a log, a space was maintained between the kindling
sticks. This allowed oxygen to be channeled into the fire to produce a big smokeless flame.
The presence of a smoky fire meant there was a lack of oxygen and the kindling was then
rearranged to increase the flame. When cooking was finished, the tips of the four logs were
left to burn out. Covered with ash, the burning was very slow and a log would burn until there
was nothing left. Depending on the frequency and length of cooking, a four foot long log
would take up to four days to finish burning. As the embers burned continuously, there was
no need to make a new fire.
When a person wanted to cook again, he or she poked into the embers to break
them up and put a few live coals on the hearth. Then she pulled the logs closer to each other.
She placed four pieces of kindling on top of the embers, and let the heat gradually warm the
kindling. After a while, she blew into the embers. After blowing a few times, a flame was
suddenly ignited.
For a log (putdong) to continue burning, it had to be hardwood so that it would burn
continuously as a live coal (bahak pui). The ember of a soft wood died down as soon as
there was no more fire to burn it. Since the Punan Vuhang used so little kindling, the kindling
was also cut from very hard wood to produce a big hot flame so that it could last a long while.
Consequently, the Punan Vuhang only used the best wood for firewood, such as the various
tree species kayu bua, keloai, lingoh, lubunyun, patik, lukukun and nyohut, among which,
lingoh was the best. Only when lingoh was not available would a person use the other types
of firewood. For putdong or log firewood, besides these woods, other types of hardwood
were also used, such as very hard wood tree species (belavan, kalen and the pejaak).
To make kindling, besides being hardwood, a good firewood was one that split
easily (bahah). To test the ease of splitting the wood of a standing tree, a person made a
notch (tukap) into the tree trunk. If the notch was easily split (kohop), the tree would also be
easy to split for the kindling. If it was difficult, it was nyapalut and abandoned. However, if the
tree was about six inches in diameter, they used the nyapalut tree for putdong or log
firewood. The kindling required drying to burn efficiently. After splitting, the sticks of kindling
were arranged and piled on a sturdy frame (puhuk pui) above the hearth. The heat produced
from cooking dried the kindling. The logs (putdong) could be used immediately after
chopping and there was no need to dry them.
While the Punan Vuhang only used good firewood from standing trees, when they
first camped at a site, they used dry wood for firewood. There were two stages of firewood
collecting. The first was collecting dead dry wood from around the campsite on the day of
arrival. Wood from broken branches and dead trees provided ready firewood. It was used for
cooking on the first two days. It was fire from this wood that heated and dried the freshly cut
kindling piled on the fireplace. From the second day onwards, only good firewood was
gathered for cutting and splitting into kindling. When the earlier collected firewood was
finished, this kindling was then used.

127

Collecting Medicinal Plants


When a person was sick, household members ventured into the forest to look for
certain plants that could alleviate the sickness as shown below in Table 4. Certain plants
were found in different areas, some in the lowlands and others in the highlands by the
mountains.
Table 4: Medicinal Plants and their Uses
Plant

Use

Preparation

arok kok

Relieves swelling and


heals skin disease

Leaves are pounded and filtered for juice which is


dried over a fire. The residue is used to rub on the
affected parts.

janan

Relieves bad hearing


and ear disease

Fruit is heated and resulting steam blown into the


affected ear.

kayu tabat

Relieves pain in joints


and bones

Tap root is shaved (munguhut) and then boiled in


water. The concoction is used for drinking.

Relieves itches on dogs

Root and leaves are pounded together, then boiled


and rubbed on itchy parts.

kelepui
terkakang

Heals wounds, including


ones to the eyes

Twigs are mashed, and the pulp is covered with


cloth for pressing on the wound.

kubuwan

Relieves stomachache,
vomiting and chest-pain

Fruit is mashed, boiled and used for drinking, or fruit


is preserved for this purpose; or the lalit root is
scraped (ngehet) and boiled, the concoction used for
drinking.

Relieves muscle sprain

Skin is slightly cut to produce an abrasion for slight


bleeding (mirak), the pounded leaves are massaged
(muhuat) into the wound, or the scraped bark is
wrapped on the skin.

Expels bad spirit in ritual

Leaves are fanned over the sick body, the bark is


scraped (ngehet) and rubbed over the painful part.

Relieves stomachache

Leaf stalks are soaked in hot water and the


concoction drunk.

larau

Rids bad spirit in ritual

Use burning leaves to hit the shelters while chanting


to get rid of spirits.

laun kelipat

Heals diarrhea

Similar to kubuwan as above.

long

Overcomes fainting

Root is mashed, boiled and concoction used for


drinking.

okar dak

Heals diarrhea

uncertain

okar jala buku

Alleviates toothache

Leaves are roasted and ground into powder which is


rubbed onto the gum or face to extract pus; to force
out the pus, the person chews a piece of tough
meat.

okar kalawit

Heals diarrhea

Scraped vine (ngehet), boiled and drunk.

okar kubulong

Relieves caterpillar itch

Rub leaf on itchy skin.

okar kutupou

Relieves caterpillar itch

Rub leaf on itchy skin.

Relieves bee stings

Rub with a leaf.

Avoids bee stings

Rub leaves all over the body, burn leaves to produce


an incense that makes the bees docile.

Heals diarrhea

Uncertain

kumulang

okar purut

128

Table 4: Medicinal Plants and their Uses (Continued)


plant

Use

Preparation

okar savit

First aid for wound

Wound is covered with the leaves and secured by


tying to stop bleeding.

Heals wound

leaf shoot is soaked in hot water and placed on the


wound.

Relieves stomachache

Leaves are chewed and swallowed.

okar talo ovan

First aid for wounds

The leaves are placed over the wound and tied in


place to stop bleeding.

paku lipan

First aid for wounds

The leaves are placed over the wound and tied in


place to stop bleeding.

Heals serious wound


with heavy bleeding

Leaves are mashed, boiled and used to cover the


wound while still hot; as the pulp is still hot, it
produces a sharp pain when placed on the wound.

patar

Relieves muscle strain

Skin is slightly cut to produce slight bleeding (mirak),


the pounded leaves are massaged (muhuat) into the
wound, or the scraped bark is wrapped on the skin.

sadai

Relieves chest pain or


vomiting

Bark is scraped, chewed and saliva swallowed.

sirau

Relieves muscle sprain

Skin is slightly cut to produce slight bleeding (mirak),


the pounded leaves are massaged (muhuat) into the
wound, or the scraped bark is wrapped on the skin.

tobo

Relieves stomachache

Bark is mashed, juice squeezed into cold water and


then drunk immediately.

tung garing

Hastens swelling of
abscess (boil), induces it
to ripen

Vine is mashed, heated by fire and used to cover the


boil.

Source: Fieldwork 1993-1995


Conclusion
Being mobile in the past, the Punan Vuhang moved from place to place, giving
resources time to regenerate. Initially, arriving in a new area, game animals were easy to
hunt, as they were unfamiliar with humans as predators. Eventually, however, they
developed avoidance habits that prevented hunters from spotting them. Hunters then used
many ways to hunt and trap them. When they had exhausted the larger and medium sized
game, they combed the forest for a variety of other foods. Some were nourishing, others not,
but helped to relieve their hunger. Over a prolonged season of scarcity, the Punan Vuhang
became very thin. Nonetheless, the diverse food sources helped them survive, for as long as
one was diligent, there was always food. If a hunter did not get anything, others would, and
the system of sharing and reciprocity helped tide them through. This system is the subject of
the next chapter.
Building upon the previous chapter on the rainforest environment and their former
mobile economy, this description of Punan Vuhang hunting and gathering clearly shows that
the Punan Vuhang had developed strategies well adapted to survive in the rainforest. It also
shows that the rainforest itself was not devoid of food, but could sustain a human population
without reliance upon outside sources of food.
129

Chapter Four: Sharing, Trade and Resource Tenure


In the previous chapters we have looked at how the Punan Vuhang adapted to the
rainforest and the techniques they used to hunt, gather and process food. This chapter
examines the social relations of production and exchange: sharing and reciprocity, barter
trade, and resource tenure. In fashioning a life for themselves in the rainforest, the Punan
Vuhang did more than merely survive, and in tracing the historical development of barter
trade, we will see, in particular, how the Punan Vuhang were induced to participate despite
the fact that the trade goods they received had little, if anything, to do with subsistence
needs. In the section on resource tenure, we shall see how despite the abundance of food in
the forest, the community restricted access to sources of food to conserve resources for later
use to ameliorate the impact of future food scarcity.
Reciprocity and Sharing, Putulat
In the past, the principle of reciprocity and sharing (putulat) ensured that most food
items were shared with other households. There were two levels of sharing: generalized
sharing, which required that food be shared among all households in the community; and
sharing a much larger portion of food among households closely related to the household
giving out the food. Households included in this latter sharing comprised the households of
the hunters and his spouses siblings. I term these closely related households the primary
sharing network, as the main share of food items was given to them, in contrast to a much
smaller share to other households.
To better explain the sharing system, the following description is based on the
actual system as it operated from 1993 to 1995. Table 5 (see page 132) below shows the
primary sharing network of every household in the community. Note that Households 4 and
14 do not contribute anything to other households. Household 4 is headed by a widow with
four children who relies on her siblings for food (i.e., Naro, Mangu, and Loyen). Household 14
is that of Luhat, a very old man living by himself. Despite not contributing food to other
households and being the sole member in his own household, he has the right to receive an
equal share from Naro, who is his adopted son. However, he has requested that his share
be only a small portion.
This Punan Vuhang primary sharing system corresponds to that described by
Testart who suggests that such systems of sharing conform to different types of kinship
terminology. According to Testart, this system
poses the principle of appropriation by the producer, places the producer [that is,
the hunter] into an individual relation with his own product, therefore into a relation
with himself. The otheri.e. the non-produceronly exists in the beginning as an
absent and excluded term, the person who has no product, who is not an owner. It
is only in the second phase, that of distribution, that the other enters, as the
potential end of the distribution process: he only comes in at the end, and then has
a subordinate role. The distribution process is a totality of movements which all start
from the same individual . . . with diminishing force the further they are from the
point of origin. It is in this context that kinship relations must be located: closest kin
receive the most, furthest least (1987:294-295).

130

Testart further notes that this kind of distribution system fits an Eskimo type of
kinship terminology. The system is ego-centered, with terms distinguished by proximity or
distance in relation to ego. An ego-based kinship system is one in which kinsmen are
organized in concentric circles, with parents, siblings and children as the closest kinsmen.
First degree kin include uncles, aunts and cousins with terminology conflating the two
collateral lines. Beyond are kin of the second degree. He stresses that this kind of kinship
system is, in effect, found among hunter-gatherers who have a sharing system similar to that
1
of the Eskimo and !Kung Bushmen.
When we examine the kinship terminology of the Punan Vuhang, we find that in
their sharing system the terms of reference focus on the producer. Thus, households in the
primary sharing network include the first degree consanguineal kinsmen of the household
head and his affinal kinsmen related to him through his spouse. In reference terms, these
members are yek (elder siblings) and arin (younger siblings); mak (father); mak mek (uncle),
and minek (aunt); and nakmarried children who have their own households (see page 260
for reference terms).
If we take the case of Naro (HH 3), we see that the kinship system described by
Testart closely fits the Punan Vuhang system. Naros primary sharing network members
comprise his siblingsLoyen, Kiam and Mangu. Also included is Luhat, his foster father who
stays by himself. His adopted daughter Ella also receives an equal portion. The other part of
the network includes his spouses siblingsJimol and Kudun, and her fathers brother,
Nahon. With Naro as producer and his spouse Vihing forming the egos at the center, the
Punan Vuhang kinship system has close kinsmen constituting the primary sharing network.
Ego has absolute right to his game and he distributes the biggest shares to members of his
primary sharing network. Whatever remains is then given to the rest of the community.
Nobody has the right to take the product from the hunter and his wife, unlike societies
practicing demand sharing.
Why Punan Vuhang practice such primary network sharing of giving bigger shares
to households of close kinsmen is probably due to the functional attributes of the band
system when they were practicing a mobile economy. During lean times, the community
divided itself into two or three bands in order to forage a much larger area. Each band
comprised households made up of immediate kinsmen. It was during lean times that
community members relied most heavily on sharing to sustain themselves in the face of food
scarcity. Sharing at such times was vital because hunting success was generally low. As
such, the game killed by a hunter helped provide for the whole band. When another hunter
also killed game, other households would receive a share so that all would have their needs
met. For practical reasons, the sharing did not extend to the other bands foraging far away.

For a discussion of the institution of sharing, see Dowling (1968), Gould (1981), Kaplan and Hill (1985),
Kent (1993) and Peterson (1993).

131

Table 5: Primary Level Sharing Network among the Punan Vuhang, 1995
HH
No.

Household
Head

Spouse

Primary Level Sharing Network Heads of


households to which food is given bigger shares
Kinsmen of
household head

Kinsmen of his spouse

Lajang

Loyen

None

Surek, Naro, Kiam, Mangu

Surek

Ella

Lajang, Nyaing, Olan,


Kuyang, Soing, Bom,

Naro, Bawek (Boms


husband)

Naro

Vihing

Loyen, Ella, Kiam,


Mangu, Luhat

Jimol, Kudun, Nahon

Kiam

Jimol

Ngui

Vihing, Kudun

Rahut

Riyek

Naut

Tawing, Sayun

Ngui, Ngarik

Mangu

Nyaing

Loyen, Surek, Naro,


Kiam

Olan, Kuyang, Soing, Bom

Lidut

Olan

Nguwek

Surek, Nyaing, Kuyang,


Soing, Bom

Sayun

Kuyang

Nigau, Riyek, Ngarik

Surek, Olan, Nyaing, Soing,


Bom

10

Sakung

Soing

Bawek, Ella, Ngion

Surek, Nyaing, Olan,


Kuyang, Bom

11

Kilat

Nguwek

Sabung

Nyaing, Olan, Kuyang, Soing,


Bom

12

Tawing

Riyek

Riyek, Nigau

13

Kudun

Ngarik

Kilat, Vihing, Jimol

14

Luhat

15

Nahon

Vihing, Luhat

When a band happened to find an area with fruit during a minor fruiting season, it
would invite another band facing scarcity to join them. This temporary gathering of bands
was called ngarang. Even though the amount of fruit during the minor fruit season might
have been small and the corresponding wild animals few in number, the host band still would
invite the other band to stay with them. In the future, it might have been their turn to face food
scarcity and be invited by a group with abundant food to join them. The guests remained at
the place for as long as resources were sufficient to sustain them. When food sources
gradually diminished, the visitors left their hosts to forage on their own in another location.
The lean periods necessitated generalized sharing which was then carried over to
times of abundance when the bands would converge. Sharing and reciprocity enhanced the
relationship between the members of different bands. As such, the Punan Vuhangs system
of generalized sharing and reciprocity fits the notion of reciprocity as insurance introduced
by Wiessner (1977) and Cashdan (1985). In this context, the theory of risk and insurance is
used to discuss risk as a reference to the chance that an unpredictable loss will occur and,
insurance is seen as a device for reducing risk by sharing losses. A reciprocity network
132

similarly acts to reduce risk by making it an obligation to help when someone else is in need
(Cashdan 1985:455-456).
The Punan Vuhang generalized sharing system corresponds to the risk reduction
hypothesis of Wiessner. According to Wiessner
The most efficient method of risk reduction open to hunters and gatherers in
environments like that of the !Kung, then, is a social method of pooling risk through
storage of social obligations. The method encompasses many principles of any
social insurance and hinges on the assumption that the population which pools risk
is diverse enough to absorb the losses of any member. In pooling risk, small,
certain losses or contributions are substituted for larger, uncertain ones. Among
hunter-gatherers, the small contributions cannot be stored in a communal pool, so
they must be stored in social obligations. A person creates relationships of mutual
reciprocity with others in the population and thereby spreads losses over a unit
much larger and more varied than the local band. In times of hardship, a persons
losses can be absorbed by others in the population, if risk is well distributed. . . .
The key factor in successful pooling risk, then, is in distributing it over as many and
as independent units as possible (1982:65).

Generalized sharing, despite the small amount of meat shared when the people
were camped together, ensured that the other party would reciprocate during lean times. The
party lacking food did not feel embarrassed to request from the one that had food, knowing
that they would oblige by giving food to the visitors. The amount given during generalized
sharing was small, but the amount of food given in return during lean times was important to
overcome famine. This notion of reciprocity therefore fits the notion of risk and insurance
1
presented by Wiessner.
Distribution During the Hunt (Sapah)Another level of sharing also corresponds to
Testarts focus on ego as the point of reference (1987:295). In a group of hunters hunting
with dogs, the greatest right to the game was held by the owner of the dogs, regardless of
whether the owner or somebody else killed the quarry. Similarly, if the pack of dogs consisted
of dogs from different households, the owner of the dog that first detected and barked at the
game held the primary right to the quarry. Through its barking, each person recognized the
2
identity of the dog that first encountered the game.
Table 6 shows the rights of different hunters to which parts of the game. The dogs
owner held the right to the chest, waist and offal of the game, that is, the best and most
delicious portions. Following that, the distribution of shares depended on the sequence of
arrival by the hunters.

The first person to reach the animals, regardless of whether the dogs owner
arrived first or later, received the next biggest share of the carcass. If there were
only two hunters, he received the rump, hindquarters, neck, front A-shaped portion
of the chest and the stomach.
1

See also Cashdan (1990), Smith (1988) and Smith and Boyd (1990) for a discussion of risk and
reciprocity.
2

At various times, disease may kill many dogs. Sometimes, as a consequence, only one or two
households will have enough dogs to conduct a hunt. More frequently, the few dogs from separate
households have to be combined to form a hunting pack.

133

When there were three hunters, the second person to arrive received the neck and
forequarters by taking the share of the first hunter.

When there were four hunters, the owner and the first person retained the shares
that were similar to a three-person hunt. The second persons share was less as
he received the jaw, the neck and forequarters. The third person took the smallest
portion, the part of the head above the jaw.

In a group of five hunters, the limbs were given to the fourth hunter. This meant that
the limb sections of the portions of the first and second hunter were given to the
fourth hunter.

In a six-person group (the maximum number of hunters in a hunting group), the


fifth hunter received the hind limbs which had slightly more flesh than the forelimbs.
The last hunter received the hind limbs. The intestines were given to the dogs
immediately after the hunt.
Regardless of the number of hunters who participated in the hunt, the owner of the
dog consistently retained the same share of meat, that is the chest, waist and offal. The
dogs owner retaining the same share of meat regardless of the number of participating
hunters shows that the system was focused on an ego-centered sharing system. It was the
participating hunters who received the lesser shares as more and more hunters joined the
hunt. The ideal number of participating hunters was limited to six, as sharing beyond that
required taking away from the shares of hunters who arrived earlier.
On rare occasions when the number of participating hunters went beyond six, the
first arriving hunter got the A-shaped part of the chest and stomach, with the rump divided
between the second and third arrivals. The neck was cut into four portions for the fourth to
the seventh person, the jaw for the eighth, and the head section above the jaw for the ninth
hunter to reach the quarry. If even more hunters participated in the hunt, the upper portions
of the front quarters were given to the tenth and eleventh hunter, while the lower portions
were retained by the dogs owner. The twelfth hunter was given one thigh of the hindquarter.
The lower limb and the other thigh was given to the dogs owner for distribution to the rest of
the community who did not form the primary sharing network. Beyond this number of hunting
participants, and if they were still other hunters, the thigh given to the twelfth hunter was
further divided into three portions of a meager share for distribution to the twelfth to fourteenth
hunter.
The distribution of other types of large game was quite similar to that of wild boar
but with differing modes of sharing. Sharing the huge sambar deer and the smaller-sized
barking deer followed the same mode of distribution, although the stomach in both cases
was retained by the dogs owner. In the case of a wild boar, the first hunter held rights to the
stomach. For a monkey, the waist section that contained the rump and hindquarters was
given away to the participating hunters.

134

Table 6: Rules for Sharing Wild Boar among Participating Hunters


No. of
hunters
1

Arriving
Sequence
dog owner

Punan Vuhang
Name
tup

English Name

dog owner

tavung,
ang sok luang
sagek,
tarok,
ohuk,
tukang

chest, waist,
offal
rump, hindquarters,
neck,
A-shaped part of chest,
Stomach

sagek,
ohuk,
tukang
tarok

rump, hindquarters,
A-shaped part of chest,
stomach
neck and forequarters

sagek,
ohuk,
tukang
jan,
tarok
takang

rump, hindquarters,
A-shaped part of chest,
stomach
jaw,
neck and forequarters
head above the jaw

sagek,
ohuk,
tukang
jan,
tarok
takang
pan, pon

rump, hindquarters,
A-shaped part of chest,
stomach
jaw,
neck and forequarters
head above the jaw
limbs

sagek,
ohuk,
tukang
jan,
tarok
takang
pan
pon

rump, hindquarters,
A-shaped part of chest,
stomach
jaw,
neck
head above the jaw
hind limbs
forelimbs

ohuk,
tukang
visi sagek
visi tarok
jan
takang

A-shaped part of chest,


stomach
half of the rump
one quarter of the neck
jaw
head above the jaw

pon
pan

upper limb of front quarter


one hind quarter thigh

visi pan

one third of the thigh

st

st

nd

2
4

st

nd

rd

3
5

st

nd

rd

3
th
4
6

st

nd

rd

3
th
4
th
5
10

st

nd

rd

2 &3
th
th
4 7
th
8
th
9
th

th

th

th

12

10 & 11
th
12

14

12 14

whole game

Note:
Regardless of the number of participating hunters, the owner of the dog
that first detected the game retained the main parts of the wild boar, similar to the
two-hunters group

135

The sharing system for other types of animals differed from that mentioned above
due to their small size. In the hunt for smaller game, dogs were not used and the game was
usually obtained through blowpipe shooting or snared in noose traps. In this kind of hunting
or trapping, if anyone were to follow, it would usually be only one more person. For
mousedeer, the upper part of the carcass that contained the forequarters (ulun) was given to
the participating hunter while the main hunter retained the right to other parts of the carcass.
For mousedeer, the rump was not given because it contained only a little flesh. For big fish,
the tail portion below the rib was given. In big birds, the bony back portion (langareh) of the
carcass was given while the fleshy front part (barong) was retained by the hunter.
The first person who saw the return of a successful hunt was given a bigger share.
Similarly, a child who first saw the return of a hunter with a wild boar and who made the
cooing call would also be given a bigger share. Consequently, old men who were too old to
hunt by themselves watched out for returning hunting dogs. If the dogs had abdomens
bulging with the games internal organs, an old man would walk to the path the dogs owner
had taken to go hunting. Waiting there, he would likely be the first person to see the hunters
return and thus would receive a bigger share of the game.
This description of how sharing was done shows the complexity of the sharing
system. The essence of it was the assurance that a hunter would be provided for when he
did not obtain any game. Whether it was by the generalized sharing or the primary sharing
network, a household could be assured of receiving some share of the game of a successful
hunter. In times of abundance, everyone, and in particular those closely related to the
successful hunter, participated in the bounty. On the other hand, in times of scarcity, sharing
then became an insurance for obtaining some food from successful hunters.
Barter Trading
This section attempts to reconstruct the historical development of barter trading
based on accounts as reported by informants. It also attempts to discern possible
motivations of barter traders who faced much difficulty traveling into Punan Vuhang country.
The third part describes activities related to trading.
The preceding chapters on the nomadic economy have shown how, in the past,
the forest most likely provided all the food consumed by the Punan Vuhang. A brief
description of Punan Vuhang material culture similarly indicates that they were able to meet
many of their basic needs without contact with outsiders. The following account is from Luhat
Tehin, the oldest individual who could recall stories of former life as narrated in the past.
According to Luhat, before their forefathers had metal pots, they cooked meat inside bamboo
tubes and molded clay pots to process fat into preserved lard. The hunter-gatherers used
tree bark for cooking thin pieces of meat and sago paste that required only a short period of
1
boiling. They processed tree bark into barkcloth to cover themselves. For metal tools such
as adzes, knives and spears, the people resorted to traveling long distances to the
1

In one of our journeys to Belaga, we passed by a fishing camp of the Penan, another former huntergatherer people living far downriver and they shared with us fish cooked in tree bark. My Punan Vuhang
fellow-traveler said their forefathers similarly used such a method to cook. I was amazed that the bark did
not burn. They explained that the tree bark must be thick and cut from a living tree. Then it is damp and
will take time to burn, by then, the food will already be cooked.

136

abandoned burial grounds of sedentary people to unearth tools. After the shamans offered
rituals to appease the spirits of the dead, they dug up the tools that were buried in the
cemetery. From this account, essentially, the forefathers of the Punan Vuhang did not have
to establish exchange contacts with the outside world to meet their needs and their
1
subsistence production sufficiently sustained them.
After the 1923 Peace Making Ceremony in Kapit, the Punan Vuhang were
involved in barter-trading to obtain materials that they could not produce with their simple
2
level of technology. A reconstruction of the historical development of barter trading helps
clarify how the Punan Vuhang have participated in this exchange of products despite not
really needing trade goods for survival.
The Punan Vuhang wove fine rattan products and lived in an area in which high
quality rattan was plentiful. Their mats and baskets were said to be among the best in the
region. The products were in great demand among neighboring sedentary people who did
not have sufficient rattan of their own or lacked the time to weave mats and baskets. The
Punan Vuhang were also skilled in obtaining rare and valuable bezoar stones and rhinoceros
horns, forest products that fetched extremely high prices in the downriver bazaars.
In the face of Punan Vuhang self-sufficiency, traders had to devise strategies to
induce the hunter-gatherers to produce or procure forest products for barter trading. Initially,
traders appeared to have brought in materials such as cooking pots, knives, adzes, spears
and flints for making fire that made the hunter-gatherers lives easier. They also introduced
cotton clothes to replace the rough barkcloth that was stiff and uncomfortable. These
materials were durable and the amount needed was small. Once the Punan Vuhang had
acquired these items, there was no longer any necessity to trade. Moreover, the
procurement of materials for barter trading required considerable work. Processing raw
rattan into the final products, for instance, was extremely monotonous and the search for
bezoar stones was highly dependent on luck rather than on skill.
To entice them to persist with these activities, traders brought along ornaments.
They also introduced salt and tobacco which was highly addictive. Due to a desire for
ornaments and their dependency on tobacco, the Punan Vuhang were enticed into a barter
3
trade economy. Table 7 compares the materials that the Punan Vuhang could obtain from
the forest with those they procured through barter trading.
Barter trading was mainly conducted with Kayan headmen and aristocrats from the
Balui River who had a great desire for Punan Vuhang products. Besides bringing trade
goods obtained in expeditions to the Belaga or Kapit bazaars, they also brought along
tobacco that they had cultivated in their swiddens. Brought in large quantities, tobacco was
given as advanced credit to bind the Punan Vuhang into a trading relation so that they would
1

In the past, two subgroups of the Punan Vuhang the Punan Terkalet and Punan Nuo were hostile
to other people, including traders who came to trade with them.
2

Before this period, the era of headhunting would have made it too risky for trading parties to go deep into
the forest to meet the Punan Vuhang.
3

Tobacco addictions were not fully satisfied. Since trading was seasonal and only conducted after the
annual tobacco harvest, the tobacco supply was limited. Not long after the traders departed, the supply
would be depleted and the Punan Vuhang had to then endure without it.

137

produce a steady supply of rattan products. In return, in debt to the traders who stayed with
them for long periods, frequently up to three months at a stretch, the people worked hard to
produce the goods needed to pay off the debt. The desire for tobacco was therefore an
enticement that bound them into a long-term relation with the traders.
To a much smaller extent, trading was also conducted with longhouse dwellers
from the Kalimantan side of Central Borneo. These longhouse dwellers traded rice, tobacco
and metal tools which Kenyah blacksmiths made from local iron ore, for cloth and salt that
the Punan Vuhang obtained from Balui traders on the Sarawak side. Living in an extremely
remote part of Borneo, the Kenyah faced tremendous obstacles and a long journey
downriver to get outside materials from coastal towns in Kalimantan. In comparison,
journeying to the Punan Vuhang camps was much easier. Other items of trade were pig lard
and smoked meat. During periods when wild boar could only be found on the Sarawak side
1
of the border, these Kenyah people would cross over to trade for meat and lard.
From this brief description, we see that virtually all essentials for survival were
obtained from the forest. Only metal tools had to be obtained through trade, and in the distant
past by digging into burial grounds of longhouse communities for knives and adzes.
Ornaments and tobacco, on the other hand, were luxuries, as survival did not depend on
them. The stimulus for trade therefore came from outside the community, from the traders
who desired the goods that the Punan Vuhang were able to produce. In time, the Punan
Vuhang came to enjoy the advantages of trade goods that made their lives easier.
Motivation of Traders
Here, as trade relations were initiated and maintained by traders coming from
outside the community, it is necessary to say something about what motivated the traders to
make the long and difficult journey to Punan Vuhang country. Traders were, in the past,
mainly headmen from the stratified Kayan community. Their main purpose for trading was to
acquire costly materials such as brasswares and beads to enhance their social standing. A
brief description of the social organization of the Kayan provides a background for this
concern for social enhancement. The Kayan generally practiced uxorilocal residence in
which a man married into his wifes household and became subservient to the members of
her family. In order to remain in his own household, a man had to pay a substantial
brideswealth (blian) to his wifes household (Chan 1991:79; Rousseau 1974a:157; Tsugami
1987). This consisted of valuable objects such as an ornamental knife with decorated sheath
(malat bukal), brassware (tawak and gong), necklaces of beads (inu), and a few extremely
precious beads (lukut). In addition, he had to hold several lavish ceremonies related to the
marriage. Only the headman of a longhouse community could obtain these objects and
organize the ceremonies through a complex corve labor system (mahap) and barter trade.

Due to this difficulty in transportation, during the decade of the 1960s, most of these longhouse
communities migrated en masse to the downriver areas of East Kalimantan. Two groups left for Sarawak.
The Kenyah Badang are settled at three areas, Long Busang, Long Dungan and Data Kakus. Another
group, the Kenyah Bakong, lives in Long Singut. The Punan Kihan, a splinter group of the Punan Vuhang,
migrated to the headwaters of the Rajang. Today, they live at Long Unai and now call themselves the
Punan Long Unai, after the location of their current settlement.

138

Briefly, the corve labor system required all households of commoner status
(panyin) to provide labor during the most important cultivation stages to the ruling household
(amin ayak) in the longhouse community. With additional labor provided by the slaves
(dipen) owned by the headman, the corve system enabled the headmans household to
cultivate a large surplus of rice and tobacco. Much rice was needed for food during a one-tothree month trading expedition. Tobacco, as already mentioned above, was among the main
exchange items in barter trading. Other than a headman, no other household could produce
a sufficient surplus of material to conduct a trading expedition.
Using Punan Vuhang mats and baskets acquired during former barter trading, the
headman made a second round of trading expeditions to the Belaga or Kapit bazaar. Here,
the headman exchanged these rattan products for metal tools and bales of cotton cloth for a
further round of trading expeditions. The headman thus acted as a middleman, making huge
profits by exchanging the rattan products produced by the Punan Vuhang for trade goods
obtained from the bazaar.
After a few trading expeditions, the headman could acquire the necessary
brideswealth that enabled one of his sons to achieve virilocal residence and so bring a wife of
high status into the household. As a result, this son could then replace him as the longhouse
headman. Failing to fulfill this social obligation, when the headman reached old age, none of
his sons remained in the household to succeed him. He then had to relinquish his
headmanship to a son-in-law married into the household. As a result, his personal standing
within the community would be diminished. In turn, the son or son-in-law who later became
headman had to carry out trading expeditions of his own in order to maintain his social
standing.
Because of this use of barter trading to maintain a headmans social standing,
once the goal of acquiring brideswealth valuables had been fulfilled, there was no longer any
1
necessity to continue trading. It was for this reason that barter trading to Punan Vuhang
country was relatively infrequent, so that the hunter-gatherers received only a few
expeditions a year. Since a headman needed to assist only one of his sons, a limited number
2
of trading expeditions were generally adequate to acquire the necessary brideswealth.

According to my observations among the Kayan, only the previous headman of Uma Nyaving Long
Linau had amassed much wealth, consisting mainly of brassware kept in his storehouse. This former
headman, Ulok Imang of Lahanan origin was an exception. Instead of virilocal residence, he had married
into the household of his wife, whose father was the headman of the Kayan longhouse of Uma Nyaving.
He became headman by virtue of his spouses brother relegating the headmanship to him. His brother-inlaw, Tajang Laing, is a prominent politician and businessman, and therefore could not assume the duties
of a headman. After his retirement from active politics, Tajang Laing returned to the community and
became the headman. It is plausible that Ulok Imang had to amass much wealth to avoid being
overshadowed by his brother-in-law. He eventually emerged to become the richest man in the Belaga
district. His situation is also peculiar in that he does not have a son to succeed him through virilocal
residence.
2

Since the 1980s, however, development in the Balui headwaters has changed these trading conditions.
The introduction of commercial items such as outboard motors, chainsaws, various consumer goods, and
the need for money to send children to school has resulted in increased trading expeditions into Punan
Vuhang (and Penan) country.

139

Trade Goods as a Means of Exchange


Rattan gathering and processing was, and continues to be, the main mode of trade
goods production and involves the entire household, although in the past, hunting and
trapping for animals with bezoar stones were also important activities. As hunting and
trapping have already been described, the focus here is on rattan production. The description
is in the present tense since it still goes on today, and is based on my observations.
The Punan Vuhang engage in barter trade whenever traders come to stay with
them. When the traders led by a headman arrive, they give some tobacco as a gift to every
Punan Vuhang individual. This gift is a goodwill gesture since the traders are going to stay
1
with them for a long time and depend on their goodwill to survive. In addition, Punan
Vuhang crave tobacco and it is not socially acceptable to begin trading immediately. After
smoking the gift, depending on the number of women available in each household to weave
mats, some tobacco is traded in advance to the households that will supply the rattan
products. The tobacco helps sustain the men during the strenuous activity of rattan
collecting, and the women during the monotonous work of rattan processing and weaving.
Before the Punan Vuhang adopted cultivation, the community would process as
much sago as possible over the next few days, as they would have to move to areas with
abundant rattan for weaving, using for this purpose only the high quality Calamus caesius
(uwei gak or uwei mongo). If they were camped in the headwaters of the Linau or the
Kajang, this type of rattan was lacking, and they would have to move to the mid-Kajang or
mid-Linau areas where it was prolific.
During my fieldwork, I observed that for as long as the traders were around, and
the goods they had brought for trading were still available for exchange, the women
continuously wove rattan baskets and mats. While the men were out hunting, the women
would weave mats, and process sago with their husbands whenever necessary. Rattan
collecting, processing and weaving required several work stages. Instead of a mere technical
description, I will describe these daily activities as part of community life.
After constructing the shelters and collecting food, the men set out to collect rattan,
with each man camping at an area where many rattan groves are present. In these groves,
the vines grow upwards to the tree canopy to obtain sunlight. The collector hits a mature vine
with his knife to loosen the dead outer layer of thorns on the leaf sheath. He cuts the vine and
twists it to remove the layer of old thorns. To avoid later entanglement of long rattan vines, he
inserts the base of the cut vine into the ground. He then pulls down the long vine, removing
the thorns by swinging and twisting the vine before gripping the upper parts. He continues
pulling until the vine is held fast to the tree canopy. With his body weight and all of his
strength, he pulls it down until the middle portion of the vine falls from the canopy. He
continues pulling until the vine cannot be tugged anymore as the crown of the rattan vine is
secured to the tree canopy. Then he stands on his toes and cuts the vine off at the highest
possible place. While a vine can measure up to a hundred feet long, some are much shorter.
1

Due to the great distance from their homes on the Balui River, traders stayed with the Punan Vuhang for
periods of up to three months. Because of the long journey, they would finish consuming their own food
supply and have to depend on the Punan Vuhang for their survival, participating with their hosts in hunting
and sago processing. This was especially so when the Punan Vuhang camped at the Danum and Linau
headwaters.

140

A young man by virtue of his strength can pull a greater length of vine from the canopy. An
old man, by comparison, is likely to give up the first time the vine becomes entangled.
Through this strenuous process of pulling and twisting, a man collects as many rattan vines
as possible. He then gathers the vines and coils one end of the vines and lets the main
length of the vines fall on the ground. He puts his arm through the coil to let it rest on his
shoulder. He may collect more rattan from the next grove. Then he drags the bundle of long
vines back to the camp.
Upon reaching the camp, he cuts the vines into lengths of about six and a half feet.
When dried and split, these are used to weave mats measuring six and a half feet long by
five feet wide. After that, working into the night, he and his household members remove the
scales that form the outer layer of the vine, by pulling and twisting the vines against a piece of
wood. They then scrape off the hips covering the internodes with a small knife. The next day,
they place the vines in a clearing under the sun for drying.
Once the vines are sufficiently dry, the people resume processing the rattan
immediately after having dinner. First, depending on the size of the vines, they split each vine
into four or five strips that measure about three millimeters wide. They remove the pith and
then shave the split vine into fine strips of about one millimeter thick, retaining the outer layer
of the rattan for the top part of the mat. This thinning process requires at least a day or two. If
they need it, the women then dye a portion of rattan strips by cooking them in a mixture of
clay and a type of leaf for several hours. Later, they wash away the clay, leaving shiny black
rattan strips. Finally, they weave the rattan strips into mats.
The thinning and weaving are usually carried out in a pleasant atmosphere. During
the day, the women sit together weaving their mats. They chat, gossip and laugh to generate
an enjoyable feeling. This atmosphere is important, otherwise the weaving work would be an
1
extremely dull affair. A mat requires about four to five days to weave, or less if the women
have few other chores to do.
During the night, the women continue weaving together. In the past, for light, they
made small fires from resin (ketitei). While the women are weaving, the men crack jokes and
describe their experiences during the day, such as tracking quarry or pursuing wild boars.
Storytellers tell suket stories, myths and legends. They also play the sape to accompany
ngajel dances. Each person, especially the women, takes turns to dance to provide
entertainment for the people and their guests. Also, with the tobacco supplied by the traders,
they have a stimulant to keep them going through the repetitious activity of weaving.
For as long as the traders remain with them, the community carries out rattan
collecting, processing and weaving. The women weave every day except on days when they
process sago together with their husbands. The men, meanwhile, accompanied by the
traders, explore the forest for food and hunt game. When the collected rattan supplies have
begun to dwindle, they go to a new area to gather new supplies of rattan for the women to
weave into more mats.
In the past when they still practiced the mobile economy, during the dry season
and when food was sufficient, the men might carry out expeditions into distant areas to
1

For that matter, mat weaving is forbidden during the mourning period as weaving is thought to require a
happy feeling.

141

search for bezoar stones by hunting leaf-monkeys (Presbytis hosei; bongat). Some eighty
years ago when rhinoceros (Dicerorhinus sumatrensis; tamaru) could still be found, they
hunted it for its extremely valuable horns. Hunters searched the Bangan-Bahau valley and
the Lesong River in Kalimantan for leaf-monkeys and the Laut Kakup mountain range for
rhinoceros. While chances of obtaining bezoar stones were higher, few rhinoceroses were
ever hunted, and those who succeeded in killing them became famous, for example, Uleh
and Ukin, who died in the early 1900s. Alternatively, the hunters might trap porcupines
(Hystrix brachyura; totung mucit, Thecurus crassispinis; totung kelien) to obtain bezoar
1
stones. Although bezoar stones fetched high prices, very few monkeys or porcupines
contained stones. Similarly, it was only by luck that a hunter might kill a rhinoceros. Usually,
hunters failed to obtain anything. Consequently, rattan mats remained the principal item
exchanged for trade goods. All that was needed was diligence to produce the mats and the
weavers received tobacco to relieve their boredom. Today, they take the addictive but highly
effective drug Kaki-Tiga to relieve the monotony (see page 289).
To sum up, barter trading and related activities were seasonal and making goods
to trade was only done while traders were present in the country. It was seasonal because
traders had to make the long difficult journey to Punan Vuhang country. The demand for
Punan Vuhang products was the chief motivation, particularly woven mats. To cement
trading relationships with the Punan Vuhang, traders introduced a highly addictive form of
tobacco which caused a craving for the substance.

Table 7: Essential Goods During Nomadic Times


Main Items

Locally Available

Through Trade

Carbohydrate food

sago starch, sago shoots, fruit

Protein food

meat, fish, sago caterpillars, fish

Cutting tools

knife handles, adze shafts

blades of knife and adze *

Hunting tools

spear shafts, blowpipe shafts,


blowpipe poison, trapping materials,
fish harpoons, fish hooks from certain
animal bones

metal tip of spear and


blowpipe *

Healing medicines

herbs, roots, vines, leaves, berries

Cooking implements

tree bark, bamboo tubes, clay pots

Rattan products

baskets, mats

Fire making implements

rattan and wood

flint

Additives

tobacco, salt

Clothes

tree bark

clothes

Adornment

bird feathers

brassware, beads

metal cooking pots

* Note: Before trading times, as reportedly obtained from abandoned burial grounds

Upon the request of traders, they also tapped tree resin (ketitei dian) for gutta purca which, however,
fetched very low prices in the past. Therefore, they only searched for it when requested by traders.

142

Resource Tenure
Continuing the examination of the social relations of production, this section
focuses on resource tenure when the Punan Vuhang were practicing their mobile economy.
It describes restrictions on utilization of food sources as conservation measures to cope with
future periods of scarcity in an economy that relied on the natural occurrence of food. We
have seen earlier that the practice of a mobile economy had enabled the Punan Vuhang to
forage food in an area comprising 1500 square miles that had previously had no other
inhabitants. The territorial vastness and natural production of resources resulted in the Punan
Vuhang considering all forest resources as open access properties that everyone could
freely use. However, the Punan Vuhang did have a private property rights system which
recognized rights holders exclusive rights to resources to which they had established rights.
While all other resources were categorized into either open-access property or private
property, the Punan Vuhang accorded both types of rights to the Eugeissona utilis (tajuk)
sago. This was because different members of the community had differing perceptions of this
resourcesome established private rights to itwhile others did not, but recognized the
rights of those who did so.
Private property rights were accorded to various types of resources. These
included fruit trees, blowpipe poison trees (Antiaris toxicaria; takjem), blowpipe trees (tanyit),
lingoh firewood trees, and the benator (shorea spp.) and sirau trees used for constructing
boats. They maintained open-access rights to resources that they used occasionally and
were able to obtain freely due to their abundance. Nonetheless, despite honey being
extremely rare, they considered it an open-access property because it was a delicacy that
had to be shared equally with all individuals in the community.
Sago
The analysis of the relationship between the ecology and the economy in Chapter
Two provides a basis for assessing the former property rights system for sago. Here we shall
see how sago has become the most important food resource to the Punan Vuhang because
it was the only food source that was available throughout the year. Sago was non-seasonal,
and when all other food resources became unavailable, the community could depend
entirely on sago.
Two types of sago grow in the Punan Vuhang territory. The main species is
Eugeissona, found throughout the territory but mainly in headwater areas. According to
Brosius, the Eugeissona utilis grows throughout interior Central Borneo and has a wide
elevational range. It is found in greatest concentration on steep ridges and slopes, where it
grows in dispersed groves interspersed with other forest vegetation (1991:142). The other
1
sago, Arenga undulatifolia (nyamakoh), mainly grows in downriver areas.
Arenga is commonly found in widespread areas. It is a solitary plant, but some of
these sago clumps do have a few palms growing together. Compared with Eugeissona,
rarely is the Arenga sago found growing in clusters. Spread all over the forest and in low
1

It is found in abundance in the Balui River. There, sago is known by different names, Arenga is talang
while Eugeissona is nanga. Arenga in the Balui grows in clumps with many palms in each cluster. Arenga
is found in lowland areas while Eugeissona thrives on soils at a higher elevation (Chan 1995:105).

143

quantities, it was difficult in the past for the Punan Vuhang to keep in memory the locations of
the clumps in their mental map. This made it hard to establish a right to it, resulting in the
Punan Vuhang treating it as open access property. Eugeissona, on the other hand, was
found in abundance throughout the river valleys. In several areas, it was so abundant that the
plant dominated the landscape covering an entire river valley as in the Peluan tributary of the
Linau River, and the Berlaup-Sulen watersheds in the Kajang River. The establishing by
some people of Eugeissona as private property but with yet other individuals continuing to
maintain it as an open-access property requires a deeper analysis.
Eugeissona propagates by producing fruits and generating offshoots that grow on
elevated aerial roots (see Brosius 1991:143). Many sago clusters are huge and consist of
many palms. Some of them are so big that one had to build a platform 10-15 feet up on a
clump to cut down a trunk. Because of its abundance, the Punan Vuhang had no qualms
about harvesting all edible young palms for their shoots. After all, they might not return to the
same area until the seedlings left behind had regenerated, and, 10-15 years later, matured.
For that reason, some Punan Vuhang did not find it a necessity to conserve a young palm
because they might not get to harvest it when the palm had achieved maturity.
These factors, among others, determined the complex nature of the property right
system of sago. Its abundance and regeneration attributes resulted in the perception of the
resource as an open access property that the community could freely exploit. However, other
Punan Vuhang considered it private property to which they had the right to exclude others
from exploiting it.
Before going on further on how this contradictory situation had come about, some
basic facts about sago processing will help us to assess the development of its property
rights system.
(1) Sago was a resource exploited for its starch and there were palms of differing
starch qualities. Only good quality palms were used, as not all sago plants contained
sufficient starch to make it worthwhile to process.
(2) Sago required water for processing into starch. In its raw condition it was heavy
and had to be transported to a water source. An accessible stream was therefore necessary
to process it.
When an individual discovered a sago clump, the first thing that he did was to
check on the palms maturity and then the quantity of starch content. If the starch content of a
palm was high, he checked on the surrounding area for a stream with constant running
water. When necessary, he returned with his wife to process the sago. If the water was too
far away, he abandoned the sago, unless, due to severe food scarcity, it was essential for
him to harvest it.
As running water was an essential factor that determined the prospective
harvesting of a sago palm, only sago that had a good water source accessible could be
used. Although there might be some small streams near to sago clumps, insufficient running
water during the drought season prevented the filtering process. Since most palms grew at a
distance from running water, the Punan Vuhang usually had to transport the sago trunks to
the stream. On flat ground and uphill slopes, they carried the sago trunks on their shoulders.
This was a feat only strong young men could do. For palms that were far from streams,
transporting the trunks frequently required a combination of long stretches of uphill paths and
144

flat paths on top of ridges. On downhill paths, however, the men had only to roll the trunks
down the hill slopes.
In the worst circumstances, a man had to mash the pith and then carry the pulp
over a long distance to a stream for further processing. He then returned to continue
mashing the pith before transporting it again. He did not mash all the pulp at one time and
then transport it in stages, as those portions that were exposed for too long would lose their
starch content. The transportation required many trips that necessitated a whole days work
as a man could only carry so much fiber at any one time. Consequently, unless it was
necessary, this strenuous process was avoided and only sago palms located near to a water
source were used.
The two factors of differing palm quality and accessibility to a water source show
that despite an abundance of sago palms, not all of them could be used for sago production.
Therefore, an individual only established rights to a sago grove when the resource fulfilled
these two conditions.
Establishment of Rights Before the Punan Vuhang left a resource-depleted area for an
entirely new territory, young men scouted around for sago resources. When the scouts found
an area with rich sago grounds, the community then moved into the area and set up camp
near the resource. Almost immediately, the men had to explore for more sago before those
on the common sago grounds became depleted.
Besides focusing on hunting, a man walked up a ridge to obtain a better view of the
surroundings by looking down at the valleys. When he saw a patch of sago fronds protruding
from the forest canopy, he went there to check on the resource. If the sago grove contained
quality palms and was near a water source, he established rights to it by cutting away the
dead fronds (masap) from several palms. He returned when there was a need to harvest it.
When the man came back to the area to process the sago, he could choose to
harvest the resource fully or conserve some of the palms. If he chose conservation, he would
retain some young palms for future exploitation. He would make a mark by cutting a few
notches on a trunk of an adjacent big tree and clear the surroundings of small trees to
establish permanent rights over the sago clumps. Otherwise, these small plants would grow
up into big trees and obscure any sign of his claim. When the palms had regenerated, the
mark on the huge tree and lack of big trees around the sago clump served as evidence of a
permanent claim to it. As the hunter left the site, he fixed the location of the clumps in his
mental map of the territory. When the community returned to that area years later, he knew
exactly where to find his resource.
As this study refers to events of the past that are no longer practiced, we will look at
what the literature has reported on the amount of sago palms that Punan groups elsewhere
leave behind. According to Sellato (1994:122-123):
A quick calculation indicates that a band of twenty-five people would need fifteen or
twenty of these smaller palm trees a week, or between 800 and 1,000 palms per
year. If a single palm grove, like the many I have seen, may contain from fifty to a
hundred trees, of which perhaps only a half have grown to usable size, then the
band would have to leave it for another grove after a week or two. This important
factor regulates the movements of the band. A palm grove thus harvested may be
revisited a year or two later; there will always be new palms reaching maturity.

145

According to Brosius (1986:117), the grove is left to regenerate over several years.
Eugeissona is said to take no more than five or six years to reach its full growth
(Johnson 1977:67), though Kedit notes that the same palm when planted takes
from ten to fifteen years to mature (1982:235). Whatever the case, the bands do
revisit the same palm groves after a certain lapse of time (Anderson et al.
1982:118).

This idea of conservation is also practiced by the Penan, as recorded by Jayl


Langub, Perhaps the most important aspect of Penan resource management is the practice
of molong. The word molong can be roughly explained as the sustainable use of forest
resources for harvest at a later time. It can also mean the fostering of resources for the future.
. . . Penan harvesting strategy is based on the concept of molong, and on the principle of
sustained yield. For example, when harvesting sago, they cut only one or two of several
trunks, leaving the palm to resprout (1996:107).
However, not all community members practiced conservation, as some cut all
young palms for the delicious sago shoots for snacks or a side dish. When they cut down the
palms, the remaining seedlings would take many years to mature. If the community returned
to the place before these seedlings matured, there would be few palms to harvest. Since
they were uncertain when they would return to an area, people found it not worthwhile to
establish permanent rights to the sago.
In short, besides establishing rights to the resource for immediate use, the Punan
Vuhang also established rights to young sago resources near streams for future exploitation.
Also, during affluent times when there was no immediate need for this food, the discovery of
a sago cluster would result in its reservation for exploitation during a future period of scarcity.
The Development of the Sago Property Rights Systems
The above description shows the Punan Vuhang considered sago both as an
open-access resource and as private property. Analysis of this phenomenon requires an
assessment of the influence of ecological factors on the Punan Vuhang mobile economy that
also affected the property rights system.
Open Access Property The Punan Vuhang resided in a large territory that provided them
with a wide resource base for exploitation. They therefore considered sago as being so
abundant that it did not need the establishment of permanent rights. When they depleted the
sago in an area, they simply moved to a new area. They found little problem obtaining sago
because the Kajang - Kihan - Linau watersheds were rich in this resource. Along several
major tributaries, sago was so abundant that it was the dominant vegetation covering whole
stretches of hill slopes. The community felt that the large area provided them with so many
different sources of sago that by the time they returned to an area, exploited sago palms
would have sufficiently regenerated. So the community did not feel any need to establish
permanent rights over the resources. Also, they could not easily utilize a sago growth that
was inaccessible to a water source for sago processing. Therefore, it was not necessary to
establish rights over these sago resources.
The arrival of the fruit season with a period of food abundance was another factor
that relieved the need to establish permanent rights over sago. From the synchronized
calendar in Figure 1, (see page 26) starting on the fifth month, the Punan Vuhang
146

experienced about five months of food abundance. This period of non-dependency on sago
largely relieved it from exploitation, and thus conserved it for lean times.
Private Property The existence of private property rights over sago resources, however,
requires further analysis. According to informants, despite the abundance of sago, failing to
conserve young palms led to future difficulties in the search for mature palms. This was
especially so during lean times when the community had to rely totally on sago, as proteinbased food resources were immensely difficult to find then. As sago was the only available
food resource, the Punan Vuhang had to search throughout the territory for mature palms.
Frequently, they could only find a few sago grounds and they had to intensify the search. As
such, they had to fall back on previously exploited sago clumps. Often they did not obtain
sufficient food. When this occurred, a person had to step up his effort even more to search
for new sago resources that others had not discovered. Then the Punan Vuhang had to
explore distant areas to search for it.
Consequently, some thoughtful members tried to avoid the recurrence of the
difficult search for sago. They resolved this by making claims over sago clumps and then
limiting themselves to selective harvesting of young palms. This conservation allowed the
remaining palms to regenerate in a short time, enhancing future exploitation. The availability
of young palms therefore ensured a more reliable food supply without the Punan Vuhang
having to wait too long for them to mature. In order to protect these conserved palms from
disturbance by other people, they established rights over these sago clumps by clearing
around their bases.
As this assessment contradicts the above statement that the Kajang - Kihan Linau watersheds were very rich in sago resources, one has to look deeper into the situation.
Precisely because this area was rich in resources, the Punan Vuhang often focused their
camps near these three rivers. Camps in previously exploited areas within these watersheds
became much more frequented than other places. Consequently, resources in many of
these sago grounds had not yet gained maturity before the community returned to them, and
so, some members conserved the resource and established permanent rights to the sago,
because they knew that before long they would have to return to those areas again.
When the Punan Vuhang came back to an area, these rights holders usually found
little difficulty in obtaining sago, as their conserved palms would have matured. On the other
hand, those who did not practice conservation had to search extensively for new sago
resources after having depleted the common sago grounds. Due to a lack of mature palms,
whenever they found young palms, they would cut them to get shoots for immediate
consumption. Without conservation, the cycle went on, and when they returned to that area
again, they again faced a lack of mature palms. Despite this, they still did not want to practice
conservation and establish rights to sago resources.
The reluctance of most community members to practice conservation and
establish rights to sago resources can probably be seen in the light of two perspectives: (1)
the social context of selfishness and, (2) the perspective of immediate and delayed returns in
a hunter-gatherer society. Informants mentioned that many persons considered the selective
harvesting of only the bigger palms to be a selfish act (misep). Retaining young palms
implied that a rights holder wanted to keep these resources for himself and prevent others
147

from harvesting the food. These people therefore preferred confronting problems in procuring
mature palms rather than being labeled as selfish.
The stigma of being considered selfish was one of the worst social sanctions that a
person could face. Among the Punan Vuhang, the community expected a hunter to share
whatever food he obtained with others, especially among kinsmen. Thus, for example, during
the worst of times, even small game, as little as a frog or a tree shrew was shared among
kinsmen. If a person hoarded food for himself while other people lacked food, he became the
butt of communal gossip as a self-interested person caring only for his own needs.
The perception of selfishness, however, was only a matter of opinion. A person did
not keep everything for himself but shared the sago that his family processed with all
households in the camp. The provision of starch to every household therefore reduced the
stigma of selfishness. Sharing was certainly welcomed. During lean times, sharing ensured
the provision of food to all households. Consequently, individuals who practiced conservation
disregarded the selfish stigma. Really, the effect on them was small as food contribution to
all, including those who gossiped against them nullified the stigma of selfishness.
1
Furthermore, those who lacked food really appreciated the sharing at that crucial time.
The perspective of immediate and delayed return systems of hunter-gatherer
societies, introduced by Woodburn (1982), provides another explanation for the development
of an open access property right system for sago. According to Woodburn, hunter-gatherer
societies favor economic activities with immediate return because of their opportunity to
obtain resources instantaneously. On the other hand, they shun activities with delayed
returns that require time to yield results.
From the perspective of an immediate return system, the Punan Vuhang fully
exploited edible sago resources to fulfil their immediate need for food. To instantly alleviate
hunger, they chose not to conserve for future use in order to avoid being considered selfish.
Besides, during lean times, the only food that served as a side dish to complement the plain
sago starch was the delicious sago shoots. Consequently, the immediate need to cope with
food insufficiency combined with the social stigma of selfishness, resulted in some Punan
Vuhang consciously choosing not to establish private rights to the resources.
However, the Punan Vuhang did have a notion of delayed returns to some extent,
as the activity of trapping required time to snare a game. Even blowpipe hunting which
enabled a hunter to obtain game almost immediately also required patience. One had to
wait for an hour or two before the blowpipe poison took effect to kill the game completely. In
the cases of the helmeted hornbill (Rhinoplax vigil; terjaku) and male pig-tailed macaque
monkey (Macaca nemestrina; barok), the waiting time was even longer. The act of waiting,
although only involving a substantial duration for blowpipe hunting and several days for
trapping, was a form of delayed return activity. Likewise, waiting for a young sago palm to
1

During fieldwork, I brought food and kept food like sugar and biscuits for the household. Every day I took
out some rations for eating together. Frequently, however, the children requested food from me
throughout the day. I seldom gave it and reasoned that I was keeping the food for hungry times. Early on
during my stay, they always accused me of being stingy. However, in 1994, a flood swept away all the
paddy and we had to rely on sago. Frequently, sago ran out for an entire day. While the adults went to
process sago, the food rations that I had kept became the main food source, especially for breakfast. The
perception about my stinginess during that time changed as some members defended my attitude of
being thrifty and emphasized that the food ration was only to be eaten when they lacked food.

148

gain maturity, albeit a few years, was acceptable to some Punan Vuhang. Therefore, some
community members were willing to practice sago conservation and established perpetual
private rights over this resource.
An analysis of sago rights among the Punan Vuhang shows an evolution from
open access to a private property rights system. However, some members continued to
retain open access property rights to sago. The vast tropical rainforest that the Punan
Vuhang lived in sustained the hunter-gatherers even during lean times when only sago was
available. This caused many members to retain open-access to sago although during lean
times they would have difficulty in searching for the food.
Fruit Trees
The Punan Vuhang considered fruit an important resource to supplement their
staple food. During the fruit-ripening season, a variety of fruits released them from total
dependence on sago, thus allowing them to conserve palms for the lean period. Community
members consumed nutritious fruits as staple food while taking sour and less palatable fruits
as snacks. Due to their importance as a staple food, the Punan Vuhang established private
property rights over favored fruit trees for the purpose of retaining their growth after
harvesting. On the other hand, they considered non-favored fruit trees as open-access
property. This allowed members to harvest indiscriminately without considering the wellbeing of the tree, such as, lopping the main branches or even chopping down the tree to
harvest the fruit.
When a Punan Vuhang discovered an unmarked mature favored fruit tree, he
established rights to it by slashing a few cuts in its bark. The flowering season was the time
that fruit trees were frequently discovered by virtue of their dense flowering which enabled an
individual to see them easily from afar. For a tree that was located near a hunting or
collecting path, the rights holder made a batak sign pointing to its direction. This sign
informed passersby of the finding of a fruit tree. The Punan Vuhang did not limit themselves
to establishing rights only for mature fruit trees. They also established rights to small trees
whenever they discovered them. A person established rights to a small tree by clearing the
surrounding undergrowth and cutting down small trees nearby. This prevented these plants
from competing for nutrients with the growing fruit tree. Then, he notched a big tree next to
the small fruit tree to create a permanent mark. Similar to the markings made on a mature
fruit tree, the mark on the other tree showed the establishment of a claim to the small fruit
tree.
Besides the importance of establishing rights over a resource to reserve its use,
the marking of a fruit tree was a deliberate creation of a landmark in a particular area. The
feature helped the rights holder to recall precisely the location of each fruit tree within an
area. In a wide territory of different river systems, it was almost impossible to recall the
locations of fruit trees unless rights were deliberately established over them.
The recognition of private rights to a fruit tree was not so rigid that it required a
person to obtain permission from a rights holder before taking fruit if the owner were camping
too far away. During lean periods, the Punan Vuhang usually divided themselves into two
bands or more to exploit a larger pool of resources. During a minor fruit season, most places
did not contain enough fruit to sustain the entire community and so community members had
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to remain divided into two bands. As such, a rights holder might be camped far from the fruit
tree while the other band was camped near it. Therefore, there was no necessity for a
person to obtain permission from the rights holder to harvest the fruit.
Fruit Harvesting The type of fruit determined the type of harvesting. There were three main
ways of harvesting: climbing to pluck fruit on the tree, chopping the branches or tree to take
the fruit while still standing on the ground and, picking up fruit that dropped to the ground. If
the tree were easy to climb and the fruit ripened in stages, they climbed the tree to pluck the
fruit. For favored fruit that ripened on the tree all at once, the Punan Vuhang lopped off the
secondary branches. Rambutan (Nephelium lappaceum L.; beliti), Xerospermum sp.,
Pometia pinnata Forst. (isau) and Nephelium mutabile Bl., Nephelium uncinatum Radlk
(avong), for example, fell into this category. For the unfavored types, they lopped off the
major branches or chopped down the trees (for types found in abundance) during the early
stages of the fruit season. Then they plucked the fruit from the branches lying on the ground.
As the fruit ripening season progressed, they waited for all the fruits on a tree to ripen before
they chopped the branches or felled the tree.
When a person harvested fruit that required lopping branches or chopping down
the tree, he invited others to participate in the harvesting. If the fruit yield was more than
enough for his household, he requested his siblings households to join in the harvest. If
abundant, he would invite the whole community to participate. Although the private rights to a
fruit tree were exclusive, it was inconceivable that only his household should eat the fruit by
themselves. On the other hand, if the quantity of fruit was not sufficient to invite others to
participate, he distributed some fruits to all households, or invited the community to eat the
fruit in his shelter.
A rights holder checked to estimate the fruits ripening time when they reached the
mature stage. The fruit that dropped when ripe was collected every day. Other fruit that
ripened on the tree simultaneously and required branch lopping or tree felling was checked
for the exact condition of the fruit. This was to determine the date for the communal
harvesting.
On the appointed day of communal harvesting, every member participated in the
fruit collecting. After the men lopped off the branches or the rights holder chopped down his
tree, everybody participated in plucking the fruit from the branches. They plucked the fruit
from the upper parts of the branches, and all fruit that might be reached without lifting up the
branches. While each person ate some fruit, the community gathered the fruit into one pile
for distribution. The distribution was on an individual basis, that is, giving an equal amount of
fruit to every single individual, or giving the same amount to each household. Households
with more members were allocated a little more than the others. After the first stage of
plucking, the rights holder owned all the remaining fruit on the lower part of the branches.
Fruit dropping to the ground due to the impact of the branches falling on the ground became
open-access property that anyone could collect.
Fruit such as durians (Durio zibethinus Murr.; luyan, Durio kutejensis; tabalak) and
mangoes (Mangifera pajang Kost.; pangin), that dropped upon ripening were gathered from
the ground. These fruits that dropped usually ripened in stages and only a few fruits dropped
in a day. Consequently the amount of fruit that dropped for the day was only enough for the
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rights holders household and not enough for sharing. There were cases of men becoming
too impatient even to wait for their valuable durian fruit. They chopped down the trees to
1
harvest all the fruit, including the unripe ones.
As with most other food resources, the Punan Vuhang shared the much relished
durian fruit with the rest of the community. In the early ripening season, an individual would
bring back the fruit, and share a few fruits with related households. If his collection was
abundant, he opened the fruits and distributed the flesh to every household. As the ripening
progressed, the rights holder invited all households to take turns gathering the durian fruit, a
system that only applied to this particular fruit.
The valuable durian fruit (Durio zibethinus Murr.; luyan) involved a complex but
orderly sharing system. The sharing entailed a rotation system that gave all households an
equal opportunity to collect the fruit. According to this rotation system, the right holder began
the rotation by collecting the fruit on the first day. After that, he divided the day into four parts,
and allocated each quarter of the day to one household to collect the fruit. The first watch
was from about midnight until sunrise. Then, the second household collected the fruit until
afternoon. The third household took their turn until sunset, while the fourth and last group
completed the days rotation by collecting their share until midnight.
The households that collected the fruits during the night phase camped together at
a shelter built by the tree owner. Although they stayed together, each household kept its
share of the fruit. On the following day, another group of four households formed the second
days rotation to collect the fruit. This went on until all households had had their share of fruit
collecting. Meanwhile the rights holder did not get anything unless some generous
households gave him some fruit, as the households involved in this sharing were not
obligated to share the fruit. However, if the durian fruit yield for a particular session was more
than enough, the household concerned would give some fruit to the rights holder. With the
completion of the first cycle, the rights holder then resumed his turn to collect the fruit for a
day. Following that, the rotation system began another cycle of fruit sharing. The rotation
went on until the fruit yield was no longer significant for further sharing.
The rotation system differed slightly for a durian tree that grew at a distance from
the camp. Then, the duration of a groups collection time was extended to 12 hours for each
session. The first session was from sunrise until sunset, and the second from sunset till
sunrise. However, instead of only one household per session, two households shared the
rotation, making the number of households remain at four per day.
The sharing system was not obligatory and there was no sanction against those
who did not invite other people to participate in the fruit collecting. Although members felt that
those selfish people should be retaliated against by not inviting them, they did not do so, for
such an action would imply their own stinginess. Therefore, when a member invited the
whole community to participate in the sharing system, he included even those who had been

This occurred even after the Punan Vuhang had become sedentary, with the last incident occurring
sometime in the 1980s when the community no longer accepted this harvesting method. Other members
chided the rights holder for felling the durian tree and reasoned that he and his children would never gain
fruit from that tree again. Since then, no one has ever chopped down a valuable fruit tree again.

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stingy. Being invited to participate, the selfish people would feel embarrassed and this
ensured that in the following fruit season, they would not keep the fruits for themselves.
Another aspect of durian fruit sharing was the time factor. The community only
practiced this system during the early period of the fruit-ripening season. As only a few fruit
trees had ripened, all the people were keen on consuming the fruits and thus the necessity of
sharing with those whose trees had yet to ripen. As the ripening season progressed, the
system was no longer necessary as most households had their own fruit. However, those
households who owned exceedingly good quality fruit continued to invite other households to
participate in the fruit collecting.
Blowpipe Poison, Takjem
The Antiaris toxicaria blowpipe poison tree (takjem) was one of the most important
resources to the hunter-gatherer people, without which it would have been almost impossible
to kill game by blowpipe hunting. In this method, it was a combination of skill and quality of
equipment that enabled a hunter to shoot the game. However, it was the Antiaris poison that
actually killed the game. As such, the Punan Vuhang considered Antiaris an important
resource and private property.
The Punan Vuhang used two varieties of poison tree: the takjem pingitan and the
takjem sarik. They were both quite rare. The poison came from the latex of the tree bark. The
tapped parts of the tree did not produce any more latex for future tapping, thus making the
Antiaris tree a non-renewable resource. As the tapping continued, the rights holder cut the
bark higher and higher up the tree. Although the bark would never grow back and thus renew
the resource, the rights holder would remove only a few strips of bark at a time, thereby
making his resource last for a while. When the untapped portion became too high for
tapping, he felled the tree to use the entire tree trunk.
The Antiaris tree was one of the main resources that the community did not share,
although they did share processed poison which involved a complex distribution system.
Even so, a rights holder only gave the poison to a sibling who had requested it. On the other
hand, a sibling would only make a request for it if its potency were stronger than poison in his
possession.
Antiaris was a poison that had varying levels of efficacy, depending on the tree
from which it came. The efficacy of the poison even varied from different places on the same
tree. While most Antiaris trees produced poison of considerable potency, some trees
produced especially effective poison. Therefore, a tree that produced highly potent poison
was extremely valuable to the Punan Vuhang and a finder did not make his discovery known
to anyone. He did not even tell his siblings for he feared that they might steal it. Because
very strong Antiaris was rare, the Punan Vuhang only used it to shoot game that ordinary
Antiaris could not kill. Such game included the male pig-tailed macaque (Macaca
nemestrina: barok), bear cat (Artictis binturong; ketan), clouded leopard (Neofelis nebulosa;
kuli) and helmeted hornbill (Rhinoplax vigil; terjaku). A little mixture of this potent takjem
increased the effectiveness of ordinary Antiaris and required less time to kill game.
A person only knew the effectiveness of his Antiaris poison upon trying it in hunting.
If it were good, it required a shorter time to kill game. If it appeared to be effective, he tried it
on game that only a potent poison could kill to confirm its efficacy.
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Although a hunter kept the information to himself of having found a good Antiaris
tree, over time, his siblings might come to know of it when he was more successful than
usual in killing game. When this happened, a sibling realized the potency of the new poison
and then requested a little of it. When this sibling also achieved a higher success rate in
blowpipe hunting, other siblings would also become aware of it and request some too.
Eventually, the community would realize that a new effective Antiaris tree had been found.
Nonetheless, because Antiaris poison was extremely rare, only kinsmen who felt that their
own Antiaris poison was less potent would request it. The Punan Vuhang only gave away
Antiaris upon request.
The Antiaris sharing system was different from sharing systems for other types of
resources. As mentioned, a person only gave the poison upon request, unlike other
resources that one was obligated to share without being asked. Nonetheless, the level of
giving depended on the quantity of the latex that the rights holder had tapped from the tree. If
the amount was small, the rights holder did not give it away. He only gave some to his
siblings when his tapping produced one lakaruh container of latex (about 400 ml.). When he
obtained two to three lakaruh, he could share it with a cousin, and a second cousin if their
relationship was close.
When a sibling requested a little poison, the rights holder cut the piece of
processed poison longitudinally into two equal portions. He did not cut straight across the
piece of poison, as one end of it might be more potent than the other. For non-siblings, he cut
a piece of poison that was equivalent to a fingertip. When this amount was ground into a
powdery form, it measured up to one teaspoon.
The sharing of good quality Antiaris with the entire community was done only
under exceptional circumstances, such as for defense. Even then, a rights holder only
shared the poison when it was of exceedingly high quality that was renowned among the
community. However, to qualify for communal sharing, the tapping of the Antiaris tree should
have produced more than three bottles of latex as it was then sufficient for a small portion to
be distributed to all households.
An event of Antiaris communal sharing occurred at the turn of the century when the
Punan Vuhang were in Kalimantan. At that particular time, the Punan Vuhang were avoiding
marauding Iban and had sought safety by the Kayan River. While at the Brem-Brem rapids
area, two brothers discovered an extremely effective Antiaris tree (see Footnote 1 page 64).
The poison was so strong that it could instantly kill an animal, hence, the poisons name,
Takjem Tipluk (poison that cuts the throat). After the community stayed there for some time,
the Punan Vuhang returned to Sarawak. Knowing that after leaving the area they would not
return to Kalimantan again, the rights holders decided to share the poison with the
community for defense. Consequently, they invited every household to participate in the
tapping with each one acquiring equally a little of the highly effective latex.
Another form of Antiaris that was regarded as an extremely effective poison was
called takjem uhu. That poison was acquired about a hundred years ago and has been
passed through several hands since then. The Antiaris tree was discovered by Naro, the
great-grandfather of the present Naro whose name derived from this forefathers name.
From Figure 15 below, Naro (1) acquired the poison when the Punan Vuhang were in Long
Kayan in Kalimantan. He passed it to one of his sons, Ukin (2). Although Naro had many
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sons, he gave the poison to Ukin, because Ukin was a keen hunter compared to his other
brothers and hence able to kill game more frequently. However, Ukin was childless and he
passed the poison to his elder brother Surek (3). When Surek became old, instead of giving
the poison to one of his own children, he passed it to his adopted son Nyinyang, son of his
deceased brother Enang. Surek gave the poison to Nyinyang (4) because Nyinyang was the
eldest child under his care. Then, Nyinyang passed the poison to Liwan (5). Liwan was the
son of Surek (3), Nyinyangs adopted father and uncle.

Figure 15: Individuals Inheriting the Takjem Uhu


Naro

Nalim

Surek

Liwan

Ukin

Tosu

Enang

Nyinyang

Negen

Nyaweng

Sai

Loyen

Uji

Lajang

children

Nohen

Lating

According to informants, Nyinyang gave it to Liwan for two reasons. First, Nyinyang
had himself acquired a new Antiaris from his visit to the Kihan in Kalimantan, a poison that
was equally effective as the takjem uhu that he had inherited from his uncle. Thus, he had in
his possession another extremely effective poison. The other reason was that Nyinyang
himself was childless while his foster brother and cousin Liwan had children to feed. Liwan
therefore required an effective poison to hunt game to sustain his household. After that,
Liwan passed the poison to Nohen (6), the eldest son of his youngest brother Negen. Liwan
did not pass the poison to his own children because he wanted all the households of his
siblings to have an opportunity to use it. Nohen, being childless, then passed it to his eldest
nephew Uji (7), son of his eldest sister Sai. Uji is currently holding the right to use the poison.
Of all these persons named, only Nyinyang and the middle aged Uji were still alive during my
fieldwork.
Because of this effectiveness and the inheritance through so many hands, the
poison was called takjem uhu, to differentiate it from other types of takjem. It was most likely
that Uji would pass it to his son Lating (8). An informant reckoned that Lating (a young boy
now) would possibly pass it to the children (9) of his mothers brother Lajang. Lajang married
a daughter of Nyaweng, the sister of Nyinyang (4). Hence the sharing would eventually
rotate among the descendants of the forefather Naro.

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Firewood
The Punan Vuhang considered good trees for producing firewood as an important
resource to provide fuel for cooking. Although the forest was full of trees, they only used a
few species of hardwood trees for firewood. Good firewood had two attributes. Its hardness
produced a hot strong flame and a long-lasting burn. However, despite its being hard, it was
easy to split (bahah) so that a person could split a big log into kindling two inches thick to
yield a big flame. Despite the multitude of trees in the forest, very few trees fall into both of
these categories. Most types of wood have only one of the two attributes. Some were hard
but difficult to split (nyapalut), while others were easy to split but were soft, thus producing a
low heat fire that did not last long. The lingoh, gahing and mujun types of trees fall within the
category of good firewood and the Punan Vuhang constantly searched for them. Other
woods of lesser quality that were used by the community included jeliri, kayu bua, keloai,
lirap, lubunyun, lukukun, nyohut, orak, patik and sarit. Of all these woods, the lingoh was the
best and the Punan Vuhang established private rights only to this wood.
The lingoh tree, growing up to one and a half feet in diameter, was hard but
extremely easy to split. It burned very well, produced a fire of great heat which lasted much
longer than most other types of wood. During cooking, only about three or four pieces of
kindling were required to cook a meal, with slightly more if much meat was being cooked.
When a man discovered this tree near the camp, he established rights by felling it and
notched (ngalong) the trunk into portions (tolo). The length of each tolo portion corresponded
to the length of an axe handle (about two feet) and the ngalong marks indicated
establishment of rights over the trunk. The unmarked part of the trunk and the branches
became open access property. When the man was free from other work, he returned to the
tree and chopped up the trunk following the marked portions and then transported them back
to the camp where his spouse or father-in-law then split the trunk into kindling.
While the felled lingoh tree remained in the forest, if a person passed by and
needed wood urgently, he was allowed to take a portion of the marked trunk without prior
permission. When he returned to the camp, he informed the rights holder that he had taken
the wood. He apologized for doing so without permission and said that he was too weak to
fell a good tree. This act of humility would cause the rights holder to give him the right to use
the portion.
Conclusion
This discussion of resource tenure has shown the complexity of the Punan Vuhang
former property rights system in regulating the use of valuable resources. Because of its
abundance, sago was considered by many as an open access property that could be freely
collected by any individual. However, others did not perceive it in such a way. Instead, they
established private rights to the resource, which restricted others from harvesting it, thus
ensuring food availability during lean times. They considered it necessary to establish rights
for some other resources so that they could use them on a sustained basis. Such
sustainable use of resources enabled the Punan Vuhang to tide over periods of food
scarcity, giving them the ability to survive in the rainforest without dependence on cultivated
food. Combining this regulation of resource tenure, the Punan Vuhangs practice of sharing
and reciprocity enabled the whole community to survive though lean times. When individual
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hunters failed to obtain anything, they still did not have to worry about going hungry, for they
had socially organized themselves in such a way that successful hunters and gatherers
shared their food with every household. With generalized sharing, every household
reciprocated by receiving and giving a portion of food.
These social strategies to cope with lack of food mean that the Punan Vuhang had
no need to rely on farming societies for food. This idea of non-reliance is further underlined
when we see how barter trading and related activities were rare and seasonal as traders had
to make long and difficult journeys to Punan Vuhang country. Efforts to make goods to trade
were only done while traders were present in their midst. Even then, the Punan Vuhangs
needs were easily satisfied, affirming Sahlins Original Affluence theory that huntergatherers have few needs to fulfill. It was the traders who were strongly motivated to obtain
Punan Vuhang products, particularly woven mats that were extremely monotonous and
tedious to produce. To cement trading relationships with the otherwise uninterested Punan
Vuhang, traders introduced a highly addictive form of tobacco which caused a craving for the
substance, thus binding the former hunter-gatherers into barter trading.

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Chapter Five: Leadership, Consensus and Autonomy


Introduction
In the preceding chapters, we have seen how the Punan Vuhang developed
various strategies to acquire food and various other necessities of life. We have also shown
how their social system was based on sharing and reciprocity that ensured a reliable food
supply even during periods of food scarcity. The next two chapters concern social
organization and reconstruct the way in which the Punan Vuhang organized their relations to
one another and to the inhabitants of the supernatural realm during the period in which they
lived as hunter-gatherers. This chapter more specifically describes the Punan Vuhang
political system, emphasizing, in particular, their egalitarianism.
The Punan Vuhang political system was egalitarian, with individual members free
to do largely as they liked. Nonetheless, individuals were bound by decisions obtained
through consensus that affected the well-being of the whole community. The Punan Vuhang
had leaders but these leaders lacked the authority to compel others to do things. A person
became a leader because his actions caused others to respect and follow him.
In this chapter we will see how the personal characteristics of an individual may
have caused him to be recognized by others as a leader and how he would gain authority by
attracting others to him as his followers. In doing this, we will compare the Punan Vuhang to
the stratified Kayan, for we shall see how the Punan Vuhang borrowed from the latter a
notion of aristocracy and yet at the same time preserved their basic egalitarianism. While
information on Punan Vuhang leadership is based on what I was told by informants, the
interpretation of these data is my own.
The Kejian and the Kotokek as Community Leaders
According to Naro, the present headman, there were three categories of Punan
Vuhang leaders: the gum tokongwho led a band; the kejiana very good person who had
yet to attain the status of an elder but who commanded the peoples respect; and, the
kotokekthe old wise leader who, due to his age, was elevated above the kejian. The gum
tokong, or leader of a band, was not a political leader. Instead, he was the eldest individual
of the kin group that formed the core of a separate band during lean times. As a nomadic
community, the Punan Vuhang formerly broke into smaller groups during such times in order
to spread out and exploit a larger resource base. Because of the non-political nature of the
gum tokongs role, I shall not say more about this position. When all the bands converged to
live together as a single group during the season of abundance, the kotokek or the kejian
became the leaders of the entire community.
The kotokek did not have any authority to personally make decisions that affected
the community. His main role was to initiate communal meetings (putuhok) to discuss
matters that affected the community. The role is best thought of as a coordinator who
organizes an activity on behalf of a group. In meetings, he led the discussions which were
meant to obtain a general agreement acceptable to every member. In carrying out a
decision, the kotokek was the person who initiated the work involved by becoming the first
person to do whatever had been agreed upon, giving directions to others only when
necessary.
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During contact with traders who had come to trade with the community, the
kotokek acted as the community host and took responsibility for the welfare of the guests. He
organized young men to assist the visitors in obtaining food. The leader himself gave food to
the guests whenever he obtained some. As the main contact person in the community, he
was the intermediary between the visitors and the Punan Vuhang, and important requests to
the community were made through him. During meetings with government officials that took
place far downriver, the kotokek was the communitys main representative.
When the kotokek became old and began to feel too tired to carry out this work, he
delegated leadership to a younger man with leadership potential. This man took over any
activities that involved going far into the forest, or meeting with government staff far
downriver. Over time, the man was elevated to the status of kejian when he began to
assume leadership within the community. Eventually, the kotokek became too old and the
kejian would take his place. When the kejian himself attained old age, or when he became a
grandfather, he was elevated to kotokek status.
Here, I believe something must be said about how it was possible that a leader
would gain authority in a community whose members generally considered themselves as
more or less equal to one another. For this, we must start by considering the characteristics
that caused a person to be seen as a kejian and ultimately a kotokek. In addition to what
Naro said, other informants also said that a person who had kejian potential showed great
concern (mahik) for other members of the community regardless of their gender, age, or
relationship. He cared for the old, children, women and the infirm. He was kind-hearted
(polongan) and generous with his belongings, giving to those in need. He was diligent in his
work (bahik; nyegehok) and was thus able to obtain more food (tapui) for sharing with others
(putulat putom dok linau). He was knowledgeable, (ketikgob) but humble. The kejian was
courteous and soft-spoken (jian adet), and patient (ovow longan). He was affable and
people felt comfortable being with him. He liked to joke and make people feel happy (tavat
nyat sanik).
From Naros observation of previous headmen, while anyone in the community
might possess these attributes, what made a kejian stand out from other good people were
his leadership abilities. He was able to identify a matter of concern and initiate a meeting
(putuhok) to discuss the issues affecting the community. He was attentive, listened to
everyones ideas, and possessed an ability to analyze other peoples arguments. He
reasoned well and communicated effectively. He could speak convincingly and yet was softspoken, thus making it easy for others to agree with him.
From my own observation of community meetings, despite his proficiency as a
speaker, a kejian did not always voice his opinion. When discussions readily led to a general
consensus, he merely led the community in deciding on a course of action that was
acceptable to the majority. The kejian only needed to voice an opinion when disagreement
arose. He analyzed the ideas, gave weight to the ideas that he found reasonable and then let
the community determine the choice of action. However, when he felt that he had to say
something, he would reason and clarify his thoughts. His argument was usually rational, wellprepared and gently delivered. When he voiced his opinion, community elders generally
supported him, bringing up decisions previously made that were thought to be wise
judgments. In short, communal discussions were a forum in which the leadership qualities of
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a kejian stood out from others. This corresponds to Sellatos (1994:151) description on
Punan leadership:
Since he has no formal power, his influence depends on his experience, his
wisdom, his ability to make good decisionsthough, for that matter, it appears that
decisions may be made only after a general discussion in which everyone has a
voice (see Jayl Langub 1972:220). . . . The leader must be hardworking, an
eloquent speaker, experienced, and fully familiar with the groupss history and
traditions.

When a kejian was challenged, he had two alternatives. The first was to accept his
opponents ideas and help to carry them out. This act of humility commanded their respect
and gained favor and support in the long run. On the other hand, he would persist with his
own opinions if he thought that the ideas of those who challenged him were detrimental to
the community. The latter might not agree and so abstain from participating in the action
chosen. Eventually, however, once this action was underway, they might come around and
join the others.
Naro noted that during the discussions that resulted in the adoption of rice
cultivation in 1968, Negen, then the kotokek, opposed abandoning the traditional economy.
However, the majority, especially the young people, were adamant and Negen gave in to
their demands. However, the community later experienced a series of disasters, including
many deaths. The people attributed the cause of these difficulties to having abandoned their
old way of life and then began to have serious doubts about settling down. Negen reminded
them of his earlier objections. Nonetheless, instead of demanding that they revert to the old
ways, he advised the community to persevere with cultivation as they were already on the
verge of change. He stressed that he had anticipated trouble because taking up a new way
of life was certain to require adjustments. This was especially so as they knew very little
about the new procedures they were adopting. However, he was confident that once they
gained the necessary knowledge of cultivation they would succeed. Because of the peoples
confidence in Negen, they persisted and eventually became successful cultivators (see also
page 222).
A leader also counseled community members who were involved in severe
conflicts with others that resulted in fights. However, the immediate responsibility for averting
more serious conflict lay with the close kinsmen of the contending parties. A leader would not
interfere directly with the fighting, as the opponents, if he did, might challenge his leadership.
After several days when emotions had cooled, he would invite one of the opponents into the
forest to collect sago shoots. There the leader would point out the adverse consequences of
the fight on the latters reputation. As the advice would be given without other people
knowing about it, instead of feeling embarrassed, the man was likely to realize his mistake.
By making him conscious of his foolishness, the leader gained respect and improved the
behavior of his followers. Similarly, the leader would approach the other opponent too, and
1
counsel him without the others overhearing.
The leadership of a kejian was also vital in the past to the survival and well-being of
the community. As nomadic people dependent on forest resources, the Punan Vuhang had
1

See Jayl Langub (2004:206-9) on the role of Penan headmen in the resolution of conflicts.

159

to move from one river system to another as food resources were depleted. During lean
times, the kejian led his followers to areas where he knew food could be found (gum linau lak
angkun). By contrast, other community members might keep knowledge of these resources
to themselves. While leading the search for food, a kejian was expected to be hardworking
and take initiative and his determination encouraged others to work equally hard. Being
motivated, people liked to join him as their efforts were likely to be rewarded. Also, the kejian
was generous and assisted weaker members of the group with their work and shared his
yield with them.
In terms of territorial knowledge, or knowledge of the location of food resources, the
kejian usually knew more than other members of his age group. This was because he had
been attentive to old people who reminisced about the resource grounds they had exploited
in the past. Also, being a diligent person, he had assisted these elders since his youth and
therefore knew about different river systems. Due to this knowledge, the kejian was generally
able to lead his followers to areas where food was likely to be available. Consequently, when
the need arose to search for game or sago palms in distant areas, they turned to the kejian to
lead the way.
The kejian was also sensitive to the needs of the community and was among the
first to be aware of the depletion of resources. His awareness was due to his diligence and
concern for other peoples needs. As a hardworking person, he usually explored further afield
and therefore became aware of food shortages looming ahead earlier than most others in his
group. Other members might think that there was still a wide area to explore and therefore
might be less attentive to the deteriorating conditions. Also, as a generous person whom
others asked for food, his sense of the situation would be further confirmed by the frequency
of requests he received. Besides, being their leader, others would inform him of the
increasing difficulty they were facing. When this happened, he notified his followers of the
need for a meeting and invited them to gather at his shelter.
The wife of a kejian also helped to determine whether he remained a kejian or was
rejected by his people. If his wife was as generous as he was, others would continue to seek
his assistance. If she were selfish and berated her husband for giving away food and other
things, people would feel sorry for him and avoid asking him for help unless absolutely
necessary. Should this happen, that would have been the end of his authority as a kejian.
This kind of downward mobility rarely happened, however, because a good person, people
believed, would only marry someone equally generous. A woman in this case, had to accept
the generous nature of her husband before she married him.
Kinsmen also played an important role. Ideally, the members of a leaders kin
group should also possess good character. They should also be hardworking, diligent and
generous. Because of these characteristics, members of the kin group would not only be
self-sufficient as a rule, but often would have a surplus of food that they were able to share
with one another. As such, the kejian would have little problem taking care of his relatives
and could therefore pay attention to the needs of others in the community.
Legitimization of Authority
While the leadership attributes of a person might help elevate him to become a
kejian, it is vital to note how a kejian gained legitimization of his authority from other
160

community members. Although his political skills might enable him to gain the consensus of
community members, there was no guarantee that they would act upon a decision and the
kejian had virtually no way to compel them to tow the line.
I believe that it was the inherent personal qualities of the kejian that gave legitimacy
to his authority. Since his youth, the kejian had been helpful to other people. In return, the
community gave him the status of kejian and allowed him to lead the community. It is
important in this regard to understand that reciprocity among the Punan Vuhang was a vitally
important institution that made community cooperation possible.
There were two forms of reciprocity, generalized reciprocity and individualized
reciprocity. Generalized reciprocity, which was discussed in detail in the previous chapter,
involved sharing of food among all members or households in the community. In contrast,
the other form of reciprocity, individual reciprocity, involved a close personal relationship
between one person and another. A person tended to give because of his generosity and the
close relationship that existed between him and the other person. He might offer something
to another person in need even though the item was the only one of that thing that he owned.
After that, he would put in extra effort to acquire the object again. The item could be anything,
for example, a lighter, or in the past, flint and steel to make fire, a small knife or blowpipe
poison. He might also temporarily lend his larger tools, such as a bushknife, axe, or a spear,
when he had no immediate need of them. The person who had received the special help
would reciprocate whenever the giver was in need.
It was in this context of individual reciprocity that a kejian gained a special
relationship with many households and individuals, who in turn gave him the authority to lead
them. Due to his generosity, the kejian would give extra portions of food to a household in
need, and he would make an extra effort to acquire such food above the needs of his own
family. He worked harder than was necessary, in order to obtain extra rattan to give to weak
members of the community who could not get it themselves. He might carry water and
firewood for them and helped the weak to build their shelters. Because of his generosity and
kindness, people in need did not feel embarrassed requesting help from him. If he really did
not have an item, he would say that he did not have it, or had given it to somebody else. The
person would believe him and not feel that the kejian was being stingy. When a household
head was sick and unable to work, the kejian would assist by providing for his households
needs, such as helping household members process sago and hunting for them.
By making this extra effort to help people in need, the kejian established a close
relationship with his followers. Over the years, people tended to forget the exact assistance
that the kejian had provided, but they tended to remember that they had been helped, and
so, when necessary, they would support the kejian in meetings or join him in carrying out
actions that had been determined by consensus during a meeting. When the kejian made a
personal request, his appeal would be fulfilled. It was this individualized reciprocity that gave
legitimacy to the kejians leadership. People generally felt obliged to support him. However,
when they recalled how the kejian had helped them in times of need and the kejian himself
was in a difficult situation, they would no longer feel that their support was obligatory, but
would gladly reciprocate. In addition, the kejian received support from elderly influential
persons whom he had frequently helped. When the kejian was challenged by others in

161

communal meetings, they would rally to his support. With this moral and influential backing,
the kejians status would be further enhanced.
From my observation of the relationships between young people on the one hand,
and the headman and Chief Deacon on the other, I saw that a kejian could also gain
legitimacy with teenagers and young men by having been kind to them when they were still
1
young. When a young kejian was just starting his household, he would frequently invite
small children to eat with his family when they were playing near his shelter and he had extra
food. At meal times, when he called his own children to return to eat, he might also invite
others to eat with them. During the course of eating, he would develop a close relationship
with the children. If there remained extra food, he would give some to the children to take
back to their younger siblings. After the children had gone back, the kejian would cook
another pot of sago paste for his household members as the first dish would be barely
enough to satisfy them.
When the young kejian returned from hunting, the small children liked to gather
around him. They generally stayed on for dinner to savor a little food unless their parents
called them back. Through this close interaction and his generosity, the children would
develop a fondness and a close relationship with the young kejian. This relationship would
develop and continue into the childrens adulthood, and these former children would become
a core group of persons who supported him, thus further enhancing his standing. Whenever
the kejian asked them to do something, they would gladly fulfill his request. These requests
did not require consultation or the consensus of the community. This ability to mobilize the
actions of the young mena core group who did the most difficult and strenuous workwas
another way in which the kejian enhanced his leadership.
Prominent Punan Vuhang Leaders
Very few Punan Vuhang leaders attained the status of kejian or kotokek. Although
most men were capable of the economic aspects of leading people to locations where food
resources were presentgum linau lak angkun, or leading a bandgum tokong, they did
not possess the necessary political skills to make them kejian. Moreover, even some who did
possess the skills failed to become prominent and were no longer remembered by
informants.
My main informant, Nyinyang Enang (himself considered a kotokek), mentioned
the names of thirteen leaders, all descended from Nyuvuhan, the earliest leader whose
name is still remembered. However, in another account, he could remember only seven of
2
them Nyuvuhan, Rahman, Tigang, Lean, Jeli, Surek, and Negen. Other informants,
besides mentioning Nyuvuhan, only talked about Lean, Surek and Negen.
This, to me, suggests that not every leader successfully attained the status of
kejian or kotokek in the past. It also confirms the view that men in hunter-gatherer societies

This position of Chief Deacon is a new one, due to their conversion to Christianity.

Nyinyang Enang, my main informant on past leaders, is a leader himself. Other informants could not
provide this kind of detailed information.

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are only recognized as leaders if they possess important character traits that benefit those
who follow them.
As I understand the stories of famous Punan Vuhang leaders, a knowledge of
good leadership was passed on through their children and grandchildren. To maintain their
good name, parents encouraged their children to display the characteristics that would make
them useful members of the community. They encouraged them to develop survival skills,
practice good behavior so that they were socially acceptable, and be generous with their
possessions. Relatives also helped to socialize the children by inviting them for meals and
then advising them on the need to maintain the good name of the household. In this way, the
children of a kejian and his siblings were taught the behavior required of potential leaders of
the community. The examples set by their elders further enhanced the socialization process.
Thus, the kejians children saw the acts of generosity and kindness performed by their
parents, grandparents, uncles and aunts, and so would acquire similar attributes, and
through emulation, grow up to become important community members and possible future
leaders.
As the children of a kejian grew up, they acquired political skills by observing how
their father handled community affairs in their shelter. Unlike other children, who remained in
their own shelters during meetings, their presence provided them with an opportunity to
observe and develop political skills. They learned how to differentiate a good speech from a
bad one and to master the criteria necessary for making a convincing one. When they
accompanied their father, they would learn how a leader had to be the first to initiate
community activities. Besides following their fathers work, they might also assist others and
so learn the essentials necessary for success. They would learn that a leader had to be
diligent and able to motivate other people so that they would work equally hard. On the other
hand, they observed that if a leader was unable to motivate them, other people would not be
inspired.
Through these socialization processes, the children of a kejian would become
acquainted with the attributes necessary to become a leader. As they grew up, the eldest
son or the most able among the sons would be chosen to represent his father in various
activities. Eventually he was likely to become the kejian when his father reached old age. By
comparison, the children of other households had less opportunity to acquire the attributes of
leadership. They lacked leaders in their ancestry and therefore did not feel the need to
maintain the latters good name. As long as they practiced generalized reciprocity and helped
their kinsmen, they did not need to be extra generous. Besides, they would not have gained
any benefit from being a kejian. Unlike Kayan leaders who received corve assistance from
other members of the community, Punan Vuhang leaders did not receive any kind of aid
from their followers. Instead, they themselves had to provide assistance to others to maintain
their kejian status. This notion of a leader not gaining any advantage is consistent with the
literature on hunter-gatherers in Borneo. Referring to Nicolaisen (1976:214) and Jayl Langub
(1972: 219, 204), Sellato stated of the leader: There is nothing sacred about his role, and it
entails no particular privileges. . . . The leader has little formal authority, his power being
based only on his personal qualities (1994:151).
This description suggests that only children of a household with past leaders had
the opportunity, motivation and interest to become a kejian. Although they did not gain much,
163

they cherished the notion of being chosen to carry on the family legacy of leadership. The
only benefit of becoming a leader was the respect and recognition of the community. If a
man became a very good leader, he achieved renown and was memorialized in the history
of his people. For that reason, only descendants of Nyuvuhanthe first recognized Punan
1
Vuhang leader, gained recognition as leaders of the community.
Origin of Punan Vuhang Leadership
All renowned leaders of kejian and kotokek status are believed to be descended
from a common ancestor, Nyuvuhan, who was the first kotokek of the Punan Vuhang.
Nyuvuhan emerged at a time of spirit disturbance when many shamans were misusing their
powers. I was told, in the past when the Punan were banded in different and opposing
groups, wicked shamans ordered their patron-spirits to attack their opponents. I have
recorded a story of spirit warfare in Chapter Two, where Nyuvuhan, who was also a powerful
shaman, was able to nullify the effects of harmful shamans who had attacked his people.
It is possible that Nyuvuhan was inherently of good character and so drew powerful
spirits to assist him. His good character might also have caused him to be recognized as the
community leader. To ensure that his children grew up to be upright people, Nyuvuhan must
have educated them well, for, it is told all four of his sons, Majat, Rahman, Lawan and Imang,
became leaders (see Figure 16, page 166). Nonetheless, it was his second son Rahman
who succeeded him as the principal leader of the community.
My informant Nyinyang Enang was not clear about the names of those who succeeded
Rahman as leaders. It was after Sabung, however, that the line of leadership became clear.
Sabung was succeeded by his son Nyilung whose son Joyah then became leader. Then, Joyahs
son Tigang assumed the position and, following Tigang, Tigangs son Lean.
It was during the era of Lean that Hugh Brooke Low (Sarawak Gazette 1884) came to
2
the Balui headwaters. Lean was also famous because he led the Punan Vuhang on a journey
around the regions surrounding the mountain range between the Balui and the Kajang-Linau
Rivers. They entered Kalimantan and traveled down the Lesong tributary, moved up the Iwan and
then the tributary of the Kihan before reentering Sarawak. While some groups remained in the
Kihan and the Kajang areas, Lean returned with his group to the Balui headwaters. It was there at
Kahei, that fourteen Punan Vuhang fell prey to Iban headhunters in 1916 (see page 60). Upon the
death of Lean, his son Jeli took over leadership. After Jeli, Jelis brother Banai assumed
leadership.
It was during the leadership of Banai that his son, Sangom, led the Punan Vuhang to
3
take revenge against the Iban. Despite having led the Punan Vuhang in this one incident of
1

The close relationship between their ancestor Nyuvuhan with the mythical leader of the dominant
Kayan, Lake Dian Lulo Kasut, has also given them a sense of pride in their lineage.
2

In Lows account, there was no mention of a person called Lean. It is possible that the news of Lows
visit circulated among the people and later reached the Punan Vuhang when Lean was the leader.
Considering the distance to reach the Punan Vuhang in the headwaters, it might have been a long time
later that the news reached them. If it is correct that Lean was the leader during that time, then Lean must
have been a very old man when he died at the hands of the Iban in 1916.
3

Sangom led a group of men to take revenge on the Iban and killed four of them. After this, the
community went into Kalimantan to avoid Iban retaliation.

164

revenge, my informant mentioned that Sangom was not known to be capable in leading the
community, and so when his father died, the leadership moved to another line of Nyuvuhans
descendants, beginning with Surek.
The new groups line of descent from Nyuvuhan was, however, unclear. From this
group, Surek became the first leader and led the community during the Second World War
period. When Surek died, no renowned leader led the community until his youngest brother
Negen became leader.
During the period between Surek and Negen, a minor leader who was not a
descendant of Nyuvuhan, by the name of Bakup, was appointed Penghulu of the Punan
people by the Brooke Government as he had attended the peacemaking ceremony with the
1
Iban prior to the 1924 Peacemaking Ceremony in Kapit. Although Bakup held a high
position, he lacked leadership characteristics and never attained kotokek status, even after
the death of Surek. When Negen later became the kotokek, Negen was more influential and
held more authority than Bakup. While Bakup only led his band, Negen led the entire
community.
Before the 1963-66 Indonesian-Malaysian Confrontation, Nyinyang Enang (my
informant, as noted earlier) became the kejian while Negen remained the kotokek. After
Negens death in the 1970s, Nyinyang assumed leadership and later became kotokek
(Nyinyang is mentioned as the leader of the Punan Vuhang in Elliss report (Ellis 1972;
1975). As Nyinyang entered old age, he continued to hold the kotokek position until his death
in late 2002. In the late 1980s, his nephew Naro applied for Nyinyang to be named a
government-appointed headman which drew a salary of RM1000 a year. In 1996, Nyinyang
relinquished the headman position to Naro, his sisters son.
From this description, succession occurred over five generations (Sabung to
Banai), and then, for the last four leaders, from brother to brother (Surek to Negen), and then
from uncles to nephews (Negen to Nyinyang to Naro), all of them claiming to be
2
descendants of Nyuvuhan. All of these leaders and their kin also claimed to be of
aristocratic (maren) status. This claim probably makes sense in so far as leadership has
3
come from a single line of descent. However, other Punan Vuhang do not accept this
notion of aristocracy and claim that all members of the community are equal.

After the Punan Vuhang returned to Sarawak from fleeing into Kalimantan, Bakup and a few members
went downriver to obtain tobacco from some Kayan. It was on this occasion that the Kayan brought them
to meet the Brooke officials. In this meeting, Bakup was appointed the governments representative with
the rank of penghulu. His duty was to guard the vast territory in which the Punan Vuhang lived and report
to the government any intrusion by the aggressive Iban (see page 65).
2

This, of course, may be fictional. We have no confirmation from other independent sources that such
persons existed and were related to each other in the way described. I take it, however, that the account
is believed to be true.
3

Leadership among the Western Penan of Sarawak is also established through genealogical link to an
apical ancestor. In the case of Long Luar, the headman could trace his ancestry up to seven generation
(see Jayl Langub 2004:194-7).

165

Figure 16: Lineage of Leadership

NYUVUHAN
RAHMAN

Majat

Lawan

Imang

unclear ancestry
Sabung
Nyilung
Lahi

Joyah
Tigang

LEAN
Jeli

Banai

Sanei

Sangom

Bawe

probable line of relationship

Nyaing

Nalim

Viring

Surek
Liwan

Lanyu
Ngo Matjai

Naro

Naut

Ukin

Tosu
NYINYANG

Selobi

Toyang

Enang

NEGEN

Nyaweng

Sai

Naro
Pua

Sayun

Ava

Surau
Kuyang

Uji
Lating

Note: Names highlighted in bold capital were prominent leaders mentioned in the oral history. Those
highlighted in italic were common leaders.

166

The rejection of aristocracy was probably justified as the Punan Vuhang did not
have a stratification system such as that found among the Kayan, the dominant society in the
Balui headwaters. There were no lower status aristocrats (hipuy), commoners (panyin), or
slaves (dipen), nor were there sanctions against rejecting aristocratic dominance. Punan
Vuhang leaders had no authority to compel other persons to do anything against their will.
Naturally, other members of the community ignored the maren status claimed by those
families that produced all the leaders, as the latter had no coercive power. In contrast, Kayan
maren wielded great power over their communities. The rest of the Punan Vuhang
community were not familiar with this oral lineage of leaders going back ten to twelve
generations. However, they did not openly challenge those who claimed to be maren, but
rather voiced their non-recognition among themselves. This rejection of aristocratic status of
Nyuvuhans descendants differentiated the Punan Vuhang from the Kayan. It is useful
therefore to compare the role of leadership in these two communities to understand the
differences.
I will first briefly describe the Kayan system to provide the basis for comparison.
According to Kayan belief, stratification originated from their ancestral god who had four
sons:
When all his children had grown up, [the god] could not decide what roles the four
sons should be given. To be fair to all the sons, he organised a contest among
them to choose the suitable role for each person. It so happened that the eldest
son won the contest, the second son obtained second placing, the third son, third
and the youngest became the last. Since the eldest son was the strongest, and the
youngest son the weakest, it was decided that the eldest brother should help the
weak brother in all kinds of work. The second son, being the second strongest,
should occasionally help the weakest brother in activities that required a lot of
manpower, for example, in the various stages of paddy cultivation. The third son
being weak himself, was not required to help the weakest brother in any work. All
these different roles were to be inherited by their descendants. . . . The
descendants of the youngest son became the marens [ruling aristocrats], the
second weakest son became the hipuys [lower level aristocrats], the third son
became the panyins [commoners], and, the strongest son became the dipens
[slaves] (Chan 1991:63-65).

The economic assistance given to the maren allowed them to concentrate fully on
political affairs. Their domination of political affairs enabled them, in turn, to build up a power
base from which they could not be challenged. Over time, this accumulation of power was
further strengthened by a belief system which provided legitimacy to the differentiation of
roles between strata. After all, it was the ancestral god who had made assisting the maren
mandatory. Moreover, certain rituals and ceremonies involving the whole community could
only be performed by the maren. For example:
The chief also is responsible for the proper observation of the omens for the
regulation of malan (tabu) affecting the whole longhouse; and, ... takes the leading
part in social ceremonies and in most religious rites collectively performed by the
village (Hose and McDougall 1912.i.65)

In comparison, the Punan Vuhang had no such basis for differentiating roles. Every
individual performed similar activities, except for rituals and ceremonies that were conducted
by the shamans, some of whom were also community leaders. Without a leader, hunter167

gatherers could still survive because a knowledge of the environment and food acquisition
skills were the determining factors for survival and this knowledge was shared by all within
the community. A person of superior abilities benefited the community and his counsel was
generally followed. Otherwise, the person had no say over the affairs of others.
Unlike the Kayan who depended on the maren to carry out rituals that benefited
the whole community, Punan Vuhang leaders played no such ritual role. The shaman
functioned to maintain the well-being of individuals in the nalau healing rituals and that of the
community by cultivating the help of benevolent spirits in the nyangen rituals. A shaman
might also lead the community, as was the case of various leaders in the past who were also
shamans, but one became a leader by virtue of leadership attributes, not because of ones
position as a shaman. In the past, there were many shamans who were not leaders, and
also leaders who were not shamans. Furthermore, there were no spiritual consequences
suffered by those who did not respect their leaders. In contrast, the Kayan believed those
who went against the headman would suffer tulah, punishment by spirits.
The role of Lake Dian Lulu Kasut, the ancestor of the Balui Kayan aristocrats, was
also different from that of Nyuvuhan, the ancestral leader of the Punan Vuhang. Lake Dians
origin was recounted in legends, with differing versions. However, in all of them, Lake Dian
emerged from inside a durian fruit, which was considered the king of fruits. According to one
version, Lake Lae, the Kayan paramount chief in the Apau Kayan, was one day hunting with
1
his dogs. Along a straight stretch of river (lulu), he came across a huge durian fruit. He
brought the fruit back and when he opened it, he found a baby inside. Lake Lae adopted the
baby and since it was found inside a durian fruit, he named the child Dian, from the Kayan
word dian meaning durian. As the durian fruit was found on a hunting path beside a straight
river, the babys full name was Dian Lulu KasutLulu for the straight river and Kasut from
the word ngasukto hunt with dogs.
When Lake Dian grew up, he succeeded his father as paramount chief of the
Kayan. As a person of unusual origin, he was believed to possess supernatural powers that
gave him the political superiority to unify the Kayans. Because of his influence and status, his
children inherited his position. The Kayan in the Apau Kayan region, under the leadership of
Lake Dians son and daughter, Baweng and Ipui, then migrated to the Balui in Sarawak.
During the rule of Bit Meng who was a great-grandson of Lake Dian, the paramount chief of
the Mahakam Kayan came to challenge Bit Meng for supremacy. All the Kayan groups and
2
other tribal groups in the Balui rallied to defend Bit Meng and defeated the challenger.
1

The following description of Lake Dian is taken from Chan (1991:2-6), an account in my Masters
dissertation on the Kayan.
2

According to the Balui Kayan, the Mahakam Kayan later migrated to the Baleh River on the Sarawak
side. When Iban headhunters began to move into the Baleh, the Kayan found it difficult to defend
themselves as the Iban conducted warfare in secret, attacking farmers in the fields and hunters in the
forests. To avoid more deaths, they moved back to the Mahakam. In my 2002 fieldwork in the Mahakam,
I found the Bahau-Busang living at the upper part of the river speak a somewhat similar language to the
Balui Kayan but have different vocabularies for some words. Old people told me that the Kayan in which I
conversed with them is the original language as theirs has been a mixture of words from other groups. On
their origin, they do not have any story of having migrated into Sarawak and then returning. Their
ancestral ground is on the western side of the Apau Kayan, the homeland of the Balui Kayan. Also in the
upper Mahakam, there is a group who are called Kayan but speak a different language.

168

This victory further enhanced the status of Lake Dians descendants as the
undisputed paramount chiefs of the Balui Kayan. As a result, all the sons of Bit Meng who
married into other longhouses assumed leadership in their spouses longhouses. Today,
most headmen and aristocratic families, including not only the Kayan, but also the Kajang
groups, are all interrelated as descendants of Lake Dian Lulu Kasut.
This account of the origin of Lake Dian shows that the Balui Kayan believed him to
be a leader sent by the gods to preserve their unity and supremacy. He was sent not to any
single Kayan longhouse but to Uma Daro, whose headman was the paramount chief of all
the Apau Kayan (Chan 1991:3). As Apau Kayan is the ancestral homeland of all Kayan, this
means he was sent to lead all Kayan groups, including those in distant areas. When his
supremacy was challenged by the Mahakam Kayan, people rallied to defeat the contender.
Today Kayan aristocrats, as the descendants of Lake Dian, are held in great esteem and
rule the longhouses in which they live with authority.
In comparison, Nyuvuhan, unlike Lake Dian, was not sent by the gods. He was an
ordinary human being who possessed a good character. He lived in a time of tumult when
shamans of different Punan groups waged intra-tribal warfare with their patron-spirits. Due to
his good character, powerful spirits offered their patronage and thus provided Nyuvuhan with
immense power which he used to bring peace to his people. He ensured that his children
internalized good attributes and when they reached adulthood, they all became recognized
leaders. Among these sons, Rahman succeeded the aging Nyuvuhan. After Rahmans
death, it is not clear who among the grandchildren and descendants of Nyuvuhan led the
1
community. The leadership line is remembered only from Sabung onward. The line,
however, terminated with the death of Banai, the seventh leader after Sabung. After that,
leadership went to another line of Nyuvuhans descendants, whose precise ancestry to the
founding leader they could not ascertain.
In contrast, Kayan leaders and other aristocrats are able to recite their ancestry
directly to Lake Dian, thus affirming their aristocratic status. Even the older members of lower
level aristocrats (hipuy) claim descent from Lake Dian in order to validate their status. For
Punan Vuhang leaders, although they emphasize their descent from Nyuvuhan, they cannot
actually trace their ancestry, and so cannot affirm their claims to the rest of the Punan
Vuhang community which does not recognize them. The prohibition to mention the names of
the dead, except during child naming (mek aran bikop) when the name of a dead ancestor
was given to a newborn baby (see page 254) made it impossible to recite their ancestry.
Unlike Kayan leaders who are generally wealthier than others, Punan Vuhang leaders have
neither brasswares (tawak, gong) nor necklaces and belts of valuable beads (inu, lukut), and
indeed, instead of compulsory corve labor provided by commoners to farm their rice fields,
and former slaves to relieve them of household tasks, Punan Vuhang leaders serve others
by providing for their needs.

In fact, Sabung became renowned not for his leadership but because of events surrounding his death.
Sabung and his brother fled from enemies and hid in a cave. The enemies discovered this and lit a fire at
the entrance of the cave to produce smoke. The smoke forced them to come out and then they were
killed.

169

Leadership among Punan Vuhang is similar to that described for other huntergatherers, being egalitarian or anti-authoritarian. Thus, a leader gains the voluntary following
of other community members by showing exemplary behavior. He is a leader because his
performance is in some important aspect of social affairs superior to other members who
therefore choose to follow him (Lee 1979:343, 1982:47; Riches 1995:683; Sellato 1994:151,
Woodburn 1982:445).
Egalitarianism: Punan Vuhang Pursuit of Individual Autonomy
We have now considered the issue of leadership and examined the question of
why the Punan Vuhang have little regard for political authority unless a leader possesses the
personal attributes that cause other people to respect him. This section attempts to assess
why the community values equality. Several theories that attempt to account for the pursuit
by hunter-gatherers of individual autonomy are examined by Gardner (1991), and are used
here to examine why the Punan Vuhang are an egalitarian people.
The adaptive-child-training theory asserts that hunter-gatherers tend to press for
self-reliance, independence, and individual achievement (Gardner 1991:543). This theory
explains that Punan Vuhang men tended to be independent because they were trained to
accomplish many activities by themselves. In blowpipe hunting, each individual owned a
blowpipe that he used to hunt by himself. In trapping, a man set traps alone in an area where
no one else could trap. Similarly, a hunter led a team of dogs to hunt in a particular area. This
solitary hunting maximized the communitys labor force. Also, as the exploration area of each
hunter was distant from other hunters grounds, it ensured the fullest territorial expanse of
environmental exploitation by the community.
The need to socialize a person to become highly independent was particularly vital
during times of food scarcity. At such times, a hunter had to go to distant hunting grounds to
hunt for game. While exploring for resources, he knew how to identify and locate game and
various other food sources. As he pursued his quarry into unfamiliar places, he developed a
mental territorial map that enabled him to keep track of his location.
In the past, the Punan Vuhang maintained their nomadic economy by means of a
pattern of socialization that ensured each boy grew up into a highly independent person with
the skills needed for survival. This is not confined to the Punan Vuhang, for Puri makes the
same observation of the Penan Benalui, When a young man understood how to survive and
could successfully spend days hunting in the forest by himself, he was considered an adult
and ready to start a family (2005:238). The adaptive-child-training theory therefore focuses
on child-rearing practices that tended to produce this skilled, independent type of person.
This independent self-reliance was the basis for the Punan Vuhangs egalitarian form of
social organization.
The nomadic-food-quest theory propounded by Lee and DeVore (1968:11-12) also
seems to apply to the Punan Vuhang. This theory views
foragers egalitarian, flexible, individualized social life as being shaped by their
nomadic food quest, dispersed and variable food resources, avoidance of food
storage, and visiting between resource areas. Nomadic procurement of food, for
instance, restricts the amount of personal property possible and minimizes
interpersonal differences (Gardner 1991:543).

170

As a nomadic people, the Punan Vuhang were also in the past constantly on the
move from one place to another. When the resources in an entire river system had been
depleted, they moved far away into another river system to begin a new cycle of resource
exploitation. Over long distances, they carried only the most necessary items that would be
difficult to produce in the new area. These items were mainly tools, such as knives, adzes,
blowpipes, spears and sago filtering baskets. They also carried cooking utensils such as
cooking pots and processed bamboo water containers. Their ornamental items such as
clothes and earrings, were light and easy to carry. The heaviest things they had to transport
were old infirm members of the group.
The difficulty in transporting items prevents accumulation of property. With the nonacquisition of valuable materials, it was impossible for a person to enhance his status
through material gain. Although the Punan Vuhang avoided most forms of food storage, the
Punan Vuhang did in the past store some amount of food in the form of pig lard, as
discussed earlier on page 30.
The foraging-mode-of-production theory presented by Leacock and Lee (1982:7-9)
has several core features that are found among the Punan Vuhang. The community
practices the collective ownership of the means of production (Leacock and Lee 1982:8) in
that for the most part, they considered the major staple food resource, wild sago, a form of
open-access property. Nonetheless, some community members did establish private claims
to certain sago groves. Most other resources either fell into an open-access or private
property rights system, as is discussed in the chapter on resource tenure. However, despite
establishing some private rights to resources, the Punan Vuhang were unable to
accumulate. The obligation to distribute and share sago starch and other food surpluses
ensured that no one could accumulate surplus food.
The Punan Vuhang also practiced the right of reciprocal access to resources of
others through marriage ties, visiting and co-production (Leacock and Lee 1982:8). When a
man married, he automatically became a member of his wifes kin group. He thus had rights
to use the resources of the group, and vice-versa. Also, the households in a primary sharing
network included those of the siblings of both the man and his wife. Visiting members from
1
another band either participated with their hosts or gathered food by themselves. It was
preferable for visiting Punan Vuhang to obtain food themselves so that the resource
exploitation for both host and guest would increase.
The Punan Vuhang practiced little food accumulation except for processed pork
lard. During the wild boar migration season, when wild boars were plentiful and very fat,
hunters processed the game into lard. They preserved the lard by burying it in the banks of
small rivers or streams. Although there was a temporary abundance of wild boar that could
have been processed into lard, in reality, the amount of lard that a household processed was
limited. Processing lard required boiling chunks of fat in a cooking pot until the fat melted into
oil. As the number of pots that a household owned was small, usually only one or at the most
two, the amount of fat that they could process was limited, amounting at most to about ten
1

During the minor fruit season, occasionally one band came across an area with fruit while the other did
not. The visitors then joined the band with fruit and lived with them for a period until both bands had
depleted the fruits.

171

liters per day. Consequently, a household could process, at most, about three hundred liters
of lard per season. This, if sparingly consumed when there was no meat, could last for more
than a year.
The only other time when the Punan Vuhang amassed food was when preparing
sago starch for a long journey. When the community had to migrate to a distant river system,
which required a journey of several days, they needed to prepare sago for consumption
along the way. They dried the moist starch over a slow fire to remove moisture and so lighten
the starchs weight. Drying also prevented the flour from spoiling. However, when the Punan
Vuhang reached their destination, they ceased to accumulate processed sago. They
asserted that preserved sago flour was less tasty than fresh starch and therefore had no
desire to preserve it. Each time that they processed sago, the amount was just sufficient for a
few days food supply. After that they processed it again.
Like other hunter-gatherers, the Punan Vuhang practiced generalized reciprocity. A
hunter shared food with all households although he gave larger shares to the households of
his wifes and his own siblings. As a result, he did not have an opportunity to accumulate.
The more food he obtained, the more he had to distribute. For example, if a man processed
a larger amount of sago, up to a full basket (kalong), about 3 cubic feet, he distributed the
starch in round balls about six inches in diameter. When he obtained less, he was obligated
to give balls of only about two and a half inches in diameter. A ball of starch about the size of
half a mans fist, when cooked into a watery paste (linut), was sufficient for a single meal for a
four-member family. After distribution, what remained for his own households consumption
lasted between one and five days; beyond which time, the moist starch spoiled.
Like many other hunter-gatherers, for the Punan Vuhang, there was an
Access of all to the forces of production. Virtually everyone possesses the skills for
making essential tools (Leacock and Lee 1982:9).

From an early age, individuals acquired skills by watching and imitating the work of
skilled adults. As they grew older, they assisted skilled persons and eventually acquired the
ability themselves. For refined work, they asked elders to finish the work for them. As they
observed and emulated, they became experts themselves.
The notion of individual ownership of tools also held for the Punan Vuhang. Just
as Leacock and Lee write, individuals readily borrowed and lent their tools, although
borrowing and lending were rather rare since each person knew how to produce tools for
himself. A person only borrowed when his tool was damaged, and he would obtain the use
of the tool first from a kinsman. He only borrowed from a person who had no use for the tool
on that particular day. He returned it when the lender needed it back. On the following day,
he then borrowed from another person. Soon he repaired or made a new tool and had no
further need to borrow.
The fourth theory examined by Gardner is the resource-depletion theory
propounded by Foley (1988). Since this theory derives from archaeology and applies to Late
Pleistocene hunter-gatherers, I shall not dwell on it here.
The storage theory of Cashdan (1980) suggesting that storage buffers against
environmental variability applies only to a limited extent to the Punan Vuhang. The
172

community only stored lard from processed pig fat during the relatively brief wild boar
1
migration season. Testart (1982) has argued that food storage inhibits residential mobility.
He stresses that sedentism allows important people to assume management of food stores,
thus making storage possible (Gardner 1991:544). This theory that storage hindered
residential mobility does not hold for the Punan Vuhang. The storage of pork lard did not
inhibit their movement; having stored the food, they moved on and returned to obtain it only
when the need arose, and no one was left in permanent charge of it. The other part of the
theory on management and exploitation of food storage is also not found among the Punan
Vuhang. As their agrarian neighbors, after adopting rice cultivation, Punan Vuhang
households store rice individually and therefore the storage system offers no chance for
exploitation by other people. Similarly, the storage of lard was also individual.
The collective-hunting theory by Steward (1936, 1955), which asserts that
unrelated families come together in a composite group, resulting in bilateral descent and
the possibility of band endogamy (Gardner 1991:544), only partially holds for the Punan
Vuhang. The theory partially fits the Punan Vuhang situation because during seasons of
abundance, different bands came together as a single group. Each band was comprised of
different kin groups with minor leaders. These bands deferred to a leader having authority
over the entire group only when there was a prominent kejian or kotokek leader present
among them. As such, unrelated families did live together as a composite group but only for
short periods of time during seasons of abundance.
In terms of Stewards theory, although different kin groups did stay together, it is
hard to see how this factor leads to the practice of bilateral descent. In the case of the Punan
Vuhang, I think that the practice of uxorilocal residence was the main determinant of bilateral
kinship. Among the Punan Vuhang, a person may marry anyone who is descended from the
same great-grandfather, although this is not encouraged. Marriage among distant cousins is
necessary because the bilateral kinship system covers a large network of related persons
that practically includes almost every individual in a band. The practice of marriage between
individuals of different households but of common ancestry, therefore, allows for the
possibility of band endogamy.
The next theory that Gardner reviews is Turnballs avoidance-of-social-disruption
theory.
Turnball (1968) offers a partially ecological explanation of the flux . . . expressed as
recurrent fission and fusion which . . . may be characteristic of the majority of
[hunters and gatherers] (p.132). He argues that (day-by-day or seasonal)
reconstitution of cooperating groups can serve as a systematic means for averting
social disruption in band societies whose environment offers choices of
subsistence techniques (Gardner 1991:544). [Emphasis original].

This theory requires a detailed reconstruction of membership in all bands within a


defined period to test its validity. From the information that I gathered, it seems that the

Having adopted cultivation, the community now stores rice. Because they have only become adjusted to
the new economic system since 1968, it is yet to be seen how storage might cause the Punan Vuhang to
become more stratified. As of my main fieldwork period, in 1993-95, the Punan Vuhang were still
egalitarian.

173

composition of bands was quite consistent over time. Kin grouping was the basis of band
composition and the Punan Vuhang usually divided themselves into two groups that were
further divided into bands during lean times. One group lived in the headwater region and the
other in the middle parts of the Kajang and the Linau River areas. The Punan Vuhang
situation does not seem to correspond with Turnballs theory in that the Punan Vuhang did
not reconstitute their bands with different households each time that they reorganized
themselves.
The marketing theory by Kroeber (1928, 1945), Jenness (1932), Steward (1936),
Leacock (1954), Bose (1956), Fox (1969) and others sees foragers as becoming simple
culturally, exploiting resources familially or individually, and perhaps also becoming nomadic
or bilateral as a direct or indirect result of involvement with external markets (Gardner
1991:544). A form of this theory has been debated among anthropologists working in
Borneo. Hoffman (1984), has proposed this view to account for the presence of huntergatherers in Borneo, but it has been disputed by Brosius (1988; 1991), Kaskija (1988),
Sellato (1988) and others. This argument is discussed earlier in the chapters on history and
trade.
The depopulation-displacement theory of Deetz (1968), Hickerson (1960) and
Service (1962) suggests that spatial and social reorganization result from depopulation or
displacement in contact settings (Gardner 1991:545). The Punan Vuhang are an amalgam
of three different Punan groups that joined together as a result of contact with powerful tribal
groups that had entered their traditional territories. Threatened by their enemies, the Punan
Nuo and Punan Terkalet offered their women in marriage to Punan Vuhang men in order to
be accepted into the Punan Vuhang community. This gift of women was to seek Punan
Vuhang protection from the Kayan, who were bound by past ties not to attack the Punan
Vuhang. This fusion of the Punan Nuo and Punan Terkalet with the Punan Vuhang seems to
support the theory that contacts with outsiders resulted in spatial and social reorganization
among hunter-gatherers. Further, the recognition of Nyuvuhans descendants as leaders
appears to have been associated with this fusion (see page 164).
An assessment of the Punan Vuhangs historical contact with powerful outsiders
appears at odds with the subordination-dependence theory proposed by Gillin (1942), James
(1961) and Gardner himself (1966). This theory argues for an association between chronic
intercultural pressure (the long-term presence of more powerful neighbors) and ...
individualism (Gardner 1991:546). Although the Punan Vuhang were surrounded by more
powerful neighbors, the Kayans downriver and the Kenyahs across the headwaters, they
were not subordinated to them.
They were separated from these people by physical barriers such as long
stretches of rapids and mountains. Before the advent of outboard motors and the modern
era of logging that has opened up the interior, to get into the region inhabited by the Punan
Vuhang required a journey of between one to three weeks or even longer. The travelers had
to use boats in the past to paddle and pole against strong river currents and had to abandon
their boats and walk overland when they came to stretches of rapids. When they reached the
next parts of the river that allowed boating, they had to make new boats. The entire journey
required several stages. The Punan Vuhang were therefore too far away to be subordinated
by powerful outsiders. Only traders with close relationships with the Punan Vuhang were
174

interested in visiting them for barter trade. Physical isolation thus allowed the Punan Vuhang
to escape chronic intercultural pressure from powerful neighbors. Because of this, this theory
is not relevant to the case of the Punan Vuhang when they were nomadic.
Finally, the domination-escape theory argues
that large power differences between foragers and their neighbors can shape
foragers social life . . . . when foraging people remain mobile in order to escape
domination by their neighbors, their residential instability affects their social
structure (Gardner 1991:546).

The theory seems plausible when applied to the Punan Vuhang. The Punan Nuo
and Punan Terkalet left their ancestral homeland to avoid being attacked or dominated by
their enemies. Members of former hunter-gatherer groups, such as the Baketan, Lisum and
Punan Batu, were largely absorbed or assimilated into the expanding Iban population. After
the merging of these Punan groups in the Balui headwaters, all left the Balui to avoid
domination by the expanding Kayan.
A reconstruction of this periodbefore the migration of the Kayan and the invasion
of the Iban into the Baluishows that the Punan were already nomadic. The Punan Vuhang
ancestors exploited all of the region formed by the headwaters of the Balui River, as was
described earlier. According to their oral history, they moved from place to place in exploiting
forest resources, thus practicing a nomadic economy. At that time, they are believed to have
experienced extended periods of great scarcity of protein-based food. Punan Vuhang stories
make no mention of their ancestors having practiced cultivation. Only one suket story
mentions two mythical spirit figures who cultivated, however, they did so not in a
conventional sense, but their farms produced a crop instantaneously. Many of their stories
are about animals, suggesting a way of life based on hunting and gathering. Consequently,
an examination of Punan Vuhang myths and history does not seem to support a view that
they moved about as a result of contact with dominant people.
Conclusion
In conclusion, the Punan Vuhang appear to have long been an egalitarian people,
but one with some notion of aristocratic leadership. In this chapter, I have described the
personal characteristics that people expected of a leader. Leaders, however, did not have
authority to compel people to do anything. A person gained no advantage by being a leader.
The only gain was in social recognition and the pride derived from the good name of his
ancestors who were community leaders in the past, and then for his name to be retained in
the communitys collective memory when a descendant is named after him. Relating this to
the hunting and gathering economy, we can understand how the characteristics expected of
a leader were ones that contributed to the survival of the group. The community recognized
as leaders only persons who contributed to the welfare of others. After all, every individual, at
least most of the time, was capable of meeting the basic needs of his or her own household.
If a leader was incapable of offering benefits beyond that of others, his influence was simply
not acknowledged. Punan Vuhangs notions of leadership therefore enhanced their
community survival.

175

In the absence of leadership, individual households relied on themselves for


survival, for socialization ensured that every individual acquired basic survival skills. When
food was extremely scarce, households making up a band would go separate ways to find
their own food. This solitary foraging was possible because of the egalitarian notion common
among hunter-gatherers that enabled persons to make their own decisions without concern
for others. This notion of individualism corresponds to two theories concerning huntergatherers way of life that enabled them to survive on their own. The first is Gardners
adaptive-child-training theory that asserts hunter-gatherers tend toward self-reliance,
independence and individual achievement (Gardner 1991). In the second, the idea of selfsufficiency can be explained by the nomadic-food-quest theory propounded by Lee and
DeVore (1968) that views foragers egalitarian, flexible, individualized social life as being
shaped by their nomadic food quest for dispersed and variable food resources. During the
long periods of food scarcity, such skills were keys to both their individual and collective
survival in the rainforest. This chapter on notions of leadership and egalitarianism provides
the last argument to substantiate the premise that Punan Vuhang could survive on their own
without dependence on other societies for food. In the next chapter, we shall see from a
different perspective through an account of cosmology and belief, that there was no need to
rely on other societies for their social well-being.

176

Chapter Six: Cosmology, Rituals and Religious Beliefs


Introduction
Today the Punan Vuhang profess Christianity, as we shall see in Chapter Seven.
Their conversion was one of several interrelated events connected with their settling down.
The present chapter describes the former Punan Vuhang cosmos, including relationships
between humans and both bad and good spirits. Various components of their former beliefs,
in particular, that of avoiding death sites, meshed nicely with an economic system based on
mobility. Punan Vuhang cosmological beliefs contained four main elements that were related
to their socio-economic activities. First, they believed that the realm inhabited by human
beings encompassed several spirit realms inhabited by both benevolent and malevolent
spirits. Second, aided by shamans, people were able to cultivate close relationships with the
benevolent spirits by celebrating nyangen rituals. These spirits, in turn, assisted them in
nullifying the threat of malevolent spirits to which they were exposed in nalau rituals. Third,
belief in the harmful effects of the malevolent souls of the dead caused the community to flee
from sites of death where these souls were said to linger. Fourth, their augural system
influenced their socio-economic life in that the appearances of auguries regulated many of
their daily activities.
As the community no longer fully embraces these beliefs, my account is based
solely on information provided by informants. Nyinyang Enang, the only former shaman still
alive during my fieldwork, was my primary informant. Nyinyangs narration was difficult to
follow and I have relied on Naro Pua and Uji Lating to clarify and order the information. As I
arrange the material, I need to highlight an issue mentioned by Endicott (1979:29-30):
But I think it is fair to say that everything I have recorded is present in the Batek
cultural tradition, even though it probably does not correspond exactly to what is
known by any particular individual. Another difference between Batek knowledge and
my description is in the order I have imposed on the material. I have arranged the
exposition in a way that I hope will be easily comprehended by the reader. But this
does not actually violate Batek conceptions because there is no correct order for
describing the Batek world-view.

I also take note of Shanti Thambiahs concern not to create an impression of


coherence in a situation filled with uncertainty and contradictions. (1995:157).
Cosmology
The Punan Vuhang believed that the cosmos consisted of five main realms, with
the human realm at its center. Above the human realm was the heavenly realm, or sky,
termed lau. Below the human realm was the realm beneath the land. On the same level with
the human realm were the upriver and downriver realms. The realms of the heavens and
those beneath the land were beyond the reach of ordinary human beings. The upriver and
the downriver realms, on the other hand, had no clearly demarcated boundary and
overlapped with the human realm. Consequently, ordinary human beings could interact with
the spirit beings residing there. In contrast, only shamans could communicate with spirits
residing in the realms above and below the earth.

177

The following depiction of the Punan Vuhang cosmos will provide a background for
understanding their belief system. The characteristics of different realms relate to the beings
that reside in them and also to the interactions with beings of other realms. I use the term
realm to describe the five domains that different categories of spirits inhabited. The Punan
Vuhang themselves did not talk of realms but accorded specific names for the distinctive
domains inhabited by different spirits.
The Heavenly Realm
Table 8 shows that the heavenly realm consisted of five distinct regions: Kak lolau
(beyond the sky) was the highest. The second highest was the likun avun and the level
below that was the nuan sok lau (a place in the sky). All these regions were beyond the
reach of ordinary human beings. Only the soul of the shaman could visit these places and
went regularly to the likun avun to perform nyangen rituals with participating otu tulik spirits.
Kak LolauThe kak lolau, or region beyond the sky formed the highest part of the
heavens. Its sole inhabitants were the lorong spirits. The only other spirits that were able to
travel there were the otu tulik, spirits who inhabited the likun avun region. Besides residing in
a region beyond the reach of other spirits (with the exception of the otu tulik), the lorong were
also invisible to all other spirits. Their unattainable environs and invisibility made the lorong
the most powerful spirits in the Punan Vuhang cosmos. Because of their power, the otu tulik
spirits sought the lorong for protection and requested that individual lorong become their
protector-spirits. In order to commit a lorong to provide protection, the otu tulik made pacts
with them in which they became protector-spirits. After forming a pact with an otu tulik spirit,
the lorong protector-spirit then became visible to its otu tulik protg. Other than this, the
Punan Vuhang did not know much about kak lolau as it was considered a mysterious place
too high even for the soul of a shaman to reach.
Likun AvunThe next region below kak lolau was the likun avun, the best- known realm in
the Punan Vuhang cosmology. It was the realm that the otu tulik inhabited, where they
performed nyangen rituals comprising musical and singing activities and competitive games
(puyat) renowned throughout the cosmos. Because of nyangen, likun avun was a place
frequently visited by spirits of other realms, including the souls of shamans who helped otu
tulik perform the nyangen rituals.
According to Nyinyang, the only surviving former shaman whose soul is
acknowledged to have gone to likun avun, the most striking feature of the region was its
brightness (talabangat / talajantan). Everything was sparkling and bright. The other unusual
feature was that the houses could fly. Using a helicopter as an analogy, a house could fly
and land wherever its inhabitants, the otu tulik, liked. Despite the brightness of likun avun, the
houses were even brighter, like fireflies shining in the darkness of the night. Some of these
houses became the site for performances of nyangen rituals. As otu tulik in the likun avun
performed various activities, otu tulik from other regions or realms came to participate or to
watch as spectators.
Features of likun avun were quite similar to that of the human world. Its rivers were
big with pebbles shining like sparkling beads. The water level always stayed the same and
178

the current flowed gently. Trees were of a similar height, with leaves like stars sparkling on
clear moonless nights.

Table 8: The Spirit Realms and their Spirits


English Translation

Inhabitants

kak lolau

beyond the sky

lorong

likun avun

No equivalent translation

otu tulik

nuan sok lau

a place in the sky

buruan dok kavoh

belahut

no equivalent translation

otu belahut

kunyuling

no equivalent translation

otu kunyuling

muxit matan lau

realm of the rising sun

otu muxit matan lau

bulukuk

mountains

tanok

lands

otu tulik bulukuk; otu tanok


otu dogkek; otu pahkavoh
otu tanok; otu dogkek

The Heavenly Realm

Realm Below the Land

The Upriver Realm

The Downriver Realm


realm of the dead

buruan dok kavoh


(souls remaining at the death
sites)
suket

laput lanum

realm of the river mouth

lengunang

sea

otu laput lanum (spirits of wild


boars)
ivit; lubuhok; yiang

lanum

within the waters of a river

tun lanum; yiang

kali
no name

179

180

Nuan Sok LauThe region of the nuan sok lau (a place in the sky) or jik lau tek kakop (a
region in the lower sky) was where souls of the dead congregated. The Punan Vuhang
believed the souls of the dead (buruan dok kavoh) existed in a very happy state, always
laughing, playing and splashing water (petitik). The Punan Vuhang were forbidden to
mention a souls name, not even in a whisper, for the spirits would know of it and then cause
rain or even rainstorms. For this reason, the Punan Vuhang were not told the names of their
ancestors by their elderly kinsmen. A household was only told an ancestors name during the
naming of a child that took on the name of the ancestor. Then the elders in the community
announced the relationship between the newborn child and the dead ancestor. The ancestor
was usually of the third or fourth generation, chosen from among the siblings of the
individuals grandparents or great-grandparents whose name only the surviving elders knew.
The soul of the dead or buruan dok kavoh traveled to the place of the dead by way
of a land bridge called Batang Tebilong, which linked the earth and the place of the dead
through the moon (langane). A dead persons soul traveled up the Batang Tebilong, going
through the moon to reach the sok lau (see Figure 17). The Punan Vuhang heard long ago
that a man by the name of Lake Tungum (of Punan Aput origin) was sleeping on a mountain
ridge near the Kapuas River in Indonesian Kalimantan. It was said that through the night, he
saw people of all colors and languages passing by him on the ridge. Most of the people were
groaning in different languages, some understood by Lake Tungum, but most unintelligible
to him. As he observed further, he saw that the land bridge led to the moon and then beyond.
This story supported the Punan Vuhang belief that the souls of the dead went up to
the heavens during the appearance of a new moon (see page 203). It explained how the
moon functioned as a bridge between the earth and the sky for the dead spirits to go to their
place in the nuan sok lau.
The Realm Beneath the Earth
The realm beneath the earth was believed by the Punan Vuhang to be a huge
space with its own sky and a ground terrain very similar to that where human beings resided.
It consisted of two regions, the belahut and the kunyuling, with the names of the inhabitants
being the same as that of the region in which they dwelled.
Belahut The belahut was the region below the earthly realm that was closest to the
surface of the earth. It was a place in which all vegetation was similar in height and as tall as
a Punan Vuhangabout 5 feet 2 inches. The plants were small and looked very luxuriant
and beautiful.
The otu belahut emerged from the earths surface to fish, although their main food
was a type of tuber called luan. They lived in wooden longhouses that they did not build, but
instantaneously created.
KunyulingKunyuling was the region far beneath the earth. It was too far for the soul of a
shaman to enter directly from the ground. Instead, he had to go up to likun avun, and then
dive down to it. In kunyuling, all things were red, and even the sunlight was reddish.
The otu kunyuling residing there were extremely powerful and no other type of
spirit could defeat them. They could take on the form of wind, or turn into a body with a
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human likeness. The spirits had huge red bodies with tattoos on their skin. As their realm
was so far beneath the earth and beyond the reach of other spirits, they intermarried among
themselves. They stayed in longhouses, had families, but did not propagate through sexual
intercourse, rather, their children simply emerged out of nowhere. Their food consisted only
of the tanguh fish (Tor douronensis), a single fish being sufficient for a whole longhouse
community of otu kunyuling.
The otu kunyuling were on very good terms with humans. Some otu kunyuling
would approach the Punan Vuhang to become patron-spirits of shamans. As the role of
being a patron-spirit was mainly that of the otu tulik, only a few otu kunyuling became patronspirits. Those who did, however, did not relinquish their positions. When their shaman died,
they approached the shamans children and eventually become a patron-spirit of one of the
shamans descendants. This was unlike the otu tulik, who returned to their place of origin
upon the death of their shamans. An example of an otu kunyuling becoming a patron-spirit
can be seen in the story of the deeds of Ugang Bilong, a patron-spirit to the shaman Ukih.
Upon Ukihs death, the otu kunyuling patron-spirit then went to Nahen and Nyinyang.
Another otu kunyuling, Pogang Loteng, became a patron-spirit to Toyang, Ukin, Jelip, Liwan
and Nyinyang. An otu kunyuling, Inan Musang, however, only became the patron-spirit to
Ngo and did not go to his descendants.
The Upriver Realm
The upriver realm was the domain that ordinary Punan Vuhang could experience,
as two of its three regions were not distinctively separated from the human realm. Spirits in
these regions frequently mingled with human beings, occasionally with positive
consequences, but more often resulting in conflict and injuries to humans.
Muxit Matan LauWithin the upriver realm, the region farthest upriver, muxit matan lau,
was the only region that ordinary Punan Vuhang could not reach. Muxit matan lau, literally
translated as where the sun appears, was the place of the rising sun and thus it was
extremely hot. Not much was known about that area since only the most powerful of
shamans could withstand its heat. Nonetheless, Lengerik, the head of otu muxit matan lau
and three other spirits, Boyong, Jilen, and Jinikon, became the patron-spirits of some
shamans. The spirits that resided there were otu tulik and were called otu tulik muxit matan
lau. Unlike the otu tulik of likun avun, most of these spirits did not want to become patronspirits.
BulukukThis mountainous region with peaks and steep cliffs, huge rocks, and rivers with
high waterfalls and rapids was the domain of various types of spirits, both benevolent and
malevolent. These spirits had frequent contacts with humans. Good spirits assisted the
Punan Vuhang whenever requested to do so. The bad ones harmed the human community
upon being disturbed, and the malevolent spirits killed humans whenever opportunities
arose.
Otu Tulik BulukukThe most important spirits found in the mountains were the otu tulik
bulukuk, spirits similar to those in likun avun. These spirits resided inside the rocky formations
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of the mountains. Their houses were, like those of the likun avun, bright and beautiful. The
leaders of the mountain otu tulik did not welcome visitors. This was especially so in regards
to the shamans or their patron-spirits who requested them to participate in nyangen rituals in
likun avun. They refused to join these nyangen rituals because they did not want to be
absent from their homes, fearing that marauding spirits would come to raid their
communities.
These otu tulik had families, spouses and children. Their children emerged out of
nowhere and became adults within the same day. They exited and entered the mountains
with ease, penetrating through the rock like diving through water. Although these spirits were
similar to those of likun avun, the terrain inside the mountains where they lived was different
from likun avun. For example, rivers and trees were not found inside these mountains.
The Punan Vuhang believed that the mountains in the Bahau watershed where the
cliffs were covered by clouds during the night were homes of the otu tulik. The names of the
mountains, and the leaders of the otu tulik found in each mountain, were respectively,
Bulukuk Sengayan led by the headman Suan Baring, Bulukuk Menanyam led by Jilen, and
Tanok Basah led by Nyuking. Two less well-known cliffs were Tukong Bangat and Batu
Timang.
These mountain otu tulik went to likun avun for nyangen rituals and some of them
became patron-spirits to Punan Vuhang shamans. While most were good natured, some
had a marauding nature and raided stores of busui in likun avun for the highly desired busui
(musical instruments played during nyangen rituals). These warlike otu tulik were also
archenemies of another type of fierce spirits, the otu laput lanum, originating from the realm
of the river mouth. When either party went on an offensive against the other, innumerable
warriors, like a swarm of bees would take part. There was not much reason for war, except
fighting for pride and supremacy. A battle ensued when one party boasted of its greatness
and that its king or leader was the most powerful king. This insulted the other spirits, causing
them to wage war against the boasters. When an enemy attacked a group of spirits, all the
spirits of the same kind united to defend their honor. In an offensive war, however, only those
otu tulik with the same warlike attitude participated. From time immemorial, neither the otu
tulik nor the otu laput lanum had ever achieved a decisive victory over the other.
Consequently, the two archenemies were frequently at war with each other.
The otu tulik related to the shamans, especially as patron-spirits, were never
involved in these wars. The patron-spirits had immense loyalty to their shamans and only
acted under their orders. Moreover, the patron-spirits had no need to be involved in these
wars because their leadership in the nyangen rituals provided them fame and status
achievable by no other means. In addition, some of their enemies, the otu laput lanum,
participated as audience in the nyangen rituals in likun avun. This contact resulted in
familiarity between the two types of spirits, and consequently, an otu tulik patron-spirit found it
unsuitable to fight against the other spirits with whom it had relationships.
Otu TanokThe otu tanok were spirits who lived inside big rocks or boulders found in the
mountains. They were dwarf spirits about one and a half feet tall and resembled human
beings. They looked like little children, and wore clothes and used tools similar to those of the

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Punan Vuhang. However, they did not marry and always traveled with a companion of the
same sex.
While the otu tanok were essentially harmless, they were bad tempered and easily
irritated when humans became too noisy. When disturbed by noise, the eyes of an otu tanok
turned red with anger and then it attempted to kill the offender. For that reason, the Punan
Vuhang did not become noisy unnecessarily, or misbehave, out of respect or fear of the otu
tanok. During festive seasons, however, the otu tanok were not offended, as they seemed to
understand the need for people to be joyful and merry. This was especially so if the activities
involved a shaman. The otu tanok had great respect for shamans because many otu tanok
were assistant spirits to various shamans.
Otu Dogkek The otu dogkek were spirits that resided in conditions similar to those of the
otu tanok. They were also dwarf spirits that looked like little children. While they wore clothes
and used weapons, they differed from the otu tanok in that they had little hair and had
yellowish skin. While usually only shamans could see them, occasionally ordinary human
beings also saw the otu dogkek. They lived in communities with leaders called tokek lapo. In
the mountains they resided mainly along river banks, with their shelters in boulders.
The otu dogkek searched for food in pairs, usually at sunrise and sunset, the only
times when they were awake. The only food that the otu dogkek ate was the very small
finger-sized seluan fish, which they caught by using lines and hooks. They made the lines
from long strands of the female spirits hair and the fish hooks from tekurang bones. These
spirits cooked their food over a fire of blue flames that did not produce any heat. The otu
dogkek did not excrete their food. After eating, they simply rubbed their stomachs with a leaf
to ease their digestion.
Otu PahkavohThe otu pahkavoh were the spirits most hostile toward mankind, always
seeking opportunities to kill and eat a human. For that, they were called the otu pahkavoh,
simply translated, killing spirits. The ability to kill a human elevated their status, and the
human heart was a much-craved food. They resided inside big rocks found mainly in flat
rivers with hard beds located immediately above big and high waterfalls. The Punan Vuhang
called this kind of place natong, which they believed to be the nesting grounds where
dragons gave birth to their young. The mountainous region of the Bahau had many such
places, and the Punan Vuhang believed it to be an area infested with otu pahkavoh.
The otu pahkavoh were big, white-haired beings and extremely powerful. They
produced a foul stench so toxic that a human being who smelled it even from faraway would
have a headache and stomachache and vomit. Despite their strength, they armed
1
themselves with knives, spears and blowpipes.
Although the otu pahkavoh were very powerful, like all spirits, they could not
withstand the heat produced by fire. Even wounds caused by weapons forged with fire
resulted in their death. Two stories mention Punan Vuhang killing otu pahkavoh. In the first
story, a hunter used a spear to kill the hostile spirit. In the second story, a poisoned dart shot
1

The first Europeans the Punan Vuhang encountered, they believed to be otu pahkavoh (see Chapter
Seven).

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by a blowpipe caused the spirits death as the poison smeared on the dart had been made
with heat from a fire. Otu pahkavoh traveled in small groups of twos or threes, or more
frequently, alone, in order to prevent shamans from sighting them. Traveling in bigger groups
exposed them more easily to the shamans. They feared that a shaman would see and kill
them before they had reached an area inhabited by humans.
Tanok, the Region of the LandThe region of tanok, or land, was located within the
same realm as human beings. The difference was that tanok was a spirit realm invisible to
the human eye, while the human realm was the natural domain inhabited by life on earth.
The main spirit beings, both the otu tanok and the otu dogkek, inhabited big rocks
and boulders, with the otu dogkek residing closer to the river banks. As their shelters were
also within the territory inhabited by the Punan Vuhang, these two types of spirits were
closely related to the human community. By virtue of their proximity, they were more intimate
with the humans than spirits of the same type residing in mountainous regions.
Otu TanokOtu tanok had a very close relationship with the human community and some
occasionally informed the Punan Vuhang of the arrival of the seasonal wild boar migration.
This usually occurred after a long period of several months without wild boars. The spirit
would one day suddenly appear at daybreak walking around the settlement site, looking like
1
a little boy wearing a loincloth and a bottom protector (tabin), and carrying a knife and spear.
This indicated that the otu tanok was asking the Punan Vuhang to go hunting. Informants
maintained that heeding this sign always resulted in a successful hunt.
Otu DogkekWhen a hunter repeatedly failed to obtain game, he could approach an otu
dogkek for help. One could invoke their help by chanting, Kek, kan angkun pok. Oh no ok
kan yut kum, loosely translated, Grandfather (or granduncle), give me some food.
Afterwards I will give you your share. Shortly afterwards, the hunter would be successful. In
appreciation for the spirits help, the hunter would immediately give the otu dogkek its share
by leaving a little meat or blood on a leaf. The share had to be small, the size of a small twig.
The otu dogkek would turn the small portion of meat into a quantity sufficient for all its
communitys needs.
While the humans could ask the otu dogkek for help, at times, these spirits also
asked the Punan Vuhang for assistance. When the otu dogkek was in distress, especially
during a period of extreme scarcity of food, one would approach a hunter for help by
appearing in his dreams. The next day, the hunter would go out to hunt and successfully
obtain game, and then give a little of it to the otu dogkek.
In times of very great distress, the otu dogkek would appeal to a shaman for help.
They would do this with great humility, for they had great respect for shamans. An appeal
from the otu dogkek occurred as recently as November 1994, even after the community had
converted to Christianity and no longer had contact with the spirits. One night, two female otu
dogkek spirits appeared in a dream to Nyinyang, the surviving former shaman. The following

See Footnote, page 252.

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morning, three of his nephews and members of a related household each obtained a fat wild
boar. That evening, Nyinyang offered a little of the meat to the otu dogkek and invoked the
Christian God to show sympathy toward the spirits.
According to Nyinyang, otu dogkek previously had not appeared to them after the
communitys conversion to Christianity, and seeing them now was indicative of a time of very
great distress for them. This difficulty could have been related to the drought that had
extended into the expected rainy season. It was also a time when there were very few wild
boar. Food was scarce during the long drought, and most wild boar became very thin.
Frequently, the animals were so thin that the hunters had to abandon the carcasses in the
forest because even their hunting dogs found the meat unfit. It was an exceptionally long
drought which had not been experienced by the Punan Vuhang for a very long time.
Therefore, it was not surprising that the situation had even affected the otu dogkek so badly
that they had appealed for help from a former shaman no longer in contact with them. This
event shows that although they are now Christians, the Punan Vuhang still believe in spirits.
The Downriver Realm
The downriver realm, as the upriver realm, was categorized as a spirit domain
distinctively different from the natural human realm.
Kali, Region of the DeadThe first region downriver from the human realm, was kali, or
region of the dead, which was actually the abandoned campsites where people had died.
These sites were located within the territory inhabited by the Punan Vuhang. A death site
was not necessarily only to be found downriver. It could also have been upriver from a
present settlement, when the community over the years had moved downriver from the
earlier abandoned site. However, based on the Punan Vuhangs rule to immediately flee a
death site, a move was always in the upriver direction, or a direction toward the hinterlands
away from the river bank. The kali, therefore, in relative terms, was always the downriver
region.
When a person died, one of his or her two souls remained at the death site, while
the other went up to the heavens (nuan sok lau). According to shamans who frequently saw
them, the souls remaining at the death sites were in extremely bad condition, disfigured and
hungry. Upon seeing a shaman, they would wave to the shaman for help, but unfortunately,
these souls were condemned to their fate and nothing could be done to help them.
The Region of the SuketThe region farther downriver, the region of the suket, was the
beginning of the area that ordinary human beings could not reach. It was a place farther
downriver than all the areas inhabited by human communities. The Punan Vuhang had no
specific name for this place of the suket. Like human beings, the suket depended on food for
survival. They ate ferns, fished and hunted, and processed sago. After eating, they did not
pass any excretion, but merely massaged their stomachs with anui and jalik, two types of
sweet-smelling leaves. Only two suket, Lirang and Belavan, were known to have practiced
cultivation, and their crops took only one week to mature. When sick, the suket performed
healing rituals to heal themselves.

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The suket were similar to human beings, being proud and boastful of their abilities.
They could jump across the sky from one place to another, and were powerful and warlike by
nature. Probably for this reason, the otu laput lanum residing in the region farther downriver,
always attacked the suket. The equally warlike otu laput lanum were probably envious of the
suket, as Punan Vuhangs storieswith the same namesuket, frequently told about their
adventurous quests. In this connection, apparently a renowned suket named Lirang was the
first spirit to lead a warparty to attack the otu laput lanum. The suket lost. However, they did
not give up and afterwards, these two types of spirits were always at war. Whenever they
fought, the suket were usually defeated.
Laput LanumThe region of the river mouth, laput lanum, was a land-based region located
farthest down river. The environment was quite similar to that of likun avun, except that
instead of its light being white, the light in laput lanum was yellowish. Probably, the
perception of the light as yellowish was due to the color of the sky during sunset, as the laput
lanum was west of the Punan Vuhang territory. (The Punan Vuhang do not have a word for
the color orange. They call orange, as well as yellow, nyahang.)
The otu laput lanum, the sole type of spirit inhabiting the river mouth region,
densely populated the area of laput lanum. These spirits looked like the otu tulik and spoke a
similar language. They lived in longhouses with innumerable members led by two paramount
chiefs of similar authority called Lay Bovong Avun and Barang Longokbat. Otu laput lanum
did visit likun avun for the nyangen rituals, but no other spirit outsiders could visit them
except shamans who had otu laput lanum as their patron-spirits. Even so, shamans were
also forbidden to enter the inner sanctum, and upon encroachment would be killed. The
prohibition for all other beings to enter laput lanum could be related to the otu laput lanums
bellicosity. As they were warring spirits always on the offensive, it was natural that they had
many enemies. In order to avoid certain enemies who might have been disguised as friendly
visitors planning a surprise attack, they simply attacked all visitors except for patron
shamans.
The otu laput lanum were always at war with other spirit beings, especially the
suket and the otu tulik residing in the mountainous regions. In battles against the suket, they
usually won. However, against the otu tulik, they had not achieved any decisive victory,
therefore, perpetual war still existed between them. They were also hostile toward humans.
However, the famous Punan Vuhang shaman, Rigai, made a pact with the otu laput lanum.
Consequently, when a Punan Vuhang invoked a chant mentioning that he was a
descendant of Rigai, his life would be spared. According to legend, two Punan Vuhang
brothers by the names of Kalong Jot and Tipijot, in running away from their father eventually
reached the realm of the otu laput lanum. They married spirits, and their descendants upon
hearing a person speak the Punan Vuhang language, would spare his life. Also, for that
matter, the otu laput lanum would never attack a Punan Vuhang settlement.
The otu laput lanum were hostile toward migrating wild boar and sought
opportunities to kill them. The Punan Vuhang had a myth that the migrating wild boar were
actually spirits, who turned into wild boar during the major fruiting season (see page 97).
When the wild boar were in their spirit form, they always defeated the otu laput lanum.
Therefore, the otu laput lanum would only attack these spirits when they were in their
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defenseless form as wild boars. During the peak of the wild boar migration season, the
Punan Vuhang believed that the otu laput lanum killed many juvenile wild boar. When the
Punan Vuhang would cut open a carcass, a small wound was usually found on the heart,
and the Punan Vuhang believed that it had been caused by an otu laput lanum spear. They
also believed that wild boar killed by the otu laput lanum, although still fresh, produced a
terrible stench, and hunters would ignore such carcasses. At one period of great wild boar
spirit massacres, not a single wild boar reached the headwaters for decades, with the
exception of one big one.
The spirits of wild boar resided in a longhouse community on an island in a huge
lake. The Punan Vuhang believed the island was located in the rivermouth region. When
these spirits traveled in the form of wild boars, they were always accompanied by a spirit
called Man Babui (wild boars father). Man Babui would protect the wild boar from attack by
their enemies, especially the otu laput lanum. Fortunately for Punan Vuhang hunters, the
protector spirit of the wild boars, for reasons unknown, always left a trail of clay on the trees
along its path. On seeing this clay, the Punan Vuhang did not go hunting in order to avoid
clashes with Man Babui. Also, a shaman could see it traveling from afar and would then warn
the community of the protector-spirits impending arrival.
LengunangThe realm of the sea was the most dangerous of all, and was inhabited by the
most powerful and violent spirits. It was a mysterious place, and only the shamans who were
powerful enough to enter the hot sun could go there. However, informants did not know of
any story of a shaman going there since the shamans had no reason to go there. No spirits
from other spheres dared to go to lengunang as they would have been killed by the spirits
found there.
The two types of spirits inhabiting lengunang were Ivit and yiang. Ivit was the
brother of Akikato, the creator of the world. But Ivit was very wicked and was driven away by
Akikato to lengunang. Because Ivit had no contact with human beings, informants did not
know much about him.
The yiang were malevolent spirits that journeyed from the sea into the rivers of the
human realm. The yiang were solitary, traveling alone. They were usually seen in the shape
of an animal such as a buffalo, deer or barking deer in the large deep river bays (liang).
Although yiang were malevolent, Punan Vuhang knew few cases of yiang attacking human
beings. However, when that happened, it was usually fatal, as it was difficult to rescue a
drowning victim they had dragged into a deep bay.
LanumWithin the downriver realm was an area of the river inhabited by the malevolent
yiang and tun lanum spirits. As mentioned above, the yiang traveled from the sea into upriver
regions to prey on victims in huge deep bays. The tun lanum, on the other hand, did not
originate from the sea, and their domain was solely in the rivers. A tun lanum never rose to
the surface of the water nor laid on the river bed. Instead, it always swam in the middle depth
of the river. The shape of the tun lanum was exactly like that of a human being except that it
had very long hair. When it was angry, it would cause a boat to capsize, and when it was
very hungry, it would eat a humans soul. Once the soul was bitten, the human died, as the
nalau healing ritual could not rescue it.
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The Danum River (called Lanum) where the Punan Vuhang occasionally ventured
was known to be inhabited by the tun lanum and the yiang. Perhaps this is why the Punan
Vuhang seldom went there unless it was absolutely necessary. The spirits only resided in the
remote headwater regions of the Danum that had few rapids. Living even further upriver, the
Punan Vuhang seldom went downriver where there were many dangerous rapids separated
by huge deep river bays. It was likely that due to this downriver location of the tun lanum and
the yiang, the Punan Vuhang thought of the malevolent beings as spirits of the downriver
realm.
The orientation of these spirit and human realms (see Figure 17) is similar to that of
the Batek (Endicott 1979:50). The Punan Vuhangs heavenly realm and realm beneath the
land correspond to the Bateks up/down axis while the Punan Vuhangs sunrise: upriver /
sunset: downriver orientation is based on the daily movement of the sun, as is the Bateks
east/west orientation. The Punan Vuhang and the Batek also share similar concepts of time.
Endicott (1979:51) states that for the Batek, time is also ordered by the passage of the sun.
Many of the terms for different times of day refer directly to the position of the sun in the sky
(Endicott 1979:51). So, following the term lau for sun in Punan Vuhang, daybreak is gang lau
(emerging sun), noon is oun lau (middle sun) and afternoon is tesing lau (evening sun).
The Nyangen and Nalau Rituals
While the Punan Vuhang cosmos consisted of five main realms, only two factors
determined the relationship between the human realm and the realms of the spirits. The first
was the humans relationship with the good spirits, and the other with the bad spirits. The
human community cemented its relationships with the good spirits in joyous nyangen rituals
and used the nalau healing rituals to defeat the bad spirits.
Nyangen
During nyangen, the soul (buruan) of the shaman went up to likun avun to sing and
play a musical instrument called a busui with the otu tulik spirits. After the musical
performance, the spirits played different types of competitive games. As the shamans soul
observed the events, the shaman reported these activities to the human audience. The
reports took the form of a singsong narration conducted in the otu tulik language. Members
who knew this spirit language then translated the songs for the rest of the community.
Everyone very much enjoyed these performances. Thambiahs transcription of a musui, a
singing poem that tells of the work of the uboh busui spirit among the Bhuket gives us some
idea of the nyangen (1995: 165-166). Some of the Bhuket, unlike the Punan Vuhang, despite
being Christians continue to practice such rituals.
The shaman began the nyangen ritual by shaking a kayuk busui, once the
community had gathered. The shaking of the kayuk busui produced a flute-like sound heard
in the heavenly realm of the likun avun. Instantly all otu tulik spirits related to the shaman
gathered at the house of the shamans patron-spirit, the pun busui, whose house served as a
place of congregation (tiring busui). The patron-spirit took out busui from a stronghold
(tilong) and distributed the musical instruments to other otu tulik. The distribution took place
according to the rank or seniority of the patron-spirit, each one taking an instrument first for
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himself and then for his spouse. Then, his companion or assistant and the spouse of the
assistant were given busui. After that, the patron-spirit presented instruments to other otu
tulik, with the numbers distributed determined by the number of busui available.
The otu tulik then played the busui, producing a beautiful sound heard throughout
the spirit realm. This attracted other otu tulik to form a large audience. Among them were otu
tulik related to other shamans. Also, otu tulik not related to any shaman but eager to
participate in the performance attended, hoping to join the group in future performances.
The sound produced by the busui provided background music to the singing.
Although other participating otu tulik also sang, the main singer was the patron-spirit. While
the soul of the shaman went to the heavens to observe the events, in the human realm, the
shaman sang songs to community members, following the exact wording, intonation and
style used by the otu tulik.
Each time the shaman conducted a nyangen ritual, a new busui was added in likun
avun. However, in the human world, the shaman used his same kayuk busui until a member
1
of the community died and a new one was made after the end of mourning. Both the
human community and the spirits eagerly looked forward to a nyangen ceremony because it
provided great entertainment. Further, the ritual offered an avenue for the otu tulik spirits to
gain status, as those playing in the musical performance achieved fame. An otu tulik who
possessed and played a busui had his name mentioned and praised in the shamans
narrative. Not only the human community, but also all beings in the spirit realm heard the
narration.
Additionally, otu tulik wanted to participate in the ritual because, in doing so, they
would become very strong, resulting from a close relationship with the shaman. The
closeness enabled them to receive heat from the shaman, who, as a human being could
handle fire. Heat produced from fire would give exceptional strength to the spirits who would
then become very much stronger in comparison to ordinary spirits, who could not withstand
heat. And so, it followed that in any form of competition or fight, ordinary spirits lost to spirits
related to a shaman.
After the singing and musical performance, the otu tulik spirits proceeded to play
competitive games. The shaman continued his narration of these activities. An informant
used the analogy of a live-broadcast of a football game on radio to describe the shamans
narration. Although the listeners do not see the game being played, they could visualize it
from the broadcasted commentary. Similarly, the human community could not see the otu
tulik spirits, but their familiarity with the otu tulik spirits and the types of games they played
allowed them to imagine in their minds the spirits playing. Since the narration was also heard
throughout the spirit realm, otu tulik involved in the games became very famous.

During the mourning period following a death, since singing nyangen was a joyous activity, it was
forbidden. The community abandoned a kayuk busui at the death site and the women made a new one
after mourning.

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Table 9: Games Played by Otu Tulik during Nyangen in the Likun


Avun
Game

Method of Play

Nyalong

a game female spirits played against male spirits

Bongan

the throwing of the bongan fruit against another spirit


who tried to avoid being hit, those with weaker lorong
lose

Pokjun

wrestling-like game

Poktojou

racing to be the fastest otu tulik

Nyavit

dancing and singing after the end of mourning

Nalau, Healing Ritual


Contact between human beings and bad spirits, in particular the otu dogkek and
otu pahkavoh, resulted in humans becoming sick. The otu dogkek would hurt the offender
only when disturbed. Otherwise, they did not harm human beings. In contrast, otu pahkavoh,
or killing spirits, used any opportunity to kill a human being and then eat his heart. Otu
pahkavoh wished to kill human beings because being able to do so was a great
achievement that gave the killing spirit tremendous fame.
Illnesses caused by the bad spirits ranged from mild to serious, requiring different
types of healing methods. Also, shamans differed in the methods they used. While some
employed parts of their own bodies, such as strands of hair or drops of blood, others
depended on healing aids given to them by their pun busui patron-spirits. The healing aids,
called Batu Tulik, were in fact, containers for keeping healing potions. The patron-spirit
sometimes gave the batu tulik to the shaman through the otu tanok, or assistant-spirits. At
other times, the soul of the shaman went to likun avun to get the healing aids. After they were
consumed in a healing ritual, the patron-spirit himself would refill the batu tulik container with
potion.
The shaman conducted healing rituals at the sick persons shelter. Household
members of the patient prepared a special compartment to avoid contact with dogs, as the
tulik spirits assisting in healing disliked dogs. The most common method for healing involved
the use of kumulang leaves, a type of plant much feared by evil spirits. The shaman rubbed
the leaves on the affected parts of the patient and simultaneously chanted. This was done for
common illnesses such as the seliat, headaches (paroh utok) and vomiting (nutak) caused
by the otu dogkek, or by the stench of the otu pahkavoh. If kumulang leaves were ineffective,
the shaman then turned to a healing agent given by his patron-spirit which he put on the
injured part of the patients body. The aid, by itself, would adhere to the injured part and suck
out the cause of the injury. Once the healing agent had cured the injury, it would drop off.
Other shamans used a few strands of their hair or a few droplets of their blood to rub onto the
affected parts of the patients body. If these methods proved ineffective, the shamans soul
would go to likun avun to obtain other healing aids from his patron-spirit or to receive

191

instructions on the proper healing method. Alternately, the patron-spirit himself would give
another healing agent through the otu tanok.
Chest pain, serious stomachache and waist pain were indications of severe
wounds inflicted by the otu pahkavoh. These kinds of illnesses required a more intense
healing ritual. This was crucial, because the life of the shaman was in grave danger, as the
killing spirit would try to obstruct the shaman from healing the victim, even to the extent of
killing the shaman. The patron-spirit and his protector-spirit lorong, then, would come to
1
protect the shaman and ward off the aggressor. The spirits used a wrestling method
(perpitak) to keep the aggressor from coming near the shaman. Eventually, the otu
pahkavoh would give up, thus allowing the ritual to be completed within a short time.
Not all the otu pahkavoh killing spirits, however, gave up so easily. A hostile spirit
that was inherently powerful, or aided by other otu pahkavoh, would continue to challenge
the patron-spirit and his protector spirit. When the situation worsened, and the life of the
shaman became increasingly endangered, the shaman would conduct a nalau ritual
involving nyangen. The shaman summoned all his related otu tulik by hitting a knife across
an axe hung on a string. This emergency summons (bukak) resulted in the otu tulik reacting
instantly as fast as lightning to rescue the shaman. Once they had arrived, the otu tulik and
their lorong protector-spirits formed a defensive circle around the shaman. Within this circle,
the patron-spirit and his lorong made an inner circle to protect the shaman. As the otu tulik
fought with the enemy, a battle developed. To enhance the ability of his otu tulik to fight, the
shaman conducted a nyangen and narrated the battle. The fight would go on for up to five
days. Occasionally, the otu pahkavoh would temporarily win and the patient became worse.
Eventually, however, the otu tulik won by virtue of their superior strength over the hostile
spirits. During the battle, a rainstorm or a very strong wind would come to indicate a victory
over the otu pahkavoh.
The shamans spirits had won the battle when all the lorong protector-spirits of the
otu tulik succeeded in grabbing and holding the otu pahkavoh. The lorong then carried the
captured enemies for imprisonment in a place called luvang malam, where, the Punan
Vuhang believed, the sun sets. Here, they would throw the otu pahkavoh into a deep hole
and cover it with a big rock. The luvang malam was a prison from which no otu pahkavoh
ever escaped.
During the imprisoning of the defeated otu pahkavoh, the shamans spirits took
great precautions to prevent other hostile spirits from coming near the shaman. These
aggressive spirits might have taken advantage of the absence of the lorong to attack the
shaman. Therefore, the patron-spirit and his lorong and all the otu tulik remained behind to
protect the shaman. When the healing was completed, and all possible harm was nullified,
the otu tulik then returned to likun avun.
During all forms of nalau healing rituals, the community complied with following
several prohibitions. One prohibited children from coming near the sick person to avoid the illeffects of exposure to the lorong, the protector-spirit of the patron-spirit, whose power the
children could not endure. Also, the shaman and the patient had to eat their meals together,
1

Only the lorong, however, would fight against the hostile spirit as the patron-spirit had to stay back to
protect the life of the shaman, constantly the target of attack by the otu pahkavoh.

192

and avoid eating wild boar. They could only consume fish and small birds which the patients
household would provide. As mentioned above, the community kept their dogs away from
the special compartment as the otu tulik spirits involved in the healing disliked dogs.
The Roles of Shaman and Spirits
The above described the proceedings of nyangen and nalau in which several
actors were mentioned. This section will describe the various actors roles which the shaman
and his spirits adopted in the nyangen rituals and then united to repulse the malevolent
spirits. Table 10 compares their roles in the nyangen to their roles in the nalau rituals (see
page 196).
Nupi, Shaman
The above description of the role of the shaman (nupi) in the nyangen and nalau
rituals shows how the shaman acted as an intermediary between the human and spirit
realms. The function of the shaman served both the needs of the human community and the
interests of the spirits, in particular the otu tulik. He provided entertainment to the Punan
Vuhang in the nyangen rituals, which, in turn, gave the otu tulik an avenue to gain fame and
power in the spirit realm. Otherwise, these spirits would have remained unknown and
insignificant. Since the soul of the shaman frequently went to the heavens (lau or likun avun)
to watch the activities taking place there, the Punan Vuhang also called a shaman aran ang
sok lau, he who sees the heavens. In the nalau ritual, the shaman healed sick people
afflicted by malevolent spirits. Because he conducted healing rituals, the community also
called a shaman dok ang nalau, he who conducts healing rituals.
In the nyangen ritual, the shaman physically remained in the human realm while
his soul, buruan, ascended to the heavenly realm of likun avun. While his soul witnessed the
occurrences there, the shaman narrated these events down in the human realm to the
Punan Vuhang community. In the nalau ritual, the shaman healed people from spirit-inflicted
sicknesses. The shaman used part of his own body or charms given by his patron-spirit, the
pun busui, to heal. In serious cases, the patron-spirit and other otu tulik would come to
protect him from the attacking spirits while he was healing the sick.
Of all the shamans known to them, the Punan Vuhang acknowledge that Lawing
and Rigai were the most famous. Lawing was a shaman who brought the Punan to the
1
heavenly realm of likun avun. After frequently hearing stories about likun avun, his people
asked him to take them there. One day, he told the community that on a certain day, a ladder
would come down from the sky to enable them to go up to likun avun. He told the community
that they must observe several conditions before they could go. One condition specified that
only certain adult people could go first. Pregnant women, teenagers, old people and people
who owned dogs would have to follow after. At the appointed time, the ladder came down
and two young men went up first. Unfortunately, one old woman with a dog and a pregnant
1

At that time, the Punan Vuhang were living in their ancestral home at the headwaters of the Balui. The
Punan were then divided into two groups. One staying at the Vuhang area were the ancestors of the
present Punan Vuhang. The other group, who resided in the Aput area, were the ancestors of the Punan
Aput now residing at Long Suleh on the Kayan Ok River in East Kalimantan, Indonesia. Lawing was an
ancestor of the Punan Aput.

193

woman were too impatient to wait for their turn and so rushed to the ladder. As they
approached it, the otu tulik suddenly pulled it up into the heavens. Consequently, no one else
could go up. The two men already up there were trapped and turned into immortals.
According to shamans who later met them in likun avun, the two men could feel pain as their
Punan kinsmen experienced it in the human realm. Because of this story, Lawing is famous.
It was only because his people did not stick to the conditions that they could not go up to
likun avun. Other shamans subsequently attempted to copy Lawing but none ever
succeeded.
The other shaman, Rigai, is famous for his pact (servilak) with the otu laput lanum.
These spirits would kill human beings whenever meeting them. With the pact, however, the
hostile spirits no longer killed the Punan. This pact was important in the past during the
period of wild boar migration and related hunting activities. The otu laput lanum were the
archenemies of wild boar and during the seasonal wild boar migration, the otu laput lanum
followed the animals to kill them. On encountering a human being, the spirits would also kill
him. To avoid that, when a hunter went hunting during the wild boar season, he chanted, we
are Rigais grandchildren who had servilak (formed a pact) with your ancestors. With this,
the otu laput lanum no longer attacked them. Also, in the pact, Rigai agreed that Lalong Usai,
an otu laput lanum, would become his patron-spirit. Acquiring a special ability from the otu
laput lanum, Rigai became the first shaman who could see spirits during the day. This also
made Rigai famous. Other shamans who did not have otu laput lanum as their patron-spirits
did not possess this ability.
Learning to be a shamanA shaman was a person who possessed great powers.
Unfortunately, if a shaman abused his powers, he might order his patron-spirit to kill people
he did not like. A shaman, therefore, had to be a kind and patient person, able to cope with
people who offended him without resorting to killing. Consequently, an aspiring shaman had
to go through a series of tests to ensure that he possessed noble attributes.
An aspirant would first request an established shaman to take his soul to likun avun
to learn to become a shaman. If he did not dream that particular night, he presented a
precious bead to the shaman to make a fresh request. When he next slept, the shaman then
brought his soul (buruan) to likun avun. Along the way, the buruan encountered many
obstacles testing whether it had the attributes necessary to become a shaman. Among the
1
first obstacles was a big and aggressive cobra. The buruan had to be bold but not act
aggressively toward the snake. He would pat the head of the snake as it were a pet. Another
obstacle was the necessity to cross a very frail bridge over a steep valley. If the soul
attempted to slash the snake in the first instance, or failed to cross the bridge, it could not
continue on its journey to likun avun.
In his dream a person could not control the reaction of his or her buruan toward
these obstacles. The buruan had its own character, independent of the conscious mind.
Although an independent being, the buruan had great influence on its owners character, with
an aggressive buruan resulting in an aggressive person. Therefore, slashing the snake

The cobra was probably the shamans otu tanok assistant-spirit who appeared as a snake.

194

showed the character of the aspiring shaman as one who would not hesitate in killing an
opponent. Failing to cross the bridge showed him to have a weak character, unable to
confront obstacles in life. If he failed these tests, no established shaman would take his
1
buruan to likun avun again, as it would never pass any future tests.
If the soul of an aspiring shaman passed all its tests, it would reach likun avun to
become an apprentice shaman. The established shaman would bring it to meet an otu tulik
who would become the aspirants teacher. There, the buruan of the aspirant first learned the
otu tulik language. Usually, by the end of the first month, it could comprehend the language.
However, it would take him a period of six months to a year before he could fully converse in
the new language. Also, the otu tulik taught him nyangen songs and the style of their singing.
An otu tulik who taught songs was called a tulik sangen.
Throughout the training period, while his soul went to likun avun for study, the
apprentice would sing the nyangen songs to himself in the human realm when he was
awake. After a year, he would have acquired the basic skills needed to become a shaman.
The community would then request him to conduct a nyangen ritual. When he agreed, the
womenfolk prepared a kayuk busui to be played by an accomplished shaman to accompany
him in his first nyangen ritual.
During the performance of the first nyangen, the established shaman who had
brought the apprentice shaman to likun avun had to hold the kayuk busui. It was forbidden
for the apprentice shaman to hold the kayuk busui himself. If this prohibition was disobeyed,
his soul that had gone to likun avun could not return to the human realm. Immediately after
the nyangen, the community would request him to do an extraordinary feat. The apprentice
shaman would humbly say that he was not capable of doing so but would nonetheless try.
After a short while, a wild animal, for example, a monkey, a bird, or even a snake, would
come and linger at the settlement site. This wild animal was in fact an embodiment of the otu
tanok, the assistant-spirit of the apprentice shaman. The manifestation of the animal proved
that the apprentice had become a real and qualified shaman, or nupi mongo.
The first performance of the nyangen ritual with the kayuk busui was also an
important turning point in the likun avun region. The use of the kayuk busui in the human
realm enabled the tulik sangen (the new shamans otu tulik teacher) to hold a busui for the
first time. The holding of the busui elevated the status of the tulik sangen into that of a Pun
Busui or full-fledged patron-spirit. This turned him into an extremely powerful spirit who could
defeat any non pun busui spirit. With the completion of the first ritual, the shaman could
manage the kayuk busui himself without further help from another shaman.
Over time, the community would ask him to predict future events. When his
predictions came true, his status would be further elevated as one who could predict the
future. From then onwards, they also asked him to conduct nalau healing rituals. This turned
him into a complete shaman, a person who could do both the nyangen and the nalau healing
rituals.

Inspite of having passed these tests, however, some shamans, because of their greed and zeal would,
over time, become overwhelmed by their negative attributes. Instead of controling their temper, they
abused their power. Informants, however, refrained from mentioning their names for fear of offending their
spirits.

195

Table 10: Roles of Spirits during the Rituals of Nyangen and Nalau
Character

Nyangen

Nalau

Pun Busui,
Patron-Spirit

led musical performances


main busui player
main singer

provided healing aids to


shamans
informed shamans of healing
methods
protected shamans when
aggressive otu pahkavoh
attacked

Otu Tulik related


to a Shaman

participants in both musical


performances and competitive
games

formed a defensive circle to


protect shamans from otu
pahkavoh

Common Otu
Tulik

observers in the audience

potential raiders of busui without


a patron-spirit

Lorong,
Protector-Spirit

unknown

force against aggressive otu


pahkavoh
force to catch and imprison otu
pahkavoh
bodyguard of patron-spirit
second lorong protected stores
of busui from raiders

Otu Tanok,
Assistant-Spirit

an observer in the human


realm of nyangen
warned shaman of
approaching enemies
announced the beginning of
wild boar migration

delivered healing aids to


shamans from patron-spirits

Otu Dogkek

no role

caused minor illnesses


needed shamans to heal their
own sick

Otu Pahkavoh,
Killing-Spirit

no role

main cause of human illnesses


would battle with otu tulik to
prevent shamans from healing
their patients

Predicting the futureThe skill of predicting the future was manifested in the ability of the
shamans soul to see visitors on their way to the Punan settlement. The shaman actually
based his prediction on the vision of an occurrence that the Punan Vuhang would experience
some days later. For example, the shaman might see approaching traders still so far away
that it would take them several days to arrive. Judging the distance, he would estimate the
likely date of their arrival. The foresight might also be achieved when the shamans soul went
to likun avun for a nyangen ritual. From there, it could see the approaching traders.
Otherwise, his assistant-spirit, the otu tanok, would inform him of coming visitors. The otu
tanok could see traders during its patrolling around the surrounding area. Another
characteristic of the shaman was the ability of his soul to travel great distances. Frequently,
when family members had not returned to camp at the time expected, their relatives would

196

request the shaman to check on them. He would then conduct a nyangen ritual to enable his
soul to ascend to the sky and from there check on these missing family members.
A shaman, because of his spirits protection, usually lived a long life. When he died,
one soul remained behind at the death site to become a buruan dok kavoh. The other soul
went to the heavenly realm to join the otu tulik of likun avun. It then would become a member
of the likun avun, unlike ordinary Punan Vuhang who just went to the realm of the dead.
Pun Busui Patron-Spirit
The pun busui was the main spirit actor in both the nyangen and nalau rituals. He
led the nyangen musical performance by virtue of being the main singer and busui player. In
competitive games in which the patron-spirit participated, as the most powerful participant, he
emerged as the winner. In a healing nalau ritual, the pun busui sent the shaman healing aids.
These aids could be in the form of charms to draw out the source of the illness from the
patient. In more complicated cases, the patron-spirit informed the shaman of the appropriate
method of treating the patient. When a killing spirit stubbornly resisted a healing ritual, the
patron-spirit would come down from likun avun to protect the shaman.
A patron-spirit was initially an ordinary otu tulik before becoming the patron-spirit of
a shaman. When an established shaman brought the soul of an apprentice shaman to the
likun avun, an otu tulik would offer to become the apprentices teacher. This otu tulik was
usually related to the established shaman and had participated in the nyangen rituals the
shaman had previously conducted.
While he was teaching the apprentice, the Punan Vuhang called this spirit a tulik
sangen. The term tulik sangen referred to his main role in teaching singing. When the
apprentice became a successful shaman and a busui had been given for a nyangen ritual,
the tulik sangen would automatically have his status elevated to that of pun busui. As a
shaman conducted more nyangen sessions, more busui were added to the possession of
the pun busui patron-spirit. The addition of busui would attract the ordinary otu tulik who did
not belong to any established shaman to join this new group of otu tulik. Since the patronspirit used his house as the place of nyangen (tiring busui), he would become the leader of
this group of otu tulik. His otu tulik followers thus elevated his position to that of tokek lapo
(headman of a community). Thus, he was responsible for looking after the busui. During a
raid for busui by marauding otu tulik, the patron-spirit hid the busui inside his spirit body. It
was believed that if a patron-spirit failed to protect a busui, his shaman would die.
A patron-spirit, by virtue of its intimacy with shamans, was one of the strongest
spirits in the spirit realm. Besides holding the busui, the patron-spirits greatest source of
strength was the element of heat from fire. He absorbed this heat from the shaman who, as a
human being, could handle fire. The element of heat from fire made the patron-spirit
extremely strong. However, despite his association with heat, a patron-spirit still could not
possess weapons, as the tools cast from fire contained heat that he could not withstand. A
patron-spirit, therefore, did not own a weapon. He merely relied on his strength to wrestle
and ward off attacks by other spirits. Nevertheless, a patron-spirit named Jilen, the patronspirit of Panak (see Table 11 page 198) could withstand heat from fire and requested his
shaman Panak to give him a knife. Consequently, Jilen, became exceptionally powerful with
no spirit able to challenge him.
197

The patron-spirit, despite his inherent good nature, was, however, blindly loyal to
his shaman. He would fulfill any order given by his shaman, including killing a human being,
without considering the reason for the action. Janin is a term referring to a patron-spirit used
by his shaman for killing. Due to the patron spirits blind loyalty, any aspiring shaman had to
1
be gentle and mild in nature so that he would not abuse his power.
Although a patron-spirit was directly under the control of the shaman, it could also
be temperamental. Pagan Oven, the patron-spirit of Nyinyang, once became so angry that
he wanted to kill the entire Punan Vuhang community when a mourning period forbade
Nyinyang, then a new shaman, from performing a nyangen ritual. As the patron-spirit was
beginning to play a busui, it was suddenly taken away from him. Feeling extremely deprived,
he could not control his disappointment and anger, and caused a hailstorm intended to kill
the Punan Vuhang. Fortunately, Jidiri Langit and Terajung Avun, patron-spirits of two
established shamans, Liwan and Nahen, contained the power of Pagan Oven, the new
patron-spirit, and thus reduced the effects of the hailstorm.

Table 11: Some Spirits, related to Shamans, Known to the Community


Shaman

Pun Busui PatronSpirit

Companion-Spirit

Otu Tanok
Assistant-Spirit

Nyinyang

Pagan Oven

Jidigin

Liwan

Jidiri Langit

Jidilo

Lidivok

Nahen

Terajung Avun

Ping Belavan

Lawing

Lake Anyie

Rigai

Lalong Usui

Panak

Jilen

Ukih

Ugang Bilong

Ngo

Inan Musang

A patron-spirit was usually accompanied by an otu tulik. Both the patron-spirit and
its companion had wives, but neither had sexual intercourse for as long as their shaman was
still alive. In the nyangen ritual, these four spirits were the first to hold and play the busui.
During a nalau ritual involving nyangen, they formed the inner defensive circle around the
shaman. A patron-spirit also possessed two lorong protector-spirits who had sworn to protect
him. The two lorong had different functions with the first serving as bodyguard of the patronspirit and the other as the caretaker of the tilong, the store of busui. Another type of spirit, the
1

During the prehistorical era, intra-tribal spirit warfare occurred between shamans from different Punan
groups. These shamans ordered their patron-spirits to attack their enemies (see page 49).

198

otu tanok, an assistant-spirit to the shaman, also occasionally acted as an intermediary


between the patron-spirit and the shaman. Some of these spirits were familiar to the Punan
Vuhang and Table 11 above shows examples of spirits with known names.
Among all the patron-spirits known to the Punan Vuhang, most came from likun
avun which was in the heavenly realm. Some patron-spirits came from mountain otu tulik.
The main spirits other than the otu tulik that became patron-spirits were the otu laput lanum,
spirits that inhabited the river mouth regions. The other spirits that become patron-spirits, but
more rarely, were the otu kunyuling from the realm beneath the earth.
Otu Tulik
The otu tulik spirits had the closest relationship with the Punan Vuhang and were
the main spirits in the nyangen ritual, as active participants or audience members.
Participating otu tulik were those spirits whom the shaman and the patron-spirits had invited
to play the busui in the musical performances of nyangen. During a nalau ritual requiring
nyangen, the shaman summoned these otu tulik for protection against the malevolent otu
pahkavoh.
Most otu tulik were not related to any shaman but became part of the audience
during nyangen. These otu tulik desired to join nyangen sessions because the shaman in his
incantation praised the participating otu tulik and they wished for this mentioning of their
names and praise. The enlistment of new otu tulik into a nyangen group was restricted due
to the limited availability of busui which enabled their participation. A new busui was only
added to the patron-spirits possession upon the performance of a new nyangen session.
Due to the large population of otu tulik, no amount of nyangen sessions could ever meet all
their needs. Consequently, many otu tulik craving to join a nyangen group could not do so
and some even resorted to stealing a busui when the opportunity arose.
The raiding of busui could occur during a nalau ritual when the patron-spirit and his
bodyguard had to go down to the human realm to protect the shaman. The store of busui
(tilong), then was guarded only by a single lorong, who was the second lorong sworn to
guard the tilong of the patron-spirit. As only one spirit was guarding the tilong, the otu tulik
craving busui found it tempting to raid the tilong. The battle for busui caused a rainstorm.
However, the more powerful lorong repelled the marauding spirits and no otu tulik ever
succeeded in making off with a busui. Nonetheless, they did not give up and continued to
attempt raiding a tilong. Frequently, the Punan Vuhang attributed the occurrence of
rainstorms to the battles between the lorong and otu tulik raiders.
Lorong Protector-Spirit of the Patron-Spirit
As the lorong were invisible to all other beings, thus giving them great advantage
over their opponents, each otu tulik would make a pact (servilak) with a lorong for protection.
When an otu tulik eventually became a pun busui patron-spirit, the lorong automatically
became the patron-spirits protector. As the role of the otu tulik changed from being an
ordinary otu tulik to becoming a pun busui, the lorongs role similarly changed, and it was
given much greater responsibility, including protecting the life of the shaman. Since a patronspirit assumed a greater responsibility for its busui, it would make a pact with another lorong
to protect the stores of busui from the marauding otu tulik.
199

Otu Tanok Assistant Spirit to the Shaman


The otu tanok spirit helped the shaman in healing rituals by delivering healing aids
from the patron-spirit. Other than that, informants did not mention any active participation of
the otu tanok in the healing ritual. In the nyangen ritual, it attended the ritual held in the
human realm as a passive listener to the singing and narration. Nonetheless, the otu tanok
would be on its guard for approaching enemies. If the assistant spirit saw enemies within
striking distance during the night, it would warn the shaman to stop the nyangen ritual so that
the community could take immediate precautions. Once it had given a warning, however, the
1
otu tanok would not warn a second time.
The appearance of an otu tanok was an important indicator that an apprentice
shaman had become a real shaman or nupi mongo. During the performance of a shamans
first nyangen ritual, the appearance of a wild animal that refused to go away was believed to
be an embodiment of the otu tanok. An otu tanok was a constant companion of the shaman
and resided in a unique stone kept by the shaman. It went wherever the shaman went. It
would stroll about at night and could see approaching parties. Upon a sighting, the otu tanok
would inform the shaman. If it were an enemy party on a head-hunting raid, the community
immediately took the necessary defensive precautions. If they were traders, the community
waited with excitement for them to arrive on the expected day.
Otu Dogkek
The otu dogkek was a dwarf spirit that caused harm to a human being when
disturbed. However, it did not deliberately cause hurt and only acted in response to being
hurt or disturbed by a human. Occurrences that hurt the otu dogkek usually consisted of
three types: disturbing their shelter; destroying their fishing tools; and, the worst offense,
cursing them (portunuk).
Destroying their habitat, and especially their shelter, occurred during the cutting of a
tree. Therefore, when the Punan Vuhang felled a sago palm, they sang a chant requesting
the otu dogkek to leave the area so that the falling tree would not hurt them. Occasionally,
however, some of them did not leave. Consequently, when a tree fell on their home, despite
a huge rock protecting them, the otu dogkek would feel shaken and then retaliate by hurting
the offenders.
A rarer form of disturbance could occur when the otu dogkek went fishing. This
happened at sunrise and sunset, the times when the otu dogkek collected food. The spirits
fished with lines and hooks, by either holding the line and waiting for a fish bite or tying the
lines to poles stuck in the river bank. Sometimes Punan Vuhang children ran and played by
the river bank. If the children disrupted these poles, it irritated the otu dogkek which then hurt
the children.

Informants attributed the killing incident in the Kahei where Iban killed fourteen Punan Vuhang as due to
ignoring the otu tanoks warning (see page 61). During a nyangen session, the otu tanok warned Panak,
a woman shaman, of approaching enemies and advised her to stop the ritual. Unfortunately, she ignored
this and continued performing. After being disregarded, the otu tanok did not again warn this shaman.

200

The most serious actions that harmed the otu dogkek were the words of curses
toward them. When a person became angry and said expletives, he might lose his control
and curse the otu dogkek. Should this happen, the curse would affect the children of the
spirits and the children would become very sick. Even worse, certain words, for example,
jarum, resulted in the death of their children or wives. When this occurred, the otu dogkek
naturally became angry and retaliated against the offender.
The Punan Vuhang held the nalau healing ritual to cure these sicknesses caused
by the otu dogkek. Because the revenge of the otu dogkek was seldom serious in nature,
healing aids provided by the patron-spirit sufficed. The otu dogkek did not hinder the healing,
unlike the otu pahkavoh, because they had deep respect for shamans. Whenever a
shamans soul met the otu dogkek, they talked in the otu tulik language. When an otu dogkek
became sick, they asked a shaman to heal the ill spirit as they had no shamans of their own.
Otu Pahkavoh, Killing-Spirits
Otu pahkavoh were extremely powerful huge white hairy beings. They wished to
kill humans both to elevate their status and to satisfy their craving for human hearts. When
they attacked humans, a nalau healing ritual involving nyangen was needed to prevent the
otu pahkavoh from thwarting the patients healing, and in more serious cases, attempting to
kill the shaman.
Death Related Belief System
The Punan Vuhang had beliefs relating to deathbefore, during and after a
persons deathwhich greatly affected the community. Besides initiating a period of
mourning which prohibited various social activities, death also affected them psychologically
due to their fear of the soul of the dead. The Punan Vuhang believed that a person had two
souls. The first soul remained with the corpse and was a malevolent spirit harmful to the
living and therefore it was necessary to avoid it. For that reason the community had to
abandon a death site. The second soul was a good spirit that went up to the place of the
dead in the heavens, which the Punan Vuhang called nuan sok lau. Initially, it followed the
living, and only during the second emergence of the moon after death would it leave for the
heavens.
The following section on death is divided into two parts. The first describes former
activities related to death, abandoning a death site, mourning and passing through a burial
ground. This abandoning of death sites explains why the Punan Vuhang could not become
sedentary while the community professed their old belief system. The second section
describes phenomena believed to be related to the spirits of the dead and how they
influenced the economy of the community.
Before Death
When a shaman had given up hope of healing an individual, the community
convened to prepare for the impending death. The shaman informed the community of the
failure to heal the patient and then they held discussions to select a new campsite for after

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the death. 1 The choices of a new site were limited as only locations upstream from the
existing settlement or hinterlands away from the river bank could be considered. They
believed that the stench or odor of the corpse flowed downstream and also toward the river,
and they had to avoid areas affected by the odor. This could help to explain the common
custom practiced among some Punan groups in the abandonment of the entire sector of the
territory where death occurred (Sellato 1994:159). Other conditions for a new settlement site,
were, as usual, determined by the economic factors of resource sufficiency.
Abandoning a Death Site
On the day following the death, the entire community had to flee the existing
settlement site now called the nuan dok kavoh, the place of the dead, to establish a new
site. The new campsite was a temporary camp (lepo via) in which the community resided for
only one day, or at the most two days. To occupy the lepo via for longer than that would
cause another death to occur. The new death would be caused by the sacrilege of adet
servireh.
The sacrilege of adet servireh occurred when a community separated itself into two
or more groups, with the groups leaving camp on the same day. A negative result of being
kicked apart, terkakjeh, was death. The Punan Vuhang associated the concept of
separation with adet servireh because the dead persons two souls were separated from
each other. The first soul remained at the death site, while the second soul followed the
community before going to heaven. The fleeing community abandoned the first soul. In
effect, the separation of parts of the community and the second soul from the first that
remained at the death site caused adet servireh to govern the rule of abandoning a camp
where a death had occurred. The term lepo via was used to indicate the temporary camp set
up after death, and differentiate it from a normal temporary camp.
There was a strict rule for fleeing from the death site to the lepo via that the
household of the dead had to observe. The concerned household members should have
been the last to arrive at the new site. They could have been the first to leave the abandoned
site, but halfway through the journey they had to stop to let the rest of the community pass. If
the journey involved a boat, the household members traveled in the last boat so that the
dead persons second soul was guided into following its own household. This prevented the
soul from becoming confused and following other households, causing negative effects on
the rest of the community.
In the new settlement site, the shelter of the dead persons household should have
been the first one on the route, making it the nearest shelter to the abandoned site. This
settlement layout enabled the soul to immediately meet its own household upon arriving at
the new camp, thus preventing it from mixing with other community members. If deaths had
occurred in two households, the same rule applied and both shelters were set up at the
same location, close to the path, next to each other.

Also, the people believed that on the eve of death the sick person saw the souls of dead family
members closely related to him converging at his death bed. In every case, a person who would soon die
informed the living of these souls visits. It was believed that these souls came to accompany the soul of
the dying person to the realm of the dead.

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Mourning
Mourning began the second day after the death. During the mourning period, it
was forbidden to adorn the body with ornaments, pluck eyebrows and eyelashes, and
conduct activities associated with happy feelings. Even more strictly prohibited were singing
and dancing, playing musical instruments and performing nyangen rituals, except the ritual
accompanying the healing nalau rituals. If one wished to wear a pair of earrings, the rings
should have been stone-based, otherwise the exposed elongated earlobes had to be
covered with cloth. Mourning rules also forbade the weaving of fine rattan products and the
carving of ornaments because the Punan Vuhang associated these refined activities with
happy feelings.
Mourning consisted of two phases. The first was mourning by the whole
community which lasted for a month. Following that, the dead persons household continued
mourning for another month. Upon the first sighting of the new moon, the soul was thought to
be ready to go up to the heavens to the place of the dead called nuan sok lau. The readiness
of the soul to leave the living ended the community mourning period. However, as it only
actually left for heaven at the next sighting of the moon, the affected household had to mourn
until then.
During the period of mourning, the affected household had to watch for the
emerging new moon. When it was thought that the moon was approaching, household
members looked in the direction of the emerging new moon. They observed this to enable
the dead soul to go quickly to the nuan sok lau. The household members watched for the
new moon diligently every night until they saw it, for if the members concerned did not do so,
it indicated that they did not care whether or not the deads soul went to the better place in
heaven.
For as long as they did not see the moon, the soul (buruan) was thought not ready
to go to the heavens. After one or two months of non-sighting, the household members had
to make more of an effort to help the soul go to heaven. They would climb up a tall tree, high
above the tree canopy, to obtain a better view for sighting the moon. If they still did not see it,
they regarded the soul as a bad spirit that did not want the community to have a life filled with
happiness. On the other hand, if they soon sighted the moon, the soul was considered to be
a good one that desired the community to end mourning quickly. They ended community
mourning by performing a ritual of waving laun san leaves and then chanting:
soyah nyi mapah ciu obat kavoh nyi;

these leaves sweep away the evil that


caused the death;

ken in kak sok en nya kavoh nyi;

because of it, his death occurred;

kuen langanenya, langane nuam kai


morip jian;

it is now the month, the month for us to live


a good life;

morip ngavaii, morip sanik oh ren;

to live a healthy and a happy life;

soyah nyi mapah ken in kak sok nya obat


kavoh nyi.

these leaves sweep away the evil spirit that


caused the death.

Following the end of the community mourning period, community members


immediately removed all signs of mourning and adorned themselves with new clothes. They
uncovered their earlobes and then put on isang ear adornments. All the members also wore
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tabaang necklaces, while the womenfolk wore pasang skirts. Since the sighting of the moon
occurred during the night, it was then too dark to pluck eyelashes and eye brows. However,
1
by first daylight the next morning, they removed the much-disliked facial hair. Then, they
adorned themselves with ornaments and wore beautiful clothes. On the following nights, if
they felt like it, they might sing and dance, but usually would not, out of respect for the
affected household who still had to mourn for a month. Then, members of the affected
household threw a piece of burning wood from the fireplace in the direction of the moon while
chanting:
2

nya pui sirom;

Nah, this is your fire;

nya pui sirom belajak nu nuam ang nyot


kavoh kuom;

Nah, your fire as a weapon to kill your


enemy that killed you;

koh lak in tovih koh;

take it with you;

avut koh kavoh, avut tei jadi otu;

in case you are killed by your enemy and


become a ghost;

tentu patut oh gob lak lawen nya oh nya


kavoh kuom;

surely you can fight your adversary by


yourself;

komoh potovih.

(you and the fire) go together.

Taking this offering of fire and the chant, the soul then left the living for its new
place in heaven. This Punan Vuhang belief of the soul living in the nuan sok lau is in
contradiction with Sellato who states that the Punan, apparently having no belief in the
existence of a final home for the souls of the dead, see every death as a serious spiritual
danger, as the spirit of the deceased remains to wander the earth (1994:161).
While the above description refers to a general situation of a normal death, a
violent death required a much stricter observation. For example, they regarded the
occurrence of a man falling from a tree as an extremely dangerous situation to all men in the
community. They believed the evil force that caused the death would attempt to take more
lives. To neutralize the effect, during each evening, every man performed a ritual and
chanted against the malevolent force. The death of a young child, on the other hand,
required all young children to tie a string slightly above the ankle on their right foot. The string,
called tali tin was to prevent the spirit of the dead child from causing the death of other
children. Upon the first emergence of the moon, the oldest man in the community used an
axe to cut off the string on each child, thus neutralizing the effect of the spirit.
Passing a Death Site
The death site was considered an extremely harmful place because the bad soul
of the dead that remained would attack anyone who intruded into its place. Such a belief is
also found among the Batek who believe that the spirit of the dead would attack anyone who

This corresponds with Beccaris comment that tribal people disliked any hair which grew on their bodies,
including eyebrows and eyelashes (1904:278).
2

Armed with fire, the soul of the dead could repel any spirits that attempted to harm it. No spirit could
come near to fire, as it would be killed.

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comes near to the gravesite (Endicott 1979:114). When the Punan Vuhang community had
to pass through an area that contained a death site, they would take precautions to avoid the
malevolent soul. Before commencing the journey, they held a meeting to decide the
appropriate route. They chose the best route which was as far away as possible from the
death site. The household of the dead, however, had to take a detour route that bypassed
the burial ground from a distance far enough not to attract the soul. When the rest of the
community approached the death site, they held a ritual to avoid the negative effect of the
dead soul. Every individual slipped a few pieces of laun long leaves and a type of fern into
the waistbands of their loincloths and chanted:
mengalong tain dok kavoh

the long hacks the bowels of the dead

mengalong tain otu

the long hacks the bowels of the spirit

paku putu tain dok kavoh ang jiet

the fern severs the bowels of the bad soul

paku putu tain otu ang jiet

the fern severs the bowels of the bad spirit

This chant together with the use of the two types of plants caused the leaves to cut
the bowels of the spirit if it attempted to confront the community. As the community passed
by the death site, young pre-adolescent children had to look away from the site. After passing
some distance away, the leaves were left on the path while chanting:
paku ngotoh tain otu

the fern binds the bowels of the spirit

paku ngotoh tain dok kavoh

the fern binds the bowels of the dead spirit

long malin tain otu

the long hides the bowels of the spirit

long malin tain dok kavoh

the long hides the bowels of the dead spirit

The long leaves and the fern, empowered by the chant, became an obstacle to the
spirit of the dead. If it tried to pass the obstacle, the long leaves and the fern would burn its
bowels. The ritual thus prevented the dead persons malevolent spirit from pursuing the
living. At an appointed spot, a distance away from the death site, the household of the dead
person then joined the rest of the community. As they used a distant route that bypassed the
death site, the spirit would not be aware of them.
If an intrusion occurred at the death site, the offender had to pay a fine to the
household of the dead to neutralize the sacrilege. They had to observe this, even if it had
been an unintentional trespass such as, for example, following dogs that were chasing
game. As one would usually relate his traveling and the routes used in the journey, a person
who had not been aware of the death site would eventually come to know of his trespass.
Any person who committed such a desecration would apologize to the affected household
and offer to pay a fine in the form of a knife or spear. The acceptance of the apology would
neutralize any intended retaliatory actions of the dead spirit. However, it was entirely up to the
household whether or not to accept the fine as it was not mandatory for them to do so.
Beliefs Related to the Spirits of the Dead
The Punan Vuhang believed that certain occurrences, even long after the end of
mourning, were related to the influence of the souls of the dead. Two aspects related to
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death seriously affected the economic system. The first was ciu otu and the second was
longotu. Ciu otu, loosely translated as thrown away by the spirit, described a drastic
reduction of productive yield from any economic activity carried out again for the first time
after the death. Longotu (no equivalent translation) was a prolonged period of rainfall,
resulting from the first conduct of any activity that had once been carried out with the dead
person during his lifetime.
These two beliefs continue in the community up to this day. Since the communitys
conversion to Christianity, it is now believed that only those members who pray against being
affected by them will be free of them.
Ciu Otu

The end of mourning marks the beginning of ciu otu which is a phenomenon
affecting the yield of any activity conducted for the first time since the end of mourning.
According to shamans who have witnessed the situation, the soul of the dead is pleased with
the activities of the living and also participates in them. However, instead of helping the living
members, the spirit throws away the production yield. The term of ciu otu, meaning thrown
away by the spirit, is used to explain the exceptionally low yield.
This low yield occurs with ciu otu and appears in all forms of economic activities
and the Punan Vuhang cannot avoid it. It mainly occurs in two situations, with both
phenomena related to the first time an activity is initiated after a death. The first phenomenon
is related to the initiation of an economic activity for the first time after mourning. The second
phenomenon involves a more complicated process, in that it will occur when members who
had formerly participated together in an activity come together again to take part in the same
kind of activity after a death. Ciu otu will happen, regardless of the length of the period after
the death, and may even happen many decades later.
In the first case of ciu otu, sago production, despite giving all indications of a very
good yield, will produce only a little starch, or, when the Punan Vuhang are hunting with
dogs, game seemingly surrounded by the dogs suddenly disappears. A short time before the
hunter approaches the cornered game, the dogs suddenly stop barking as they have lost
track of the game, which the Punan Vuhang believe the soul has taken and thrown away. If
the dogs have not tracked down any game, ciu otu does not occur. In blowpipe hunting, a
hunter obtains no game and even if a bird or animal has been shot with the blowpipe, it will
survive and elude the hunter. Even if it falls to the ground from a tall tree, a hunter will not be
able to find the carcass. In fishing, the Punan Vuhang will catch only a few small fish after
many attempts, even though the fish have been abundant at other times.
The second instance of ciu otu occurs when members who, before the persons
death, performed an activity together. For example, hunter A had gone hunting with a group
of four other hunters, B, C, D and E before the death of X. After the death of X, if hunter A
goes hunting with any of these four men, ciu otu can take place. Similarly, if any of these
members go hunting together, regardless of the combination, ciu otu will occur, as long as
some of these members are participating together again for the first time since the death.
1

During fieldwork, some church leaders did not experience the effects of ciu otu and longotu, and I
believe that in the future, this belief might be ignored.

206

Even the addition of new members not involved in the earlier groupings will not nullify the
effect.
During my fieldwork in 1994, a trader participated with some Punan Vuhang
women in processing sago. The sago starch yield was very little although the sago trunk was
in excellent condition. The Punan Vuhang attributed the low yield to ciu otu because this man
had not processed sago with the community for a very long time and there had been many
deaths in the intervening years. The last time that he had participated with them was before
the late 1960s when the Punan Vuhang were still nomadic. Despite the passing of three
decades, ciu otu still occurred.
The return to an area by a person who had performed an activity with a person
who has since died will also result in ciu otu. Frequently, the participation of an elderly man in
a collecting expedition to a distant area also has this effect. When this happens, the old man
will explain to the younger men that in the past, a person now dead, had participated in the
same kind of activity with him at that place.
Although ciu otu occurs after all forms of economic activities, the community can
reduce its negative effect in sago processing. By draining the solution from the starch after
only several rounds of filtering, the soul of the dead is tricked into thinking that the whole
process has been completed. So the soul will throw the processed starch away. Following
that, they believe the soul will leave the place and they can then resume sago processing
without further disturbance. Consequently, ciu otu no longer happens in the later filtering
process. They usually do this to trick the soul whenever they feel ciu otu will affect their work.
Longotu
Longotu, which has no literal translation, refers to the occurrence of a continuous
but light rainfall. It can last for several hours or even a whole day. Rainy weather prevents
searching for food. On such rainy days, the community feels bored and if food is scarce,
hungry and miserable. The factors that lead to longotu are similar to those leading to ciu otu.
Like ciu otu, longotu is a result of the first time an activity is initiated after a death, but only by
a person who had done it with the person before he died.
A few hours following the activity, or more usually the next day, longotu will occur. If
no rain falls during the second day, a whole day of continuous rain will come during the third
day. The Punan Vuhang call this whole day of raining longotu poloh. Although longotu is
similar to ciu otu, it also has significant differences. Unlike ciu otu, which results only from
economic activities, longotu occurs to a much greater extent. Not only economic activities
cause it, all forms of social activities may bring it about. These include the first group singing
and dancing, and a common meal among kinsmen who are closely related to the dead. It
also applies to the surviving spouses participation with unmarried members in a social
gathering. Another difference from ciu otu is that longotu will happen right after all types of
activities have taken place. Ciu otu will only affect hunting after any shooting or chasing of
game by dogs. Ciu otu will not occur in an uneventful hunt despite conducting it several
times, whereas longotu will happen just after a first hunt regardless of the result.
The Punan Vuhang believe that longotu occurs because the souls in heaven (nuan
sok lau) are causing the rainfall. The soul that has just arrived in heaven is nostalgic for the
activity conducted for the first time by a closely related individual. Other souls in heaven feel
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happy and they play in the river. Their splashing of water results in water droplets falling from
the sky. They play for a long time, thus causing the continuous daylong light rain.
Seliat Buruan Dok Kavoh, Effect of the Dead
Seliat buruan dok kavoh is the term describing an effect of the dead which occurs
when, during a joyous social gathering, a child suddenly vomits. This usually happens during
a major event of fruit or honey collecting, or the lolong festival. The community believes that
during these events, the souls of the dead come down from the heaven to participate with
the living. Their presence will, however, be negative for one or two children who are not
strong enough to ward off the effect of the spirits. Consequently, the spirit contact will cause a
child to vomit. A shaman can identify this phenomenon by rubbing the affected childs hair
and head to feel whether they are cold. If they are cold, then the vomiting was an effect of the
dead, or seliat buruan dok kavoh. The shaman will rub kayu kumulang leaves on the childs
head which will cause the child to sweat and then sleep. When he wakes up later, he will be
recovered.
Adet Behok Augury Beliefs
Before they became Christians, the Punan Vuhang held beliefs pertaining to
auguries that directly regulated their lives. They believed the augural spirits appeared in the
forms of various birds and animals. The augural spirits, behok, appeared to show their favor
or disfavor concerning particular activities being undertaken or planned. If the people did not
heed unfavorable omens, disasters would befall them. This belief corresponds to King,
Borneo peoples hold to the importance of signs or augurs from the gods, usually
communicated by birds, but also by certain animals (1993:235; see also Jensen 1974:127134; Metcalf 1976: 96-123; Rousseau 1998:67-72; Sather 1985: 1-36, 2006:763-798). There
were two types of auguries; the first type regulated daily affairs and the second regulated
camp movement and foretold the outcome of planned warfare.
Auguries Regulating Daily Affairs
A favorable augury was indicated by a bird flying from right to left across the
direction a person was heading. The telajan augury bird, however, flew from left to right to
indicate its favor. Augury signs were also indicated through the calls of the birds. If an
individual heard the sound from the right side, it was favorable. For unfavorable auguries, the
direction of encounter was from left to the right crossing the path of the person, but for the
telajan, from right to left. When a person was on his way to begin an activity, if he
encountered a favorable augury, he would continue as the augury spirit had shown its
approval and he would be successful in whatever he intended to do. However, if he met an
unfavorable one, he had to stop and immediately return to the camp. Depending on the type
of augury, he had to remain in camp for a period from one day and one night to three days
and three nights. Table 12 below shows the types of auguries and the duration that a person
coming across them had to remain in camp. Of all the auguries, only the buwau, likiyan and
savut required a person to stay put for three days and three nights.

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Table 12: Auguries for Daily Activities1


Scientific Name

English
Name

Punan
Vuhang
Name

Leader of
the Spirits

Duration of
abstaining from
work

buwau

Kalong

3 days & 3 nights

bat

likiyan

Atu Aki

3 days & 3 nights

Haliastur indus intermedius

brahminy kite

savut

Jemaling

1 day & night

Sasia abnormis abnormis

rufous piculet

bukang

Manok
Nadang

1 day & night

Platylophus galericulatus
coronatus

crested jay

telajan

Ivat Imang

1 day & night

Harpactes sp. ();


Pericrocotus sp. ();
Artamus leucorhynchus
leucorhynchus ()

trogon

legehek
(male)

Ngiligei

1 day & night

Harpactes sp. ();


Pericrocotus sp. ();
Artamus leucorhynchus
leucorhynchus ();

trogon

mungulung
(female)

Bakakah

1 day & night

Lacedo pulchella melanops

banded
kingfisher

assee

Okai

1 day & night

Blythipicus rubiginosus
parvus

maroon
woodpecker

pee-it

Kutuk

1 day & night

Hearing the call of most augury birds at daybreak did not prohibit the community
from going out to search for food. This was because the people could not determine the
direction from which the call had originated - from the left or the right. However, there were
three auguries whose calls in the morning prohibited the entire community from leaving
camp. These daybreak auguries, or behok gang lau, were called assee, telajan and likiyan,
and they prohibited all community members from going out regardless of the food needs of
their households. However, a hunter could perform a ritual to avoid the effect of the behok
gang lau if his household was in dire need of food within the next few days. He waved a laun
ikpo or a fern, paku, over a fire and recited a chant. The chanting caused the fern to kill the
augury spirit that had attempted to harm him:
Nutong tain ang di behoknya,
nutong luang nyi mek kai kavoh,
nutong hin beh kai niut,
beh kai ovan,
purip kan angkun kai,
kan bavui, kan payau, kan laut,
jian orip kuen kai

The bowel of the augury will be burnt,


its stomach will be burnt if we die,
its body will be burnt if we are hit,
or if we are wounded,
give us life by giving us our food,
give to us wild boar, deer and animals,
so that we can live a good life!

See Lake Baling (2002: 63-66) and Rousseau (1998:67-72) for a Kayan version of the auguries. The
Brahminy Kite, Rufous Piculet, Crested Jay, Banded Kingfisher and Maroon Woodpecker are found in the
Kayan augury.

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After that, the hunter could go his way without any harm coming to him. The ritual
served to warn the spirits that the fern would destroy them if any harm befell the hunter. A
person could only perform this ritual if his household was in urgent need of food and if he
was brave enough to challenge the spirits. A timid person would not do it unless it was an
absolute necessity.
If hunters heard unfavorable auguries for as many as four consecutive nights, it
meant they had to leave their campsite. Before leaving, each household had to conduct a
tanok polo ritual to call on the auguries to allow them to leave. The oldest man in each
household took a strand of hair or a thread from his pants or loincloth for spinning around a
stick. He placed the stick spun with thread beside a fire and chanted:
Ni patahin kai luek magom nu nyi,
kai jo tahan kai mojob,
kai joh tahan kai joh kejian angkun,
nyi hin kai luek magom ang ni,
makjom pui, luek kai onya
teh oh kai keyap

What leisure is this that we have to face,


we could not tolerate being hungry,
we could not endure not having any food,
we have been resting here holding this [stick],
when the fire goes out, we will leave behind the stick,
then we will have to go on our way

This ritual requested that the augury spirits understand their predicament and allow
them to leave the camp for a new place.
During the usual move from a place with depleted resources to a new site, if they
had been confined to an area for more than three nights due to bad behok, they would
perform a ritual to alleviate its effects. Like the ritual above, an old man would spin a strand of
hair or thread from his pants or loincloth around a stick. Placing the stick spun with thread on
the three stone tripod fire stand (tatuk pui), he would chant:
nyi hin kai luek ni oh nyi,
kai polo oh nyi oh ren,
kakjiknya kai tei,
kai terloa lain abok, lain behok,
kai polo nyi,
oh nyi luek, alumnya, pelekoh kai,
kai muvut,
ivok kayu, irap ivei, jah in luek.

Here we have been resting,


we really would feel dull if we have to remain here,
after this we have to go,
There are too many bad behok calls,
we are really bored,
Stay back while we have to depart,
we have to leave,
hair and thread on the stick, stay back!

Auguries Regulating Movement of Camp and Warfare


As nomads, the people were constantly on the move to new areas, but when they
encountered lajaring and lasaring auguries, the community had to return to the camp and
stay put for half a month. The lajaring was a snake with a red head and a red tail, and the
lasaring was a type of millipede. Upon having seen the lajaring snake augury, the Punan
Vuhang could not do anything but observe the taboo. However, upon having seen the
lasaring millipede, if they wanted to go on with the journey, they could simply slash it in two,
then put one end of the body on the left side of the path and the other on the right, and
continue the journey. Otherwise they had to stay put at the camp for half a month. While

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staying back at the camp, community members were permitted to collect food as usual as
the two auguries only applied to whole camp movements.
Besides preventing people from moving camp, these two behok also regulated the
journey of a war party. If the war party met either of these two behok, they had to return or
else they would be defeated and killed during an encounter with their enemies.
Two other auguries, the barking deer (telau) and the munim civet pertained solely
to warfare. The prohibitions of these behok were similar to those of the two behok mentioned
above. However, unlike the snake and the millipede auguries that could not be eaten, the
telau and munim were food sources that the people frequently hunted, although warriors
who had made war and killed enemies found the meat of these two animals very bitter. After
consumption they became speechless for awhile. Being protected by the spirits of these
animals during warfare, they should not have eaten the flesh.
In addition to these four auguries, two more auguries that regulated daily affairs
were also observed by the Punan Vuhang in the past during battles. At the start of a war
partys journey, the sight or sound of the mungulung augury bird was favorable and signaled
support from the augury spirits. The war party then stopped for an elder warrior to perform a
ritual to acknowledge the blessing of the augury and to seek its further help. The man took a
piece of a dead legeheh branch and shaved the wood into small long strips to kindle a fire,
then chanted for help from the augury:
Nah ni sok kai benyi,
kai ni gam koh nyi,
nah jian longan kai,
mek koh nyi nyok pikjak kiap kai,
nek koh nyi nyioh, pikyun kai.
nyium polokoh kai deh nyuit usuk, nyuit ovi
linau,
sok hai so hai deh.
Nyuim polokoh kai ovan mek linau nyi nek
kai deh,
avut kai kavoh koh, avut kai nyuit usuk koh,
nyuit ovi, nyuit boloang koh,
avut kai nyuit takgeh, nyuit pakgoh koh.
Nyuim polokoh kai kena,
pikyun busuk kai lamok-lamok sok kai mek
linau,
gon koh mek kai lumak ngavoh linau,
gon koh mek doh ngajoh tikgob kai.

Nah here we are,


we bring you along with us,
we are thankful for your support,
as you become our guardian,
as you lead us and uphold us,
dont let us become a victim of enemies
spears and knives,
wherever we go.
Dont let us become wounded by enemies
as we attack them,
prevent us from dying, protect us from being
impaled by enemies spears and their knives,
shield us from the darts of blowpipes.
Dont let us become hit by anything,
guide us all the way until we encounter our
enemies,
give us an easy victory to kill our enemies,
make our enemies blind to our attack.

If they did not hear any signs from the auguries, they returned to camp and waited for
another time to begin the journey. After hearing the mungulung omen, the sound or signal of
a favorable sign from the telajan augury then indicated the war augury spirits favor. After
that, if they came across any unfavorable auguries on that day, they could safely ignore
them.
During the first night of camp on the journey, a favorable sign from the likiyan
further indicated a very good prospect for warfare. The leader of the group then would

211

perform a ritual to acknowledge the augury spirit. By a fire specially made for this purpose, he
chanted in the direction of the call:
Pui sirongnya,

This fire for your warming,

gon koh pikyun kai, kai nyi keyap,

support us as we go on our way,

jian longan kai sok koh leyannya,

we are so glad of your approval,

nuan koh nulip matan doh,

let the enemies focus on your flight

avut doh aran kai nyi dei i,

so that they wont see us,

hei-hei hak linau mek kai nyi dei mohoi,

anywhere we go,

nuan koh nulip matan doh nya lavu matan doh,


avut doh aran kai,

your flight clouds their vision, so that they


wont see us,

Nah! Beh kai nyi dei sauk,

Nah! As we leave tomorrow,

gahang-gahang kai nyom kai dok ji dei tapah,

make sure the number of our warriors


remains the same,

nyon dok ji kavoh sok kai,


nyon kai ten palit

protect every one of us from becoming a


victim.

If there was no augury of the likiyan that first night, they had to return to the camp
the next day to wait for another favorable time to pursue the war. With the observance of all
these auguries, the Punan Vuhang claimed that they never lost a life during their attacks on
enemies.
The augury system, although thought to proffer warnings that saved lives, was a
major hindrance in economic activities. During the restrictions imposed by unfavorable
auguries, the Punan Vuhang had to remain in camp despite the lack of food. Nonetheless,
they believed observance of these augury spirits was for their benefit as the auguries foretold
future events that would affect their lives.
Conclusion
To conclude our description of Punan Vuhang cosmology and beliefs, it is useful to
consider Sellatos view of the Punan band as a secular society, pragmatic and little given to
religious belief or behavior (1994:162).
Sellatos characterization of the Punan as being non-religious is based on the fact
that: The Punan have few or no prohibitions, omens or auguries, curing or purification
ceremonies for the sick, or rituals related to the extraction of sago, hunting, or gathering. .
.When they do have them, they seem to be traits that have been borrowed and considerably
simplified (1994:161).
After becoming sedentary, the Punan in general took up rice farming divested of
its rituals. . . . [and showed] no special interest in adopting the farmers body of beliefs
(1994:206).
Their evident reluctance to grant a sacred character to a material object like a house
or to an economic activity like rice farming (two spheres closely linked and highly
ritualized among the settled peoples but secular among the Punan), along with an
absence of any inclination towards their neighbors cosmogonic beliefs and theories,
the notable minimalism of the ritual and religious sphere in the Punan traditional
culture, and their lack of enthusiasm for borrowed rituals, all lead to the conclusion

212

that Punan societies are fundamentally nonreligious and solidly pragmatic (1994:206207).

Sellatos description of the Punan as nonreligious follows Turnbull (1961:198) who


sees the BaMbuti pygmies as not a ritualistically minded people. To Sellato, This phrase
seems completely adequate as a characterization of the Punan: although it cannot be said
that they have no religion, it seems evident that they are not a religiously minded people
(1994:207).
However, the question of Punan religiosity can usefully be considered in terms of
Endicotts description of Batek religion:
The few rituals the Bateks do have, such as the blood sacrifice and the singing and
trancing sessions, do not follow rigidly fixed patterns. They contain a small core of
standardized acts surrounded by a great mass of options and alternatives. They
have no general term for ritual, and they normally designate particular rituals by
ordinary terms describing the actions engaged in. For example, the blood sacrifice
is simply called throwing blood. But it is possible to distinguish categories of Batek
behaviour according to the orientations of the activities. I think it is justifiable to
regard as religious ritual all those actions that are directed toward the superhuman
beings, even though they may show few of the outward signs of behavioural
patterning that are usually the mark of religious rites (1979:23) [emphasis mine].

To me, Endicotts way of identifying religious behavior is preferable, as it is more


objective. For it is not for us to impose externally defined patterns of behavior, as Sellato
does in using sedentary peoples categories to define the Punan. Instead, if we apply
Endicotts description of Batek religion (1979:25) as an all-encompassing framework of
ideas and actions that makes the world intelligible and gives meaning and value to the whole
of Batek life, we may say that Punan Vuhangs beliefs were complete and did not need to
incorporate other peoples rituals or beliefs. This was evidenced by their initial reluctance to
accept Adet Bungan when they were persuaded to adopt agriculture, as is described in the
next chapter. Even after adopting this new religion, they retained their practice of singing and
healing rituals.
If we adopt Endicotts notion and accept as religious ritual all actions directed
toward superhuman beings, we can say the Punan Vuhang were undoubtedly religious.
Their cosmology described spirits and the spirit realms, with humans living in their midst, and
in both the nyangen singing ritual and the nalau healing ritual, it was believed that spirits
interacted with humans or human souls. Their death-related beliefs also assumed potential
human/spirit interactions.

213

Chapter Seven: Settling Down and Adapting to Change


In the first half of the 1960s, events following Indonesian-Malaysian Confrontation
(1963-1966) brought about drastic changes to the Punan Vuhang that eventually led them to
adopt new beliefs, cultivation, and permanent settlement in place of their former mobile
economy. This chapter begins by narrating these events as they were related by my
informants. Described here are contacts between the Punan Vuhang and the
Commonwealth Forces that patroled the border area to prevent Indonesian soldiers from
infiltrating into Sarawak. The story tells how a Kayan trader persuaded them to adopt
agriculture and their reactions. Events surrounding this adoption of cultivation, in particular
mass deaths, believed by the Punan Vuhang to be due to their having abandoned their
traditions, are narrated in detail. However, an influential leader eventually persuaded the
community to persist with cultivation despite their initial negative experiences.
The Punan Vuhang adopted cultivation at the same time as their conversion to
Adet Bungan, a new religion that was believed to nullify the negative effects of bad auguries
that would have hindered their agricultural activities. Occurrences of mass deaths later led
them to convert to Christianity. The chapter ends with a brief description of the present
practice of Christianity.
The Era of Indonesian-Malaysian Confrontation, 1963-1966
The regional crisis caused by Indonesia invading Sarawak brought calamity to the
whole region. Incursions took place at border passes between Kalimantan and Sarawak,
including assaults that occurred at the Balui headwaters where major access routes existed
between the two bordering states. The Punan Vuhang lived along one of these border
passes and so were affected by Confrontation. Commonwealth Forces, under the command
of the British army, guarded the border passes, and one group stayed with the Punan
Vuhang and moved camp whenever the people moved. Although the situation was tense, for
the Punan Vuhang it is remembered as a period of easy life as they were given ample food
1
provisions by the army.
The initial experiences of Confrontation during the beginning of the border crisis
were frightening to the Punan Vuhang. Iban soldiers on border surveillance were thought to
be headhunters on the prowl. Fearing these headhunters, the Punan Vuhang moved up
the Linau headwaters to be as far as possible from the Iban. They stayed in places unknown
to people who were not familiar with them. Not long after this, Kesing, a Lahanan traveler,
2
told them of the impending Confrontation. Informants said this made them even more
nervous as they did not know whether they, themselves, or the British Colonial Government
1

Due to the difficulty of transportation through the Kihan-Kajang route, the Indonesian army abandoned
their intended invasion through this pass. Nonetheless, there were concentrations of soldiers across the
border and the British army had to guard the pass.
2

Kesing was going from Kalimantan to Belaga to inform his brother of the movement of Indonesian
soldiers across the border. Kesing is a Lahanan of Belaga and lived with the Busang-Bahau (who speak
the same language as the Kayan) in the Upper Mahakam River. Kesing is the brother of Ulok Imang, the
trader who frequently visited the Punan Vuhang. Ulok Imang was an important figure in subsequent
Punan Vuhang historical development.

214

were the target of Indonesian forces.1 It was a time of fear as they were trapped between
Iban headhunters and Indonesian forces. Not knowing what to do, they decided to remain
in hiding.
After Kesing left for Belaga, further events relating to Confrontation took place.
Kesings brother, Ulok Imang, brought Sarawak government officials to spy on the ground
conditions across the border. The Punan Vuhang brought them into the Kihan and found a
concentration of Indonesian soldiers preparing to invade Sarawak through the Kihan-Linau or
Kajang route. After the spies returned, no traders came to visit them anymore. Of all the
trade goods that they lacked, the Punan Vuhang most craved tobacco. A group seeking
tobacco from their kinsmen in the Kihan in Kalimantan were caught by the Indonesian
soldiers. The Indonesian army decided to engage them as informers to spy on British army
movements in Sarawak by inducing their leader to come to them for negotiations. By setting
a conditional release, some men were withheld and others were told to return. The returning
men were instructed to ask their headman to go over to the Indonesian side to negotiate for
their kinsmens release. The leader, Nyinyang, went as ordered. He was forced to agree to a
swearing ceremony that sealed their alliance to the Indonesians as a condition for his mens
release. Upon their return to Sarawak, they were to act as spies for the Indonesian army.
However, later events showed that the Punan Vuhang broke this promise.
Not long after their return, the Punan Vuhang encountered flying machines of a
different kind than those experienced during the Second World War. These planes
helicopters with roaring sounds that seemed to come from different directions, but were able
to float stationary in the air were perceived as flying spirits. One day during this period of
flying spirits, a hunter returned to camp to report something about meruka which turned
out to be Gurkha soldiers as he did not know how to pronounce the word Gurkha. This was
the first direct encounter with the Commonwealth Forces and the Gurkhas were a
component of the army. The encounter with the Gurkhas was a frightening experience
because miscommunication between them resulted in serious misunderstandings for both
parties.
As narrated by Naro, my key informant on this period, to find out who the meruka
were, some youths led by Nyinyang went to check them out. They met the Gurkha soldiers
who inquired in broken Malay about the presence of Indonesian soldiers. The Punan
Vuhang pretended not to understand and asked whether it was wild boar that they were
asking about. Upon further query, they again pretended not to know and asked the soldiers
to go to their camp for inspection. Two Gurkha soldiers followed a distance behind the main
group to avoid being ambushed as their leader walked with the Punan Vuhang.
The first misunderstanding occurred when the leader asked Nyinyang whether the
walk to their camp would take lima-puluh minit (i.e., 50 minutes in Malay). Nyinyang
answered confidently, Ya! (Yes!) without knowing what the question meant. When the time
was up, Nyinyang, not understanding the time concept, said that another 10 minutes were
required to reach camp. Then the walking went past 20 minutes and they had yet to reach
the destination. Because of the misunderstanding, tension rose and the Gurkhas accused
1

After the Second World War, the Brooke Administration under Charles Vyner Brooke handed Sarawak
over to Britain and it became a British Crown Colony in 1946.

215

Nyinyang of plotting to kill them. Nyinyang wanted to keep walking but the soldiers wanted to
make camp there. In broken Malay, Nyinyang managed to convince the leader that he would
guarantee their safety. After that, they continued on until they reached the Punan Vuhang
camp. The leader was very vigilant and checked everything and everything people did.
Assured that everything was all right, the three Gurkhas set up camp with the Punan
Vuhang.
The next day the tension continued as the Gurkhas wanted to go to a place called
Sungei Lanang. The Punan Vuhang said no such place existed. When shown a map to the
intended location, they simply led the Gurkhas despite not knowing what the map signified.
They brought the soldiers to a distant watershed between the Putik and Peluan far from the
place the soldiers had wanted to go. It was strange to them that they had been led to that site
when they should have gone to the nearby Sungai Lahang which sounded similar to Lanang.
In any case, when the Gurkhas checked the map, they found the place not to be where they
1
had wanted to go. The Gurkha accused the Punan Vuhang of trying to mislead them and
more tension arose. Not knowing what to do, they had to part ways. Nyinyang told the
soldiers that the Punan Vuhang were simply an ignorant people and did not know anything.
He asked them not to shoot the Punan Vuhang in the forest. The soldiers were reminded
that the Punan Vuhang only wore loincloths, were accompanied by dogs, and were armed
only with spears or blowpipes. The Gurkhas then went on their own by tracing their maps.
Later encounters with white soldiers were rather hilarious as Naro recalled,
because the Punan Vuhang thought they had met ghosts. Not long after the encounter with
the Gurkhas, they came across two Kayan men bringing Tuan toward the Punan Vuhang.
Not knowing what tuan meant, the Punan Vuhang thought they were otu ghosts or spirits.
The tuan were, in fact, white British soldiers who had requested to camp near the Punan
Vuhang. The people did not want the soldiers to camp near their campsite for fear that their
children would be traumatized by the spirits. The men then went to check on the white
soldiers and thought they saw spirits that resembled the otu pahkavohthe killing spirits, for
the white men had features similar to the otu pahkavoh spiritspale features, yellow hair and
hairy bodies, and seemed to have no eyes due to their eyes being blue. For the Punan
Vuhang, the eyes of human beings were always either black or deep brown.
The following day, two hunters came across tents that looked like the nests of wild
boar. The green camouflaged canvas tents seemed like fresh and dried leaves that covered
wild boar nests. They thought that the tents were the dwelling places for the spirits. The idea
was proven when they saw, emerging from a tent, a soldier who was bigger and taller than
those they had seen before. They thought that this soldier had to be a real spirit as the otu
pahkavoh were also tall and big.
Following these initial encounters, the Punan Vuhang became familiar with the
British soldiers and they were treated well and given food. The soldiers offered to protect the
Punan Vuhang from the Indonesian army and asked the Punan to construct a helicopter

Through later communication they found that the place that the Gurkhas had wanted to go was actually
very near the Punan Vuhang camp.

216

landing pad.1 Nyinyang agreed on condition that they would be given whatever they
requested from the soldiers and that their advice would be heeded. The older men thought
that staying with the soldiers was not a good idea as the helicopters would reveal the location
of the soldiers. If the Indonesian forces attacked the soldiers, they would also be attacked.
Nyinyang argued that it would be beneficial to stay with the British as they had
promised to give them food and various provisions. He reasoned that Confrontation had
prevented traders from traveling and they would then have to endure scarcity similar to the
times they had experienced during the Second World War. He said if they were attacked, he
would sacrifice himself for the benefit of the people. Persuaded by Nyinyangs argument, the
community agreed to stay with the soldiers. On the following day, the Punan Vuhang helped
the soldiers cut the trees and clear the ground for the helicopter landing pad. They were
amused to see the soldiers awkwardly handling their knives to chop the trees and offered to
help. In no time they cleared the land with their axes.
2
The arrival of the helicopter was another hilarious and memorable experience.
The soldiers informed them that the helicopter would be arriving the next day to deliver
goods. On the next day, the people gathered and waited for the big eventeach individual
wanting to be the first person to meet the flying object. After a whole days wait, they were
then told that the helicopter could not come. The Punan Vuhang felt cheated and had never
felt so stupid in their lives. They complained how was it possible to know whether the
helicopter could come or not by merely listening to the dit-taa-dit-taa Morse code
transmitting instrument. The captain of the platoon however assured them that the helicopter
would come the next day. Early at dawn, the young men went to gather sago shoots for food,
expecting to wait foolishly for another whole day. By daylight everybody was waiting for the
plane again.
At noon, the army sent up a big hot air balloon to indicate their location. As the
balloon hovered in the air, the people marveled at the sight. Shortly after, they heard the roar
of the helicopter which was to be their first close encounter with a soon-to-be familiar event.
Naro recounted the conversation among the Punan Vuhang who thought the flying object
looked like a huge helmeted hornbill with propellers on its head roaring at them. The wind
produced by the propelling force was so strong that they had to hold their mouths for fear
their voices would be blown away. A further sight surprised them. Nobody had thought there
would be human beings inside the plane and were extremely surprised to see soldiers
emerging from the helicopter to distribute supplies to the soldiers on the ground. The
1

This arrangement was of mutual benefit. If the Indonesian soldiers were to enter Sarawak, the Punan
Vuhang, being forest wanderers, would spot the intruders first. The soldiers, therefore, did not have to
patrol so thoroughly. On the part of the Punan Vuhang, the protection by the soldiers was an important
security measure. This arrangement suited the British and Gurkha strategy as they had put great stress
on mobility, constantly patrolling the remote jungle paths and harrying intruders whenever they found
them (Mackie 1974:211).
2

The use of helicopters was a major success in containing Indonesian incursions. Soldiers could be
dropped behind enemy insurgents to cut off their retreat to the border. The increased availability of
helicopters for support services was crucial in the psychological warfare of winning the hearts and minds
of the people dwelling along the frontier. The support from these people was crucial as one of the
Indonesian strategies was to mobilize them to provide material support to the Indonesian incursions
(Mackie 1974:211-212).

217

helicopter delivered the food rations that included one gunny of sugar, half a gunny of salt
and a tin of tobacco. After the helicopter had left, the excitement continued with the food
distribution and Nyinyang reiterated his argument to stay with the army. After a week, more
supplies of food rations were delivered by parachutes dropped from the helicopter. The
1
parachutes were a marvelous sight as they floated down through the air. The Punan
Vuhang felt staying with the British soldiers was like a carnival with plentiful sweet and tasty
food, and the fun of seeing the helicopters landing and the parachutes dropping from the sky.
The jovial atmosphere was dampened, however, with the death of a kinsman and
the need for the Punan Vuhang to leave the death site. The army followed them and
eventually did so for at least eleven sites until the end of the Confrontation. In most
campsites, small sites were cleared for dropping parachutes. In one site, at Laput Lahang,
the army used bombs to blow up the trees to clear the land. The explosions were terrifying,
yet provided a fascinating sight as the trees were blown to pieces. One day while camping at
this site of Laput Lahang, Indonesian planes flew toward the camp as the Punan Vuhang
were having their daily game of football (soccer) with the soldiers. The Punan Vuhang were
told to dive into the river if bombing occurred. Fortunately the planes turned out to be on a
reconnaissance mission and caused no harm. The people and the army then left the site to
avoid an Indonesian attack.
After a long period of up to a year, Tom Harrisson, the famous Sarawak Museum
curator, visited the people in 1965 and wrote two articles about them (1965a, 1965b). He
suggested the Punan Vuhang work as informants to inform of Indonesian incursions. The
pay for each man was $150 per week and the Punan Vuhang had never seen so much
money before. Eventually, however, they preferred trade goods as the money had no value
to them. They then stayed in a camp called Padang Lalik for six months. It was at this camp
that drum after drum of kerosene was flown in as fuel for the helicopters. It was also the first
time that the Punan Vuhang used cigarette lighters fueled with kerosene and found them to
be very convenient.
Toward the end of their six months stay at the camp, two Malay policemen came
to announce peace and the incorporation of Sarawak into Malaysia that had occurred earlier
on 16th September 1963. Informants thought this event was meaningless to them until the
subject of the Malaysian governments assistance was brought up. It would be more than
that given by the British. The aid was, however, based on the condition that they stopped
being nomads, settled permanently, and started farming. The British captain arranged for
Ulok Imang to bring in food crop seeds for the Punan Vuhang to cultivate. An Adet Bungan
teacher was also brought along to teach the Punan Vuhang the Bungan religion so that
when they returned to the Kajang, they would not be affected by unfavorable auguries. The
people, however, rejected Bungan because it was an alien religion of Kenyah origin and they
did not want to abandon their own belief system which was regulated by auguries. The
seedlings brought to them by Ulok Imang were instead planted by the soldiers to show them
the benefits of cultivation. However, having had a continuous ample supply of food from the
army, the Punan Vuhang had no interest in the hard labor of cultivation.
1

From this observation of the parachutes, anything that resembles the chute is referred to as Parachute
Branded.

218

As Confrontation ended, there was one event that showed the Punan Vuhangs
concern for their dogs. A soldier from a new platoon shot one of their dogs for biting his
camera case. The Punan Vuhang were angry over the dogs death because they treated
dogs like their children. They demanded to be separated from the British but requested the
Gurkhas to accompany them as the Gurkhas had never posed any problem to the Punan
Vuhang. Later, New Zealander Maori soldiers temporarily replaced the Gurkhas. The Punan
Vuhang were amazed with the Maoris ability to sniff the scent of animals. While hunting with
the Punan Vuhang, they could sniff the type of wild boar and determine whether it was fat or
thin. Towards the end of Confrontation, the Gurkhas did not move around with the Punan
Vuhang anymore. However, one Punan Vuhang band that had become dependent on the
soldiers later rejoined the Gurkhas.
The end of Confrontation was signified by the Lahanan trader Ulok Imang visiting
the Punan Vuhang to ask them to deliver a peace letter to his brother, Kesing, in Kalimantan.
The letter invited Indonesian tribal chiefs to come over to Sarawak to perform a peacemaking ceremony. Uloks brother, Kesing, then led Kalimantans regional chiefs for a
rendezvous with their counterparts from Sarawak. Accompanied by Sarawak government
officials, they camped near the Punan Vuhang and held a peace-making ceremony to renew
the harmony that had been disrupted by the war. The war had caused people who were
related to kill each other and the ceremony helped dissolve any hostility remaining among
them. Following that, they proceeded to Belaga for further ceremonies. With the end of
Confrontation in 1966, the British packed up and left the Punan Vuhang to live by
themselves.
Chronological Development of the Adoption of Cultivation
The end of Indonesian-Malaysian Confrontation in 1966 brought peace to the
headwater regions, and Kayan and Lahanan traders began to come back to the Punan
Vuhang area to trade. The influential trader who had a close relationship with the Punan
Vuhang, Ulok Imang (commonly known as Taman Bulan, Bulans father), requested that
the community settle in one location. This request was so that traders could have an easier
journey. The frequent movement of the nomadic people into the far distant headwaters had
posed great difficulty for traders to meet them. A laden boat and foot journey from the main
Balui River into Punan territory would take a few weeks. Further traveling into the
headwaters, made worse by harsh traveling conditions, would require several more weeks
before one could reach a Punan camp. The Punan Vuhang were then resided at the
headwaters of the Linau River. This was the portion of the Linau that had many rapids in its
downriver area. Visitors going upriver would have to drag their boats through these rapids.
At long stretches of impassable rapids, they had to carry their goods and walk for several
days and occasionally had to cross mountain ranges before reaching a Punan Vuhang
camp. The idea of the Punan Vuhang community settling at a distant downriver location
1
would therefore be a great convenience to the traders.
1

See Jayl Langub for a brief description of Penan response to a sedentary life in Sarawak (1974:295-301;
1996:108-116). Sellatos review (1994) on sedenterization is mentioned in the introductory chapter, and
then analyzed in accordance to the Punan Vuhang experience in the concluding chapter.

219

The Punan Vuhang initially refused to accept the idea of settling. They rationalized
that settlements in downriver territory were unfavorable to trading as little rattan was available
there. Ulok Imang then suggested that the nomadic people move to the Kajang basin where
rattan was abundant. The Kajang valley was also a very fertile area, thus providing a good
environment for cultivation. Besides, traveling into the Kajang River from the Linau, the main
waterway, only required a few hours walk across a mountain range. Once inside the Kajang,
traveling on the river was easy as there were no difficult rapids. The elders were against the
idea but the younger members were adamant in adopting the new life. For the sake of
communal cohesion, the community leader, Negen, decided to go along with the young and
persuaded the elders to follow suit.
The Punan Vuhang then agreed to move into the Kajang valley and adopt
cultivation. However, Ulok Imang foresaw that in adopting cultivation the people would face
great difficulties. He believed that two factors in the Punan Vuhang belief system would pose
serious problems to the adoption of cultivation and a sedentary lifestyle. First, the augury
1
system would disrupt the cultivation process should unfavorable auguries occur. Second,
the necessity to flee an area when there was a death would force the community to abandon
their cultivated crops. These two factors were highly incompatible with cultivation, which
required consistent crop maintenance and a sedentary lifestyle. Consequently, he urged the
Punan Vuhang to adopt Adet Bungan. He assured them that Adet Bungan only suppressed
the negative effects of omens and death observances. They could continue practicing the
nyangen and nalau rituals. In fact, the nalau healing ritual was compatible with Adet Bungan.
Eventually, the Punan Vuhang accepted the new religion and then moved into the Kajang
valley to begin farming.
When they crossed over to the Kajang valley, they immediately settled at Laput
Bukor. Although they had always been hunter-gatherers, the community had some idea of
rice planting. They had seen people cultivating from their visits to agrarian communities in the
Balui River and to their Punan Kihan kinsmen who had earlier adopted cultivation. They
knew that farming required long-term settlement to be present for long periods of planting,
growing and harvest. Therefore, at Laput Bukor, they constructed stout shelters made from
durable materials and then went on to start farming.
In 1968, the nomadic Punan Vuhang for the first time attempted to grow crops.
Following the little information they had, they correctly started by slashing the undergrowth,
then felling the trees. However, the plot of land for each household was small and they only
took a few days to clear the land. When the land was ready for planting, they then realized
that they did not have any seeds. They discussed where to get them. The two nearest places
were the Lusong Laku Penan settlement down the Linau River, and their Punan Kihan
kinsmen then residing at Long Ikang in Kalimantan. Initially, they thought of going to the
much nearer Lusong Laku Penan settlement. However, they had no boat to travel down the

For the same reason, all agrarian tribal communities in the Balui River and the Apau Kayan in
Kalimantan had abandoned their old belief system to convert to Adet Bungan. An augury system,
somewhat similar to that of the Punan Vuhang, heavily influenced the belief system. After adopting Adet
Bungan, their economic condition became much better. For the Punan Vuhang augury system, see Table
12, page 209.

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Linau. Despite the greater distance, they decided to walk to their Punan Kihan kinsmen to
obtain seeds.
Twenty men, each person representing his own household, made the two weeks
journey to Long Ikang in Kalimantan. After they returned, another nine men followed suit. At
Long Ikang, each member obtained about a gantang of rice seed. They also brought back
banana shoots, sugarcane and tapioca stalks for planting. The community waited for the
second group to return, and then they burnt the felled vegetation to prepare for sowing.
Looking back, informants realized that they were fortunate to have sown the seeds correctly
despite their ignorance of the appropriate time for planting. They laughed at themselves for
not knowing that sowing depended on a fixed time in the calendar and that burning should
only be done just a few days before sowing. Although the rice seeds sprouted a few days
later, an unfortunate incident happened that would badly affect their lives.
A group of Kayan men returning to Kalimantan gave a mistaken impression to the
Punan Vuhang about obtaining trade goods. These men had worked in Sarawak for many
years, but could not return home due to the Indonesian-Malaysian Confrontation. After a
long time working as wage laborers, they had accumulated much money, which they had
saved to buy various goods to take back. When the crisis was over, they returned to
Kalimantan by way of the Kajang-Kihan route. At the Kajang, they stayed for awhile with the
Punan Vuhang. When the Kayan travelers left, the Punan Vuhang thought that they could
also obtain many goods if they went to Belaga. Naro, my informant recalled that they did not
realize that the Kayan had worked many years to earn wages to purchase the items that they
had seen. They thought by merely going to Belaga they could also obtain many goods and
have gold dentures made. Most Punan Vuhang men had never even been to the Balui River
and the idea aroused great excitement. Subsequently, they left for Belaga. When they
returned, instead of bringing back the desired goods, they had contracted a contagious fever
and brought it back to the Kajang without seeking any medical treatment.
The Punan Vuhang had no idea of the course of the deadly disease. Halfway back
in the Kajang, they met a group of Penan men on a rattan-collecting expedition. They
camped together for a night and unwittingly passed the fever to the Penan men. Unaware
that they were the cause of the sickness suffered by the Penan men, they continued their
return journey. When they returned to Laput Bukor, the fever spread and seven people died
from it. These deaths baffled them. Although the conversion to Adet Bungan should have
averted fleeing the death site, the unusually large number of deaths caused panic and they
abandoned the settlement site that they had just established.
By then the rice crop had begun to ripen, and at the same time forest fruits also
ripened. The availability of both food sources, instead of bringing joy, brought a dilemma
about which food they should harvest first. They felt tempted to collect the fruits, because the
fruiting season only occurred once in two years. However, they remembered the difficulty
they had had in obtaining the rice seeds from Kalimantan. Therefore, they harvested the
paddy to keep some seeds for future cultivation.
The harvesting was soon over as the plots of land were small. Also, the rice yield
was very poor due to bad maintenance. Most households could only obtain a gantang and a
half of grain, from the one gantang of paddy seeds planted. Adding to the disappointment,
the harvested paddy had not yet ripened and the rice tasted bitter. Then the Punan Vuhang
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thought the Kayan must be mad to ask them to cultivate such a bitter food. In their frustration,
they had forgotten that they had eaten rice before and found it to be delicious.
The Punan Vuhang wondered whether they had made a grave mistake in
adopting cultivation. The poor paddy yield and the terrible taste of their harvested rice was
not commensurate with their effort in cultivation. They thought that the many deaths since
starting cultivation were a punishment for abandoning their nomadic life, a way of life their
ancestors had followed from time immemorial. The whole community thought of reverting
back to a nomadic life. All of them strongly felt that they should not go ahead and resume
cultivation.
While the people were disillusioned and wanted to give up farming, Negen, the
leader, recognized as possessing wisdom and an uncanny ability to decide correctly, thought
otherwise. He maintained that since the community had already decided to adopt cultivation,
they had to be persistent because a first experience in any venture was seldom successful.
He reasoned that their kinsmen, the Punan Kihan, had successfully adopted cultivation.
Then, he thought they had no reason to be so foolish as to fail to learn from their mistakes.
Besides, Negen believed that their paddy had not yet ripened when they harvested it, as they
were familiar with tasty rice that traders had managed to bring with them. He believed that
the people would eventually learn the correct way to cultivate. He argued that even if only
five people were to survive during the learning process, the five would benefit from
cultivation. Based upon his persuasive argument, the community decided to abide with his
decision and continue this new form of livelihood.
Negen decided that the new site for cultivation should be farther downstream at
Lapo Linga. The settlement at a downstream location would make it easier for traders to visit
them. Furthermore, the area there was equally fertile and had an abundance of rattan.
Negen went there first with five households while the rest of the community were to follow
later. However, because of the abundance of fruit at Laput Galuk, the rest chose to camp
there to collect the fruit. Since that year was a minor fruit season, they were worried that only
a little fruit could be found elsewhere. Five days later, Negen returned upriver to inform the
community of the abundance of fruit at Lapo Linga and subsequently all of them moved to
Lapo Linga.
At Lapo Linga, two Kayan, Sapoi and Utok from the Mahakam in Kalimantan,
came to stay with them. Sapoi went there to acquire forest products for trading, while Utok
was there to learn the art of making blowpipes. The Kayan were an agrarian people and after
learning of the Punan Vuhangs difficulties, the two men taught them the proper methods of
planting.
Sapoi and Utok introduced the Punan Vuhang to a cooperative work system that
was a prerequisite for shifting cultivation. The system enabled clearance of large tracts of
forest land. Heeding their advice, the Punan Vuhang adopted a cooperative system and
opened a very large area. After the Punan Vuhang cleared the undergrowth and felled the
trees, the Kayan requested that the Punan Vuhang return to Laput Bukor to obtain banana
shoots and sugarcane stalks. They advised the Punan to plant these seedlings first before
cultivating rice. When the men went to Laput Bukor, they found that most crops had matured.
The abundance of fruit gave them confidence that cultivation could provide plentiful food.
Furthermore, the fruit season then had not yet ended and the annual wild boar migration was
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at its peak. These factors of food abundance convinced them that cultivation, together with
the availability of forest fruits and wild boar could provide a much better life than remaining
nomads.
After the Punan Vuhang prepared the land and sowed rice, the community again
caught a contagious fever that resulted in many deaths. Sapoi returned to Indonesia after
helping to teach the Punan Vuhang how to cultivate. Two Punan Vuhang men accompanied
him as far as Long Ikang where Sapoi continued his journey. At Long Ikang, the two men
caught a fever, now believed to be malaria. They returned despite having the fever and
everyone in the community caught the contagious disease. The fever caused people to
become very weak. Eventually, the situation worsened and nine people died. Fearing that
continued settlement would cause more people to die, the community fled the death site.
They decided to break into two bands, hoping that if the fever were to wipe out one group, at
least the other might survive. Later, they decided to split into three groups. After a month, all
three groups faced a similar worsening situation. Thinking that if all of them were to die, dying
together as a community would be better than dying separately, they returned together to
the cultivation site at Lapo Linga.
The Punan Vuhang were baffled at the situation as their traditional healing method
of performing a nalau ritual did not provide any cure. It was a new disease and a spirit
phenomenon did not cause it, otherwise the nalau healing ritual would have alleviated it.
Their conversion to Adet Bungan also did not help as they did not have sacrificial items such
as pigs, or chickens or eggs to carry out the Adet Bungan rituals. The situation continued to
worsen. The community decided to split again. One group remained at Lapo Linga while the
other camped downriver at Tatang Ilen. The disaster became much worse when the
weakened members could not go out to find food. They then felt the need for all capable men
to group together so that all of them could help each other collect food.
The community eventually depleted the surrounding areas within Lapo Linga of
sago and they then moved inside the Sulen tributary, an area with abundant quality sago.
With a bounty of food, their diet and health improved. Some members actually recovered
from the fever. As the situation became better, they realized that for a whole year they had
not eaten any wild boar. This caused them to yearn for meat and they felt they could no
longer continue to live without protein. They remembered that they had stored some lard in
the Linau River before they had migrated over to the Kajang. Stronger young men who had
recovered walked all the way to the Linau headwaters to retrieve the stored lard. They were
certain that the lard kept inside the derry-can (jerry-cans abandoned by the British army)
would be well preserved despite the long period of storage. Another group of four men went
to their kinsmen, the Punan Kihan, to get some lard as they knew that wild boars were
abundant there. Both groups returned at about the same time and the lard provided a much
needed improved diet. The better food improved their health and the situation increasingly
became better.
Over time, rice planted at Lapo Linga began to ripen and they returned there to
harvest it. However, because the Punan Vuhang had sown few seeds and had not
maintained the crop due to the fever, they only obtained a very poor paddy yield. The
community realized that they could not subsist on their harvested rice for long and they
decided to move to locations with sago resources. Then they moved up to the mountain
223

ridge separating the Kajang and the Linau and settled at the headwaters of the Betlaup.
They had sufficient sago there, but could not find wild boar. After that, they moved down to
the Linau river bank to camp at Ogak Kuhui. Wild boar were available but they could only kill
a few because they no longer had hunting dogs. The long period of food scarcity had starved
many good hunting dogs. Only four men still owned hunting dogs, which the hunters divided
into two groups to make two hunting teams. As the dogs had to rest after two or three days
hunting, the Punan Vuhang could not continuously obtain wild boar. Nonetheless, the
availability of some fresh meat and sago further improved their health. The hunting dogs also
became more fit and the Punan Vuhang could even hunt deer with the dogs, a feat only
achieved by strong dogs.
As the situation increasingly improved, the Punan Vuhang realized that they should
begin cultivating again and decided to return to the Kajang. Young men scouted the Kajang
valley searching for a location with abundant sago resources. They found plentiful sago at
Tatang Takjem and the whole community moved back to the Kajang. After awhile, they
moved upstream to Laput Lidem. When settling there, Ngang, the headman of their kinsmen,
the Punan Kihan, came to visit them. Ngang advised them to settle down permanently and
not to move around again, as cultivation required a sedentary life. Ngangs comments
annoyed the Punan Vuhang because they had already understood this necessity. Even so,
the Punan Vuhang heeded his advice to select a site favorable for permanent settlement.
After deliberation, they decided that the location of their present settlement near Laput Lidem
was an ideal spot. It was a good location because it had routes leading to major tributaries
inside the Kajang hinterland (see Map 9, page 227). Also, it was quite near downriver areas
which enabled traders to travel to their settlement more easily. Sites farther downstream
would have been good for trading but land there was less fertile and had limited choices of
good hunting grounds.
Permanent Settlement at Laput Lidem (Long Lidem)
After agreeing upon the place for a permanent settlement at Laput Lidem, the
people cleared the land and felled the huge trees. They constructed the frames and main
structures for the shelters within the same day. During the evening, the men decided on a
durable roof and chose the leaves of laun silat (Licuala valida Becc.) as roofing material. For
the whole of the following few days, each household made at least four trips to collect the
leaves. Four men decided to construct a different type of roof for their houses. They used
kepang wood, a type of split planks one yard long, overlaid one on top of the other to make a
stout and durable roof. The use of laun vireh and split bamboo, instead of small trunks or tree
bark, made a strong floor for the shelters. Within five days the Punan Vuhang completed
their houses, which was their first attempt at constructing a permanent settlement. This was
a major change in their style of housing. They had never felled huge trees to make a large
clearing for a settlement site nor taken more than a day to construct the roofs of their
shelters.
While the men were busy building the shelters, the crops planted the previous year
at Lapo Linga began to yield. Banana, tapioca and sugarcane provided a food supply that
they supplemented with sago. A month after settling down, the migrating wild boar season
began. As usual, the wild boar first arrived from the Bahau River and its tributary of the
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Bangan. The community then went to the watershed between the Bangan and the
Lumunung (a tributary of the Kajang) and stayed at Lapo Avan. For two weeks they did
nothing but hunt wild boar, process lard and occasionally process sago for carbohydrate.
When the wild boar migration moved further upriver, the Punan Vuhang returned to Laput
Lidem where they could go on daily hunting trips. During the height of the migration, a hunter
could kill a wild boar within a short distance from the settlement. Most hunters could obtain
up to half a dozen fat wild boar in a single day. Out of sheer abundance, the hunters simply
abandoned the flesh of the wild boar carcasses and carried back only the thick slabs of fat for
lard processing. While the men went hunting, the women processed the lard and stored it in
containers in a small river across from the settlement. The small river became the common
place for storing lard and they simply called the stream Tubu Lanye, buried lard.
The availability of cultivated food from their previous planting and the peak of the
wild boar migration provided them with abundant food. This, according to the Punan Vuhang,
was angkun mongoh, real food. They began to gain weight after the former lack of proteinbased food which had lasted for several months, and before that, they had subsisted on only
a very few small animals such as squirrels and tree shrews. Only three years after first trying
to adopt cultivation did the Punan Vuhang finally get enough to eat.
After a few months, the situation vastly improved. It was then, in June 1971, that
D.B. Ellis led the research team of the Malayan Nature Society and the Sarawak Museum to
visit the Punan Vuhang (Ellis et al. 1972; 1975). With the visit of the research team, the
Punan Vuhang became known as a people who had become sedentary. As the community
had now become permanently settled, the government authorities began to focus on them.
Not long afterwards, the Statistics Department took a census. The Statistics Department
briefed them that they held the census in preparation for an impending election. After the
election, the newly elected Member of the Sarawak Legislative Council, Nyipa Bato, visited
the Punan Vuhang with the District Officer. It was the first high-level government visit since
Sarawak had been incorporated into Malaysia in 1963.
The Punan Vuhang had heard about this new government. Its representative,
during the end of the Indonesian-Malaysian Confrontation, had promised them that the new
government would provide many materials if they settled permanently and adopted
agriculture. They also had promised that the provisions would be much greater than those
given by the British Forces who had stayed with the Punan Vuhang. It had been several
years since the government authorities had visited them. The community elders
remembered the promise and requested projects.
The government promptly responded to the request. A month later, a military
helicopter brought two hundred sheets of corrugated zinc for their roofs. It was an advance
delivery and the officials requested that the Punan Vuhang not use them then until later
deliveries had proven sufficient for all households. However, when the second delivery came
two weeks later, the zinc was still not enough for everyone. Then Nyipa Bato, the Legislative
Council Member of Kayan origin who had come with the helicopter, requested them to
construct their houses in a longhouse style. The Punan Vuhang refused, emphasizing that
their hunting dogs would fight if their owners stayed together in such close proximity. Nyipa
argued that the dogs would eventually get used to such a situation. Besides, he reasoned,
they could visit other households during rainy weather more easily as the extended common
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corridor linking all apartments would shelter them from the rain. This, argued Nyipa, was a
better option than individual shelters separated from one another.
The Punan Vuhang were convinced by Nyipas argument and decided to let him
choose for them the structure of the longhouse. Later, the government sent more housing
materials of zinc and nails, and tools of saws and hammers. It commissioned a Kayan
carpenter from Uma Belor both to build and to teach the Punan Vuhang the proper method
of house building. When the longhouse was completed, for the first time, the Punan Vuhang
stayed in a permanently built house in a longhouse style. After the completion of the
longhouse, the government authorities visited them with decreasing frequency.
Adet Bungan and Christianity
The community adopted Adet Bungan when Ulok Imang persuaded them to settle
permanently and take up rice cultivation. Adet Bungan was founded by a Kenyah man
named Jok Apui of the Apau Kayan in Kalimantan. According to commonly told stories, Jok
Apui had been a poor commoner who had always had bad luck and poor harvests. Because
of that he was ostracized by his community. One night he dreamed of a female deity named
Bungan Malan who appeared to him and asked him to follow her ways. The deity assured
Jok Apui that she would protect him from unfavorable auguries. When he needed favors
from her, he merely had to sacrifice a few chicken eggs and invoke her help. When he
awoke the next morning, he found a handful of rice seeds in his clenched fist. The
appearance of the seeds assured him that the dream was a vision from the deity. He planted
the seeds and from then on ignored all forms of auguries. His community thought he had
gone crazy for disobeying the auguries but, as assured by his dream, he did not appear to
suffer from any mishap. During the paddy ripening season, his paddy yield was the best
among all the people, a marvel considering his meager yield over the previous years.
The longhouse headman realized something special had been bestowed upon Jok
Apui and asked for an explanation. After listening to Jok Apui, the headman accepted the
new belief. Following this conversion, both of them became prosperous in all their
undertakings as they did not have to heed unfavorable auguries anymore. Eventually
everyone in the community was convinced of the benefits and accepted Adet Bungan.
Jok Apui then dreamed that Bungan Malan requested him to propagate the new
belief. He complied and every community in the Apau Kayan accepted Adet Bungan.
Eventually, he came over to Sarawak in the early 1940s to proselytize Bungan among the
people of the Balui. All the communities accepted the new belief as it freed them from the
cumbersome old system which required that they observe auguries and furnish many
sacrificial materials to conduct rituals. Over the years, the Bungan practitioners, instead of
1
only using chicken eggs as requested by Bungan Malan, also sacrificed pigs and chickens.

See also Rousseau (1998:22-23) and Lake Baling (2002:86-91) for more detailed accounts of Adet
Bungan.

226

227

228

Because this belief enabled practitioners to ignore unfavorable auguries, the


Lahanan trader, Ulok Imang requested the Punan Vuhang to adopt Adet Bungan so that
they could cultivate without any spiritual hindrances. Initially, the Punan Vuhang did not want
to adopt this new belief system as it had originated with the Kenyah. Eventually, however,
they became quite keen as it only rejected the difficult-to-practice augury beliefs, while
allowing them to retain the much favored nyangen and nalau healing ceremonies. Ulok
Imang then brought religious teachers (dayong) to teach the Punan Vuhang how to perform
the necessary rituals and chants to make requests to Bungan Malan. After teaching the
Punan Vuhang shamans, the dayong returned to the Balui. Following that, the Punan
Vuhang adopted rice faming.
Not long after that, the Punan Vuhang were exposed to Christianity from Kenyah
travelers returning to Kalimantan. The time of peace that resulted from the end of the
Indonesian-Malaysian Confrontation in 1966 allowed many Kenyah men who had been
working in Sarawak to return to Indonesia. They used the traditional Kajang-Kihan route to
go back to their longhouses on the Iwan River. Their easy lifestyle with no fear of auguries
attracted the Punan Vuhang to the new religion of Christianity. Nonetheless, they did not
immediately adopt the new religion from the travelers.
In early 1970, Pendeta Bawe, a Kenyah pastor, like other travelers, was on his way
back to Kalimantan. He did not know the return route and requested the Punan Vuhang to
guide him back. At that particular period, the people were experiencing an unfavorable
augury and could not fulfill his request. Pendeta Bawe then told them about Christianity and
asked three young men to convert to the religion so that they would not be affected by the
negative consequences of unfavorable auguries. The three men adopted Christianity and led
the pastor back to Indonesia. When they returned, no mishap happened to them and the
community then converted to the new religion.
D.B. Ellis recorded the same reason for the conversion although his story of the
actual process differs from what informants told me.
Their knowledge of Bunganism was limited, though most of the Busang
[Vuhang] believed in it, and during the time of increased sickness and death in the
Linau and Kajang valleys they appealed to the Kayans for help as it must be their
ignorance of the new God which was causing their troubles. Perhaps they should
re-adopt their belief in bird signs. They sensed that a fundamental mistake was
causing their misfortune. But the Kayans didnt come and the deaths continued. . . .
Ninyang sent a party of 7 men to Long Klawit, Iwan river (Kalimantan) to meet the
priest and discuss Christianity with him and the converted Kenyahs . . . . On their
return, though impressed, Ninyang himself decided to visit Belaga and consult the
Kenyah priest before accepting new beliefs. He was instructed for some two weeks
by the Priest, a man who had spent 6 years at the Borneo Evangelical Mission at
Lawas, and then advised to return to his people. Ninyang was converted and
1
thereafter the Busang have followed Christianity (Ellis 1972a:250).

The difference between my field data and Elliss account is that Ninyang or Jungeu was the leader who
sent the young men to learn the religion. Similar to his report, Nyinyang did go to Belaga, but differing from
Ellis, my data suggest that he went there to learn more of the new religion instead of acquiring knowledge
for conversion. As Pendeta Bawe was a pastor of the Protestant denomination, Nyinyang approached the
Borneo Evangelical Mission in Belaga for instruction.

229

The new belief freed them from auguries, but unlike Adet Bungan, also required
that they abandon their dependence on spirits and Nyangen and the Nalau healing rituals. In
place of the nyangen ritual which offered praise to the spirits, the people now sing hymns and
Christian songs on Sunday mornings and afternoons, and Wednesday and Saturday nights.
During the meetings, one of the deacons (pelayan) leads the community in singing,
accompanied by guitars played by young people. The head deacon (ketua pelayan) usually
gives the sermon. For healing, instead of the shaman performing the nalau healing ritual, the
church leaders (pelayan) converge at the house of the sick to pray.
Sayun, the ketua pelayan, attended a layman education course at the Belaga Bible
School to learn the Christian faith for several weeks in the late 1980s. As the most
knowledgeable person on this religion in the community, he is considered the pillar of the
Christian community. As Nyinyang, the headman, ages, Sayun is widely favored to become
the new leader but he intends to remain as head deacon, preferring that his second cousin,
Naro Pua, assume the position of headman.
The Punan Vuhang follow the Protestant sub-denomination of the Borneo
Evangelical Mission, commonly known by its local abbreviation, S.I.B. for Sidang Injil Borneo.
This sub-denomination is the dominant Christian movement in the headwaters of Borneo,
including the Balui River.
Church leaders from Belaga rarely visit the Punan Vuhang due to the great
distance. In the mid-1980s, a Penan pastor from the Baram River accompanied by his wife
1
became the pastor of the community for several years. The people took care of the
couples needs by taking turns providing food and firewood. Since their return, no pastor has
been stationed there. The pastor based in Lusong Laku occasionally makes the two day
journey to visit and teach. There was a church building that had an apartment for a pastors
family. The building was built in the mid-1980s by volunteers from a Data Kakus Badeng
community then living at Long Dungan, downriver of Belaga town. When the Punan Vuhang
built a new longhouse, they rebuilt a church building close to the present longhouse.
There are six deacons (pelayan), who are elected every three years. They usually
serve the community by leading worship, reading the Bible and giving sermons. Among them
are three men who know how to read and they are the main preachers for the sermons. The
position of deacon gives these men enhanced status as they are the only people who
regularly stand in front of the community to give advice and admonishment. Whether the
members of the community listen, or follow the advice, is a different issue.
An important figure among these deacons is the treasurer who keeps the collection
from the weekly offerings. The offerings usually consist of money or tradable items. Members
usually give rattan, woven ajat baskets (worth RM10.00 for the ajat kalong and RM4.00 for
the ajat kawang) or the oii shoulder straps that are worth 50 cents. From the collection of the
offerings and occasional other fund raising, the community managed to buy an electric power

The pastor, Dariu Oho, now lives in Ba Keramok, Upper Baram, close to the Kelabit Longhouse
community of Long Lellang.

230

generator and a television. Due to non-reception of television broadcasts in the distant forest,
1
they could not use the television.
Besides receiving other benefits from the new religion, the community believes that
Christianity broke the curse that caused many of them to become barren. The people believe
that the curse was a result of the Punan Vuhang failure to fulfill their promise to spy for the
Indonesian army during the Indonesian-Malaysian Confrontation (see page 215). As a result
of breaking this promise, the people believed that they were cursed and the community
would eventually be obliterated. A few years later, they felt the consequence when a series of
deaths (suspected later to be malaria) hit them. In addition, very few children were born and
many married couples were barren. Of the community members aged between 15 and 25,
only nine children were born to six women who did not seem to be affected by the curse. In
the mid-1980s, the Belaga district pastor came to the Punan Vuhang and he prayed to lift the
curse. The Punan Vuhang believed that as a result of this prayer, new marriages were not
affected by the curse and children were born to the community, although some couples still
remain childless (see page 233).
Conclusion
With the events of the Indonesian-Malaysian Confrontation inducing them to settle
down and to take up cultivation, the Punan Vuhang were persuaded to convert to Adet
Bungan to negate effects of bad auguries that might otherwise have disrupted their daily
agricultural activities. The conversion was seen as necessary as rice cultivation tasks need to
follow a fixed schedule carried out within short time frames. They believed that negative
auguries could disrupt rice growth and cause delays in some cultivating activities that would
be disastrous. For instance, a delay in burning felled vegetation and then rain would result in
a bad burn, producing few nutrients and limited time for crop growth. Further, a delay in
harvesting would expose the crop to pest destruction. Consequently, informants stressed
that their conversion enabled them to settle and cultivate rice. However, incidents of mass
death and the inability to use Bungan rituals to avoid death led them to convert to Christianity.
Evangelical Christianity, however, forbids all other forms of religious practice, and that means
that the Punan Vuhang may no longer practice their healing and festive rituals that involved
the spirits of their former cosmos.

After I left the fieldsite, they bought a video-tape recorder. Because it is difficult to obtain Christian video
tapes, the people mainly played recordings of wrestling matches, tapes which are easily available in
Belaga or Kapit.

231

Chapter Eight: Demography, Household, Marriage and Kinship


The previous chapter discussed the Punan Vuhang process of settling down and
we shall now look into their present demography, settlement layout, household composition,
and patterns of marriage and kinship. I shall begin by looking at household composition
based on data from a survey conducted during my fieldwork and updated in 1995 prior to
leaving the field. The description looks into marriage, household formation, the birth of new
household members, and, finally, marital separation which is a common phenomenon
among the Punan Vuhang. During fieldwork, none of these events took place. Instead, my
description is based on interviews. The chapter concludes with an account of the kinship
system.
During the period of initial settlement in Long Lidem in 1971, the Punan Vuhang
were divided into twenty households. Over a 20 year period, thirty-two persons died. The
numbers of households declined to sixteen in 1995, two of those with only one member
each. Through the years, the longhouse structure started to decline. In 1992, the part of the
longhouse built on wetter ground collapsed. The Punan Vuhang requested assistance from
the government for building materials. Not long after, several flights of helicopters delivered
plywood, corrugated zinc, nails and paint, and hammers, chisels and a chainsaw. In the latter
part of 1993, the community built a new longhouse at a site slightly downriver from the old
site.
Longhouse Demography
As of January 1995, the population of the community consists of a total of 70
persons, 47 male and 23 female. There was clearly a marked disparity between males and
females, with 67.1% male, and 32.9% female. The imbalance is particularly evident among
the old and children. Of the members over 40 years old, there are 21 men and only 5
women. For members aged below 20, there are 19 boys and 12 girls. Only the age groups of
20 29 and 30 39 seem balanced with both genders having equal numbers of 11.
This uneven gender ratio of men to women has a great impact on marriage and
household makeup. Among the 15 men who are no longer married, there are 5 divorcees
and 10 widowers. In comparison, there are only 3 divorced women and no widow. Of the 3
divorced women, one is too old to be married, one is mentally unstable, and the third has a
fierce character that drives men away. She has been divorced twice. Of the 15 men
mentioned above, 3 are too old to be married and one widower is in courtship. The remaining
11 men will not have the chance of ever becoming married to a woman in their community,
unless a divorce occurs among the married women, thus providing them a potential mate.
The future seems equally bleak for the growing boys to marry within the community
and have their own household. There are 7 girls that will be available for 15 boys when they
gain maturity. This means that half of them will remain bachelors unless the women bear
more girls. However, of the youngest 11 children in the age category of below 10 years old,
there are only three girls, so that the prospects of future marriage within the community do
not seem favorable for the boys.

232

Another striking feature of Punan Vuhang demography is the high proportion of


childless members. Out of the 13 married couples, 6 are childless. Of the total of 28 men
who are or were once married, 13 are without children. Of the 16 women, 6 are childless.
Because of the disparate male-female ratio, most households have very few
female members. There are four households with one woman as the sole female member.
There is one household (HH 7) that contains only a husband and wife (see section on
household composition below). Two households have a woman living with two male
members. In HH 12, Bom lives with her husband and his brother, and in HH 13, Nguwek
lives with her husband and her nephew. In HH 2, Ella lives with her spouse and two sons,
and her husbands two kinsmen, making 5 male members. In HH 6, Naut stays with 6 men
who include her husband, her brother, 3 nephews and one grandnephew.
There are 6 households with two women living among the men. Of these, 3
households have an equal ratio of 2 male and 2 female members. HH 3 contains Vihing and
her husband, her niece and her father. Olan in HH 8 lives with her husband and son together
with an adopted daughter. HH 10 is the nuclear family of Soing and her husband with a boy
and a girl. HH 9 has 4 men staying with two sisters-in-law. HH 14 has a mother and daughter
sharing meals with 5 male members, among whom, one sleeps in his own apartment. One
household, HH 1, has 7 male members staying with a mother and daughter. The largest
number of female members in a household is 3 and there are 2 such households. HH 4 has
a woman staying with her small girls and two sons. HH 5 comprises a grandmother, a
mother and a granddaughter staying with 4 male members.

Table 13: Population of Long Lidem according to Age and Gender,


January 1995
Age Category

Female

Male

Total
No.

70 >

4.3

60 69

1.4

50 59

10

14.3

40 49

12

17.1

30 39

13

18.6

20 29

12.9

10 19

11

15.7

<9

11

15.7

Total

23

47

70

100

233

Figure 18:

Population Profile of Long Lidem according to Age and Gender,


January 1995
Female

Age
Category

Male

70 >

60 69

50 59

40 49

30 39

20 29

10 19

<9

Table 14: Married Population of Long Lidem according to


Gender, Current Marital Status, Parenthood and Child Adoption,
1995
Status

Male

Female

Total

Married

13

13

26

Divorced

Widowed

10

10

With Daughters

13

With Sons

12

20

With Adopted Daughter

10

With Adopted Son

Childless

13

19

234

Figure 19:

Population Profile of Long Lidem according to Gender, Marital


Status, Parenthood and Child Adoption, 1995
Male

25

Female
Total

20
15
10
5

C
hi
ld
le
ss

So
ns
ed

Ad
op
t

au
gt
he
r

So
ns
n
Ad
op
te
d

O
w

au
gh
te
r

O
w

W
id
ow
ed

or
ce
d
D
iv

ar
r ie
d

Longhouse Layout
With the adoption of a longhouse settlement, the Punan Vuhang have adapted to
living in apartments attached to each other through a communal corridor (soar). In the new
longhouse that was constructed in 1993, there are two rows of apartments and three
individual houses (see Figure 20). During the initial planning there were three opinions
concerning the longhouse layout. The main group, Households 5 to 14, wanted to follow the
practice of longhouse communities by first building the kitchen compartments while
accumulating materials for later construction of the main apartments comprising the living
rooms. The second group, Households 1 to 4, felt that the community, after building their
kitchens, would not have the ability to construct separate living rooms. Consequently, the
second group of households constructed their apartments following the alignment of the first
groups kitchens. Agreeing with the first group, the head of Household 12 decided to build his
kitchen and living room in a single compartment, following the alignment of the main
apartments. To him, this space is sufficient for a household of only three persons, the
household head, his wife and her sisters son. When I left the field site in 1995, there was no
sign of any accumulation of materials to build the main apartment.
As for the others: In Household 13, Tawing lives with his mothers sisters two sons,
whose brother is head of Household 6. Originally, this small room was built by Kudun, head
of Household No. 14, for the late Langin Nguwei. Kudun was related to Langin through his
1
adoption of Langins daughter, Nojab. During Langins illness, Kudun built the room so that
Nojab, who lives with him, could take better care of her father. When Langin died in the room,

When Langin divorced Nojabs mother, Ngarik, Nojab lived with her mother. When Kudun married her
mother, he adopted Nojab.

235

it became vacant. Tawing, a widower who is Kuduns wifes mothers mothers brothers son,
came to stay in the room. Then the two brothers mentioned above came to join him. In
Household No. 15, Luhat Tehin, an old man, lives with Nanyab. This apartment was a
temporary shelter for Kuduns household while he was constructing the main apartment in
the longhouse. In the last household (No. 16), Nahon, a widower, lives by himself. As an old
man, he has no intention of building a durable and spacious longhouse apartment.
Figure 21 shows the principal kinship and marriage relations that existed between
the different households, including household heads and their spouses, making up the
village in 1995. Household numbers coincide with those shown in Figure 20 (Longhouse
settlement layout).
Household Composition
The composition of Punan Vuhang households is complex. Here, I define as being
household as composed of those persons who eat meals together on a daily basis, whether
they reside in the same apartment or not. A household is therefore a commensal unit. With
the exception of one nuclear family (HH 10), the composition of most households is varied
and in many, the relationships existing between household members are complex. This can
be seen from the household diagrams (Figure 21) and from Table 15 which shows
household composition.
How these complex living arrangements have actually come about is beyond the
scope of this study. In most cases, however, it is related to the high rate of mortality the
Punan Vuhang experienced during the process of settling down, particularly the death of
thirty-two persons that occurred during this period, as described in the previous chapter. In
seven cases, persons who once belonged to separate households have joined together to
form new composite households as a result of death. Indeed, two households (HH15 and
16) have been reduced to a single member each as a result of death. A high rate of divorce
also contributed to the complex household structure, as is seen in the section below on
temporary separation and divorce (see page 258).
Six households (HH 7, 11, 12, 13, 15 and 16) include no children and so are likely
to eventually cease to exist. Except for Kilat Ngeting of HH12 who adopted a girl fathered by
his brother, Sabung (living in Household 14), and Luhat Tehin of HH 15 who has adopted the
son of his wife, none of these households has adopted any children. This suggests that the
continuity of the household is of little concern to the Punan Vuhang. This is also consistent
with what Thambiah observed of the Bhuket; that they do not have a strong value in
ensuring the continuation of a kajan [household] through time (1995:81). The question of
growing old and of no one taking care of them does not seem to be a problem. Luhat Tehin
(HH15) and Nahon Ruyong (HH 16), for example, receive shares of food equal in portion
with all other households, even though they are no longer able to reciprocate in sharing.
In the narrative below, household numbers, again correspond to the numbered
apartments shown in the settlement plan (Figure 20).

236

237

238

239

Table 15: Household Composition, 1995


Household Composition
HH
no.

Household
Head

Male

Female

Total

Generation
relative to
household
head (HH) and
number of
persons

Generation Structure

Lajang (M)

0 (3)
-1 (5)

wife, wifes brother, HH,


4 sons, 1 daughter

Surek (M)

+1 (2)
0 (1)
-1 (2)

mothers mothers
brother,
fathers mothers
husband,
wife, HH
2 sons

Naro (M)

+1 (1)
0 (2)
+1 (1)

wifes father,
wife, HH
wifes sisters daughter

Kiam (F)

0 (1)
+1 (4)

HH
2 sons, 2 daughters

Jimol (M)

+1 (1)
+1 (1)
0 (3)
+1 (2)

wifes mothers mother


wifes mother
wife, wifes mothers
son, HH, 2 sons

Riyek (M)

0 (3)
-1 (3)
-2 (1)

wife, wifes brother, HH


2 wifes brothers sons,
wifes sisters first sons
son

Mangu (M)

0 (2)

Lidut (M)

0 (2)
+1 (2)

240

Wife, HH
wife, HH
son, wifes brothers
daughter

Table 15: Household Composition, 1995 (continued)


Household Composition
HH
no.

Household
Head

Male

Female

Total

Generation
relative to
household
head (HH) and
number of
persons

Generation Structure

Sayun (M)

+1 (1)
0 (4)
-1 (1)

wifes fathers brother


wife, wifes brother and
his wife, HH
wifes brothers son

10

Sakung (M)

0 (2)
+1 (2)

wife, HH
son and daughter

11

Bawek (M)

0 (3)

wife, brother, HH

12

Kilat (M)

0 (2)
-1 (1)

wife, HH
wifes sisters son

13

Tawing (M)

0 (3)

2 mothers brothers
sons, HH

14

Kudun (M)

+1 (1)
0 (3)
-1 (2)

foster father,
wife, wifes daughters
foster father (who is also
wifes former husband),
HH
wifes daughter, son

15

Luhat (M)

HH (Nanyab who lives


in the same apartment
as Luhat takes his
meals in HH 14, and is
recorded there)

16

Nahon (M)

HH

241

Household 1: Lajang Ap

Ella

Surek

Sep

Lajang

Loyen
z

Senah

Liuk

Lobin

Sangom

Ap

Baby

at HH 2

Notes: is household head and z is his wife. Dotted line shows different households
As Punan Vuhang practice uxorilocal residence, a man marries into the wifes
household, as indicated by the direction of an arrow () next to the mans name. Hence,
Lajang, the household head, is married into Loyens household, and their son, Surek, is
married into his wifes family. Surek and his wife Ella, form household HH2.
In HH1, Lajang Ap lives with his wife, Loyen, their six children and Lobin, Loyens
brother. Lobin lives in his own separate bedroom, but takes his meals here. He participates in
the cultivation of Lajangs swidden. Surek, eldest son of Lajang and Loyen, is married to Ella
of HH2.
Household 2: Surek Lajang
Meti

Nyinyang

Surek

Ella
z

Donga

Rape

Note: indicates deceased male and indicates deceased female member


In Household (HH) 2, Surek lives with his wife, Ella, and their two boys. Surek is
the son of Lajang and Loyen of HH1. Ella is from HH3. During the construction of the new
longhouse, with the help of his own and his wifes families, Surek built this apartment.
Two other individuals live with them. The first, Nyinyang, is Sureks mothers
mothers brother. After the death of his wife, Nyinyang lived with Loyen at HH1. As there are
9 persons living in Loyens small apartment, and Surek had only his wife and two boys living
in their newly constructed apartment, Surek asked Nyinyang to live with him. He similarly
requested Meti, his fathers stepfather, to stay with him.

242

Household 3: Naro Pua


Milang

Ella

HH 2

Naro

Vihing
z

Ngion

In HH3, Naro lives with his wife, Vihing, her father and her sisters daughter, Ngion.
The couple is childless. Ngion is the daughter of Vihings late sister, Varong, and her first
husband, Bawek (of HH11). Varong divorced Bawek and later married Igeng. When Varong
died, Igeng returned to his mothers sisters household (HH12) while Ngion lives with her
mothers sister, Vihing, and Vihings husband, Naro. Ngions elder sister Ella is married to
Surek and lives in HH2.
Household 4: Kiam Pua

Tiong

Volin

Kiam
z

Ngihun

Yiobin

Nyalau

indicates divorce and/or separation

Kiam lives with her two sons and two younger daughters. In her first marriage with
Masan of HH9, she gave birth to Tiong. When they were divorced, Masans sister in HH8
adopted Tiong. In her second marriage to Langin, she gave birth to Volin and Ngihun. When
she and Langin were divorced, the two boys stayed with their father. After their fathers death
in 1994, the teenage boys returned to stay with their mother. Years later, Sabung (HH13)
lived with her for a short period and she gave birth to Yiobin. Sabung then left her. Sabungs
brother, Kilat, of HH12 adopted Yiobin as his daughter but the girl continues to live with her
mother in HH4. Lastly, Nyuwe lived with her for a short period and she gave birth to Nyalau.
Being an elderly man, he could not provide for the household and he left them. Nyuwes
brother, Riyek, of HH6 adopted the baby but she continues to live with her mother.
Since her divorce from Langin, Kiam has not had a husband to support her and it is
her brother, Naro, of HH3 who takes care of her needs. According to Naro, when she was a
young girl, Kiam became mentally unstable after the death of their mother. For that reason,
all of her relationships with men have ended in separation.
243

Household 5: Jimol Milang


Lavut

Nigau

Nyuling

Jimol

Ngui
z

Mean

Ukin

In HH5, Jimol lives with his wife, Ngui; their two boys; Nguis mother, Nigau; and
her grandmother, Lavut. A seventh member, Nyuling, is the son of Nigau and her first
husband, Tarang, who now lives with his brother, Bawek, in HH11. Seven members of this
household live and take meals together.
In addition, there are two other individuals who occasionally share their meals with
them Rahut and his son, Negen, who otherwise live in HH6 (as shown in Household 6).
Rahut was Nigaus second husband after her first divorce. Rahut and Nigau had a son,
Negen, and a daughter, Ngui, who is the wife of Jimol, the household head. When they were
divorced, Rahut returned to live with his sister, Naut, of HH6. Their son, Negen, lives with the
father while Ngui lives with the mother. Maintaining their relationship, Ngui usually prepares
extra food for Rahut and Negen who eat with the rest of the household.

Household 6: Riyek Sion

Riyek

Uji

Tanyut

Naut
z

Rahut

Negen

Latin

Riyek lives with his wife, Naut. They are childless. Living with them are Nauts
brother, Rahut, and his son, Negen; her late sisters two sons, Uji and Tanyut, and Ujis son.
Rahut, as noted above, was married to Nigau, and their daughter, Ngui, is married to the
household head of HH5. He and his son live in a small shelter connected to the communal
corridor outside Riyeks apartment. Whenever his daughters household has additional food,
Rahut and Negen will take their meals there. Uji is a widower. Upon the death of his wife, he
244

came back to live with his mothers sister, Naut. His son, Latin, lives with him. Tanyut is the
unmarried brother of Uji. Riyeks two brothers are living in HH13 with Tawing.

Household 7: Mangu Pua

Mangu

Nyaing
z

Mangu and his wife live in this household that consists only of a married couple.
There are no children living with them. Mangu is the brother of Naro (HH3), Loyen (HH1) and
Kiam (HH4). Their apartment is the first of a row of apartments belonging to the five sisters
Nyaing, Olan, Kuyang, Soing and Bom (HH7 to HH11). This is the most obvious instance of
the Punan Vuhangs practice of uxorilocal residence.

Household 8: Lidut Lihim

Lidut

Tiong

Olan
z

Mawan

Lidut lives with Olan and their son, Mawan. They adopted Tiong, Olans brothers
daughter. Tiong was born to Olans brother, Masan (living in HH9), and Kiam of HH4. When
they were divorced, Tiong was a little girl. Because her mother was mentally unstable and
her father could not take good care of her, her fathers sister, Olan, adopted her. Lidut has a
brother, Igeng, who lives with their mothers sister in HH12.

Household 9: Sayun Liwan

Ngihang

Sayun

Kuyang
z

Masan

Rumin

Jibet

245

Sayun lives with Kuyang. They are the fourth childless couple in Long Lidem.
Kuyangs fathers brother, Ngihang, lives with them, instead of his own brother, Kilat, of HH
12. Her brother, Masan, his wife, Rumin, and their son, Jibet, also live with them. Rumin is
from the Penan community of Long Tanyit. After staying with her parents in Long Tanyit, she
and her husband now live in Long Lidem with this household. Rumin is the first and only
Penan to marry a Punan Vuhang.
Household 10: Sakung Sanei

Sakung

Soing
z

Nyidei

Junan

This is the sole nuclear family in the community. Sakung lives with Soing and their
son and daughter. Sakung is the younger brother of Bawek of HH 11, while his wife is the
younger sister of Kuyang of HH9.

Household 11: Bawek Sanei

Tarang

Bawek

Bom
z

Bawek lives with his wife, Bom, the youngest of the four daughters of Surau. They
are childless. Baweks brother, Tarang, lives with them. He was formerly married to Nigau of
HH 5, and their son, Nyuling, lives with the mother. Baweks youngest brother, Sakung, is
head of HH10. Baweks daughter from a previous marriage, Ngion, lives with her mothers
sister, Vihing, in HH3.
Household 12: Kilat Ngeting

Nguwek

Kilat

Igeng

Kilat lives with his wife, Nguwek. They are childless. Living with them is Nguweks
sisters son, Igeng. Igeng is a widower whose late wife was Varong. When he was married to
246

Varong, he adopted Ngion, Varongs daugther from her previous marriage to Bawek of
HH11. After Varongs death, he returned to stay with his mothers sister, Nguwek, while
Ngion stayed with her mothers sister, Vihing, in HH 3. Igengs brother is Lidut, head of HH8.
Kilats brother, Ngihang, lives with their brothers daughter, Kuyang, in HH9. The reason why
Ngihang lives with his niece is because he is treated very well by Kuyang and her husband
Sayun.

Household 13: Tawing Agek

Nyuwe

Langat

Tawing

Tawing lives with his mothers brothers two sons, Nyuwe and Langat. The two
brothers prefer to live with their cousin rather than their own brother, Riyek, in HH 6.

Household 14: Kudun Milang

Sabung

adopts

Kudun

Nanyab

Nojab

Ngarik
z

Agek

Living with Kudun are his wife, their son Agek, his wifes daughter from her first
marriage, Nojab, and his foster father, Sabung, a widower who is childless. Sabung is the
brother of Kilat of HH12.
Presenting a complex situation is the case of Nanyab, who takes his meals with
this household but lives in HH15. His position is rather peculiar because Nanyab was a
former husband of Ngarik and foster father of her daughter, Nojab. Prior to their marriage,
Ngarik was married to Langin and gave birth to Nojab. Ngarik divorced Langin and later
married Nanyab. During his marriage with Ngarik, Nanyab adopted Nojab. After their divorce,
he continued to provide for his former spouse and adopted daughter. This provision
continued after Ngarik married Kudun. Because of his former marriage with Ngarik, it was
considered not appropriate for him to live with them, and he therefore lives in HH15 with
247

Luhat Tehin, but continues to take his meals in this household. Therefore, following my
definition of a household, I place Nanyab as a member of HH14.

Household 15: Luhat Tehin

In Household 15, Luhat Tehin takes his meals by himself and lives with Nanyab
who sleeps in a room of his own. Luhat is an old widower who has no children of his own. He
adopted Naro of HH3 but prefers to live on his own and eat alone. Nanyab, the individual
mentioned above in HH14, has no relation to Luhat Tehin.
This apartment was originally a temporary house used by Kudun of HH14 when he
was constructing the main longhouse apartment. Attached to the temporary house is
Nanyabs room. When Kudun and his household moved into their present longhouse
apartment, Nanyab remained in his own room, and Luhat moved into the vacant apartment.

Household 16: Nahon Ruyong

Nahon lives alone. Like the apartment in which Luhat lives, Nahons apartment
was constructed before the longhouse was built. Being an old widower and childless, Nahon
has no intention of building a durable longhouse apartment. Although he lives by himself, he
occasionally takes his meal with his brothers daughter, Vihing, in HH3.

248

Courtship, Marriage, Childbirth, Temporary Separation and Divorce


This section begins by first describing the events that lead to marriage, followed by
issues relating to married life. The first section focuses on courtship, the marriage ceremony,
taboos relating to marriage and childbirth, and the socialization of the young. I then discuss
issues related to marriage, such as post-marital residence, relations with in-laws, forming a
new household, divorce, remarriage, and the practice of infanticide. During fieldwork I did not
observe any of these things and information therefore comes primarily from the statements
of Naro and Vihing, my chief informants on these matters.
Courtship
When a man becomes interested in a girl, he visits her at her apartment (or
temporary shelter when the Punan Vuhang were still nomadic) when her parents are away
hunting or collecting food. When the parents are around, he does not visit the girl, as courting
her in their presence is considered disrepectful to them. While courting (pingu), other
members of the community alert the couple of the parents return. Usually their dogs arrive
first thus indicating their impending arrival. When the relationship reaches a deeper level of
mutual liking, the man is likely to pursue a more serious relationship by approaching the girl
during sleeping hours.
When the relationship has reached a level where the man believes she may
approve of an open relationship, he asks the girl to host a pingu session in her apartment.
This involves inviting his friends to come to her place during the night to play and dance. If
she disagrees, she will give excuses such as a headache or some discomfort that indicates
her unwillingness to enter into an open relationship. If she agrees, he then invites his friends
to her house. After dinner, the friends come and her parents excuse themselves to visit
another household so that their daughters suitor will feel at ease. From then on, young
people regularly gather at the girls house to sing, dance and play.
Open courtship allows for a deeper degree of relationship in which the man may
seek permission to sleep with the girl. However, instead of asking her directly, he makes the
request to the girl through an elderly man or woman. If she agrees, he approaches her when
everyone is asleep. He has to wait especially for her parents to sleep, as courting in their
presence would signify discourtesy towards them. However, when they are asleep, this rule
does not apply. Even if the parents wake from their sleep, they will pretend to be asleep to
avoid embarrassing the suitor. The courting couple will sleep together for a night or two.
Before dawn, he will sneak back to his shelter or apartment before the girls parents wake up.
This period is considered a trial relationship to ascertain their compatibility, indicated through
her willingness to have sexual intercourse with him.
The sleeping together enhances their relationship and the couple then openly
carries out activities together. For example, they go into the forest alone to process sago and
other forest activities. This is unlike in the past when they only participated in joint activities
with their friends. He openly takes his meals in the girls house during the absence of her
parents. If they return in the course of a meal, the young man leaves the apartment to avoid
contact with them. However, the parents will be understanding and return to the apartment
only for a short while. Then, they will go to another household so that the man can return to
join the girl and resume his meal.
249

The Marriage Ceremony


Over a period, the man has to commit himself to marriage. When he is ready, he
asks the girl whether she wants to be married. She usually responds by saying that among
many men who have wooed her, he is the only man with whom she has agreed to have an
1
intimate relationship. She replies that she has been waiting for his request and is glad to
accept his marriage proposal.
The day following the conversation, the girl informs her parents of their
commitment and readiness for marriage. She requests them to prepare a feast for the
marriage ceremony. Happy with the marriage proposal, the parents request a person with
some social standing to invite the mans household to attend the marriage ceremony. The
intermediary then goes to the mans household and informs them of the intention of his visit.
He makes known that his visit is not a normal one but is to invite them to attend the marriage
ceremony that is being prepared for their son and the hosts daughter.
The mans parents will express their happiness that the girl is to become their
daughter-in-law. At the same time, they will talk of their worries about their sons marriage.
They say that they are embarrassed about his staying in another persons household and
maintain that he is an incapable and impatient person. They will say that if only he were a
real man they would be glad for the girls parents to accept their son as their son-in-law. After
that, the mans parents inform their kindred of the marriage ceremony that evening.
The intermediary then returns to the girls parents to convey what he has been told.
However, the humble tone of this conversation is just a formality and the preparation for the
ceremony continues. The girls kinsmen divide the work between themselves to hunt for wild
boar and prepare rice (in the past, harvest sago) for the event. As evening approaches, the
food is ready and all the brides kinsmen wait for the grooms kinsmen beside the sago
dishes. The host then requests the intermediary to invite the grooms kinsmen to participate
in the feast. The intermediary goes to the grooms house to inform his kinsmen that they
have been invited by the brides kinsmen to attend the ceremony. He immediately invites
them for the feast rather than having any small talk first. Meanwhile, the finely adorned
groom and his kinsmen are ready for the invitation. At this point the kinsmen accompany him
to the brides house for the marriage ceremony.
The groom initiates the ceremony by becoming the first person to eat a scoop of
2
the food prepared for the occasion. Then he takes another scoop, keeps it inside his mouth,
returns to his apartment and spits out the food there. Then he returns to the gathering and
his bride eats one scoop of the food. After taking the first scoop, she stops eating. Following
the consumption by the bride and the groom, the kinsmen of both sides participate in the
meal. As no other type of food is necessary for the ceremony, the food is quickly consumed

This conversation is included to indicate how the questions and answers could transpire during this vital
moment before they agree to marry. This sketch is idealized based on the informants descriptions as no
marriage proposal was made while I was living with the Punan Vuhang.

When they previously practiced adet behok, the Punan Vuhang observed several auguries during the
ceremony. The occurrence of certain omens would cause the postponement of the marriage, such as, for
example, any person sneezing before consuming the food.

250

after three or four scoops have been eaten by each person. Thus, the marriage ceremony is
completed very quickly.
Instead of remaining in his spouses apartment, the groom returns to his apartment
accompanied by his kinsmen. There, his kinsmen advise him to behave like a real man
(linau mongo) as he will be living in another persons household. They advise him to conduct
himself properly toward his wifes kinsmen. He must be patient and generous, behave well
and work hard. They warn him to drop all bad habits which they have tolerated thus far. After
these speeches, the ceremony is completed. When everybody retires to sleep, he goes to
sleep with his wife and thereupon becomes a member of her parents household.
This simple ceremony is also observed by the Bhuket who do not perform
elaborate rites for marriage (Thambiah 1995:83) and corresponds with the literature on
marriage among the Punan:
Marriage rites are minimal, indeed sometimes nonexistent in many groups
marriage is entirely informal (see Urguhart 1951:519; Jayl Langub 1972:220). The
informal aspect of marriage is confirmed by the extremely limited practice of the
marriage gift or payment (Sellato 1994:156).

Taboos
Taboos described in this section were said by the older people to have been
observed by the Punan Vuhang before their conversion to Christianity. The day after the
marriage ceremony, the newly married couple was forbidden to go anywhere and had to
remain in the hut. From then on until the birth of their first child, various auguries and taboos
regulated their lives. On the second day, the couple could go out of the hut but had to remain
within the vicinity of the camp. Outside the shelter, if they came across the maroon
woodpecker (Blythipicus rubiginosus parvus; pee-it), an augury bird, flying from the left, the
man had to sleep separately from his wife for a week. From the third day onward, the man
could then go out of the camp to hunt and collect food. Usually they processed sago together
as their first joint chore after becoming husband and wife. If a branch fell on the way during
the first movement of the community away from the camp site where the marriage had taken
place, the couple had to divorce or separate temporarily.
There were several taboos that the young couple had to observe. They could not
kill and eat several types of food and had to refrain from doing certain activities. The list
below shows the taboo animals that they could not eat.
If the husband had to kill a snake in defense, he had to separate from his wife for a
week to avoid any ill-effects. A cooking pot that had been used to cook barking deer or snake
meat had to be washed thoroughly three times before it could be used by the couple to cook
food.

251

Table 16: Animals Taboo to Newly Married Couples


Animal

Effect

barking deer;
telau
python; sai
tavun
tortoise; kalop

shorten life-span

Effect following the animals


characteristic
probably related to barking deer being
attacked by leopards
The snakes twisting movements

will experience a difficult life


initially good life but will later face
difficulties and will be unable to
face problems with boldness

like a tortoise withdrawing its head into


its shell in times of adversity

When the wife became pregnant (bertayit), they had to observe several more
taboos to avoid a difficult childbirth. Any activity that entailed complications had to be
abandoned as it was believed it would hinder delivery. This included abandoning a felled tree
that did not fall to the ground directly (kayu mati) due to becoming entangled with other trees
or vines. Therefore, before felling a tree, the man had to select one that was free from vines.
Other activities that had to be avoided included plucking eyelashes and eyebrows, as this
was thought to cause the baby to have a bald head. The man could not wear a bottom
1
protector (tabin) and the couple could not tattoo other people. For the duration of
pregnancy, the husband had to search for janang, talong, and kemusang fruits for his wife to
eat. The expectant mother could not wear simply any cloth, but only the katib cloth worn by
Punan Vuhang women.
If there was a thunderstorm during the night, both the husband and his pregnant
wife could not lie down or sleep. They had to remain awake (pikgok) until the rain stopped. If
the camp was beside a river bank, they had to wait for the river level to rise (civu) which was
indicated by a sudden rush of water flowing down the river. If there was no rain, they had to
wait for the thunder to stop. Before they slept, they filled the bamboo water container (bulu
bangap) with water to signify the rising of the water level of the river. These prohibitions
ended with the birth of their first child.
When the mother was heavily pregnant and was a few months from delivery, she
and her spouse had to camp with a midwife (dok ang tikgob aran nganakshe who knows
how to assist in childbirth). Accompanied by their close kinsmen, the couple followed the
midwifes band wherever they camped so that they would be always close. According to
T.B.N Oldrey who visited the Punan Vuhang in 1971 with D.B. Ellis,
After the child is born, the umbilical cord is divided by a single stroke of a
sharpened bamboo knife against a wooden block, and the end tamped with fresh
charcoal powder until the bleeding stops, no tie is used. The placenta is delivered
by traction on the cord and buried; it is not the basis of any spiritual beliefs. For two
or three days after delivery the mother is nursed with a warm stone wrapped in
cloth placed on the lower abdomen to expel the babys blood: some years ago,

The bottom protector (tabin) is a piece of leather worn over the bottom. When a man sits in the forest
wearing a tabin, he does not have to find a dry place or worry about thorns.

252

before this practice started, several women apparently died of post-partum


1
haemorrhage (Oldrey 1972:272).

After delivery, the mother could not bathe for a week. During her first bath, she put
a type of fern (paku tanok) on a rock downriver from where she took her bath. The Punan
Vuhang believed that the odor from her childbirth would flow away with the river current.
Spirits smelling the odor would follow the smell back to its origin and then attack the young
mother. The fern served to defend the woman from the spirits by severing the spirits bowels
if they tried to pass it. After that, she did not have to observe any further taboos.
Regarding babies, a variety of taboos regulated baby boys, while baby girls were
free from them. Only a very old man could cut the hair of a baby boy, and he had to use the
sharpened skull of a male Macaca fascicularis monkey (kuyat). The Punan Vuhang believed
that the use of the monkey skull enabled the baby to live a long life. The infant also absorbed
the spirit of bravery from the male kuyat that is capable of attacking leopards.
The sleeping place of a male baby could not be located directly beneath the roof
beam (leyeb languk) as this was thought to be used by the malevolent widow spirit (oroh
balu) as its pathway. If the baby was found directly beneath the beam, the spirit would harm
the baby. As women were forbidden to walk over the head of a man, so too were they
prohibited from stepping across the babys head when he was lying on the floor. As an
added precaution, the babys head was covered with a piece of cloth to avoid the resulting illeffects if a female member should accidentally step over its head.

Table 17: Taboo Foods Prohibited to Boys


Punan Vuhang
tabalak
katu
telau
kuli
boep
otet payau
talun payau
manok otu /
manok kuan
musang
totung
kok

Vernacular
wild durian
the empurau fish
barking deer
leopard
bear
deers feet
deers testicle
rhinoceros hornbill

Scientific Name

a type of civet
porcupine
a type of civet

unknown
Hystrix brachyura
unknown

Durio kutejensis
Tor tambroides
Muntiacus muntjac; Muntiacus atherodes
Neofelis nebulosa
Helarctos malayanus
Cervus unicolor
Cervus unicolor
Buceros rhinoceros borneansis

Until he reached adulthood, a boy was forbidden from consuming a variety of


taboo foods, as indicated in Table 17. If a boy got a headache as a result of his household
cooking a kok civet, he wore a cap made from the skin of the civet for one or two weeks.
Similarly, if he got a headache and red eyes due to their cooking a rhinoceros hornbill, he
1

Due to this crude form of child delivery, Naro brought his adopted daughter, Ella, to the government
clinic for delivery a month before her due date. Despite the long and difficult journey, he was willing to take
the risk rather than have his adopted daughter go through the traditional method.

253

had to wear a cap made from the skin of a hornbill and then, when he became an adult, he
could not eat more then ten rhinoceros hornbills in his entire lifetime. In the case of civets
known as musang, children of both genders could only eat the animal when they were able
to pronounce its name. Otherwise, they would become mute.
Girls, too, had their own restrictions. They were not allowed to consume primates
except for grey leaf-monkeys (Presbytis hosei; bongat), red leaf-monkeys (Presbytis
rubicunda; kumom), white-fronted langurs (Presbytis frontata; bui) and silvered langurs
(Presbytis cristata; kucei). They were also forbidden to eat sun bears (Helarctos malayanus;
boep), clouded leopards (Neofelis nebulosa; kuli), the yellow-throated marten (Martes
flavigula; tusungoh) and all types of edible snakes eaten by the men.
It was believed that the cooking of tasak and luan roots, and lungan fish, the food
eaten by the otu kunyuling spirits, had bad effects on small children. Consequently, before a
household cooked these foods, they informed the community so that the children would stay
quietly inside their apartments. The effects on the children were lahut tasak or lahut luan, that
is, severe stomachache or chest pain. Following this, a shaman healed the children by
rubbing their bodies with kumulang leaves (ngemulang), which acted to draw out the illeffects of these foods. Then the shaman held a ritual to strengthen the affected child. While
the shaman chanted, he held the blade of a small knife (yu) while the child held the handle.
The ritual signified the severing (silit) of the malevolent spirit from the child. It also gave
further protection from the effects of these foods.
At sunset, the otu dogkek spirits set up fishing rods along the riverbank, so children
were forbidden to play there lest they disturbed the spirits. If the children accidentally knocked
down the fishing rods, the spirits retaliated by causing the children to fall ill. If the parents
found their children playing along the riverbank at sunset, they requested a shaman to hold a
ritual to prevent any ill effects. During this ritual, the patron-spirit of the shaman acted to stave
off objects (lumut) hurled at the children. Otherwise, if the children were attacked, they would
vomit and have a severe headache. When this happened, the shaman needed to hold a
long ritual to heal (ngemulang) them. In becoming an adult, a person no longer observed
these taboos.
The sections following this description are about child-naming, infanticide and
socialization. Except for socialization, taboos and other practices traditionally associated with
infancy are no longer observed now that the community has converted to Christianity.
Child Naming, Mek Aran Bikop
When the baby could sit, crawl and smile, the parents selected a name from a
1
dead ancestor closely related to the father or the mother. When both spouses agreed upon
the name, they had to seek agreement from their siblings who owned the name. They
inquired secretly and whispered (pukulim puknyik) the name. When they agreed on the
name, it could then be given to the baby and then mentioned out loud. However, if they
chose a name of the shamans patron spirit, it could be given to a baby immediately after
birth. The patron spirit would be very happy with his name being given to a baby. Examples
of spirit names were Gik, Rape, Nyidei and Nahon (from Jenahon).
1

See Appendix 2 for genealogy and kindred of existing kin groups.

254

If a child did not live a good life, his or her name could be changed to that of an
ancestor of the other parent. If the baby continued to live a bad life, the name would again be
changed. The name of a living person could not be given to a child. When a person died, and
a living persons name sounded similar to that of the dead person, the living persons name
had to be changed to avoid confusing the spirit of the dead person. For example, when
Nanyan died, the headman Ninyangs name was changed to Jungeu.
Infanticide, Ciu Bikop
It was taboo for a baby to be born with the umbilical cord (lilit okar) wrapped round
its body or for it to be breech delivered (terkukup). If such a baby were allowed to live, it
would pose harm not only to itself, but also to its parents. Within memory there have been
two babies that were abandoned due to the umbilical cord having been wound around them.
The Kayan people also practiced the same taboo (see Footnote, page 51 on a legend about
how Sigoh Garing was born with the umbilical cord wrapped round him).
Socialization
In the course of growing up, a boy was expected upon reaching adolescence to
follow his father and learn various skills. These included, in the past, identifying routes in the
forest, tracing the tracks of game and then trailing them, identifying forest resources, making
tools and learning how to survive in the forest. A boy learned how to imitate the calls of most
animals to lure them within shooting distance of the blowpipe. Essentially, a boy acquired
whatever skills his father knew.
When a boy became a teenager, he might gain further skills by seeking out men
who were considered experts in particular activities. Generally, a man became an expert in
only one or two tasks because of the effort and diligence needed to achieve expertise. These
tasks included the following:

Tracing deer tracks on the river bedDeer tracks on a stony river bed were difficult to
identify as the fast-flowing water removed most traces;

Tracing the flight direction of a helmeted hornbill that had been shot by a blowpipe. This
type of bird required a long time for the blowpipe poison to take effect. If it was shot in
the afternoon, it would only die from the blowpipe poison the following day. This meant
that the hunter had to identify the characteristics of the hornbill, including the posture
and direction of the bird after being shot and the physical terrain that it would most likely
fly to;

Getting within the spearing range of a wild boar without alarming the quarry during kusi
hunting. Every man had some level of expertise in this type of hunting as it enhanced
his status, and

Making tools such as blowpipes and boats.


Because these skills required much effort and time to master, a man could only
learn them from experts. Only a persistent student would be able to gain expertise in a
particular task that made him stand out from the rest. In the past, division of the community
into separate bands also posed difficulty for teenagers when the expert lived in a different
band. Consequently, a young man only had the opportunity to fully follow an expert who was

255

a kinsman living in his band, although he could choose to follow a man by joining the other
band for a period.
In his early teenage years, a boy participated in hunting and food gathering with his
father and siblings. As soon as he acquired the basic skills he began to hunt by himself.
Issues Related to Marriage and Family
This section describes aspects of marriage and family. These include relations with
in-laws, post-marital residence and the forming of a new household, separation and
remarriage after the death of a spouse.
Relations with In-Laws
A man is expected to behave in the presence of his parents-in-law with shyness
and humility. His feeling of shyness toward the mother-in-law is even more intense because
of his unfamiliarity with her. Toward the father-in-law, his shyness is much less, because
being of the same sex, they have frequently been in contact before marriage. Therefore he
does not feel so embarrassed. On the other hand, parents-in-law are expected to treat their
son-in-law with respect. They do not ask him to do anything as it is assumed that he is the
other major food provider in the household in addition to his wifes father, and so does not
need to be told what to do. Furthermore, anything obtained by him is given to his wifes
parents.
The deep respect and the intensity of shyness between parents-in-law and son-inlaw cause them to avoid talking to each other unless absolutely necessary. Arguing and
quarreling are totally abhorred. Such open conflict can be a reason for a wife to divorce her
husband, as happened to the late Varong Milang who divorced her husband for this reason.
In fact, informants mentioned to me that her brother could not endure the insult and so left
the community to live with another Punan group in the Upper Balui. There is no sanction
against such disrespect, but the man will become the butt of gossip as a person who has
1
committed the gravest form of nyelupohmeaning total disrespect.
In his relationship with his wifes siblings, he continues the relationship as before. If
they have been close to each other, they remain so. Nonetheless, being in-laws, they do not
argue openly with each other.
The son-in-law not only does not talk to his father-in-law, he cannot even mention
his name. If the son-in-law has to talk to him, he merely speaks without directing his words
toward anybody and says what he has to say (as is the case between my foster father, Naro,
and his father-in-law, Milang Ruyong). When the father-in-law is with a group of people, the
son-in-law asks another person to speak to him. For the brothers or sisters of a parent-in-law,

The Punan Vuhang avoid marrying Penan because they say quarreling among in-laws is common in the
Penan community. The Punan Vuhang find such disrespect abhorrent, but among the Penan it does not
seem to be so offensive. As a result, they avoid marrying the Penan because they say they could not bear
the thought of being disrespectful to their in-laws nor being treated discourteously by them. This explains
why they rarely marry outside their group, in spite of the unequal gender ratio. Nonetheless, one marriage
between a Punan Vuhang man and a neighboring Penan woman did occur in 1992, before I started
fieldwork. In 1994, the couple came to live in the Punan Vuhang community. When I visited them in 2002,
they were still living there.

256

the prohibition to use their names depends on the level of attachment between a mans wife
and her uncles and aunts. If they are close, the relationship towards them is similar to that of
parents-in-law. Otherwise, if his wife is not close, he may call them by their names. The
adopted parents of the spouse are also treated with full respect.
According to Naro, for several months a son-in-law will not eat with his wifes
parents until he has become familiar with them. When a recently married man returns home,
if the in-laws are around, no matter how hungry he is, he will avoid eating for as long as they
are present. However, knowing that the son-in-law is hungry, they will excuse themselves
and visit another household until they are certain that he has eaten. If his wife is not in, the
mother-in-law cannot prepare food for him and she has to look for the daughter to prepare
the food. Being newly married, he will be too shy to prepare his own food. In times like this,
he may go to his sisters apartment to eat if he is hungry. It is said the man will only feel at
ease with his in-laws after three years or three consecutive occurrences of the fruit seasons.
He also feels at ease when he has become a father as his children become attached to the
grandparents which helps lessen his shyness.
This level of deep respect also holds between a woman and her husbands
relatives. For example, when my foster mother, Vihing Milang, was talking with Nyinyang, her
husbands uncle who lived next door, both of them spoke in whispers.
Postmarital Residence
The Punan Vuhang practice uxorilocal residence in which the man joins his wifes
household after marriage. Throughout Punan Vuhang history, there was only one period
when people adopted virilocal residence. This occurred during the time when the Punan Nuo
and Punan Terkalet fled from the Kayan to join the Punan Vuhang who were on close terms
with their enemies. To obtain protection from the Punan Vuhang, they offered their women in
marriage. Since then, there has only been one case of virilocal residence which occurred
because a mother would not allow her daughter to marry a fierce man. After this rejection, no
man wanted to associate with the girl. Consequently, the mother offered her daughter to a
diligent, hardworking man, who could not join his wifes household because he needed to
care for his aging parents. Otherwise, there have been no other cases of virilocal residence
that I was told of.
Formation of New Households
Up to the present, after a period of several months of marriage, newly married
couples are encouraged to set up their own household (piksat lapo). A new household
obtains a share of food in the food distribution system. If they remained in the parents
apartment, they would not get any additional share. However, certain conditions have to be
met before they can leave. In the past, the man had to prove that he could obtain sufficient
food, especially during lean times. Besides that, he had to construct his shelters by himself
and produce certain tools necessary for survival. The couple had to be independent in sago
processing. In short, the newly married couple had to be able to stand on their own without
the help of their parents. The ultimate condition for them to set out by themselves was the
ability to procure the necessary cooking pot through barter trade, without which they could
not cook food on their own.
257

Eventually, all the children married and established their own households, except
for the last married daughter, who remained in her parents household with her husband in
order to take care of the elderly couple. Other siblings provided their help by giving food to
them and filling whatever needs were necessary. As the young couple remained with the
parents, they acquired rights to all the materials remaining in the household, such as the
cooking pot, axe, blowpipe and knives.
Temporary Separation and Divorce
Punan Vuhang use the same word (tolang) to refer to both temporary separation
and divorce. Generally, temporary separation is a result of a spouse being jealous of his wife
or husband and accusing the other of committing adultery. There are two types of temporary
separation, tolang puklik and tolang paknyot. Permanent separation by divorce is called
tolang kak ciu.
Tolang Puklik
Temporary separation means that after a period of separation the spouses reunite.
The cause of this separation is due to uncontrolled anger resulting in a serious quarrel that
forces the husband to leave the household. After a period, their tempers cool and he returns
to reunite with his wife. The cause of the quarrel is usually due to an allegation of adultery,
but there is no proof to substantiate the accusation. Since there is no evidence, their tempers
eventually cool and they reunite. Temporary separations usually occur up to three times
before a marriage becomes stable. The Punan Vuhang call such temporary separations
cukui botak, a situation that resembles the three stones of the fireplace. A fireplace requires
three stones to form a stable foundation to hold the cooking pot. With less than three stones,
it is impossible to hold the pot, and so with a marriage. Until there are three occurrences of
temporary separation, a marriage is not considered stable. According to informants, all
married couples who have been married for a long time have experienced these three cukui
botak separations.
Tolang Paknyot
Unlike tolang puklik, this separation results from a proven allegation of adultery
(paknyot). To resolve the anger, the person with whom the spouse committed adultery has to
pay the affected spouse a fine of a cooking pot, a spear or a good knife. When tempers cool,
the couple will reunite.
Tolang Kak Ciu
Divorce happens when, during the period of separation, one of the spouses
marries another partner. With that, there is no way for the former couple to reunite without the
newly married spouse divorcing his or her second spouse. Among the present members of
the Long Lidem community, there are four such cases of divorce in which the subsequent
marriages became stable and one ended with the death of the spouse.

258

Remarrying After Death of a Spouse


The death of a spouse dissolves the union and the surviving spouse is free to
remarry. Nonetheless, the widower (avan) or the widow (balu) has to complete the mourning
period before being courted by a new partner. The first time that a person sleeps with a new
partner requires a payment of a fine called buling to the dead spouses siblings or children,
and his or her own children. The payment can be anything such as adornments, clothes,
knives or other valuable items, with the more valuable items being given to the children. If the
buling is not given, a negative effect called tulah will fall on the children causing them to
become sick or to become prone to divorce when they marry later. Tulah is caused by the
soul of the deceased spouse which is angry over the action of the surviving spouse. With the
payment of buling, the person can start a new relationship and marry a new partner. If the
courting takes place before the mourning period is completed, more valuable items of buling
have to be given to the siblings of the dead spouse.
Kinship
Punan Vuhang kinship is bilateral, meaning that relationship is traced through both
father and mother (following Keesing 1975:22-23), and is similar to the Bhuket (Thambiah
1995:91 and the Penan (Brosius 1992:216). The Punan Vuhang do not seem to attach
particular importance to ancestors. Most persons do not know the names of ancestors
1
beyond those of their grandparents.
The lack of knowledge of the ancestors names is due to a prohibition against
mentioning the names of the dead, including ones own ancestors. The only time that a
name can be mentioned (in a whispering tone) is during the naming of a baby, when the
name of a dead ancestor is given to a child. Consequently, only during such times are the
names of ancestors revealed to the community, thus re-establishing a relationship to the
2
ancestor. Unless this happens, an individual may never learn the names of his ancestors.
This prohibition of mentioning names of the dead therefore prevents one from recognizing
kinsmen related through common descent beyond that of the great-grandparents.
The exception to this absence of interest in ancestry is the group of related
households that claims a genealogical link from Nyuvuhan (see page 164). Figure 22 below
shows the kinship relations between three second cousins who regard each other as closest
kin. Relationships are traced through either paternal or maternal links. For Sayun, the link is
through his father, and for Naro and Uji, through their mothers, emphasizing the bilateral
aspect of their relations.
Thambiah (1995:93) mentions that this lack of preserving lengthy genealogy is also
noted by Freeman (1970:32) among the Iban, and Rousseau (1978:89) among the Kayan.
1

The community is fortunate to have the very old Luhat, who, as mentioned in Chapter One, has survived
through several generations. It is from Luhat that I obtained the names of the ancestors of various
households (Appendix 2).
2

This re-establishing of kinship relations is by no means universal. The names of common ancestors may
never be revealed if no children are born to their descendants. The genealogy of Riyek almost certainly
would have been terminated if his eldest brother had not recently fathered a child by an insane woman. All
of Riyeks other kin are childless. The genealogical line of Luhat will definitely come to an end as he has
no living siblings and is childless. His adopted son is also childless.

259

According to Sather (1994:47-55), Freeman is referring to the Baleh Iban who were recent
migrants. Other Iban groups, like the Saribas Iban, have lengthy genealogies up to 32
generations. Rousseaus observation is true among the commoners but not among the
aristocratic families who take great pains to keep into memory their ancestors (see page 168
on Lake Dian). The Bhuket on the hand, are able to trace relationships with great precision
(Thambiah 1995:93).

Punan Vuhang Kinship Terms


Reflecting the bilateral nature of the Punan Vuhang kinship system, terms of
reference and address are the same for relatives on both the fathers and mothers sides.
Consanguineal Terms
The Punan Vuhang kinship system is quite similar to Eskimo or Inuit terminology
all cousins are lumped together under the same term but are distinguished from brothers
and sisters, and all aunts and uncles are lumped under the same terms but are distinguished
from mother and father (Ember and Ember 1996:404). As shown in Table 18 and Figure 23,
all first cousins are referred to by a common reference term as pakri, with second cousins as
pakri lipoh, and third cousins as pakri lipoh kak keduo. The cousin term pakri is differentiated
from egos siblings, yek for elder sibling and arin for younger sibling. The terms for uncles
and aunts on both the fathers and mothers sides are the same. Uncles are referred to as
mak mek, and aunts as minek. Father is referred to as man, and mother as inan. A special
address term, ivet, is, however, given to the mothers brothers wife.
In comparison to the kinship terms of other Punan groups, whose systems often
do not distinguish birth order, and the contrast between elder and younger sibling therefore
appears to be irrelevant Sellato (1994:154); the Punan Vuhang do differentiate birth order.
From a genealogical perspective, there are distinctive terms up to seven
generations, or eight if we accept the term the children of grandchildren. Great-greatgrandparents are referred to as kek lop ayok; great-grandparents as kek lop; and,
grandparents as kek. Punan Vuhang refer to their children as nak, and grandchildren as
nyahuk, while great-grandchildren are referred to as nak nyahun children of grandchildren.
The terms of address that a person uses for his kin do not strictly follow this
terminology. For example, Milang, the only man who is a great-grandfather in the community,
calls his great-grandchildren nyahuk, similar to the term that Naro, a grandfather, uses to call
his grandchildren. Similarly, the child, Donga, calls his great-grandfather, Milang, kek instead
of kek lop. A person may call a fond uncle mak mek, while addressing another uncle by
name. Likewise, a boy may call his aunt minek while calling another by her name. An
individual may call his children nak, while another person may call his by their names.
According to informants, the terms of address that a person uses to greet other
persons shows the relationship between them, and the respect that he or she has toward the
other. Normally, if they have affection for each other or the individual has respect for the

According to informants, in the past, the Punan Vuhang used teknonyms and death names. Today they
no longer use such terms, and so I have not dealt with them.

260

other, he or she calls the latter by a kin term. Otherwise, there is no feeling of uneasiness in
using personal names.
In contrast, Thambiah (1995:68) reports the Bhuket seldom use terms of reference
when speaking to one another. They call each other by pet names, thus reflecting the
relaxed atmosphere of interaction. People use terms of reference only when there is a need
to clarify or explain relationships to an outsider. However, the feeling of affection causing
Punan Vuhang to address other persons using terms of reference, as mentioned above, is
also found among the Bhuket. Thambiah states: I have also observed that Bhuket use these
terms of reference when they want to express affecton, and sometimes in a playful way.
When an individual calls his brother Arik or his wife Sok or his father-in-law Bosok he is
expressing feelings of affection in public. But in normal circumstances the preference is to
remain informal and call each other by given or pet names (1995:68).
Tracing kin outward, the Punan Vuhang have terminology up to the range of third
cousin. Between second cousinspakri lipoh, marriage is allowed but discouraged.
Between third cousins, pakri lipoh kak keduo, marriage is common since their relationship is
considered distant. The nature of the relationship between two cousins depends a great deal
on their level of interaction. For example, as in Figure 22, Naro is closer to his second
cousins, Sayun and Uji, than to his first cousins. In a like manner, Naros relationship to Uji is
closer than to Tanyut, Ujis brother. Naro can ask Uji to do things to help him, but will not ask
help from Tanyut. The difference is due to an age gap. Uji is just a few years younger than
Naro and the two were playmates since they were boys. They are close to each other and
they call each other by the same pet name. On the other hand, Tanyut is much younger, and
a different kind of relationship has developed between them.
Figure 22: The Closest Kin of Three Individuals

Surek

Enang

Negen

Liwan

Nyaweng

Sai

Sayun

Naro

Uji

261

Table 18: Punan Vuhang Consanguineal Terms


Kin Relation

Initial

Reference
Term

Address
Term

Father

man

mak

Mother

inan

inak

Son & daughter

S; D

nak en

nak

grandchildren children of son


and daughter

SS; SD; DS; DD

nyahun

nyahuk

great-grandchildren

SSS; SSD; SDS; SDD; DSS;


DSD; DDS; DDD;

nak nyahun

nyahuk

elder brother / sister

B; Z

yek

yek

younger brother/sister

B; Z

arin

arie

nephew & niece children of


brother & sister

BS; BD; ZS; ZD

naken

naken

grandfather/mother

FF; FM; MF; MF

kek

kek

paternal & maternal greatgrandfather / mother

FFF; FFM; FMF; FMM;


MFF; MFM; MMF; MMM

kek lop

kek

paternal great-great
grandfather/mother

FFFF; FFFM; FFMF; FFMM;


kek lop ayok
FMFF; FMFM; FMMF; FMMM;

kek

maternal great-great
grandfather/mother

MFFF; MFFM; MFMF; MFMM; kek lop ayok


MMFF; MMFM; MMMF;
MMMM;

kek

uncle father & mothers brother;


father/mothers sisters hushand;
fathers fathers brothers son;
mothers mother sisters son

FB; MB; FZH; MZH; FFBS;


MMZS

mak mek

mak mek

aunt father & mothers sister;


fathers brother wife

FZ; MZ; FBW

minek

minek

aunt- mothers brothers wife

MBW

ivet

ivet

1st cousin children of uncle &


aunt

FBS; FZS; MBS; MZS;

pakri

arie

paternal & maternal


granduncle/aunt

FFB; FFZ; FMB; FMZ;


MFB; MFZ; MFB; MFZ

kek

kek

2 cousin children of paternal


& maternal granduncle/aunt

FFBS; FFZS; FMBS; FMZS;


MFBS; MFZS; MFBS; MFZS

pakri lipoh

arie

nd

3rd cousin

pakri lipoh kak arie


keduo

262

Figure 23: Punan Vuhang Consanguineal Terms

kek lop ayok


===

kek lop ayok


===

===
kek
kek
lop
lop

kek

===
kek
kek
lop
lop
===
kek
kek

mak
mek

===
mak
mimek
nek

===
mak
mimek
nek

pakri
lipoh

pakri

yek

pakri

===
kek
kek
===
mak
inak

EGO

yek

nak

===
ivet
mak
mek

arin

nak

nyahun

naken

nak naken

nak nyahun

263

===
mak
mimek
nek

arin

===
kek
kek

pakri

===
mak
minek
mek

pakri

naken

pakri
lipoh

Affinal Terms
The Punan Vuhang have a special set of terms for affinal kinthose related through
marriage. The terms include those for persons who are related through the spouse and
affinal kin of ones siblings, and certain categories of paternal/maternal affines. Table 19 and
Figure 24 below list affinal terms.
A male ego refers to all his brothers-in-law as luguk, including his wifes brothers
and sisters husbands. He calls his sisters-in-law languk. A female ego refers to her brothers1
in-law as languk and her sisters-in-law, as ngarik.
The term of reference between parents-in-law and children-in-law is the same,
boson. Nonetheless, children-in-law add the suffix le to refer to their father-in-law (boson le)
and oroh for mother-in-law (boson oroh). To address a spouses uncles and aunts, the same
terms as for parents-in-law are used.
A Punan Vuhang avoids addressing his or her parents-in-law or children-in-law.
When he needs to talk to his in-laws, he will pass the message to his spouse, or in her
absence, to someone else to convey the message. Unless absolutely necessary, a man
calls his father-in-law bakeh (friend) and a woman calls her mother-in-law ayu. For the
opposite sex, there is no address term used between the son-in-law and the mother-in-law,
or the daughter-in-law and father-in-law. This non-utterance of address terms is a sign of
extreme respect. Usually when a person wants to convey something to his in-laws, the
request is made known through the spouse. When the spouse is not present and there is an
urgent need to do so, the conversation between the two is carried out with deep respect.
They talk in a low tone of voice and use soft-spoken wordsa sort of audible whispering.
Between an individual and the parents of his or her childrens spouses, a man calls
the father of his child-in-law bisan, and a woman calls her counterpart ayu. There is no
address term for the opposite sex. There is no prohibition of social interaction between bisan
and ayu, although they are expected to show deep respect for one other.

See Sellato (2002:93-103) for a discussion of the special reference terms for such siblings-in-law. Using
a complex terminological system for affines involving distinction of the same-sex and cross-sex relation
and gender differentiation, Sellato attempts to correlate the nomadic way of life and economy with
utrolocal post-marital residence. However, as mentioned above, the Punan Vuhangs practice of
uxorilocal post-marital residence would not support this hypothesis.

264

Table 19: Punan Vuhang Affinal Terms


Kin Relation

Initial

Reference
Term

wife

oan

oak

wifes brother

WB

luguk

luguk

wifes brothers wife

WBW

languk

languk

wifes sister

WZ

languk

languk

wifes sisters husband

WZH

luai

luai

children of wifes brother and


sister

WBS & D; WZS & D

naken

naken

father-in-law wifes father

WF

boson le

no term

mother-in-law wifes mother

WM

boson oroh

no term

uncle-in-law wifes fathers


and mothers brother

WFB; WMB

boson le

no term

aunt-in-law wifes mothers


and fathers sister

WMZ; WFZ

boson oroh

no term

grandfathers-in-law

WFF; WMF;

man boson

man bosok

grandmothers-in-law

WFM; WMM

inan boson

inan bosok

daughter-in-laws father, son-inlaws father

SWF; DHF

bisan

bisan

daughter-in-laws mother; sonin-laws mother

SWM; DHM

no term

no term

grandchildrens spouse

SSW; SDH; DSW;


DDH;

oan nyahun

oan nyahuk

brother-in-law sisters
husband

ZH

luguk

luguk

sister-in-law brothers wife

BW

languk

languk

sibling of sisters husband &


brothers wife

ZHB; ZHZ; BWB;


BWZ

luai

luai

When Ego is woman:


husbands sister and brothers
wife

HZ; BZ

ngarik

ngarik

When Ego is woman: daugtherin-laws mother; son-in-laws


mother

SWM; DHM

ayu

ayu

When Ego is woman: there is


no term for the father of her
daughter-in-law and her son-inlaw

ZWF; DHF

no term

no term

265

Address
Term

Figure 24: Punan Vuhang Affinal Terms

===
man
inan
boson
boson

===
boson
boson
le
oroh

luai

===

languk

arin /
yek

===

luguk

arin /
yek

===

EGO

oan

naken

boson
le

===

luguk

luai/
languk

===
bisan
no term

boson
oroh

===

languk

languk

nakan

===
nak
boson

nyahun

===

nyahun

oan nyahun

nak nyahun

Note: If ego is a woman, all her sister-in-laws are called ngarik; she calls the mother of her daughter-in-law
ayu, and there is no term for the father of her spouse.

266

Conclusion
With the deaths of thirty-two individuals since settling down, and divorce and
separation, 9 households today are composite households due to amalgamation by which
related individuals once belonging to separate households have joined together. This
complex membership of households has implications for other aspects of social life as seen
in the next chapter when six individuals carry out shifting cultivation on their own rather than
farming together with the rest of the household members.

267

Chapter Nine: The Contemporary Economy


Introduction
This chapter will discuss the Punan Vuhang responses to the adoption of
cultivation in 1968 and then permanent settlement at Long Lidem in 1971. An ability to
produce enough food to allow them to stay in one place resulted in many elements of their
former mobile economy being discarded. However, the Punan Vuhang do not rear animals
for food and so continue to rely on wild game for protein. Consequently, the Punan Vuhang
remain a hunting people although their hunting strategies have changed. The passage of
time has also caught up with the Punan Vuhang and outside materials obtained through
trade are now important features in their life, in comparison with nomadic times.
This chapter on the contemporary economy will discuss the shift of economic
orientation by first assessing why the Punan Vuhang prefer planting to their former sago
exploitation. This is followed by an account of the stages of cultivation. We will then look at
the forms of hunting and fishing that the community continues to do. The final section on
trade shows how the economy has now become partially geared towards producing
materials to barter for outside goods.
Preference of Cultivation to Sago Exploitation
This section compares sago exploitation with cultivation to explore why the Punan
Vuhang prefer cultivation. The adoption of cultivation ensures a more constant food supply in
1
contrast to sago gathering which always involved some degree of uncertainty. With proper
procedures and under the right weather conditions, rice and cassava are crops that can be
cultivated to obtain a sufficient yield which lasts through the year. In contrast, sago harvesting
depended entirely on the natural occurrence of sago growth and necessitated the community
continually moving.
Rice cultivation produces grain that can be stored, and cassava can be taken from
the ground when needed. These two food resources sustain the community throughout the
year, thereby allowing them to remain sedentary. Sago consumption, on the other hand,
required mobility. It involved harvesting vast areas and moving between one river system
and another that entailed long-distance traveling. This travel was particularly intense during
the lean period when sago was the only available staple food. Even so, during the nomadic
era, Punan Vuhang frequently experienced food scarcity and were reduced at times to eating
a single meal per day.
The relative food certainty from cultivation allows people to pursue leisure activities
during the non-cultivation season. Although they may face meat shortages, the availability of
food allows them to take rest days from work. During nomadic times, the men had to
alternate between sago gathering and hunting throughout the lean period. They searched for
food every day, except during a torrential downpour or when sick. The only time when the
1

I use the relative term more constant because famine can still happen. In January 1994, a flash flood
swept away their harvested rice. Consequently, the Punan Vuhang had to revert to sago as their staple
food for much of the year. Also, the exceptionally long period of drought which prolonged the lean food
period caused local wild boar to destroy much of the cassava crop. Consequently there was insufficient
rice and cassava to sustain the community. The rice crop of the following year 1994/1995 was abundant
and the Punan Vuhang did not have to rely on sago anymore.

268

community could ease their activities was during the season of abundance that lasted about
five months during which they could easily obtain fruits and hunt wild boar.
The availability of cultivated food increases a sense of food security and therefore
enables hunters to carry out less intensified hunts. They know that if they fail to obtain game,
their spouse can collect cassava leaf shoots or ferns from nearby for cooking into side
dishes. Frequently hunters return by midday, despite not obtaining any meat. Hunters during
nomadic times did not have the luxury of returning home early without game. They had to
leave camp by daybreak and only returned at nightfall to maximize their exploration ranges
over a vast area. Informants mentioned that the distant areas covered by those hunters on a
daily basis (puklik-ulik) would now require young men to camp overnight (misan) before they
could reach those places. When too far to carry back, older hunters nowadays leave the
carcasses in the cold streams for preservation and then return home. The next day, the
hunters ask the young men to bring back the carcasses.
Cultivation and permanent settlement have allowed women to become less
involved in economic activities in comparison to sago processing that needed much of their
time and involvement. Nowadays, Punan Vuhang women only need to assist their husbands
in the cultivation stages of sowing, weeding and harvesting, in which much labor is needed.
At other work stages, they may merely accompany their spouses and cook for them in the
swidden fields, without getting involved in the work. However, more often than not, the
women remain in the longhouse while their husbands work by themselves in the swidden
fields.
The availability of cassava close to the settlement allows the women to go
themselves to dig cassava tubers as a supplement for the main staple food which is rice.
Once or twice a week, groups of women paddle boats to the swidden sites. If the swiddens
are quite far from the longhouse, a male teenager accompanies them. When they run out of
cassava, they revert to eating rice. In the early mornings, they dry the rice and pound it to
remove the husk. If their spouses do not get any game, they go to the adjacent swidden to
pluck cassava leaf shoots. Whenever necessary, they collect firewood in the surrounding
forest. Most of the time, they are free from any task, and weave rattan products.
For children, life has become much better as they now have more meals than
when the community was nomadic. They have breakfast and then play throughout the
morning. They come back for lunch and resume playing in the afternoon. At night they have
an evening meal. In comparison, children in the past had only a single meal during lean
periods. They only had their first meal when their parents returned from sago processing late
in the day. Nonetheless, informants emphasized that during times of food scarcity, they had
been used to having empty stomachs. Therefore, as long as there was food at the end of the
day, it was all right. They said that it was only after looking back on the nomadic times that
they realized how much suffering they had endured.
During a lean period, when food was scarce, hunters had to go out every day to
search for food. No man remained behind unless he was very ill. Now, the community
observes Sunday as a rest day. They even have the luxury of having a long holiday,
extending from Christmas day (December 25) till the second day of the New Year (January
2). Everyday during this festive season, they celebrate into the night and young people
frequently play until the wee hours of the morning.
269

For these reasons, the Punan Vuhang continue to practice cultivation and have
never reverted totally back to sago exploitation, except for the famine year of 1994. In fact,
they are so successful as cultivators that for many years, downriver Penan communities
such as Long Tanyit, Long Kajang and even Lusong Laku come to visit them for Christmas.
They even stay throughout the Christmas-New Year period because of the availability of
1
food.
In the adoption of cultivation, the Punan Vuhang have transformed themselves into
successful cultivators. They do not rear animals, however, and remain hunters. They also
continue to harvest honey during the flowering season and collect fruit during the fruit
season. However, with the availability of cultivated fruit they now depend less on wild fruit.
Shifting Cultivation
The mode of cultivation that the Punan Vuhang have adopted is shifting cultivation.
This has been, and continues to be, the main economic practice of the agrarian communities
living in central Borneo. Swiddening has been extensively studied in Borneo (see, for
example, Chan 1991; Chin 1977, 1985; Dove 1985; Freeman 1955; King 1993:170-187;
Rousseau 1977). Basically, swidden cultivation involves clearing and burning an area of
forest to provide a space for cultivation, sowing rice seeds with a dibble stick and planting
various crops, weeding (if necessary), and then harvesting. After that, the land is allowed to
revert to forest, a process known as fallowing. When the land has reverted to secondary
forest with mature trees, the cultivators use the land again for another cycle of cultivation.
While the forest is under fallow, the cultivators move to cultivate another area of forest land.
They move from one site to another until the land that they cultivated earlier has fully
regenerated into secondary forest (bae).
Shifting cultivation requires simple technology. The farmers use long knives to
slash and cut down small trees, and axes to fell larger trees. In recent years, chainsaws have
been introduced to fell trees. They use dibble sticks to make shallow holes in the ground into
which they then sow seeds. In harvesting, they use small blades to cut the rice panicles from
the stalks.
Rice plants obtain nutrients from very old secondary forests and primary forests
humus in the soil, and from biomass of the burnt vegetation. In secondary forest, nutrients
are derived mainly from the burnt biomass, converted from forest vegetation.
In this section, I will briefly describe the stages of cultivation. This provides some
idea of how the Punan Vuhangs work processes differ from other agrarian communities who
rely solely on rice as their staple food. It is important to note that the Punan Vuhang subsist
on a variety of staple foods that include, in the order of importance, rice, cassava, bananas,
potatoes and yams. As such, I believe that they have chosen not to cultivate rice as
extensively as other people. Also, the Punan Vuhang live on land with very fertile soils quite
similar to those of Benalui basin which the Kayan of Uma Daro claim are the most fertile in

In 1994, the Penan people did not come to celebrate with the Punan Vuhang. This was because the
logging companies which intruded into their territory had paid good-will money for them to celebrate
Christmas. Also, in that particular year, the Punan Vuhang lost the seasons rice crop due to flooding.

270

the Balui (Chan 1991:xliv).1 As such, they do not have to farm large tracts of land, although
in less fertile areas, their swiddens are considerably larger. Besides rice cultivation, the
Punan Vuhang plant cassava that requires a year to mature. Thus, at any given time, the
Punan Vuhang rely on two staple crops 1) the stored yield from the annual rice harvest
and 2) cassava from the previous year.
Site Selection
The Punan Vuhang generally select an area that can accommodate the fields of all
households in the village. However, some households select separate sites if they feel that
the location is better than the common area. The presence of some individual sites isolated
from the others differentiates Punan Vuhang cultivation from that of the Kayan who only farm
together in adjacent swiddens. Among the Kayan, even if the farms are cultivated at different
locations, groups of households make their farms adjacent to each another.
During the cultivation season of 1994/1995, the main planting site was in the
Petjawa area, a short distance away from the longhouse. The households that farmed there
were those of Kudun, Lajang, Lidut, Negan, Sayun, Surek and Uji. Bawe and his brother,
Sakung, cultivated by themselves far upriver in the Betlaup area. Naro and Kilat farmed
adjacent to each other at Laput Kebuhor, while Jimol cultivated his land close to Naro and
Kilat. All other individuals, Igeng, Sabung, Nanyab, Rahut, Nyuwe, Milang and Mangu,
planted their swidden far from each other. Except for Mangu, all the other individuals live in
the households of other people and were therefore compelled to cultivate their own rice
farms as a supplement to their hosts.
The close proximity of the Petjawa area to the longhouse meant that the cultivators
could go to their farms on a daily basis and return each afternoon to the longhouse instead of
having to construct a farmhut. However, the short distance to the longhouse meant that the
land there has been cultivated more than once, some twice or even three times.
Consequently, some individuals found the land to be over-cultivated. They feel that the
secondary forest has yet to sufficiently regenerate to provide enough burnt biomass for rice
cultivation. Consequently they choose to farm old secondary forest land at a distance from
the longhouse. In comparison, during the previous cultivation season of 1993/1994, the
entire community cleared an area of very old secondary forest in the Sengayan region. Since
that land was far from the longhouse, the community built durable farmhouses nearby.
Method of Site Selection The first stage of cultivation involves a farmer going to the
2
tentatively selected site to examine the soil conditions to determine its suitability. They avoid
land with exposed roots on the ground surface. Here the soil (tanok apau) is so infertile that
roots grow on the ground surface to obtain nutrients from the rotting humus and cover the
soil like a tightly woven mat that prevents rice plants from establishing their roots in the soil.

The land is so fertile that it is common for rice plants to collapse due to the heavy yields. This also
occurred in land cultivated from young secondary forest.
2

Along the Kajang, most land had been cultivated by the agrarian Kajang people a few centuries ago.
Therefore, although the vegetation resembles primary or virgin forest, the land is old secondary forest.

271

The second thing they avoid is land covered with exposed soil because this indicates that it is
barren, lacks humus and so will not support any plant growth.
A good piece of land is one that is flat and contains a stream meandering across it
that irrigates the soil. The soil in this kind of land is considered cool soil (tanok bajik). The
presence of ferns growing over the land is an indicator of very fertile soil. Even in a young
secondary forest, where the trees are not sufficiently big to provide enough burnt biomass,
rice grows well because of the natural fertility of the soil. In young secondary forest land,
another indicator of suitability is the presence of thorny vines. This type of land is very fertile;
however, it is difficult to clear because of the thorns.
The best type of land for cultivation is secondary forest land that has been fallow for
more than ten years. The trees dominating the land are sufficiently mature, with a trunks
diameter larger than a mans waist, to provide an abundant biomass for conversion into burnt
nutrients, still, the trees are not too big for easy felling. The tree canopy is dense enough to
prevent sunlight from penetrating to the forest floor, thus preventing the growth of weeds and
thorns. The absence of weeds and thorny growth and the presence of few seedlings make
cutting undergrowth easy. In addition, the absence of weeds also means that there will be
minimal weed growth from seeds already in the soil during the rice cultivation season.
Another factor that contributes to soil fertility is the abundance of humus from decayed trunks
that were not burnt during previous cultivation.
Very old secondary forest and primary forest land are also suitable for rice
cultivation. The surface soil contains a thick layer of humus. Due to the thick tree canopy that
shades the forest floor, weeds do not grow on such land. The only disadvantage is the
presence of huge trees, including hardwood species, that are difficult to fell. The tree felling
stage, therefore, has to be started much earlier to enable it to be completed a month before
the sowing season. This early cutting allows the branches of the larger trees to dry sufficiently
to burn. Therefore, only households with strong men attempt clearing such land for rice
1
cultivation.
Slashing Undergrowth, Lemirik
Slashing undergrowth is the first work process and involves cutting and clearing
small plants. The ground has to be cleared of obstacles that would pose danger during tree
felling when the fellers retreat must be swift to avoid the falling trees. In young secondary
forest, young plants and vines make up a major part of the vegetation that impedes quick
movement. These small plants become dry and burn easily which provides fuel for burning
the branches of big trees during the burning stage.
To clear the ground, the farmer uses a long working knife (ovi), to cut through the
undergrowth with a single slash. The method of slashing depends on the type of growth, as
the undergrowth in old secondary forest is different from that in young forest. In primary or old
secondary forest, the undergrowth is mainly seedlings with stems that are less than an inch

During the early years of practicing cultivation, the community contained many young men who
motivated and challenged each other to fell big trees and clear large tracts of land. At present, the
availability of chainsaws enables men to fell big trees as before, including in some very old forest land.

272

in diameter. These trees are easily severed with one slash at the tree base, although the
cutting angle determines the ease of cutting. The angle should be between 20 to 30
degrees perpendicular to the tree (see Figure 25 below). This sharp cutting angle that follows
the grain of the stem is easier to sever. In comparison, cutting at a right angle across the
stem causes the knife to cut against the grain, which is hard to sever and requires more than
one slash. Also, the sharp angle allows the cultivator to slash at the tree base without having
to bend down too low. If he slashes at a right angle, he has to squat. The severed stem base
is merely two inches above the ground so that the land becomes clear of any growth.
Young trees up to four inches in diameter are cut with a few slashes at the same
spot. Cutting at a sharp angle at a single spot allows the subsequent cuts to be made deeper
into the trunk, thus enabling the trunk to be severed after only a few slashes. The severing of
these trees is at waist-level to maximize the striking force. All trees larger than that are left
standing for the tree felling stage.

cutting
angle

30

Figure 25: Angle for cutting a tree during slashing

The cultivator slashes other soft plants such as ferns with one sweeping swing
horizontally above the ground. The cutting of palms and vines with hard stems requires
caution. Severing a stem causes the bottom part of the stem to snap up after being relieved
of its heavy growth. If a person is not careful, the sharp edge of the severed stem can spring
back and cut him. Thorny vines and rattans are severed at the base by first slashing the
protruding vines and thorny leaves to expose the stem. Clearing thorny growth is slow and
difficult work and is described below.
On some parts of the land, trees may have fallen due to age or having been struck
by lightning. The opening in the tree canopy has allowed sunlight to shine through, thus
enabling vines to flourish and grow over the young trees. If the thorny growth is dense, the
cultivator squats down and slowly slashes the vines at ground level. Then he cuts the thorny
vines above his head to clear a space of about five feet high. After that, he stands up to clear
the higher part. The work requires tremendous patience and endurance as only a very small
273

area can be cleared in an hour. By comparison, slashing other growth clears an area a
dozen times larger in the same amount of time.
In young secondary forest, the main vegetation consists of young trees and thick
undergrowth. The low open tree canopy allows sunlight to shine through which enables plant
growth to cover the ground and this dense undergrowth requires tremendous effort to cut
and clear. To make slashing easier, the cultivator uses a wooden hook to pull the stems and
expose the inner, softer part of the growth. The work is slow as each man can only cut a
single plant with each slash.
If the vegetation is covered by thorny growth as mentioned above, it seems almost
impossible to clear the land. However, this vegetation is mainly found in very fertile soil in
young secondary forest that has a low tree canopy. Although the clearing seems such an
impossible task, after clearing, there is little work to do as the small trees are easily chopped
down. Since the plants are small, the felled vegetation requires only about two to three
1
weeks to dry. A man can therefore slowly and patiently cut the plants. In comparison, much
bigger trees in old forest land have to be felled very much earlier.
Felling Trees, Motet
The process of tree felling is to clear the land entirely of trees. Also, the trees
provide biomass for conversion into nutrients through burning. Tree felling involves two
distinctively different methods: chain-felling, which only one man in the Punan Vuhang
community has the skill to do; and felling a few trees at a time.
Chain-fellingThe man identifies a big tree that leans in the direction he wants the trees to
fall. This tree has to be huge and have a wide tree crown to provide enough force to push
2
down the trees along its falling path. On a slope, the size of the tree is not so important
because the force of its fall is sufficient to knock down the other trees. On flat land, only a tree
much bigger than the rest can knock down the others. After that, he chops two shallow
notches on all trees that will be affected by the falling of the big tree. The first notch that faces
the falling direction is slightly lower than the other notch that faces the opposite direction. The
depth of each notch is about a quarter of the trees diameter. With the tree remaining partially
severed, it continues to stand, but will snap if a heavy force falls against it.
Finally, the selected tree that will knock down the other trees is felled. Only a very
skillful man can do this work, as the direction of the fall of the tree must be accurate to
provide the maximum impact on the other, partially severed trees. First, he clears a path to
run away unimpeded when the tree falls. If the tree is a huge one, another man assists him in
chopping the tree. If the buttresses of the tree are high, they construct a platform up on the
higher part of the tree where the size of the trunk is narrow. Then on the side of the trunk that
faces the falling direction, he chops up to a third of the trees diameter. After that, he chops
the opposite side of the trunk. When the depth of the second cut is about a quarter of the
1

For that reason, the elderly Nanyab who lived on his own would choose this kind of land for cultivation,
as it does not require much effort to fell trees, unlike old secondary forest.
2

The tree must be free from any vines from other trees clinging to it, otherwise the vines will keep the tree
from falling.

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trunks diameter, he becomes more cautious. He looks up at the tree, and watches for the
tree to sway each time he hacks into the trunk. He chops until the tree starts swaying. Then
he quickly hacks a few times before the tree gives way. He then runs quickly away from the
falling tree to a spot that is safe from falling debris.
The tree slowly sways and its massive canopy and heavy weight cause it to snap
at the partially severed point. Its ponderous weight strikes down the adjacent trees within its
falling range. The impact causes the partially severed trees to give way and snap at their
severed points. These trees then fall on the adjacent trees and produce an impact that
knocks down the other trees. Through this chain-effect, all the trees within falling range fall
one by one like dominos. In an instant, all the trees crash down with a thunderous sound as
each tree hits the ground, thus clearing a large space of standing trees. He repeats this
process until he fells all the trees.
Felling a Few Trees at a TimeHowever, not every individual has the confidence and skill to
perform chain-felling. Even on a slope, which is supposedly easier, they will not attempt it.
These men will cut a few trees at a time and then use another tree to crash down on these
partially severed trees, quite like the chain-effect but on a smaller scale of about five to ten
trees. Trees that cannot be brought down by chain-felling due to their precarious position,
such as those leaning in the opposite direction, are felled last.
Lopping Branches, Nutuk
Branches that protrude up from the fallen trees are difficult to burn. Consequently, if
the cultivators have the time, they first cut branches from the trunk so that they fall to the
ground. This is especially so in places that have less dense wood. If the protruding branch is
found at a spot which has plenty of wood, he ignores it. After that, the wood is left to dry over
a period of a few weeks to one and a half months, depending on the size of the wood. Bigger
logs require much more time to dry. Then for the next month, which coincides with the dry
season (July to mid-August), the cut vegetation is left to dry in the hot sun. Usually the dry
season extends up to a month and a half, which is sufficient to dry the branches of big trees.
Burning, Nutong
th
th
Following the Kayan who choose August 8 or 15 of each year to be the date for
beginning sowing for each cultivation season, the Punan Vuhang burn the dry cut vegetation
a few days before the sowing date. They set fire to the dry wood with torches. Slowly at first,
and gradually gaining momentum, the fire spreads throughout the felled vegetation. The fire
consumes the small wood and burns with a roaring thunderous sound. Gradually the fire
burns the branches, then the big branches and the smaller sized tree trunks which take a
whole day and night to burn. When the fire dies out completely the next day, only the big logs
remain unburned. However, at spots with dense wood, the fire may continue to burn at the
bottoms of the trunks for a few more days.

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276

Sowing, Nugan
When the land has cooled down from the burning, the Punan Vuhang then sow the
rice seeds, preferably on August 8th, or August 15th if burning is done after the 8th. All ablebodied household members participate in sowing which requires much labor. The household
head uses a dibble stick to make shallow holes about two inches deep and an inch wide.
The women drop about six to nine seeds in each hole. It is important that the sowing is
quickly completed, as the Punan Vuhang believe that the rice sown later than two weeks
1
after burning does not grow well.
Weeding, Nabur
Weeding is done to remove weeds that would otherwise compete for nutrients with
the rice plants. It is usually done two months after planting, when the young rice plants are
between one and two feet high. The weeds, growing to half the height of the rice plants, have
to be removed before they take up too many nutrients. The types of weeds determine the
weeding method. Weeds thriving in fertile and moist soil are soft and easily pulled out.
However, their growth remains prolific and new weeds will emerge later. Weeds that grow on
infertile, dry and hard land are deeply rooted in the soil. These weeds are very difficult to pull
out by hand, so are cut with a sickle-shaped weeding knife.
The weeds, once pulled out or cut, are left where they are to become ground cover
that will prevent rain from hitting the soil surface. Also, the weeds become barriers to runoff
rain water that would flow over the surface, thus minimizing soil erosion. As a result, the
removal of the weeds not only eliminates them from competing for nutrients with the growing
rice, but also helps prevent nutrients from being washed away by the fast-flowing water.
Although weeding is important, it is only necessary in swidden cultivated on young
secondary forest land. These weeds were the main vegetation before clearing and their
seeds lay dormant under the soil surface during the burning process. When rain falls, they
germinate and sprout. In old forest land, there is no weed growth before land clearance, and
therefore weeding is not necessary.
Harvesting, Kelunau
By the first week of January, the rice that was sown earliest is ready for harvesting.
Everybody in the household participates. Some use a small blade to cut off the panicles of
grain while others pluck the stalk at the internode. Some Punan Vuhang do not put their
harvested rice into a basket strapped onto their backs like the Kayan, for example; instead,
they hold the stalks in their hands. When their hands are full, they then bring the stalks to a
basket that is shared by a few harvesters. When the basket is full, they pour the grains into a
25 kilogram sized gunny sack. At the end of the day, they have usually managed to harvest
three to five sacks of grain with the stalks intact. In the evening they thrash the yield to
separate the grain from the stalks. They then dry the grain under the sun before storing it

For that reason, Milang abandoned sowing rice in his swidden during the 1994/95 season because the
sowing for his daughters household could not be completed. After completing the sowing, he did sow a
few patches of land at his swidden, but none of the rice seeds germinated.

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inside storage bins (tilong) placed inside the longhouse and when abundant, in a rice hut
(lapo pare).
Processing grain into rice
Before pounding, the grain is dried in the sun for a few hours to harden the husk.
Then they pound the grain in a mortar until it detaches from the husk. After that, they winnow
the rice from the husk. To cook the rice, an equal amount of water and rice is poured into a
cooking pot. After the water boils and the rice has fully absorbed the water, the fire is snuffed
out. The embers retain the heat to let the rice become fully cooked. If the fire were allowed to
continue burning, it would be too hot and the bottom layer of rice would be burnt. Instead, the
hot embers keep cooking the rice with a lower heat until it is fully cooked. The rice is then
served on a tray for common consumption by all household members.
Reciprocal and Individual Labor
The Punan Vuhang use both reciprocal and individual labor to cultivate their
swidden fields. Individual labor is the more common and employed when a person is
confident that he can carry out all the work processes by himself without the help of others.
Reciprocal labor is used by a person who requires the expertise of another individual to work
his swidden field. The person then requests the assistance of the skilled person and offers to
work for him in exchange. This assistance is usually requested for the difficult tree felling
process.
During the early years of rice cultivation, the Punan Vuhang commonly formed
work groups. In this system, members of different households cooperated and took turns to
work on each others farms. The work group system that the Punan Vuhang adopted was an
unsystematic exchange of labor. The participating members of a group would work on a
households farm until all the work was completed before moving on to another farm. The
duration of work was uncertain, and depended on the size of the land and the kind of
vegetation growth on the land. There was no measurement of the number of days that an
individual worked on other households swiddens. Only the completion of work for all the
households farms signified the complete cooperation and reciprocal exchange of labor,
regardless of whether a person provided more labor than he received.
This work group system significantly differed from that practiced by Kayan
cultivators. The Kayan work group involves a systematic exchange of an equal amount of
labor, whereby the amount of labor given and received by each household is exactly the
same. The number of days that an individual works on another persons farm is reciprocated
by the same number of days work. Also, the work group works evenly for all the members
by rotating the work on each members farm until they complete the cycle before returning to
the first households swidden. This systematic rotation means that the labor exchange is
evenly distributed among all the members of the work group.
In contrast, among the Punan Vuhang, the last households to receive the work
groups aid were always at a great disadvantage. Towards the end, people were less diligent
and the absentee rate was high. Moreover, households whose fields were the last to be
cleared would receive the shortest time for the vegetation to dry, despite the fact that the
longer the drying period, the better the burn that could be achieved. However, because the
278

Punan Vuhangs swidden fields are very much smaller, the delay in obtaining labor had less
impact, compared to the Kayan who cultivate surplus rice on large swidden fields. Even so,
the Punan Vuhangs work group system created severe disadvantages to those households
whose fields were worked last. For many years, this unequal cooperative work group system
was practiced by the Punan Vuhang. Eventually it was abandoned, and replaced by
1
individual and reciprocal labor.
What eventually caused the breakdown in group cooperative work were
irregularities in the labor contribution by work group members. Since the work was
continuous and the work contribution not recorded, nobody could remember how many days
of work had been contributed by each member on other members farms. As a result, there
was a high absentee rate during the work process. When this happened, some members
grumbled and complained that the absent members were avoiding the cooperative work and
were ungrateful for the work that other people had done for them. Another factor that led to
the breakdown of work groups was the issue of firewood collection. At the end of the day,
members collected good wood for firewood from the felled trees. This annoyed some
swidden owners who complained that work group members were only interested in collecting
firewood.
As a result of these negative remarks, various members began to disassociate
themselves from work groups. Instead, they did the work by themselves, thus freeing
themselves from obligations to work with others. Eventually, people felt that it was more
beneficial to do their own work. Consequently, the cooperative work group system collapsed
due to the lack of cooperation and to misunderstandings among the members.
Individual Labor
With the collapse of the work group system, each man now works for himself for
the entire duration of the cultivation cycle. Members of a mans household only provide their
assistance in the strenuous but monotonous work of sowing, weeding and harvesting. At the
onset of the cultivation season, it seems improbable that a single man would be able to clear
the forest growth from the land. It is only by patience and hard work that he is able to
gradually cut the forest down, bit by bit. The task is extremely monotonous and he works
from morning till evening. However, as a hunter, he has been accustomed to performing his
activities in isolation, and cultivating in a solitary state is a situation with which he is familiar.
This differs from the Kayan who work in work groups because of the need to overcome the
weaknesses of working alone. For the Kayan, these weaknesses include lack of discipline,
loneliness and the monotony of work (Chan 1991:141; Rousseau 1977:138).
Another factor that differentiates the Punan Vuhang from the Kayan is the size of
the swidden fields they farm. The Kayan consider rice to be their only staple food and will
only eat other food like cassava or sago in times of rice shortage. As such, they need large
tracts of land, a condition that requires much manpower to clear. In comparison, the Punan
Vuhang subsist on a variety of staple food crops, and therefore require less rice, resulting in
the cultivation of much smaller swiddens. Consequently, a man can clear the land all by

Thambiah (1995:10) observed the same lack of orderly function of the workgroup among the Bhuket:
Once their [smaller] farms have been harvested they stop providing the labour due to the others.

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himself. However, a person who works by himself and uses only an axe to fell the trees in old
secondary forest will face a great deal of difficulty. In this case, he will reciprocate his work
with a person who is skilled in using a chainsaw for tree felling. Out of the total number of
eighteen individuals who made swiddens, only nine of them did all of the work themselves
without exchange of labor in 1994/95.
Reciprocal Labor
A man offers his labor to a person who is an expert in tree felling by clearing the
undergrowth on the latters farm. In return, the skilled person helps to cut the trees by
reciprocating work for the same number of days he received help. This exchange of labor is
more advantageous to the unskilled person because if he were to fell the trees by himself, it
would take much more time. Consequently, he gains extra working days by offering just a
few days of work.
Another reason for offering reciprocal labor is to obtain the use of a chainsaw. If a
person who is skilled in operating a chainsaw owns one that is malfunctioning, he would
work for an unskilled chainsaw owner to clear the farm of the latter to gain the right to use the
1
chainsaw on his own swidden.
The following cases illustrate how these exchanges of labor operated in the
1994/94 cultivation season:
Case 1: Kudun helped his elder brother, Jimol, fell trees in Jimols old secondary
forest and this gave him the right to then use Jimols chainsaw. Kudun and Jimol have a
special relationship, being brothers who are married to a niece and a step-aunt. Jimol
married the daughter of Nigau who is the stepsister of Ngarik, Kuduns wife. It is interesting
that these two households share food at the first sharing level that is, the biggest shared
portion of food resources is with each other. Yet, despite their close relationship, Kudun could
not merely borrow the chainsaw.
Case 2: Bawe and Lidut worked on Sayuns swidden in exchange for Sayuns
expertise in felling the huge trees on their primary and old secondary forest land. These
examples are cases that fall within the reciprocal labor category mentioned above. If these
men worked by themselves in felling the huge trees, it would require a very much longer time
than obtaining the help from an expert. Consequently, working for Sayun was to their
advantage as he reciprocated by completing the work for them in a much shorter time.
Case 3: Uji worked for Jimol to obtain Jimols labor and chainsaw to cut trees on
his land.
All these labor exchanges from members of different households involved felling
huge trees. Men who cultivated their swidden from young secondary forest did not participate
in any form of labor exchange. There was no need to obtain any assistance as they were
capable of felling the trees themselves. The only person who cultivated old forest land but did
not get any assistance in tree felling was Naro. He worked by himself because he knew how
to operate a chainsaw, and had one himself.
1

It is for that reason that the Punan Vuhang try very hard to obtain a chainsaw for themselves, as
chainsaw owners are extremely reluctant to lend their chainsaws to other people. This is not surprising, as
it requires much labor to produce the trade goods needed to obtain a chainsaw.

280

Another form of labor exchange was the labor contribution of community members
who resided in their hosts households and joined them for meals. Although they were
closely related, it was only right for them to assist their hosts. These included Tarang who
helped his brother, Bawe; Lobin who helped his brother-in-law, Lajang; and Nyuling who
stayed with his brother-in-law, Jimol. In the case of Tawing, he is the uncle of Sayun and had
at one time lived with Sayun after the death of his wife. He later stayed in an empty
apartment. Nonetheless, he felt obligated to help Sayun instead of making his own farm. This
assistance entitled him to the right to obtain a share of rice from Sayuns swidden. Langat did
not feel comfortable staying with his brothers Riyek or Nguwe. After the death of Tawings
wife, Langat followed Tawing, who as mentioned above, had initially stayed with Sayun and
who then stayed in an empty apartment. Following the work of Tawing, Langat helped Sayun
to cultivate the latters farm. Probably this labor contribution was to benefit Langat himself as
he was too weak to make his own swidden. Because of Sayuns generosity, he knew that
Sayun would reciprocate and thus he would be able to obtain a larger share of rice than he
1
really deserved.
Hunting
The Punan Vuhang remain a hunting people despite having become cultivators
because they continue to rely on wildlife as their main source of protein. Nonetheless, the
amount of hunting has become less due to the availability of a greater variety of cultivated
food. Hunting has also changed from an activity based primarily on land to becoming riverbased. With the availability of boats and outboard motors, hunters can easily go far
upstream to enter hunting grounds farther away. In comparison, during the nomadic times,
hunting always took place far in the hinterland and up on the mountain ranges.
Wild boar remains the major focus of hunting, while other types of game have
become less important. Most wildlife now has become aware of the human hunters and has
adapted to the situation by living far from the settlement and the river banks. Consequently, it
is difficult to obtain tree-dwelling game by blowpipes or to trap ground-dwelling animals by
noose traps. Hunters have to travel to distant hunting grounds to have a better chance of
killing such game. In the mid 1980s, the government issued two shotguns for the
communitys self-protection. These weapons are now important hunting tools although their
use is limited due to a lack of ammunition. Consequently, the use of spears and hunting dogs
remains the most important hunting technique.
In contrast to hunting during the mobile economy, hunters now use land routes
less frequently to venture to hunting grounds deep in the hinterlands. A few years after the
Punan Vuhang settled in 1972, Lajang was the first man to use a boat for hunting. When he
killed a wild boar, he did not carry the heavy carcass a great distance back to the settlement.
Instead, he carried it a comparatively short distance from the site of the kill to the riverbank
1

Sayun is a very kind-hearted man who offered to be the Head Deacon. Most people favor him to
become the headman in place of his uncle, Nyinyang. However, he had pledged to continue serving as
the Head Deacon. It is most likely that he did not desire the post (with government allowance) because
he feels that Naro, his second cousin, is more suitable. Because of his generosity, Ngihang, the brother of
Sayuns wifes father, stays with him instead of Ngihangs own brother, Kilat, or Sabung, or with his other
nieces. Ngihang has deformed fingers and cannot contribute any labor to help Sayun.

281

and then left the carcass on the bank. He next walked to the boat and paddled it to where he
had left the carcass. After that, he merely paddled slowly downriver to the settlement.
This idea caught on with other hunters and hunting has now changed from walking
directly into the hinterland to traveling to hunting grounds by boat. Before the arrival of the
outboard motor, hunters poled their boats all the way to the Bukor tributary, a journey of
several hours. Although the distance was far, hunters did not need to carry the heavy
carcass all the way on their backs. Instead, like Lajang, they just had to put the carcass in the
boat and paddle back leisurely. However, many individuals, in particular the older hunters,
continue to hunt using the traditional manner of walking across land for the entire duration of
the hunt. The grounds on which they hunt include the headwaters of the Kebuhor,
Sengayan, Lumunung and Petjawa that provide many excellent hunting sites (see Map 9,
page 227).
Over the years, it has become increasingly difficult to hunt wild boar near the river
as the hunting frequency has increased their wariness. Now, hunters have to travel farther
inland from the riverbanks. Also, the availability of outboard motors enables them to travel
downriver to reach hunting grounds there. With the use of outboard motors to propel their
boats, they can travel with a heavy load back up the river. In the past, before outboard
motors were available, it was difficult to pole upstream against the strong current with a boat
laden with the carcass of a heavy wild boar.
The use of a shotgun is a favored hunting method as it enables a hunter to stalk
fairly close to game and then shoot it still from a distance. If shot in the right spot, the game
will die instantly. Without a gun, it is impossible to hunt wild boar by using the traditional kusi
method of only using a spear. Kusi can only be done during the wild boar migration season
when the pigs are focusing on their foraging. For some individuals, hunting with guns is
preferable to using dogs as they need not pursue the game for a long distance before killing
it. With a gun, a hunter merely looks around for fresh wild boar tracks. The tracking is a
leisurely activity as the hunter treads lightly on the ground to prevent any brittle twigs from
snapping. When a hunter spots a fresh track, the chance of acquiring the game is high. All he
needs to do is to follow the track until he hears the grunting sounds of the pig, the munching
sounds of its foraging or the snapping of twigs as it moves against small plants. Getting into
shooting range, he easily shoots the pigs and rarely misses.
With a gun, hunting can also be done at nighttime. All the hunter needs is a
torchlight with sufficient battery power to last for several hours. Before sunset, he poles his
boat upstream until he reaches a sufficiently distant spot that will still allow him to slowly
paddle back downriver for just a few hours to reach the settlement site.
At nightfall, he slowly paddles and prevents the boat from floating too fast down the
river. He points the torchlight on the bank and looks for the reflecting glow of animals eyes.
When the light shines into its eyes, it is temporarily blinded which allows the hunter to aim
and shoot before it can escape. When the glow of the light reflects the game that he wants,
such as a wild boar, a deer, a barking deer or even a mousedeer, the hunter quickly aims at
the target by holding the torchlight together with the gun. His other hand pulls the guns
trigger. Usually, the shot is accurate as he aims at the forehead between the eyes. Shot in
the forehead, an animal dies instantly. Occasionally the shot misses the vulnerable spot and
hits the animals body. When this happens, the victim is likely to succumb slowly by bleeding
282

to death. After shooting, the hunter quickly paddles to the riverbank and ties up the boat.
Then, using his torchlight, he looks for blood to follow its trail. Under the cover of darkness,
the game sometimes does not run far away, thus offering another opportunity to shoot it. If it
runs too far away, it is difficult to track, and may manage to escape.
Blowpipe hunting is no longer practiced because the animals have become so
avoidant due to the continued presence of hunters. To successfully obtain any game with a
blowpipe, the hunter would have to go very far into the hinterlands, but the yield is not
commensurate with the effort, as it requires a high expenditure of energy and time to reach
those areas. A hunter will only search for such game when a member of the household is
sick and desires to eat a tree-dwelling animal. The Punan Vuhang do not favor pork when
they are sick because the high fat content makes them feel nauseous. When the need
arises, a hunter borrows a gun from one of the two individuals who have been given the right
to handle the shotguns.
The adaptation of avoidant behavior by ground-dwelling animals towards noose
traps has also rendered this trapping method useless. As a result, hunters do not set traps
anymore. To do so, they would have to go to distant trapping grounds and, again, the return
is not proportionate to the distant daily walk to check on the traps. The only time when the
people did so was in 1993 when traders requested them to trap porcupines to obtain bezoar
stones that then fetched very high prices. A stone the size of a thumb could be sold for up to
a thousand ringgit. However, very few porcupines that were trapped contained stones and
the most expensive one was sold for only RM 500.00. The people eventually abandoned
the activity when no more stones were found, although some traps did catch a few birds,
mousedeer, and civet.
Fishing
Fish have become more important after sedenterization because of the availability
of boats and fishnets. Luhat Tehin, a very old man, is the only person to continue to use an
ovow luyuk spawning trap. As during nomadic times, the people mainly fish at times when
wild boar are not available. During the monthly visit of the Flying Doctor Service, some
people catch fish to sell to the medical staff.
As fishing is a common practice done by many communities and has been
described in detail (e.g., Chin 1985), I only briefly mention some fishing activities and only
provide a bit more detail on those that seem unusual. A fishing expedition usually requires
two persons to assist each other. They paddle and pole their boat to big bays far upstream
from the settlement where the river is rarely disturbed by the community. The best location is
the Laput Bangan estuary which contains the most abundant fish in the whole of the Kajang
River. Other bays around that area also contain numerous fish. When the fishermen reach a
bay, the front man stands on the front tip of the boat and prepares to cast out the cast net. He
throws a stone at a spot that has no sunken wood at the bottom. This is important, as the
wood would entangle the net. As the stone hits the water, it acts as bait that resembles a ripe
fruit dropping into the river. The fish in the bay quickly swim to eat the fruit. The individual
then casts the net which spreads out wide over the spot. As the net sinks, it

283

spreads out fully and the weighted circumference hits the water simultaneously;
the weights cause the circumference to sink quickly and then gradually come
together enclosing whatever fish that might be caught. The net is then drawn up by
1
the rope held in the hand (Chin 1985:106-107).

If the bay is small, he only casts his net once. In the bigger bays he casts about 2-4
2
times. Then he fixes two gill nets, one blocking the upstream part of the bay. Next he sets
another net over a tree base that has roots protruding into the water. The spaces between
the submerged roots provide hiding places for the fish when under threat. After that, he uses
the pole for poking into the roots to force out the fish. His partner meanwhile hits the water
with his pole to produce a slapping sound which frightens the fish. With the intrusion into their
hiding places and the noise, the fish dart around frantically. When they swim into the invisible
gill net, they are caught.
The number of fish that can be trapped depends on the number of fish in the bay.
However, those fish that are used to this disturbance have learned to remain in their hiding
places and it is usually only the smaller fish that are caught by this method. The further the
fishing team goes up into the headwaters, the bigger and more fish they are able to catch, as
these fish are less experienced with trapping. When they catch a big fish, bigger than a
forearm, they tie it through its jaw with a rattan strip to a submerged piece of wood. This
keeps the fish alive for collection on their way back. Fish to be consumed are immediately
killed by snapping their gills, lest they flip over the side of the boat and escape. During a long
expedition that requires a whole day of fishing, the fishermen are likely to camp overnight.
They leave the gill nets in the bigger bays and some fish will be caught overnight as they
swim into the nets.
The use of cast nets and gill nets is only practical during dry periods when the river
is low. After a heavy rainfall, it requires about a week for the water level to subside to a
favorable level. In shallow water, the fish avoid the most shallow parts of the river and seek
shelter in the big bays. With the fish concentrated in the bays, it is easier to trap them. In
contrast, during high water, the fish swim from the bays and many enter the tributaries to
seek the abundant food available there. As a result, the Punan Vuhang only attempt to catch
fish sold for cash to the Flying Doctor Service personnel during low water.
Other Crops
The Punan Vuhang cultivate a variety of crops to supplement their rice and
cassava. Unlike the Kayan who consume only rice except during lean times, the Punan
Vuhang consume cassava (Manihot esculenta Crantz; ubi), sweet potatoes (Ipomoea
batatas; ubi okar), yams (Colocosia esculenta; cukai) and bananas (Musa sapientum L.; puti)
as other staple foods. Like all sedentary communities, they also cultivate various vegetable

The cast net purchased from traders is a circular net usually 4 - 6 m in diameter with lead weights
around the circumference. A rope is attached to the center, the end of which is held in the hand as the net
is cast (Chin 1985:106).
2

At the headwaters of the Kajang River, the width of the river is narrow and the depth shallow. The bigger
bays measure between forty to sixty feet wide. As such, the fish are easily disturbed in the small volume of
water.

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crops as side dishes. In certain locations within the swidden, they plant fruit trees. All these
crops can be classified into four types: staple crops, short term and mid-term crops, and
permanent or perennial crops.
Staple Foods
After he has sown his rice, a cultivator plants cassava stems measuring half a foot
long in the swidden fields. He inserts the stem at an angle of about 30 to the ground surface
to enable tubers to grow more profusely than when planted at a right angle. The cassava
crop requires a few months for the tubers to form. The people usually harvest it the following
year to obtain tubers that are about the size of a mans forearm. Besides the required size,
an extended growth period enables the tubers to gain more maturity and acquire more
starch. The Punan Vuhang occasionally grate the mature cassava tubers to process them
into starch, a type of food quite similar to sago starch. Occasionally when the Punan Vuhang
feel nostalgic for eating sago paste (linut), they process cassava into this dish. Otherwise
they will just boil the tuber. Also, they fry the grated cassava in pig lard to form kasai which is
quite similar to the sago kasai, although both the cassava linut and kasai are less tasty
compared to starch processed from sago.
A Punan Vuhang woman uses a working knife to extract the cassava tuber by first
digging the soil at the plant base. When the soil is loosened, she pulls out the tubers. For
tubers that still remain, she continues digging until she can pull them out. Cassava harvesting
is usually done by a group of women or an old man alone. The work is easy and a person
only needs to extract a basketful of tubers for two or three days consumption. The proximity
of the swidden to the settlement gives the women a sense of security that allows them to go
without the company of a man.
The cassava crop is harvested over a year. The following year, the plants are
abandoned after harvesting to establish new roots and tubers. However, this selfpropagating crop produces a low quality yield. Moreover, secondary forest growth may
hinder its growth.
The Punan Vuhang also cultivate bananas by planting young shoots that they
have dug up from established banana clumps. The banana shoots require a long time to
grow. After maturity, they produce offshoots which perpetuate their growth. As the plants
continue to produce offshoots, the fruits mature and ripen at different times. Consequently,
the people harvest their bananas over a long period. Besides eating this fruit as a snack, they
cook it in lard to produce banana paste (kasai puti). Occasionally, they boil raw bananas and
then mash the fruit into a pulp to eat as a staple in place of rice.
The Punan Vuhang maintain a banana garden by clearing around the plants base.
Otherwise, secondary growth will compete for nutrients and sunlight. After a few years, the
garden is abandoned as it is too tedious to continue clearing the land. Banana plants in fields
close to the settlement are properly maintained and so become a long-term crop.
The Punan Vuhang only plant maize when its seeds are available. The people do
not fancy eating this food as the breed commonly planted in the swidden is tough and
tasteless. If they do want to grow it, they cultivate maize in swidden fields together with rice.

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Short-term Crops
These plants are cultivated in the swidden, and after harvesting, the crops are
abandoned. Depending on availability of seeds, they plant vegetables, gourds and
cucumbers. These foods are eaten as side dishes. Usually by the time the rice ripens, these
crops are mature.
Tobacco is an important crop although only those who smoke tobacco cultivate it.
They plant tobacco seeds on fertile spots with the highest concentration of burnt biomass.
When the plant achieves maturity, the leaves are plucked and then cut into thin shreds. Then
the leaves are placed in the sun to dry. The Punan Vuhang use a type of broad jungle leaf in
which to roll the tobacco for smoking.
Mid-term Crops
Mid-term crops include sugarcane (Saccharum officinarum L.; tabu) and papaya
(Carica papaya; modung) that continue to be harvested until secondary forest growth
overwhelms them. As such, these crops are harvested for up to two years after planting.
Although these two crops are nourishing, their yield is small and the Punan Vuhang do not
consider them worthwhile for maintenance longer than two years.
Perennial Crops
The Punan Vuhang cultivate fruit trees along the river banks, especially at the
confluence of a small stream that acts as a boundary to the next owners land. These
concentrated fruit groves are carefully maintained. During clearing for rice cultivation, the fruit
trees are not felled. Consequently, the trees are planted near boundaries so that the fruit
grove does not take up too much land. During the firing of fields, care is taken to ensure that
these trees do not burn. Land close to the settlement is turned into small fruit gardens, so
now, during the fruit season, the Punan Vuhang do not have to go far to harvest fruit.
Among the varieties of fruit commonly planted that are favored by the Punan
Vuhang are durians (Durio zibethinus Murr.; luyan), mangoes (Mangifera pajang Kost.;
pangin), jade fruits (Artocarpus heterophyllus; bado), rambutans (Nephelim lappaceum.;
beliti), a bristly-haired rambutan-like fruit (Nephelium mutabile Bl.; N. uncinatum; avong),
and a longan-like fruit (Pometia pinnata Forst.; Xerospermum sp.; Dimocarpus longan Lour;
isau). Other fruits that are planted but not much favored due to their sour taste are, for
example, oranges (Citrus reticulata Blanco; Citrus sinensis; limo kanying), limes (Citrus
aurantifolia; limo mohom), pomelos (Citrus grandis; limo ayok tup), and pineapples (Ananas
comosus; arok san). Coconuts (Cocos nucifera L.; nyiur) also are not much favored because
of the difficulty of climbing the tree.
The Punan Vuhang cultivate fruit trees by two methods. The first is to clear around
a tree seedling that was self-propagated. This is called ngalasik. Around the settlement
compound there are many fruit trees cultivated in this way because during the fruit season,
the people simply spit out the seeds which then germinate into seedlings. Seedlings growing
too close to the longhouse are removed, as when they mature, their dry branches might drop
and damage the longhouse. Only seedlings found fifteen to twenty feet away from the
longhouse are allowed to grow.

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A person who wants to own a seedling sticks a few sticks in the ground around it
to indicate ownership. He then maintains its growth by clearing the surrounding soil until it
matures. The second method involves replanting the seedlings into a selected site at the
edge of a swidden field. The seedlings are usually obtained from self-propagated seedlings.
The people also selectively breed fruit trees by planting seeds taken from trees known to
produce good yields.
Collecting Activities
After the short-term vegetable crops in the swidden have stopped yielding, the
Punan Vuhang rely on a variety of non-cultivated plants for food, including domesticated
plants that have regenerated. They consume ferns (Stenochlaena palustris; paku paya),
bamboo shoots, cassava shoots (Manihot esculenta Crantz) and sago shoots (Eugeissona
utilis Becc.). Except for sago shoots, these foods typically grow near the settlement. Cassava
shoots are the most common and are found in abundance in swiddens, including abandoned
swiddens next to the longhouse. Women, as well as young girls, pluck the shoots and then
pound the leaf shoots into pulp in a mortar. Cooked alone or with a mixture of meat, cassava
shoots are a main side dish when meat is not available. The Punan Vuhang do not favor
ferns except for an occasional meal to break the monotony of depending too much on
cassava leaf shoots. Ferns are easy to find as the surrounding river banks have an
abundance of them. Bamboo shoots are seasonal and only those plants near the settlement
are harvested. In distant areas, hunters who are unsuccessful gather the shoots when they
come across them. Similarly, hunters deliberately harvest sago shoots from distant grounds
only during unsuccessful hunts. However, when a hunter has successfully obtained game
and passes an area with sago growth, he will cut some pith for cooking with the meat as that
produces a delicious dish.
Another important collecting activity is gathering firewood. The men take big trunks
of quality firewood from forest trees at a distance from the settlement. Groups of women, for
their part, also collect firewood from the nearby forest. During the wild boar migration season,
when cooking is much more frequent and takes much more time, firewood gathering is more
intensive. Good quality wood is found in primary and old secondary forest. Hunters usually
transport the big logs in their boats on the downriver journey when returning from hunting. At
the settlement site, if the logs are more than one and half feet in diameter, a man will split
them into four pieces so that his spouse can further split them into kindling.
The combination of these diverse activities, including shifting cultivation, hunting,
fishing, gathering and barter-trading (discussed below) has resulted in the Punan Vuhang
adopting an economy that is not much different from other longhouse dwellers in the Balui.
The main difference is in how shifting cultivation is performed. Here, individual labor seems to
be much more frequent compared to the cooperative work groups favored by others. A
further change in the economy can be seen in the following section on commoditization.

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Barter Trading
This section looks into the development of barter trading among the Punan
Vuhang, an economic activity in which they have increasingly participated over the last two
and a half decades. With settlement at the mid-Kajang River, traders now take a weeks
journey to the Punan Vuhang instead of three or more months in the past. The introduction of
outboard motors in the 1970s permits a small party to conduct trading. In fact, two Kenyah
men regularly operate alone, although trading parties most often comprise three or four
trading partners. Consequently, any enterprising individual can undertake trade with the
Punan Vuhang.
The commencement of the Bakun Hydroelectric Dam Project in late 1994 resulted
in a greater intensity of trading. The governments plan to compensate for houses that will be
submerged by the reservoir has motivated many more individuals to trade. From profits
gained through trading, they buy building materials to modify their houses in order to obtain
larger compensations. Some of them who had not even owned an apartment are now
motivated to build their own houses. Consequently, trading parties go out more frequently.
When not engaged in farm work, a trading group comes to trade with the Punan Vuhang
every two or three months at least, and at times more often.
The increased amount of trading has impacted Punan Vuhang life, and the items
traded have also changed. Several items that were in great demand in the past are no longer
needed, while a new array of goods are now required. Items such as metal tools are no
longer desired by the Punan Vuhang from the traders, as they can obtain knives from Penan
1
blacksmiths at downriver Penan settlements. Similarly, cultivated tobacco is not traded
anymore as the Punan Vuhang cultivate their own tobacco. To perpetuate trading, the
traders have introduced new goods to attract peoples attention. They have also introduced
the highly addictive Bangau brand tobacco (lokok lokong) which produces a strong effect on
the person who smokes it. The Table below shows the prices of some common items that
were not brought to the people during nomadic times, but are now available.
The availability of these consumer goods has produced new desires and the
Punan Vuhang are no longer a people with low material needs as was the case during
nomadic times. When traders are present, the Punan Vuhang become excited by the array
of goods. First, they trade for the desired goods with rattan products that they have already
woven in anticipation of the traders arrival. These desired products include biscuits or cream
crackers, instant noodles, sugar and coffee or tea. After consuming these instant foods,
they obtain other materials that are more durable, such as clothes, batteries, torchlights and
soap.
During the few days traders are present, the Punan Vuhang exchange other
materials for the traders products. Early in the traders visit, the Punan Vuhang sell off the
rattan products they have already made, and then the traders sell more products by giving
credit to the people. Following that, the people diligently weave more products to pay off the
debts. After a few days, much of the debt will be paid off and the traders will leave. The
1

Some Penan are specialists in knife making. They obtain iron bars from Belaga to fashion into knives.
Each knife only costs RM 10.00 and the Punan Vuhang find it more worthwhile buying knives than
spending time making their own.

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traders cannot afford to wait too long for the people to complete their products as the small
amount of debt is not commensurate with the expenses of staying longer.

Table 20: Commonly Traded Goods and Price Sold among the Punan
Vuhang, 1994/95
Item

Punan Vuhang

Unit

Price in RM

patterned basket

ajat kalong

10.00

mesh basket

ajat kawang

4.00

basket bottom

lutuk ajat

1.00

shoulder strap

oii

1 pair

0.50

mat

nyam

100.00

sugar

gulak

1 kg.

5.00

Salt

siau

1 kg.

5.00

Monosodium Glutamate

aji

1 packet

5.00

coffee

kopi

1 tin

10.00

tea

teh

1 packet

5.00

instant noodles

mee

1 packet

2.00

cream cracker

lotik

1 packet

10.00

Tobacco

lokok lokong

1 packet

10.00

An addictive drug

Kaki

1 packet

5.00

battery

batun pui

2.00

torchlight

tokik

20.00

sarong

celeyon

1 piece

10.00

petrol fuel

minyak motor

1 gallon

30.00

soap

kabun

1 piece

2.00

Note: At exchange rate of 1 Euro to RM4.50 or USD1 to RM3.80 in June 2005.

While all these materials are not essential, the craving for a new itemKaki, a type
of drug that relieves headache and feverintensifies the trading. The effect of the drug is
immediate in suppressing their discomfort; it also relieves them of lethargy and gives them a
sense of well-being.
This new drug was introduced by two young Punan Vuhang individuals who
attended an adult school in Belaga in the 1970s. After completing school, Tanyut then
worked as a hospital attendant in Kapit and Lobin served in a rural health clinic at the Baleh
headwaters. Over time, they could not stand the regimented lifestyle that required
observance of various rules and regulations. They were also unfamiliar with life outside their
former environment. They returned and brought along the Three-Legged brand drug
(commonly known as Kaki-Tiga) which was a very common drug taken by the Iban
community who live in the Kapit region. When their household members were sick, they
gave them the drug. It was easy to take as a person merely mixed a little of the powder in
some water and then drank the concoction. The effect was immediate. After that, whenever
an individual felt unwell, he or she would take this drug. Unfortunately, the people did not
289

know that the drug was addictive, so after taking it several times, they became addicted and
craved its soothing effect even though they were feeling well.
Eventually the drug ran out and traders were asked to bring it on their trading
expeditions. Initially the traders brought only a little, but the consumption increased. As more
and more of the drug was brought, the people became increasingly addicted and they found
it to have more uses. When they felt tired or hungry, the drug relieved them of their
uncomfortable feelings. It also provided relief for their lethargy during the monotonous rattan
weaving (some of which was to make products to trade for more Kaki Tiga) and the long
period of hunting and cultivation activities. Before long, most of them became addicted to it.
As they asked the traders to bring in the drug in larger amounts, some well-meaning traders
warned them of the side-effects. By then, it was too late as the people were already hooked.
The doctors and the medical staff who flew in once a month by helicopter were also aware of
the problem and frequently advised them of the ill-effects. However, it was of no avail and the
number of addicts increased.
If traders came without Kaki, they would be chided by the people who would
exclaim how could they live without Kaki and that they would die without it. The demand is
guaranteed and trading is extremely profitable. The drug in a powder form is light and
extremely easy to carry, and one person can carry at least four boxes of Kaki. Each box
containing 50 packets, is bought for RM125.00 in Belaga (at RM 2.50 per packet). Among
the Punan Vuhang, the trader sells the drug for RM 5.00 per packet. With the exchange of
two packets (RM 10.00), he obtains a basket worth RM 10.00 in Belaga. At a cost of RM
5.00 for two packets, he makes a profit of RM 5.00 for selling the basket. From a box of
drugs bought at RM 125.00, he is therefore able to make a profit of RM125.00. Since the
drug is so light and easily transportable, a trader can bring as much of it as possible without
needing expensive porters. Any remaining unsold portion can be brought back by the trader
and then taken for trading again.
In recent years, Balan Asan, a Badeng trader from the Long Geng community, has
introduced a new form of commodity exchange by selling chainsaws and outboard motors
through credit. A chainsaw costs about RM1000.00 and a 3-horsepower outboard motor
costs RM850.00. Households that obtain these machines have to work hard to produce mats
and designed baskets to pay off the debts. Because of the large size of the debts, it takes
about a year for them to finish paying.
With the purchase of these motorized tools, petrol fuel is needed. As of 1995,
while traders do bring petrol and sell it at RM 30.00 per gallon, most Punan Vuhang would
rather make the three-day journey to the nearest logging camp to purchase petrol at RM
11.00 per gallon (compared to about RM 5.00 in Kuching). As cash to buy petrol is needed,
most Punan Vuhang want to sell their products for cash. However, very few traders want to
buy the rattan products for cash as they do not make any profit doing so because the Punan
Vuhang only sell their mats for the same price they get in the Belaga bazaar. The trader then
does not make any profit if he sells the mat in the same place for the same price. Only a few
young traders who have traveled extensively and who do their transactions in the main towns
of Kuching and Miri will pay for the products in cash. In these towns, the rattan products are
sold for one and a half times more than the price in Belaga. Besides, these traders also buy
certain tradable items at cheaper prices than in Belaga, thus making an extra profit in their
290

trading. Punan Vuhang households who have need for cash will generally keep one or two
mats for these traders with cash. Nonetheless, these traders visit them only occasionally.
With greater needs of consumable items and to pay off loans extended by the
traders, every able-bodied household member has to work diligently to produce these
commodities. The men have to go to the forest regularly to collect rattan vines. When there is
a need to produce mats which will require a great many vines, the men will go on rattan
collecting expeditions and will camp in distant areas that have an abundance of rattan vines.
Boys will follow their fathers or uncles in these collecting expeditions to procure more rattan.
The duration of these expeditions ranges from camping overnight to three days, depending
on the availability of rattan and the quantity they need.
The women too have to work hard. A mat takes about two to three weeks to weave
depending on the other tasks a woman has to handle. A big mat measuring 5 by 5 feet and a
half is sold for RM 100.00. A basket decorated with designs (ajat kalong) takes a day or so to
weave and is worth RM 10.00. They do the work in the mornings and afternoons when they
are free from other tasks. At night they weave together and a few persons share a diesel
lamp for light. To contribute more income, the men weave meshed baskets (ajat kawang)
that sell for RM 4.00. Other men weave shoulder straps (oii), with a pair worth RM 0.50, and
basket bottoms (lutuk ajat). The basket bottom is sold for RM 1.00 to a weaver who will then
attach it to a basket decorated with designs.
The people work with full concentration as they focus on weaving. During the night,
when everybody is gathered around, they entertain themselves by telling stories, playing the
guitar-like sape or playing the tape recorder and dancing. The work is repetitive, monotonous
and boring. These forms of entertainment help them to get through the nights work. The
people seem very diligent producing the rattan products day and night. However, the craving
for Kaki is the motivation to do the work. A person jokes about it, Pinak kai mek we, kai
nyokonu Kaki ivak When we weave rattan-work, we think only of Kaki. Otherwise, the
people would not have much incentive to do this tiresome work.
Conclusion
The adoption of cultivation and a sedentary life have considerably changed Punan
Vuhang livelihood. From being a mobile hunter-gatherer community that exploited a large
territory, they have now become settled permanently in a longhouse and cultivate the
surrounding land. With the ability to substantially control the yield of cultivated crops, they are
able to produce a consistent and sufficient food supply that sustains them throughout the
year. Being a people who do not consume farm-raised pigs and chickens, they continue to
hunt wild boar and fish to obtain protein. They also consume much fruit, both from cultivated
and wild trees. In addition, they collect rattan for weaving into mats and baskets as a means
to acquire materials from the outside world through barter trade. Cash has now become
important to buy petrol for operating chainsaws and outboard motors.
In the near future, the logging industry, with its extending road penetrating further
and further into the remote corners of the forest, will reach Punan Vuhang country. It is likely
that when a road reaches their settlement, they will become involved not only in subsistence,
but also, eventually, in cash crop cultivation.

291

Chapter Ten: Resource Tenure Sedentism and the Current Crisis of


Legal Recognition
Introduction
The transition from a nomadic to a sedentary way of life has drastically changed
Punan Vuhang perceptions regarding several resources that were once worthless to them.
Land, in particular, has now gained importance as a resource for cultivation purposes.
Another resource, trees, used for constructing boats and houses, is now treated as private
property by several individuals. On the other hand, freedom from dependence on forest
products for survival has resulted in the Punan Vuhang no longer establishing rights to some
former food resources. For instance, fewer people now establish claims over sago palms as
private property.
Adoption of cultivation has brought new property rights for cultivated crops. The
Punan Vuhang accord private property rights to all cultivated crops, but consider a food crop
that self-propagates after harvesting as open-access property. On the other hand, they
consider permanent crops, such as fruit trees, private property. The establishment of
exclusive private rights over cultivated crops is based on a recognition of the effort required to
cultivate them. Planting requires many difficult labor processes. First, a farmer clears a piece
of land of trees. Next, he waits a month for the felled vegetation to dry before burning. Then,
after planting, the crop requires maintenance. Hence, it is only reasonable for the Punan to
recognize the exclusive right of a cultivator over his plants (see Sellato (1994:193) on the
development of private property). According to this perspective, cultivated food does not fall
within the sharing system. Only under special circumstances does a person feel obliged to
share his yield.
Following a discussion of the above, I will deal with a legal crisis that the Punan
Vuhang will eventually face as the States codified laws do not provide any recognition of
their resource tenure rights.
Perennial Crops
The Punan Vuhang establish private property rights in perpetuity to perennial
crops, in particular, tree crops. The people establish rights over fruit trees through two
methods, one, growing the tree from seed, and second, establishing rights to a selfpropagated seedling (ngalasik). The first method involves deliberately planting fruit trees on
the farm, usually at the edges of the swidden to identify the boundary between other swidden
fields. On land near the settlement, they plant orchards of fruit trees so that the owners need
not go far to harvest the fruits. On the other hand, plants also sprout by themselves from
seeds spat out while the fruits are being eaten.
Rights can be established to seedlings discovered at the edge of a settlement
compound. Seedlings found close to the longhouse, however, are not allowed to grow for as
the trees age, their branches might fall onto the longhouse.
While fruit trees are regarded as private property due to their perennial growth, the
Punan Vuhang also consider a banana tree as private property despite its limited life span. A
banana tree, after bearing fruit, rots and dies. However, at the base of a banana plant, shoots
emerge to perpetuate the plant, producing a clump of banana trees that continue to produce
292

shoots for further growth. Therefore, the community considers banana plants to be private
property and recognizes the right of a cultivator to retain ownership of a banana clump. This
right includes all plants that grow within the area of the first cultivated plant.
While a cultivator holds absolute rights to all of his fruit trees, it is his obligation to
share the fruit with other people when the yield is abundant. If it is sparse, the rights holder
consumes it with his household and gives some to his nephews and nieces. If the yield is
more than enough for his household, he invites kinsmen to participate in the harvesting. If
there is an abundant yield, he invites the whole community to harvest it together. During this
communal harvesting, the members only pluck the ripe fruit, leaving the partially ripened fruit
for the cultivator.
Although the right is exclusive, the owners siblings and their children can pick the
fruits without his permission, unless the rights holder shows displeasure. Since many fruit
trees are planted close to the settlement, they are easily harvested by kinsmen. If the owner
does not make a big fuss over the matter, the kinsmen will pick the fruit without considering
his feelings. On the other hand, if the owner openly shows his or her displeasure, kinsmen
will not take the fruit.
Rights holders, however, do not share their bananas. The banana tree is
non-seasonal and yields in small quantities. If a kinsman takes the fruit, there will not be
anything left for the cultivator. Nonetheless, if the fruit is almost ripe and remains on the tree,
a kinsman can help to harvest the fruit for the owner. He brings the entire bunch of bananas
to the owners apartment and he will be rewarded for his assistance. While the owner holds
exclusive rights to the fruit, he has an obligation to share with any immediate kinsmen who
requests some for cooking as a staple dish. Also, he freely gives ripe fruit to children.
Short-Term Crops
A cultivator holds exclusive private rights to short-term crops in the swidden. These
1
include rice, tapioca, tobacco and vegetable crops. Due to their short-term nature, the right
is not permanent and lapses after harvesting. This impermanence of rights includes any
tapioca that self-propagates after harvesting. An abandoned tapioca stalk does not decay,
but instead grows roots to generate new growth. When these root plants mature, the people
consider them open-access property that anybody can take. Rights to tobacco are also
impermanent. The big leaves that generate quality tobacco are the private property of the
2
cultivator, who generally disregards small leaves remaining on the stalks. The small leaves
remaining behind become open-access property. Anyone can pick them without seeking
permission, unless someone else has first reserved the right to harvest the leaves.
The Punan Vuhang consider sugarcane (Saccharum officinarum L.; tabu) as
different from other resources and therefore maintain a different system of rights over it. The
1

A close relative who obtains permission to acquire a little yield sufficient for a few meals can invite a few
others to participate in harvesting together.
2

The cultivator processes the tobacco leaves by slicing them into fine pieces and putting them out to dry
in the sun. He or she may have time to process only the larger leaves, abandoning the smaller ones. As a
result, anyone can harvest the leftover leaves, although most households ignore them because they own
tobacco of their own. Only old people who do not cultivate a farm may be interested in the abandoned
leaves.

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Punan Vuhang cultivate sugarcane at the swidden field for its juice, and chew the canes as a
snack. Sugarcane is planted by inserting the stems into the ground. The stems take root and
when mature, produce offshoots that perpetuate their growth. The second growth stage of
the canes produces the most succulent juice. As the swidden is not maintained by the
cultivator, weeds dominate the land and compete for nutrients with the sugarcane.
Consequently, the canes that grow after the second stage lack nutrients and do not produce
as much flavor. Since there is no maintenance of the plants, exclusive rights to the
sugarcane are then relinquished after the second growth stage. Nonetheless, it is
discourteous to take all the canes, unless the land has totally reverted to secondary trees.
A cultivator does not give away the canes that grow in the second stage. If a
person asks for some of them, the rights holder will say that the canes are in the second
stage, indicating his reluctance to give them away. Therefore, an individual who knows that
the canes are in the second growth stage will not ask for any of them. He expects the owner
to be reluctant to give them away, unless the cultivator is extremely generous or closely
related to him. Nonetheless, the rights holder does not refuse to give some if it is for a small
1
child who is crying for sugarcane.
As seen in the above description, exclusive rights over crops in a swidden only
cover the first seasons cultivation, except for sugarcane. After the harvesting of rice, the land
gradually turns into bush land. Any plants that self-perpetuate become open-access
propertyunless the plants are maintained by the cultivator. This conversion of the crops
from private property to open-access property reinforces the notion that the establishment of
rights to a crop is based on the effort of cultivation.
When a cultivator does not make any effort to maintain a crop that self-propagates,
he relinquishes his rights to it. This situation generally applies to pineapple and tuber crops
such as potatoes and yams. The tips cut from pineapple fruits and the discarded stalks and
skins from tuber plants generate roots to establish further growth. Generally, the Punan
Vuhang simply throw the useless stems and skins behind the longhouse. When these plants
mature and produce yields, the product becomes an open-access property. Usually, a
person only claims rights to crops growing on his portion of the land when he makes an effort
to remove the weeds. The community then recognizes his effort and recognizes his right to
these crops.
Arenga Undulatifolia Sago, Nyamakoh
The Punan Vuhang regarded Arenga (nyamakoh), a sago species, as an openaccess property during nomadic times, but now consider some of the palms private property.
The Arenga is a solitary plant that grows spaced out over a large area. Because of that, the
Punan Vuhang rarely rely upon it as an important food source. Besides, it only grows in
areas downriver from the mid-Kajang River, localities which the Punan Vuhang rarely
frequented before becoming sedentary. Generally, a person only attempted to harvest it

Usually a cultivator who has a small child will have already harvested all his sugarcane for his child. So
when the child, used to sucking the sweet juice from the cane, cries for some more, there is nothing left to
give him.

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upon the accidental sighting of a mature Arenga. Because of its scarcity and solitary growth,
the community did not accord private property rights to a seedling. Also, it did not serve any
purpose to establish rights to it, because when the Punan returned to the area later, it was
difficult to recall the location of the solitary clumps.
The establishment of rights over the Arenga species of sago is a new
phenomenon that the community initiated after becoming sedentary. In 1968, after the
adoption of cultivation, Pua Mean became the first Punan Vuhang to attempt to cultivate
Arenga. He found a sago seedling that had self-propagated, and he cleared the surrounding
land to mark the establishment of ngalasik rights over the growth. The seedling grew into a
big palm. This growth encouraged Pua and in 1972 he attempted growing Arenga from
seeds. After the seeds sprouted, he transferred the seedlings to a swidden and succeeded in
growing them. Kilat Ngeting followed suit by transferring seedlings growing in the forest to his
swidden. Since then, many people have been cultivating Arenga. Nevertheless, most of
them establish ngalasik rights over seedlings found in the forest floor by the traditional means
of clearing around the seedlings, instead of growing Arenga from seeds. At first, they only
established rights to seedlings sighted along the bank of the Kajang River. In recent years,
however, members of the community have established rights to most Arenga seedlings
growing within areas accessible to the settlement.
Cultivation of Eugeissona Utilis Sago, Tajuk
Although rights have been established over Eugeissona since time immemorial,
the Punan Vuhang only cultivated it from seeds beginning in 1982. One successful attempt
to grow Eugeissona from seeds induced others to follow suit, and by now, six individuals
have cultivated Eugeissona within the vicinity of the old longhouse site.
After the adoption of rice cultivation, Eugeissona growing in distant areas lost
importance. Only a few men continue to establish rights over it as a precaution against
famine. This sago resource which was once highly valued as the most important staple food
is now relegated to being a resource only exploited during food scarcity. Occasionally,
however, a person harvests a little of it when he feels nostalgic about eating the linut sago
paste. Also, despite no longer regarding Eugeissona as a source of staple food, the Punan
Vuhang continue to gather the young palms for their delicious shoots. When returning from
hunting or rattan collecting, the men frequently cut some shoots for immediate consumption,
and bring some back for their household members.
Materials for Building Houses
Before becoming sedentary, Punan Vuhang constructed lean-to shelters wherever
they camped. They obtained the necessary wood materials from within the vicinity of the
camp. The main items that they required were small trees about two inches in diameter
(kayu laroh), and these were found in abundance. Due to the ease in obtaining this wood,
the Punan Vuhang considered it open-access property.
The Punan Vuhang only established rights over felled trees and thatch leaves
(Licuala valida Becc.; laun silat) that they had slashed for immediate construction. This rule of
open-access property rights to these small trees and thatch leaves continued even after the

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community had settled permanently. After becoming sedentary in 1968, they continued to
live in the traditional lapo houses which they constructed from small trees.
In 1975 the government brought in corrugated zinc and tools to build durable
houses for the Punan Vuhang. The people used big trees from the nearby forest for sawing
into posts, columns and planks. From this experience, the Punan Vuhang realized the need
to establish rights to suitable trees for future construction. Nonetheless, only a few men
established rights to those trees accessible to the river, especially those upriver from the
settlement. The trees upriver are more important because the wood can be floated down
easily. In contrast, the men have to use boats with outboard motors to transport the materials
if they bring them back from downriver.
Some years after the construction of the longhouse in 1975, households with
young household heads added their apartments to the main longhouse. Several of them
constructed their houses over a wet area. Not long after, the posts standing on the wet
ground decayed. These households informed the government authority about the situation
and requested assistance. As early as 1986, when Naro Pua visited Kuching, he was
informed of an impending government housing project for the community.
When Naro returned to the settlement, he informed the community of the planned
housing project. The people had a meeting to choose the new longhouse location. They
realized that construction of the new longhouse would require many trees for sawing into
posts, columns and planks. The trees needed included the hardwood trees of avang vireh
and teggelam kavok for making posts, and avang buang and Shorea spp. (manator) for
making columns and planks. Other trees suitable for construction included nyuvulu, tebulu
manok and tanok. To obtain these materials, the longhouse site should be near to places
with an abundance of suitable trees. This proximity would not require distant and difficult
transporting of the wood to the longhouse site. They decided that the new longhouse site
should be located at the mouth of the Sengayan River where many suitable trees could be
found.
During the meeting, they also decided that each household member should
establish rights to suitable trees for house construction. Since the trees were abundant in the
forest, most of the people delayed doing so and thought of establishing rights only after
delivery of the housing materials by the government. However, since the delivery of housing
materials only came in 1992, six years after the first notice, in the long interim, few people
believed that the government would actually deliver the materials. Consequently, only three
men established rights to trees, with Naro marking a number of quality trees. Most of these
trees were located near the confluence of the Sengayan, the site of the new longhouse.
In 1992, the government delivered the materials and the community planted rice
for the 1993/94 rice season at the Sengayan tributarys confluence to clear land for the new
longhouse site. However, several members changed their minds and wanted to make their
houses at the old site where many fruit trees are located. They reasoned that by staying near
the fruit gardens, during the fruit season, they would not have to travel far to obtain fruits.
Consequently, in 1993, the majority decided to return to the old site and the whole
community constructed the new longhouse next to the old site.
Those who had established rights to trees near the Sengayan, immediately
established rights to trees farther up the Kajang River. The men who had established rights
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earlier faced less problems transporting the wood. Others who were slow in establishing
rights had to travel far and walk long distances carrying sawn planks on their shoulders to the
river bank. Then they had to transport the wood to the longhouse site by boat. Due to these
difficulties, some resorted to taking other peoples trees without permission. For instance, two
men chopped down an avang vireh tree without informing the tree owner. Usually if a person
does that, he would reserve the best portion for the rights holder, that is, the lowest part of the
trunk which is the biggest and straightest portion. In this case, they kept the best portions for
themselves. They left behind the highest part of the trunk which is considered to be the worst
portiondue to its smaller size and bigger degree of curve.
The rights holder made a complaint to the headman. Because the rights holder did
1
not pursue the case, the headman did not take any action. One of the offenders eventually
left the sawn planks and posts at the tree site, probably feeling ashamed of having taken
them without seeking permission. This offender is also prominent in the community, being a
deacon or pelayan, an important position in the Christian community. Despite this incident,
the public social relationship between the rights holder and these offenders was not strained.
However, in private, comments from the rights holder about the offenders were rather
reserved. Nonetheless, in the rice cultivation season of 1994/95, they cultivated their
swiddens adjacent to each other.
For firewood, the twenty years of permanent settlement in a single site has resulted
in the depletion of quality firewood trees such as lingoh that are close to the settlement. Now,
community members have to go to distant locations to collect quality firewood. In the
foreseeable future, various species suitable for firewood within accessible areas which in the
past were ignored, such as terkalet, will probably have rights established over them. This
change in rights could first develop for trees in secondary forest along the Kajang River bank.
Presently, anyone can fell trees in the secondary forest because the trees self-propagate to
regenerate into forest. The land owner therefore does not have automatic claim to the trees,
although he can establish rights to them if he so wishes.
Land Tenure
Before becoming sedentary, the Punan Vuhang never considered land as a
resource. Although the land itself did not have any economic significance to the Punan
Vuhang, socio-cultural factors could diminish the economic value of an area. When there
was a death, the community had to leave the river valley where the death had occurred and
settle on the other side of a mountain ridge or in another river system. Later, only the
household members of the dead individual could return to the valley and this could only take
place after a few years when there was a need to exploit resources there. For as long as the
affected household members did not return, other people could not do so. If an unforeseen
circumstance forced a person to enter that valley, thus desecrating the land, a fine had to be
1

Upon being questioned on the action he would take, the rights holder said he would respond by taking
sugarcane and bananas grown by the offenders. However, this threat was only empty words, and he
never did so. This non-retaliation and failure to pursue the matter was probably due to his wishing to
become a new headman in place of his aging uncle, the old headman. Also, he might have refrained from
pursuing the issue as it could have undermined his authority and social standing. In 1996, the government
appointed him as headman.

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paid to the affected household. The fine was to avoid any spirit retaliation for the sacrilege.
During this prohibited period, the people could not harvest any resource in the entire tributary
valley, hence, we see the effect of socio-cultural factors on the economic value of an area.
Conversion to Adet Bungan nullified any potential adverse consequences to
violating this taboo. And, the eventual adoption of cultivation which resulted in the community
becoming sedentary caused another major shift in perceptions of land. Consequently, for the
first time the Punan Vuhang established rights to land, following their first cultivation in 1968.
The establishment of rights to land followed the neighboring agrarian Kayans land
tenure system. The individual who first clears a piece of primary forest land establishes
private rights to the land. The establishment of these rights is in recognition of the difficult
work involved in felling trees to clear the land. The felling of trees, sometimes taking as long
as a quarter of a day to fell a single tree, is very difficult and dangerous work. A piece of land
that has been cleared of the big trees is more easily cleared in the future. Also, the big trees
are of hardwood species that are extremely difficult to fell. Another factor that contributes to
the value of secondary forest land is the decaying process of partially burnt tree trunks.
These rotting tree trunks decompose into humus which becomes an important source of
nutrients for cultivation. Land thus becomes a resource that acquires value upon being
cultivated, and therefore, private rights are established over it.
According to the Punan Vuhang system of property rights, it is the individual who
holds exclusive rights to the land and not the household, as in the case of the Kayan land
tenure system. A Kayan man who marries into his spouses household becomes a member
of the land-owning household. If divorce occurs, his spouses household members may only
give him a little land as a token for his assistance in helping clear the land. In contrast,
divorce does not nullify a Punan Vuhang mans rights to land that he cleared during his
marriage. Instead, his divorced spouse has no rights to the land.
A case in point among the Punan Vuhang shows this difference in land rights. The
household of Nigau (Household No 5), before the marriage of the present household head,
Jimol, had previously held no rights to land. Rights to land that were established in the
household were established by Nigaus former spouse, Tarang, who retained his land after
the divorce. Tarang retains rights to the land because it was he who opened up the forest.
Similarly, Rahut, the second spouse of Nigau, also retained his land after divorce. However,
Nigaus rights to her spouses land are not totally lost because her children produced from
both marriages will inherit rights to their fathers lands.
A different case would have occurred if there had been no offspring, in which case,
the land would have been retained by the men and then inherited by their siblings. If the men
should remarry and have children from their new marriages, the land would then be divided
among all the mens children. Since this has not yet happened, this line of reasoning is just a
conjecture.
In another case, Sakung, who divorced Naut, retains rights to all land and
permanent fruit trees that he cultivated during his marriage to Naut. The divorced spouse
only has a limited right to pick, without the need to seek permission, fruits that were cultivated
during the marriage. However, according to an informant, if this woman gives birth to children
in her new marriage, her children do not share the same privilege with her. Since she has

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become old and is childless in her present marriage, how this would have actually worked
out is unanswerable.
As mentioned above, one main factor for the establishment of rights to land is the
difficult task of felling large trees in primary forest. A new development over rights to land will
probably occur with the introduction of a new elementthe chainsaw. The Punan Vuhang
now use chainsaws instead of axes to fell trees and it will be interesting to see how land
rights will further develop for land cleared by a chainsaw. Using again the example of Nigaus
household, the chainsaw that the household members acquired was purchased primarily by
selling rattan products woven by Nigau, her mother and her daughter. However, it was Jimol,
the son-in-law, who did all the rattan collecting. The acquisition of the chainsaw was the
result of a joint effort between Jimol and his in-laws. Since the chainsaw was a jointly
acquired tool that has become the major element in the tree felling process, it is possible that
a new type of land right will develop in the case of a divorce. It is likely that land will be shared
or divided between the household and Jimol, who does all the land clearing work, although
the quantum of division might be a possible source of contention.
The Resource Tenure Crisis of Legal Recognition
This section will assess the status of Punan Vuhang resource tenure according to
State Law. It will describe the impact of the 1958 Sarawak Land Code and the Sarawak
Forests Ordinance, the two main regulations that have direct implications on land and
resource tenure. The issue is highly complex as the following discussion will show. To put the
matter into perspective, the Land Code regulates matters concerning land under the
jurisdiction of the Land and Survey Department. The Forests Ordinance, on the other hand,
provides the Forest Department jurisdiction over forested land categorized as a Permanent
Forest Estate, which is land permanently covered by forest vegetation and now reserved for
perpetual commercial timber harvesting. Forest classified under the Permanent Forest
Estate is legally categorized as Protected Forest under the Forests Ordinance. Lands and
forests outside the Protected Forest are under the jurisdiction of the Land and Survey
Department and are therefore regulated by the Land Code. Consequently, the Punan
Vuhang live on land and forest regulated by two different sets of laws: the Land Code and
the Forests Ordinance.
In 1958, the Sarawak Colonial Government enacted the 1958 Land Code to
consolidate various existing land legislations and to repeal all land ordinances created prior to
it (Chan and Lim 1992:9; Johen 1997:2). Under the Land Code, Native Customary Land is
land for which native customary rights have lawfully been created prior to the 1st day of
January 1958.
This legislation has severe implications for the Punan Vuhang. Section 5 of the
Land Code makes it clear that rights to land established without authorization of a creation of
customary native rights before 1st day of January 1958 are not recognized. The effect of
this law on the Punan Vuhang is therefore damaging. Having been a hunter-gatherer people
who had not cultivated any land before 1968, any means to claim rights to land is effectively
ruled out by the law. As a result, all customary rights to land that they have cleared are
inadmissible.

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Nonetheless, with special provisions, customary rights can be created after 1st
January 1958. Section 5.(1) of the Land Code begins with:
As from the 1st day of January, 1958, native customary rights may be created in
accordance with the native customary law of the community or communities
concerned by any of the methods specified in subsection (2), if a permit is obtained
1
under section 10, upon Interior Area Land.

Following subsection (2):


the methods by which native customary rights may be acquired are
a)
b)
c)
d)
e)
f)

the felling of virgin jungle and the occupation of the land thereby cleared;
the planting of land with fruit trees;
the occupation or cultivation of land;
the use of land for a burial ground or shrine
the use of land of any class for rights of way; or
any other lawful method [in the Land Code Amendment 2000, this subsection has
been omitted]:

Provided that . . . .
(ii)
the question whether any such right has been acquired . . . be
determined by the law in force immediately prior to the 1st day of January, 1958.

However, subsection (ii) emphasizing acquisition of land rights to be determined by law in


force immediately prior to 1st January 1958 contradicts subsection 1 that enables land rights
to be created after 1st January 1958. With this convoluted legal Catch 22, it would be futile
for the Punan Vuhang even to make an application for land titles for it is now almost
2
impossible to create new Native Customary rights in Sarawak (Hooker 1999:32).
While Section 5 seems to be out of bounds to the Punan Vuhang for the
application of documentation of land rights, they can appeal to the Minister for the declaration
of a communal reserve. In Section 6, The Minister may by order signified in the Gazette
declare any area of State land to be a Native Communal Reserve for the use of any
1

However Section 10 maintains that the exercise of rights or privileges in Native Area Land can only be
carried out under a valid and subsisting document of title. Without prior permit in writing from a
Superintendent of the Land and Survey Department, it is an offence to fell or attempt to fell virgin jungle or
attempt to create customary rights in Interior Area Land.
For a better understanding, the related following categories of land are defined:

Native Area Land means land held under a document of title.

Native Customary Land means land for which native customary rights, whether communal or
otherwise, have lawfully been created prior to the 1st day of January, 1958, and still subsist as such.

Interior Area Land means land not falling within any of the definitions of Reserved Land, Customary
Land, Native Area land or Mixed Zone Land, in which:

Reserved Land is land reserved for special purposes, National Parks, Forest Reserve, Protected
Forestry or Communal Forest constituted under the Forests Ordinance, and

Mixed Zone Land basically consists of land held under title by all legal inhabitants of Sarawak.
2

See Hooker (1999) for a discussion on the problem to accommodate customary laws and state laws in
Sarawak. See also the works of Daes (1997), United Nations Special Rapporteur on the problem of land
rights between the States and indigenous people and Martinez (1996) on the problem of treaties and laws
affecting the rights of indigenous peoples.

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community having a native system of personal law. With the proper procedures, it is
possible for the Punan Vuhang to apply to the relevant Minister to effect the recognition of
land rights under this Land Code provision. Unfortunately, looking into the trend, even if this
were to be done, it is unlikely that the Government will ever issue any such title (World
Rainforest Movement and Sahabat Alam Malaysia 1989:241-254).
As a community that continues hunting and gathering, the other law in the form of
the Forests Ordinance has a more serious implication for the Punan Vuhang. This mainly
relates to the issue of the Protected Forest that is established over forest utilized by them for
hunting and gathering. The Punan Vuhang are affected by prohibitions spelled out in Section
36 of the Forests Ordinance:
no person shall in a protected forest
a)
b)
c)
d)
e)
f)
g)
h)

erect any building, or clear or break up any land for cultivation or for any other
purpose;
fell, cut, ring, mark, lop or tap any tree, or injure by fire or otherwise any tree, or
remove timber, firewood or charcoal;
take or remove any other forest produce;
pasture cattle or permit cattle to trespass;
cause any damage by negligence in felling any tree or cutting any timber;
quarry stone, burn lime or charcoal or search for minerals;
kindle, keep or carry any fire or leave any fire burning; or,
commit any other acts of trespassing.

Subject to Sections 28 and 30, only those whose right or privilege has been admitted but
was not extinguished can exercise subsisting rights or privileges having regard to the
natural capacity of the native to enjoy such rights or privileges (Section 35. (1).
The Punan Vuhangs rights have not been admitted as they had never made any
claims during the establishment of the Protected Forest. Consequently, even if they had any,
their rights or privileges have been deemed extinguished by virtue of non-claim within the
stipulated sixty days upon proclamation of the proposed protected forest (Section 26. (1)
(c). In effect, the law now makes it illegal for the Punan Vuhang to collect any forest produce.
Nevertheless, Section 65 of the Ordinance allows the collection of produce for
subsistence in any State land which is not a forest reserve. However, this section provides
for any inhabitant of Sarawak to do so exclusively for his own domestic use and not for sale,
barter or profit.
Depending on how the law is interpreted, Section 36 explicitly prohibits the above
cited activities in Protected Forest, and this may overrule Section 65. Even if Section 65 is
applicable and allows the Punan Vuhang to collect forest products, in essence the provision
is even more harmful as anyone else can also do so for his/her domestic use. With logging
activities getting increasingly nearer to the Punan Vuhang territory and giving access to
outsiders all over the forest, valuable forest products such as rattan may soon be depleted,
as has occurred elsewhere.
While an argument can be put forth that Section 40 of the Forests Ordinance gives
hope to the Punan Vuhang to apply for communal forest status for their land, in that:

301

The Minister may, at the request of a community, constitute any State land, not
being a forest reserve, protected forest or other Government reserve, a communal
forest [emphasis mine],

this will not help them, as any land classified as forest reserve and protected forest cannot be
declared as communal forest or customary rights land. The restriction therefore makes the
Punan Vuhangs chance of application remote if not impossible as the area in which they live
is within the Linau Protected Forest area.
The implication of the Forests Ordinance for the Punan Vuhang is that they are
severely restricted in what they can legally do in the protected forest. However, although the
legal implications of Section 36 are severe, in reality, the law has not been enforced, and the
Punan Vuhang have been allowed to live as they are. One reason is that the Sarawak State
government has so far tolerated native peoples forest activities as they have lived off the
forest from time immemorial. It would be inhumane to prevent them from continuing to do so.
Even if the government were to be strict, it would be difficult to enforce the law. A major factor
that favors the Punan Vuhang is their great distance from administrative centers which
makes law enforcement extremely difficult. Besides, due to the small number of people in the
community (70 persons), their impact on the forest is minimal and it is likely that the
government will continue to tolerate their presence in the headwater regions.
Conclusion
Resource tenure has evolved from a system of rights to resources based on a
mobile economy to one that is affected by sedenterization. Open-access rights are held for
abundant resources not in danger of depletion, while private rights are held in perpetuity to
allow conservation of resources. Private rights are also held in recognition of the effort of
cultivation, although the rights are relinquished when plants regenerate after cultivation.
Recent developments will have great impact on the Punan Vuhang resource
tenure system. The increasing penetration of the logging industry into the Balui headwaters,
as discussed in the next chapter, and development of the Bakun Hydro-electric Dam have
enhanced the importance of land as a resource. Land is now not only considered a resource
for cultivation, but also offers the potential for monetary compensation when it is taken away.
The next chapter describes how, with the lack of legal protection over their traditional land,
logging has taken place without any regard for Punan Vuhang resources and land tenure.

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Chapter Eleven: The Punan Vuhang Response to Logging and Their


Sense of the Future
Introduction
The previous chapters dealt with the Punan Vuhang way of life represented as
adaptation to the rainforest environment and included strategies that enabled them to subsist
without dependence on external sources of food. In the past, this ability enabled them to
retain their freedom as a hunting and gathering people and avoid subjugation by
expansionistic agricultural peoples. Although they later adopted agriculture and a sedentary
life, this they did of their own free will. Today, however, rapid industrial development is being
initiated by the nation-state with consequences that are becoming inescapable. The drastic
impact on the rainforest, primarily in the form of logging, has altered the forest that once
served the Punan Vuhang as their primary resource base.
When I left the community at the end of my 1993-1995 fieldwork, logging had yet to
reach their forest. The nearest logging operation then was still about a weeks walking
journey away. Two years after logging started in their forest, I returned to the community for a
months fieldwork in 2002, to see how the Punan Vuhang have so far responded to this early
phase of environmental degradation.
The Punan Vuhang Response to Logging
In the early 1990s, the Punan Vuhang became wary of the impending arrival of
logging companies that would bring with them severe ecological destruction. In 1994, when
hunters went to a distant mountain in the direction of the Kahei River, a tributary of the Balui
headwaters, they heard a faint roaring sound. They went on to investigate, and it took them a
weeks walk to the area, where they found that logging tractors were the source of the sound.
Through their travel to downriver areas affected by logging and listening to peoples
complaints, the Punan Vuhang became very much concerned with how their forest would
become degraded. When I participated with them on hunting and gathering forays, they
would lament and point out to me various plants that will be destroyed when logging comes
to their area. They have seen that although only trees with commercial value will be
harvested, the impact as they are felled on the surrounding trees will be severe. The huge
canopy of a tree will crush the surrounding trees. The long liana vines that are entangled with
it will pull and snap the branches of other trees, including fruit trees that provide food for
wildlife. The use of tractors in pulling and dragging out logs will expose the mineral soil, which
will then be washed away into streams and rivers. They are aware that rivers will become
muddied and polluted, causing the fish populations to dwindle. The construction of roads
requires leveling of land at the tops of hill ridges and mountain ranges, and this will cause soil
to be pushed down the slopes. This exposed soil will cover the entire slope and will destroy
all its resources and become a major cause of erosion and pollution.
The crisscrossing of logging roads, tractor tracks and the formation of new streams
due to the changed physical landscape will affect the habitat of wildlife. The drone of
chainsaws and tractors will cause animals to flee to areas free from disturbance. Hunters will
then have to adapt to the transformed environment and go to distant hunting grounds,
including up into the highlands unaffected by logging activities, to obtain meat. Even so, they
303

have heard that the use of helicopters to extract logs from hilly and mountainous terrain will
eventually render all types of land accessible to logging.
In November 2002, during my second period of fieldwork, Naro Pua, the headman,
recounted to me how they have responded to the impending arrival of logging. In anticipation
of the problems, they requested the aid of some young people in Belaga to help write a letter
to the Sarawak Forest Department requesting a communal forest designation be given to the
th
Bukor watershed and kept free from logging. Naros entry to his diary, on January 14 , 1998,
describes when they first heard the faint sound of tractors while standing along the Kajang
River. The headman and four companions took a three days walking journey to inform the
Shin Yang logging Company operating at the Kahei area of their presence and to request
them to spare the Bukor watershed.
The group trekked up the mountain that separates the Kajang watershed from the
Bahau River which flows down into the headwaters of the Balui. After descending the Bahau
watershed, they camped at the bank of the river at Laput Busang Bahau. They put up a
fishnet and caught three big fish for dinner. Early in the morning, they ascended the mountain
across the other side of the Bahau River. On top of the mountain that separates the Bahau
from the Kahei, a river further up the Balui, they were surprised that they could not hear the
tractors sound. Members of the expedition became doubtful whether they were heading in
the right direction. The headman was nonetheless confident that they were heading the right
way. At 3 p.m. when they descended the Kahei watershed and reached the foot of Mount
Bulukuk Jilen, they heard the sound of a tractor. A man then climbed up a tall tree to locate
the source of the sound. Having pin-pointed the direction, they rested and ate lunch.
They immediately proceeded on their journey and ascended the mountain. Midway
up the side of the mountain, they saw painted marks on trees made by logging surveyors.
They descended along a stream. Not long after, they saw a river muddied by logging and
heard the sound of the tractor. While two men stayed back to put up camp for the night, the
other three went to check on the situation. One of them, armed with his gun, followed a
distance behind to protect the two front men. They saw a campsite abandoned by the
surveying crew and followed their tracks up the tractor trail. They continued searching in the
night and reached the logging camp at about 9 p.m.
Upon reaching the camp, they informed the camp manager of their identity and
their application to the Sarawak Forest Department for the Bukor to be their communal
forest. The camp manager acknowledged their visit and gave them food and shelter for the
night. On their way back, he gave them three tins of paint to mark out the communal forest
and some food worth RM400 for the community. He also advised them of a better way to
return to the Kajang instead of using the mountainous trail back to the Bahau headwaters. It
took them two days to reach home. Everybody in the community was happy with the
outcome of the visit. They were glad that the camp manager seemed sympathetic to them as
he gave food and paint to mark out the communal forest.
In March 1998, a Company surveyor crew walked for two days to inform the
community of their plan to survey the forest for the main logging road. The people requested
various forms of payment that they knew were usually paid to local communities before the
companies could do work. The terms followed that of other communities: masuk kawasan
(Malay, entering area), pemali (Iban, taboo), lanum patuk (Punan Vuhang, water
304

pollution), tembawai (Iban, old settlement area) and kuburan (Malay, burial grounds). The
Company requested them to put up the demands only after the construction of the road. The
Punan Vuhang agreed but they were insistent for payments to be made first before
construction of the road into the Kajang watershed. After the survey, the initial phase of road
construction was so rapid that it reached the Kajang watershed by July. As their demand had
not been met, the Punan Vuhang refused to let the Company carry on the survey into the
Kajang. The headman went to Belaga to complain to the District Officer, who advised him to
negotiate properly with the Company. When he returned and sought negotiation, the
Company refused to commit to any payment.
The people then put up a blockade by laying a log across the road, and demanded
compensation before allowing the Company to cross the line. Failing to find any consensus,
both parties went to seek the District Officers arbitration. The District Officer advised the
Company to pay the Punan Vuhang in accordance with the Memorandum of Understanding
(MOU) between the Orang Ulu National Association (OUNA) and the Sarawak Timber
Association (STA). With payment of RM1,800 following the MOU guidelines, and a RM6,000
compensation for opening the blockade (Malay, buka gate), the surveying and road
construction work was allowed to proceed. For other requests, the manager advised them to
wait for the road construction to reach the river so that the people would not have to walk up
to the road still on the top of the range to meet him. He made a pledge to consider their
requests; and the Punan Vuhang remembered his promise.
Using two tractors, the crews built the road rapidly. The first tractor bulldozed land
and slopes to create a passage while the second tractor leveled the roadbed. Within five
months, in December 1998, the construction reached the edge of the Kajang at the mouth of
the Kebuhor River. When the construction reached the river bank, the community demanded
compensation for damage to their land and secondary forest. The Company wanted to pay
in accordance to the OUNA-STA MOU, but the people did not know what the stipulated
amount was. So they went to see the District Officer again, who explained to them the form
of payment, which is compensation according to the extent of damage to the land, measured
by chain from the edge of the logging road.
When they returned, the Company decided to pay without actually measuring the
extent of the damage. Although protesting, the land rights holders on both sides of the river
agreed to receive a total payment of RM6,000. Besides compensating for damage to the
land, another RM18,000 was paid to the people as compensation for damage to the Kajang
watershed, (the first payment received earlier in March 1998 was for entering the Kajang
watershed). The money was distributed equally to all individuals.
In January 1999, the Company constructed a temporary wooden bridge across the
Kajang River to facilitate road construction on the other side of the river. Later, the people
protested against the construction of a metal bridge. The camp manager placated them by
offering the Companys vehicle to take them to sell vegetables to the timber harvesting
operation areas and provided other forms of assistance. A year later, in January 2000, this
road from the Balui headwaters, from the direction of the true left bank of the Kajang merged
with the main logging road network across the river that is linked to the log-pond located
along the Tubau River near Bintulu.

305

In March 2000, the Linau Base Camp was constructed at the Lirong Putdong Bay
by the Kajang, downriver of the Long Lidem settlement. The establishment of the logging
infrastructure took some time, and logging first commenced in the Kajang valley in the year
2001, starting from the Isau tributary, located at the true right hand side of the Kajang. On the
true left hand side of the Kajang, logging proceeded with forest far upriver of the settlement.
As of December 2002, logging proceeded into the upriver Bukor and Kebuhor tributaries.
This upstream activity caused much pollution to the Kajang River. As mentioned above, the
Bukor is the area where the community had applied to the Forest Department for their
communal forest. Since there was no approval, the Company simply ignored the Punans
call to stop logging.
During my visit in November 2002, the Punan Vuhang expressed their concern
over this new development by using the analogy of logging as the ficus vine that strangles its
tree host to death, for the harvesting operations were pressing into the communitys
immediate resource and hunting grounds. Rather than initiating the logging operation far
from the communitys surrounding forest, logging has already occurred close to the
settlement. The Punan Vuhang allege that the Company deliberately carries out logging
operations close to the settlement when the people are still ignorant of how to deal with the
Company. An informant feels that when the Company later will operate in distant areas, the
Punan Vuhang will no longer be a potential threat to the Company. Even if they have learned
how to take up proper actions against logging, the Punan Vuhang will be too far away to take
any action as the Company will have moved to log distant forests.
Physical Impact of Logging
The fears of the Punan Vuhang described above were confirmed when logging
occurred in their forest. The words of Bruenig (1996:88-89, 113), a forester with much
experience with logging in Sarawak, outline how unsustainable this form of logging is, which
is now being done:
In conventional selective logging practice, not only the skidtrails but also the roads
are notoriously badly aligned, drainage is poor and very ineffective, and the road
trace clearing is excessively wide, between 50 and 100 m. Consequently, rates of
erosion and runoff of muddy water are extreme and far in excess of unavoidable
increases. . . . Frequently ... the tractor driver moves aimlessly around with his
tractor. . . (Mattson Marn and Jonkers, 1981). Tractor drivers bulldoze their way
from tree to tree without planning and without considering the best extraction
routes, causing particularly bad crisscrossing in easier country (Yeo, 1987). In
steeper, more difficult terrain, skidtrails tend to be fewer and winching distances
longer, but skidding tracks are cut deeper into the soil and erosion is very heavy
(Bruenig 1996:113).

With such a drastic impact to the forest landscape, the Punan Vuhang face the
following problems: On the ground, the bulldozing of tractors over the soil surface has cut into
hill slopes, thus destroying the habitats of ground-dwelling game, such as porcupines
(totung) and a variety of birds (manok). Such habitats include underground nests for
mammals (luvang laut) and birds (luvang manok), and animal paths where hunters used to
set noose-traps (tanok ovet). The destruction includes salt lick springs (tasapan), which has
forced the animals to leave the area. Even after logging ceased, the area remains devoid of
306

game. Soil churned up by the tractors has created mud. During the rainy period, the new,
sticky clay surface makes movement difficult, which has forced the animals to leave for steep
undisturbed forest at the edge of the logged forest. At the tree branch level, the crashing of
huge trees down over the surrounding vegetation caused dense tree canopies to open wide.
This destroyed the habitat of tree-dwelling animals. Another important habitat, hollow trees or
trees with holes used as nests by hornbill birds, has also been indiscriminately destroyed.
Despite timber harvesting rules that prohibit felling of hollow trees, loggers indiscriminately fell
mature trees without checking them.
Besides destroying the habitats, the logging of timber trees has also disrupted
resources consumed by game animals. Two tree resources important to the Punan Vuhang
are the tijai and mapei trees. The grey leaf-monkey (Presbytis hosei; Bongat), eating leaf
shoots from these trees and drinking water from salt lick springs, produces highly valued
bezoar stones in their internal organs. In the Bangan-Bahau area that had many tijai and
mapei, logging has devastated many of these trees. The various species of shorea that
produce fruits and nuts consumed by wild boars have been among the main timber trees
felled, affecting the local wild boar populations.
Wherever logging occurs, it has devastated almost all animal habitats and food
resources. As the traditional hunting grounds affected by logging become devoid of game
animals, hunters have to go into patches of forest that have not been logged. Loggers forego
such forest due to the absence of commercially suitable trees, or the gradient of the grounds
may be too steep for the tractors. However, few game animals inhabit such forests as they
are sandwiched between surrounding logged forest. Consequently, hunters have to go into
distant forest grounds that have yet to undergo logging. Eventually, these forests will also be
logged, leaving few undisturbed places where hunting can be done.
Logging not only devastates habitats and animals food sources, but also plant
resources that the Punan Vuhang use for food and various material needs. The
indiscriminate movement of tractors over the ground destroys rattan groves, and crashing
trees snap the vines growing into the tree canopies. The construction of logging roads and
main tractor trails on top of ridges results in soil being pushed down the slopes, thus
destroying the vegetation that lives on it. This includes sago palms that thrive on steep hilly
soil.
The Punan Vuhang also face the problem that logging pollutes the rivers. Even
during light rainfall, the river becomes muddy, posing difficulty to fishing as fish swim away to
unpolluted waters. To fish, the fishermen have to set fishnets upstream of the logged area.
Also, away from the settlement, where piped water is not available, the polluted river water
cannot be used for drinking and washing.
Economic Response to the Changing Landscape
As hunting grounds unaffected by logging severely decrease in number and size
around the settlement, the Punan Vuhang have to go a great distance to hunt game animals.
For example, the watersheds of the Sengayan and the Kebuhor Rivers, the main traditional
hunting grounds, have been logged and are now out of bounds for hunting. On occasion,
hunters try their luck and bring their dogs into the edges of logged-over forest to search for
wild boar. Hunting there can be dangerous and difficult. When the dogs pursue a quarry that
307

runs into the logged forest, the dogs cannot run over the fallen branches. Besides, brittle
branches can drop on them. To have a higher chance of success, the hunters use boats
powered by outboard motors to bring their dogs into pristine forest far upriver. As of
December 2002, hunting on the true left hand of the Kajang is mainly done upriver of the
Bukor. At the true right hand side, hunters venture upriver of the Ase. Using an outboardmotor powered boat that is laden with dogs, a hunter requires a gallon of benzene fuel to
reach these areas. From the river bank, the dogs spread out into hinterlands to track wild
boar and occasionally, deer. The success rate is dependent on the availability of food for
game animals to forage at these hunting grounds.
Older hunters who do not have such motorized means of transportation have to
rely on the traditional method of trapping. Where trappers detect signs of ground-dwelling
animals in nearby forest that is accessible within two or three hours walk, they set noose
traps across animal pathways. Every day, they go to check on the traps and set up new ones
to increase their range of trapping grounds.
Destruction of rattan groves reduces the amount of rattan that can be harvested.
The men have to go deeper into the forest to collect vines from the remaining rattan groves
for their wives to process and weave into baskets and mats. Similarly, the devastation of
many aloewood trees has caused the Punan Vuhang to concentrate much of their time
searching out this precious wood before these trees, too, are destroyed.
Besides having a direct impact on the forest, the logging industry creates a market
for various forest products and thus causes an indirect impact on the environment. The daily
and frequent visits of Company personnel to the settlement to buy fish and meat create
additional pressure on scarce forest resources. Whenever the river conditions are favorable,
almost every Punan Vuhang male ventures to set nets in the Kajang River, especially the
upriver part of the river unaffected by logging pollution. Some men frequently camp overnight
to have better chances to catch fish. Fish, an abundant resource that once had monetary
value limited to monthly purchase by the staff of the Flying Doctor Service, are now
becoming increasingly difficult to catch. This is in part because many fish have already been
caught and most fish, according to the Punan Vuhang, have become wary of fish nets cast
all over the river. Only in the dark of night do these fish swim about and can they be snared
by the nets.
Table 21: Price of Fish in 2002
Scientific name
Tor Tambroides (red variety)
Tor Tambroides (white variety)
Tor douronensis
Hampala macrolepdidota
Leiocassis robustus

Punan Vuhang
name
katu
katu
tanguh
lungan
nalam

Price in Ringgit per


Kg
25
30
15
6
10

Like fish, wild boar and deer are in high demand by camp workers. The first
instance of selling meat occurred in 1998. While searching for aloewood in the Bahau area, a
hunter shot a male wild boar. As the meat was too much for his fellow aloewood collectors,
308

he carried the carcass to a logging camp located half a days walk away. Without negotiating
for a higher price, he sold the whole carcass for RM50. When the logging camp shifted its
location to the Bangan River, hunters walked for half a day from their settlement to sell their
quarry there. The price remained at RM50 for a mature pig. In March 2000, the Linau Base
Camp was set up downriver at the Kajang River. After that, the community decided to sell the
meat based on weight, at RM3 per kg. This was later raised to RM4. The amount of money
that a hunter can obtain ranges from under RM100 for a small-sized pig to RM200 for a big
male wild boar. Other game animals sold include deer at RM15 and barking deer at RM4 per
kilogram. Unlike wild boar meat that is sold with bones attached, bones for deer meat are
removed.
With the need to obtain cash by selling meat, the Punan Vuhang no longer share
meat within the community. The community stopped sharing when hunters began to
regularly carry wild boar for sale to the Bangan Camp, reachable within half a days walk.
When the people grumbled about this change of attitude, a respectable community leader,
Sayun Liwan, advised the people to understand that the need for cash had become very
important. He asked the people not to feel disappointed that this time-honored tradition was
no longer followed.
As sharing is no longer practiced, meat is now also sold within the community.
Unlike in the past when the carcass was brought directly into the apartment, the first hunter
who returns will cut his game in the corridor and sell it. When a logger comes to the
settlement, he usually buys the remainder. Buying the meat at a price of RM4 per kg, he sells
the meat at a higher price among workers living in the logging operation areas. Successful
hunters who return later usually wait for transportation going to the logging camp or
harvesting areas so that they can sell the meat directly to the workers, albeit at the same
price of RM4.
The people spend much of this cash obtained from the sale of fish and meat in the
logging camps shop. Among the first items usually bought are Coca-Cola, biscuits, and
sweets that they consume immediately. Other items usually needed in the household, such
as instant noodles, frozen chicken-wings, sardine canned tuna, rice and, among those who
smoke, cigarettes, are also purchased. Additional cash is immediately spent on a variety of
items: groceries like onions, garlic, ginger, salt, sugar, eggs, frozen fish, canned food;
beverages like coffee, Milo (a brand of cocoa drink) and a variety of soft-drinks; and roasted
nuts and chips. If more cash is obtained, additional items such as clothes, batteries, soap,
and toothpaste are bought. More often than not, a hunter will save some money for future
use. Part of the savings will be used to buy necessities in the future. When a Company car
comes to the village, those with spare money will hitch a ride to shop at the camp.
Another major indirect impact of logging on the Punan Vuhang economy is on their
old style of shifting cultivation: now only two households continue to cultivate swiddens large
enough to meet the needs of their households. All other households plant rice sufficient only
for a few months consumption. When their rice is finished, they buy rice at the shop.
Informants said that this practice of cultivating smaller swiddens is caused by the urgent
need to search for aloewood before the remaining forest areas are destroyed by logging.
Spending so much time in the forest searching for aloewood requires them to spend less

309

time on farm work. In any case, cash from the sale of aloewood, although acquired more by
chance than by effort, can be used to buy rice.
Pressured to earn cash through intense fishing, hunting and collection of aloewood
in an environment with rapidly depleting resources, the Punan Vuhang increasingly feel
frustrated and apathetic over the future looming ahead when all their forest resources will be
destroyed by logging. They lament that their lack of skills and knowledge of how to live in this
new, changed environment will result in a hopeless future. Ngarik Liwans grief echoes the
worries expressed by others:
Joh nyi! Kai tovih kompeni, magahan tusah
longak nyokonu in.

Oh dear! I feel so very worried about the


Company.

Nah ok aran doh nak kuk, aran doh nyahuk du


in, mahik ok nyokonu nyi.

When I see my children, my grandchildren, I


really feel pity for them.

Joh mon uron, jok ok tikgob in jiet oh! Piloh in


ang jian, piloh doh tuei kan gulak yut kai, piloh
doh tuei kan siow yut kai ivak ok! Jian longak
sok in.

Earlier, I didn't know it would be like this. I said


they are very good, I said they come to give us
sugar, I said they come to give us salt! I was
very happy.

Nah ni ok aran in ok ni alum tei sok Bintulu, ok


alum vak sok Kapit, ok aran linau nyi mesikin
nyi.

Nah! This is what I saw. I have been to Bintulu.


I have traveled downriver to Kapit. I saw the
people there were so poor.

Ang di dei paroh longak nyokonu ni, joh ok


aran doh nyahuk du ni. Ok! Koh ran longak sok
ulik kiap in, sok ulik aran dalih. Mahik-makik oh
kom nak! Mahik-mahik oh kum nyahu! Keni
mongo ren toh ni sok jik eh. Ni mongo ren doh
kavoh kak jik eh koh longak.

Now I feel heartbroken when I think of my


grandchildren. Oh! This is how I feel after
coming back from visiting those places. Oh
dear, my children! Oh dear, my grandchildren!
This is what will become of you. You will die in
the future, so my heart bleeds.

Ken aran nak kuk, doh nyahu kuk, jok ok gum


ru'o nak kuk uron. Pinak ok nganak ru'o nak
kuk. Oh sanik ru'o jian koh vak longan aran
ru'o. Jik koh longak nyokonu ru'o.

When I see my children and my grandchildren


now, it is no longer like the way when I was
nurturing them. When I gave birth to my two
children, I felt happy when I looked at them. I
had only one feeling when I thought of them.

Longak keni, Eh! Beh ok bahik dei mek hap,


beh ok mek nyam, mek we ni, kaman ru'o nak
kuk.

This was how I felt: Eh! When I diligently


process sago, when I weave mats, weave
rattan, my two children will have food to eat.

Beh ni oak ni bahik mek ovow, tei nagak, ang


di tei ngovet, kaman ru'o nak kuk koh longak,
sok ok nganak kuk uron.

When my husband diligently sets fish traps,


goes hunting with dogs, sets noose traps, my
children will have food to eat, so my heart felt those were the times when I was raising them
in the past.

Nah, ni ok aran nyahuk ben nyi, joh ren longak


kena. Aran nak kuk, nyahuk benya, piveh nya
longak (?)
Beh ok aran doh mohong. Eh! Muxit eh iling
matak, nangi oh. Beh ok aran doh mohong,
tikgob leyan, tiring tikgob leyan, sanik mohong,
tiring doh tikgob ang di ngereti irun bahasa di
toh onok, mohong doh sanik doh.

Nah! Now when I see my grandchildren, I dont


feel like that anymore. Seeing my children and
grandchildren now, my heart drops.
When I look at them laughing, Eh! My eyes
form tears and I cry. When I see them
laughing, learning to talk, beginning to learn to
talk, in the future when they learn other
languages, they will laugh happily.

Eh! Nyum me'. Sanik mohong nyahuk, nyum


me' eh sanik. Ang di sok urip lau, johnya kak
jik, koh vak orang miskin neh nya kak jik, koh
longak aran doh ren.

Eh! Dont do that. My grandchildren laugh so


happily. Dont be so happy. You wont be like
that. You will be like poor people. So my heart
aches when I look at them.

310

Nek ok balum sok Bintulu sok Kapit. Joh sok


ciap nuo orok, ang di nyot aran doh. Eh! Keni
koh dohnya nyot ligit pa'an orang miskin. Nah!
Beh lau lamuk longan onok, dei doh pivak sin.
Ok! Tuhan koh doh, kejian kuk sok in nyi,
kavaii kuk sok en nyi, linaunya kan yak, kon
doh.

I have been to Bintulu and Kapit. At the


wharves, I saw some people by the roadsides.
Eh! So that's how these poor people beg for
money! When some people become kindhearted, they go and give some money. Oh
God! Have mercy on them. Oh lucky me!
Someone sympathized with me and gave me
something, the beggar must have thought.

Nya nuak longak nangi aran doh nyahuk morip


benya, nek nyokonu irun adet nek kompeni
sok kai. Ok nyokonu tanok yut kai balum, we
yut kai balum gen yut kai balum.

This is why I cry when I see my grandchildren.


Thinking of what the Company has done to us.
I think of our devastated forest, our rattan and
fish that are all finished.

Nya nyokonu irun kainya ngaran Punan.


Matok oh kai nyi aran Punan eh, eh nuan
bangsa ulong aran kai nyi nek dok linau. Irun
kai sok laut, ngajoh doh linau tet pupong sok
kai nyi Punan eh, sok ang nyi morip kaman
tanok, morip kaman manok, morip kaman laut
eh.

I think of all of us who are called Punan. Yes! It


is true we are called Punan. Of all human
races, among all of us who need wild animals
for food, there is none who need animals more
than we Punan, because we eat forest
products, we eat birds, we eat wild animals.

Matok doh nyi balih ngaran kaman adet tanok,


keun doh. Ngaran nyinya. Nya tuket ang jik
ivak sok nuan doh lak morip doh.

Some people say, there are also others whose


livelihood is dependent on the forest. It is only
in name. They have their own ways of living.

Nek ok nyokonu doh nak kai ngajoh meyan


kerja sok kompeni. Beh ok nyokonu doh nak
kai ngajoh meyan sekolah irun doh, tapah sok
kai.

Thinking about why none of our children works


for the Company, thinking how none of our
children has gone to school, we are finished!

....

....

Nek kai morip sok tajuk, sok we, sok luq, pen
ovet, manuk, bavui, payau, irun lalem tanok ni.

Our lives depend on sago, rattan, sago starch,


game caught by noose traps, birds, wild boar,
deer, and all things in the forest.

Nah ia urip kai nyi, nek kai joh morip sok ang
vak yut kum sok laput nyi. Nah nya ok keni.

This is how we live, we dont live the way you


do at the river mouth. Nah! Thats why I am like
this.

Beh kom kena, ok piloh sok doh nyi le, piloh


hom sok urip doh jiet in.
Joh nyi nek ngajoh ok gum laik tei mohoi dok
linau mahik kai, gob nolong kai sok hadui
kompeni sok kai. Ok ngajoh tikgob mek nua
nyi nek kai ngajoh meyan kereta. Kai joh tikgob
sok hai, sok hai nuan kai tei nyot urip kai. Ok
ngajoh palamok piloh kejiet morip kai.

I have been telling this to our men, Go and tell


them about our devastated lives.
I have not brought our problems to those who
have sympathy on us, those who can help us
overcome the problems brought by the
Company. I dont know how to find a way to
see them as we dont have a car. We dont
know where we can find help to overcome our
problems. I couldnt reach them to tell how bad
our lives have become.

....

....

Ni tanok yut kai balum nyi


Nah nu koh kai morip kai, kai kavoh nyi sauk.
Mahik kum sok kai, nolong nyum sok kai. Nek
lei kai du nyi joh meyan sekolah. Joh meyan
pikir nuan kai gob puxit orob nuan kai lak
celenat nak kai, nyahun kai dunyi.

Look, our forests have been finished.


How are we going to live? Surely we will die
tomorrow. Please have pity on us, please help
us. Our men have not gone to school. They do
not know how to find ways to save our children
and our grandchildren.

Having cited Ngariks helplessness and her frustration over the community leaders inability
to control the damage done to their forest, we shall now look into the social impact upon the
people that arises as a result of logging.

311

Indirect Social Impact of Logging


During the short period of my fieldwork, from information mentioned by informants
and through my observations, I have come to see four areas of negative social effects arising
from logging. In some instances, to understand the effects better we need to compare them
with the situation before logging.
Alcoholism
The most notable problem and the issue frequently cited by informants is the effect
of alcoholism. Before the advent of logging, Punan Vuhang did not drink any alcoholic drink
as they did not brew rice wine. Only two individuals used to drink on their travels to Belaga.
As alcohol consumption is strictly prohibited by the Company, on pain of being terminated
from employment, loggers came to the community to seek a safe place to indulge in drinking.
They invited their Punan Vuhang friends to join the party-like drinking sessions.
The drinkers take pleasure in the effects of alcohol, which induce a sense of wellbeing (jian longan), happiness (sanik), and desire to tell stories (tavat sanik) and listen to
jokes. In such a good mood, they feel that their problems have evaporated and they do not
feel slighted by adverse comments that people make about them (irun lain jian ivak all
sayings are good). If the loggers have sufficient money to buy extra alcohol, the drinking
bouts can last through the night. Now many Punan Vuhang individuals have become
addicted to drinking.
With a demand for alcohol, individuals returning from the Bintulu town bring back
liquor for sale. To avoid confiscation of the drink by the Company security at the Danum
Base Camp, the travelers conceal the bottled drinks in a box, or put carbonated Coca-Cola
cans on the top of beer cans. In any case, the amount they smuggle is too little to cause
concern to the Company so searches have rarely been conducted. With the exception of the
few individuals who do not drink, in every trip to Bintulu, the Punan Vuhang will invest their
money by buying alcohol for the return trip. For a journey that involves only RM60 for the
return journey transportation, and RM20 to RM50 for accommodation in cheap hotels, more
money can be potentially earned compared to the amount spent for the journey.
Nonetheless, to avoid a security search, the amount smuggled in is limited to one or two
dozen bottles, beyond which, it would become too obvious for the security guards to ignore.
Loss of Leadership Authority
While we have yet to see how alcoholism will affect the community as a whole, it
has already severely affected the leadership of the headman. Before the advent of logging,
he was one of the two men who usually traveled to Belaga. As a headman, he had to attend
meetings at the District Office and other social functions. In the Belaga bazaar, or in the
longhouse on his journey to and from the town, he was normally invited by other community
leaders and friends to drink locally brewed rice wine (burak) or factory produced liquor. When
alcoholic drink became available in the Long Lidem settlement, he was the first to indulge in
heavy drinking.
Knowing his liking for drink, loggers who come to the community to satisfy their
craving for alcohol frequently invite him to join their drinking sessions. He usually becomes
drunk. Losing his sense of propriety, he commits socially inappropriate behavior. Instead of
312

commanding his peoples respect through good manners and occupying himself with
important tasks, he indulges in unrestrained talk (leyan manan-manan), being a busybody
like a woman (vak doh oroh), and laughing and smiling to himself (mohong-mohong) as he
walks about in the corridor.
He even drinks before holding community meetings, ignoring his spouse who tries
to restrain him. When drunk, he talks with pride when projecting his ideas and boasts that he
knows more than anybody else does. With such an outrageous attitude, the people simply
ignore his suggestions. When he becomes sober, instead of leading his people into action by
first acting on his decision so that someone will eventually join him, he gives up when no one
comes along to join him. In the end, another community leader, the chief deacon of the
church, has to take over the role in initiating discussions. Without calling for a community
meeting, a small gathering in front of his apartment generally attracts people to come, sit
down and then participate in the discussion.
For meetings with camp managers and Company foremen, the headman also
drinks beforehand, although he restrains himself from becoming drunk. What draws the
headman to drink before a meeting? He reiterates that after having a drink, he feels
confident, is able to think clearly in his strategizing of ideas and therefore able to argue more
convincingly. He states that he can then articulate fluently in Iban, Malay, and even in English
to show his superiority over his opponents! Without feeling the sensational effect of alcohol,
he does not have the nerve to speak English, a language he had learned during the 1960s
from British soldiers positioned in the border areas in the Confrontation between Malaysia
and Indonesia.
Besides losing his peoples respect, a more serious impact affecting his leadership
is his inability to resolve problems wrought by logging activities. The problems are far too big
for the traditional leadership system to handle. Previously, a leader dealt with outsiders who
came to the Punan Vuhang for their assistance, such as trading for forest products. The visits
of government personnel were matters that benefited the people. These dealings with
outsiders that brought benefits to the people enhanced a leaders authority. In comparison,
loggers today overwhelm Punan Vuhang interests. This inability to control the actions of
outsiders causes an extreme loss of faith in their leaders among the people.
Loss of Cooperation
Another issue informants see as having occurred after the advent of logging is that
the people no longer cooperate to help each other with activities that require extra manpower
not even close relatives. Each man tends his own tasks that he has put aside when he
goes camping in search of aloewood, fishing, hunting or trapping. Therefore, when he is at
home, he has to do a multitude of tasks. He repairs his outboard motor, mends his fishnets,
collects firewood and splits it into kindling, searches for raw materials and carves them into
tools, collects rattan vines and processes them into strips for his wife to weave. Occasionally
he goes to Bintulu. The times when he has money and feels the need to relieve his craving
for alcohol, he becomes drunk and cannot do anything for the day. Frequently, he is at the
logging camps shop buying things and sometimes spends a few hours waiting for Company
transportation to return home. Only when his siblings, spouses siblings or a close friend who
partners with him are in real need of assistance, will he offer his help to them.
313

Impact on Resource Tenure


We shall now look into the political problems in the Punan Vuhangs dealings with
the Company. The most important issue is the matter of the communal forest status they
requested from the Sarawak Forest Department. As we mentioned above, when the Punan
Vuhang first visited the Company to inform them of their request for a communal forest at the
Bukor River, they were given paint to indicate the boundary. However, since there was no
official letter from the Department on the status of the application, the Company went ahead
and logged the area. The camp manager even offended the headman by questioning their
land tenure. The headman recalled the offending statement made by the camp manager and
his own response to the insults:
Sok hai tanok yut nuom kom? Sok hai nuom
kom? Ngajoh nuom kom! Irun tanok yut
perintah. Luar sok yut perintah yut kompeni.

Where is your land? Where is your place?


You dont have any place of your own. All
land belongs to the government. What is
owned by the government is owned by the
Company.

Kuom joh meyan bae, joh meyan nu, joh


meyan nuan.

You dont own any secondary forest, you


dont own anything, you dont own any
place.

Pinak manager piloh kena, ok lohoi magahan,


lohoi magahan, paroh longan.

When the manager said like that, I was so


upset, so very upset, and my heart ached.

Ang nu in sebab manager joh tikgob.


Manager alem lak lesen. 2000 umo kai alum
morib oh nyi. Bukti kai meyan tanok nyi.

What is it that you manager dont know?


Manager, you only got the license
yesterday. For two thousand years we have
been living here. That is the evidence we
own the land.

Hai lesen kom, kai ang meyan lesen. Lesen


ang kum lak alem, lesen pulah!
Talanak yut kai, lesen tovih hin dok linau,
meyan celenat, meyan bahvak. Kalah! Kai ni
menang! Kai ni pun meyan tanok ni.

Where is your license! We own the license.


The license that you got yesterday is fake!
The evidences of our license are our flesh
and blood, our breath and our mouth. You
lose! We win! We are the original owner of
the land.

To refute the managers ignorance that the Punan Vuhang never owned any land,
the headman brought the manager to the mouth of the Bukor River, to show him the mature
fruit trees planted by them when they first adopted cultivation in 1968. The Company not only
had contempt for the Punan Vuhang, but also for the regulations of the Forest Department.
At the headwaters of the Balui that the Punan Vuhang know as the Kahei area, the
Company fell trees below the size of a mans waist, some just up to a mans thigh. As far as
the Punan Vuhang know, the Company is only allowed to fell trees about the size of a drum.
When they asked why such small trees were felled, the camp manager stated that they were
not bound to the regulations of the Forest Department! One time the Department personnel
came to investigate in the Bahau area. According to the Punan Vuhang, the officers
reprimanded the Company for felling those small trees and chased them from the forest. The
officers then visited the Punan Vuhang and requested them to report to the Department any
illegal activities performed by the Company. It was only then that the Punan Vuhang were
shown some respect by the Company.
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Even so, such felling of small trees continues to occur in some areas. When asked,
the workers claim that it is the Companys policy to have all trees above the size of a mans
thigh felled. The Companys post-logging inspection team will come to check on the forest.
The total volume of the harvestable trees left standing will be counted. Fines are then
imposed on the loggers responsible, based on the quantity of standing trees. The loggers
claim that to avoid deductions from their wages, they have to fell the smaller trees.
When the Punan Vuhang asked the camp management about this Company
policy, they were told that eventually the whole forest would be converted into a palm oil
estate, hence the removal of the small trees. Alarmed at such a development, the people
demanded recognition of their communal land status and that forest surrounding the
settlement be free from logging. Following some intense negotiations, the manager
consented to the idea of payung rumah (a circular space around the settlement akin to an
umbrella, hence the term house umbrella) that provides the immediate resource base for
their livelihood, and verbally agreed not to log the area.
Subject to the communitys consent, the Company shall pay a commission of RM2
per ton to the people for logging within this area. During 2002, the Company has been
operating at an area just outside the payung rumah. At close proximity to the communal
forest, a series of logging activities irritated the people. Instead of seeking permission, the
Company secretly logged part of the Natong gravity-feed pipe watershed, on the other side
of the watershed that has no effect on the water supply. The Company has yet to pay any
compensation for stealing the timbers and damaging the forest. In October 2002, the
people found that not only timber was felled within the area, but also felled were fruit trees
that had been marked with paint. Some of the painted tree stumps had been cut and
covered with soil in a deliberate attempt to bury the markings. When the people complained
and demanded compensation, the camp manager gave the excuse that the loggers from
Indonesia and the Philippines did not know how to identify local fruit trees. He told the Punan
Vuhang to directly negotiate with the workers themselves. As of December 2002, no
settlement had been achieved.
As the forest outside the payung rumah has been increasingly logged out, the
camp manager and his supervisors frequently come to the settlement seeking for permission
to enter and log the payung rumah. So far, the people have refused to give in because
compensation has not been paid to them. The subject of compensation for damage to forest
remains the most contentious issue as the Punan Vuhang consider forest their most
important property. The headman reiterated that even if their request is never entertained,
they will press on, asking again and again (muhat) for compensation, not just for their payung
rumah, but for their tanok; their land, forest and all that live in it.
Nonetheless, although the Punan Vuhang as a community rejects the idea of
logging in forest that is collectively owned by them, some individual land rights holders do not
entertain such convictions. At the Kebuhor area, where the logging road descends onto the
bridge across the Kajang River, some of the land owners who hold rights to the primary
forest above their secondary forest have requested the Company to log trees in return for
some payment.

315

Relationship with the Company


We shall now look into the relationship between the Punan Vuhang and the
Company. Despite the ambivalence between the Punan Vuhang and the logging Company,
the relationship is not as bad as some make it out to be. Although the Company refuses to
acquiesce to the Punan Vuhang demand that their communal forest (that is not yet approved
by the Forest Department) be kept free from logging, the Company management does
attempt to fulfill some requests that are within its means.
When the community has a need from the Company, it usually requests for the
camp manager to come to the settlement for discussion and negotiation. The manager
usually turns up for the appointment. The main reason for him to visit the people, instead of
them making the visit, is the difficulty in arranging transportation for the people to come to the
camp. Should that be the case, he has to arrange for cars to pick them up and to send them
back again. For him to come to the settlement avoids such complications. Although meetings
with the community occasionally get out of hand, with protracted arguments leading to
unresolved problems, the camp manager can count on the headman to bring the intense
arguments under control.
On their own, closed-door meetings between the headman and the camp
management are usually held in a polite manner. While disagreement is frequent, the
discussion seldom descends to heated arguments, unlike meetings held in the longhouse.
Each party will make an effort to listen to the arguments put forth by the other. When the
manager raises his voice, the headman softens his tone to cool down the others temper,
and vice-versa. Facing such a strategy by the opponent who listens and tries to understand
his position, and arguing gently, the camp manager has to adopt a mild temperament during
the meetings. The headman claimed that the camp manager once remarked that he felt
good discussing things with him because the headman does not speak roughly, nor talk with
pride that leads to antagonistic feelings. In fact, the manager stressed it was difficult
discussing things with the headman because it was not easy to put up arguments that
refuted the opponents points of view.
Probably in view of this amicable relationship, two Company Directors made two
visits to the community. On the first, they advised the headman to put up a request to the
Company to level the land so that the government can more easily develop infrastructure
projects for the community. The directors instructed the camp management to forward the
communitys request to the Companys management for consideration. In mid 2002, the
Company leveled a large plot of land behind the present longhouse. With the site leveled, the
Administrative Officer in Charge of Penan Affairs in Belaga told the people that he had put up
a budget proposal to build a new longhouse building. The first collaborated project between
the government and the Company took shape with the construction of the new church
building in December 2002. The government allocated RM5000 for the project, and the
Company provided labor to construct the building.
The Company provided an old 4xWheel Drive vehicle and a driver for the Punan
Vuhangs transportation. The use of the vehicle is, however, limited to the Companys
concessions in the Upper Balui, where the Danum Base Camp is the limit of its area. While it
is provided specifically for the Punan Vuhang, upon request, individuals from the surrounding
Penan communities can also make use of the car. It has a traveling schedule and a fixed
316

route, with a return journey taking two and a half hours from the Linau to the Danum Base
Camps on Monday, Wednesday and Friday. At other times, prior arrangement with the driver
for transportation within the concession area is necessary, a need, however, that is rarely
required. Otherwise, the people will hitch rides on any vehicle that passes through Long
Lidem to the Linau Base Camp, a journey taking only ten minutes.
Traveling to Bintulu or Belaga, the Punan Vuhang are free to hitch rides on the
camps transportation vehicle that travels daily between the Linau Base Camp and the
Companys transit point in its concession areas. From there, the travelers continue their
journey to Bintulu (two and a half hours) or Belaga (one and half hours) using public
transportation. As the vehicle leaves the Base Camp before dawn, the travelers camp
overnight at the verandah of the camp shop. They can reach Bintulu the same day, usually
by noon. With the vehicles return journey from the entrance point at noon, travelers leaving
1
Bintulu by 8.00 a.m. can be assured of hitching a ride to reach home by evening.
On a personal level, the Company workers maintain a friendly relationship with the
people. When not pressed for time, the foremen who drive their own vehicles usually pass by
the settlement to check if anybody has brought back game or fish for sale. More frequently,
they hang around chatting with the people while waiting for a hunter or someone fishing to
return. Returning to the camp, anyone can hitch a ride. In the evening, some of these drivers
pass by the settlement to bring the people to the camp shop and then send them back
home. The amicable relationship works both ways; during the fruit season the people invite
them in to eat fruit in the corridor. At Christmas, they invite the workers to visit their homes.
In one incident, the people recalled that the foremen went out of their way to help
them. A rumor circulated that the Registration Department was to visit the downriver Long
Tanyit Penan settlement to make Identity Cards. Punan Vuhang individuals who had not
registered with the department went there. For two days, they waited for the department staff
who never came. On the second day, when the foremen, as usual, visited the Long Lidem
settlement, they were asked to bring food to those waiting at Long Tanyit. At midnight, on
their initiative, six Company vehicles, making a few return trips, came to bring them home.
Comparing this with the situation of the Penan communities, the relationship
between the Punan Vuhang and the Company has been cordial. At a social level, they treat
the Company personnel well, just like how they have always extended their hospitality to
visitors. The workers reciprocate in ways that they can offer providing transportation
wherever possible.
Conclusion
The impending arrival of the logging Company in 1998 was seen as an inevitable
but dreadful event. Rather than being passive, Punan Vuhang made a three days journey to
request the Company to spare an area from being logged. In later negotiations over
compensations, where both parties failed to achieve agreements, they sought the help of the
government authority which helped to arbitrate in their favor. However, lacking documentary
1

According to informants, while the Punan Vuhang do not face rejection, the drivers often refuse
assistance to Penan by giving various excuses. For example, they would say that heavy rain somewhere
caused the timber trucks to be stuck in the mud, or as they had to pick up the drivers along the way, there
was no space for additional travelers.

317

evidence to support their claim of traditional rights to forest and land, nothing could stop
logging from being carried out.
The Punan Vuhang now face a certain but bleak future of environmental
degradation and resource deprivation. Worsening the dilemma is the problem of alcohol
addiction that increases their depression over their inability to stop logging from destroying
their livelihood. The strategy employed by their forefathers to move away from danger can no
longer be used. There is no place that the Punan Vuhang can seek refuge to maintain a way
of life that is free from external influence. Now they must adapt to a new way of life and cope
with resource loss.
Nonetheless, by looking at their former mobile economy, social organization, and
their responses to past events that have affected them, I believe that the community may be
able to figure out on their own how to cope with these drastic changes. For example, in their
mobile economy, they constantly adapted to changing situations in the rainforest, coped with
food scarcity, and overcame game animals that had become wary of hunters. The traumas
that they have survived, including mass deaths during their adoption of settlement and
cultivation in 1968 to 1971, points towards that possibility.
While the headman has lost his leadership standing among community members,
another individual has risen to take over the role to lead the community. He is
knowledgeable, and from my own experience, he is keen to learn new knowledge. As a chief
deacon, during his frequent travels to Belaga to meet church leaders and other individuals,
he may learn how to deal with the depressing situation. He is an honest person and may
inspire people to put their trust in him in dealing with the Company. In one incident that I
personally know of, the logging camp canteen operator asked him to take aloewood to
Belaga for sale and let him decide the grades and prices of the incense wood. I remarked to
the operator what if he were to be cheated on the price. The operator said that would not
happen, for this man is very honest. People have asked him to take over the leadership but
he has refused. For that, when the headman needs to hold a communal meeting, he will ask
the chief deacon to initiate the gathering so that people will come to listen to him, provided he
is not drunk. With such unity and experience in dealing with adverse situations, there is hope
that the Punan Vuhang may rise to the occasion in facing the impact of logging.

318

Chapter Twelve: Conclusion


This dissertation has traced how the Punan Vuhangs adaptation to a rainforest
environment has changed over time. It began with a tentative reconstruction of their past
and then addressed the question of why they abandoned their former hunting and
gathering economy. Today, the Punan Vuhang are no longer full-time hunter-gatherers;
they have established themselves in a permanent village and are part-time farmers as
well. As such, this dissertation is also an ethnographic study of the community as it was
st
during my principal fieldwork. As the community enters into the 21 century, it faces the
effects of logging and permanent deforestation.
The study thus concludes by looking at the changing mechanisms by which the
Punan Vuhang are attempting to adapt to this present-day loss of forest resources. My
reconstruction of their past is based on participant-observation, augmented by interviews
with knowledgeable informants who were able to recall their former nomadic life. Later
sections on farming, current hunting and gathering, and the effects of logging are based
on participant-observation and interviews. Finally this dissertation attempts to bring the
Punan Vuhang into a wider comparative context by relating its findings to those of
studies of other hunter-gatherer communities in Borneo.
At the onset of this dissertation, I referred to a debate between traditionalists and
revisionists concerning the ability of hunter-gatherer communities to rely completely on
the tropical rainforest for food, without dependence on farming societies. My study
supports the position of the traditionalists and suggests that the Punan Vuhang, although
they engaged in trade with outsiders, were nonetheless independent of shifting
cultivators for food. I reached this conclusion by posing three questions related to their
survival and adaptation to the rainforest. These questions were: 1) What food sources
were available to Punan Vuhang hunter-gatherers? 2) How did the Punan Vuhang hunt
and gather these foods? and 3) How did they cope with periodic food shortages?
In answering the first two questions, the materials presented in Chapters Two and
Three showed that a great variety of food was naturally available in the rainforest. During
seasonal periods of fruiting, food was abundant, while in times of scarcity, sago and
keystone species sustained life in the forest. To understand this better, we looked at the
Punan Vuhangs perceptions of forest cycles, reconstructing three interconnected cycles
of abundance followed by an irregular period of scarcity. We presented a seasonal
calendar that covered only the period for which the Punan Vuhang measured time,
starting with the appearance of mass flowering and ending with the beginning of food
scarcity. After that, the Punan Vuhang no longer measured time, as there was no way to
know when the next major flowering would begin.
The second cycle revolved around ease versus difficulty in hunting. Fruit
abundance brought about an animal population explosion due to new births and the
arrival of migratory animals. With many animals foraging on fruits, they became easy
prey. After the fruit season ended, food scarcity caused animals to forage far and wide,
making it difficult for hunters to locate them. Encounters with human hunters as predators
also caused some species to develop avoidance habits.
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These data support the argument of Brosius (1991, 1992), Dentan (1991), and
Endicott and Bellwood (1991) that the tropical rainforest is an ecosystem that contains a
great diversity of resources sufficient to sustain a hunter-gatherer population. This
analysis goes against the Green Desert Theory that maintains that most tropical
rainforest plants exist primarily in the form of inedible woody tissue. Further, the
argument by the revisionists that birds and animals living high up in the tree canopy are
difficult to obtain, and that ground-dwelling animals are widely dispersed and so require
too high an expenditure of energy to capture, can be discarded once we consider Punan
Vuhang hunting methods. In concurrence with the assertions of Colinvaux and Bush
(1991:155), Punan Vuhang hunting methods overcame these difficulties. Hunters used
blowpipes with poisoned darts to shoot primates and birds living high in the tree canopy
and used hunting dogs to sniff out and corner wild boars. They set noose traps to snare
ground-dwelling animals and set traps in the river to catch fish. All these activities have
been observed and recorded in detail by researchers studying hunter-gatherers in
Borneo (for example, Brosius 1991, 1992; Puri 2005; Sellato 1994). When nothing else
could be obtained, the Punan Vuhang relied on sago, a widely available and aseasonal
food source found in clumps consisting of dozens and dozens of palms. This observation
is consistent with Brosius (1991) who stated that sago is the main staple food and that it
enabled Penan hunter-gatherers of Sarawak to live in remote forests faraway from
farming societies. Sago to the hunter-gatherers of Borneo was thus like the wild yams
and edible tubers that allowed subsistent foraging among the Batek hunter-gatherers of
Peninsular Malaysia (Endicott and Bellwod 1991) and the Aka pygmies of the western
Congo basin (Bahuchet, McKey and de Garine 1991).
These two cycles showing initial food abundance followed by food scarcity allowed
us to understand a third cycle involving mobility, for it was the practice of a mobile
economy that enabled Punan Vuhang to overcome food scarcity. This understanding in
turn provided us with the answer to our third question, that of how the Punan Vuhang
coped with periodic food shortages. Whatever the season, when a group began to
exploit a new area, food was relatively abundant. They processed mature sago into
starch and hunted animals that were still unfamiliar with human predation. After depleting
the sago and larger game, they moved to a new area to begin a new cycle of food
exploitation. If the period of food scarcity was prolonged, the Punan Vuhang expanded
the variety of food they hunted to include, for example, bats, all kinds of birds, civets,
crabs, various kinds of eggs, frogs, pangolins, sago larvae, snails, snakes and tiny
squirrels (see also, for example, Dentan 1991 and Endicott and Bellwood 1991 for the
hunter-gatherers of Peninsular Malaysia). When rivers were low, they caught or trapped
fish. When a hunter failed to obtain game, he collected palm and rattan shoots. In such
lean periods, young hunters traveled further afield in search of resources that they had
conserved earlier (see Chapter Four). When the situation became dire, they resorted to
pork lard that had been stored underground beside cold mountain streams.
In addition to mastering the means by which a wide range of food could be
obtained, coping with food scarcity also involved gaining an in-depth knowledge of the
environment and its resources, a subject explored in detail for the Penan Benalui of East
320

Kalimantan by Puri (2005). Hunter-gatherers systematically combed the forest and kept
in their memory the locations of sago groves, fruit trees and places that attract animals
such as salt-licks and wallowing ponds. Armed with this knowledge, hunters brought their
specially-bred dogs to hunt wild boars or used blowpipes to shoot tree-dwelling animals
and birds.
Should an individual hunter fail to obtain game, he did not have to worry about
going hungry, for the Punan Vuhang organized themselves so that successful hunters
and gatherers shared their food with others. The obligation to share and to reciprocate
acted as a device to reduce risk (see Wiessner 1977 and Cashdan 1985) and so
ensured the collective well-being and survival of the community as a whole. During long
periods of scarcity, Punan Vuhang notions of leadership also enhanced their ability to
cope with food shortages. The community followed a leader whose superior knowledge
of resource grounds helped them locate areas containing sago or game. In the absence
of such leadership, individual households relied on themselves, for socialization ensured
that every individual acquired basic survival skills (see Puri 2005:278-283). When food
was extremely scarce, households came together in small bands which separated from
each other to find their own food. Solitary foraging was possible because egalitarian
notions common among hunter-gatherers enabled them to make their own decisions
without concern for others. Such individualism can be explained by two theories. The first
is Gardners adaptive-child-training theory that asserts that hunter-gatherers tend toward
self-reliance, independence and individual achievement (Gardner 1991). In the second,
the nomadic-food-quest theory, Lee and DeVore (1968) propose that the egalitarian,
flexible, individualized social life of foragers is shaped by their nomadic food quest for
dispersed and variable food resources.
Such diverse strategies made it possible for hunter-gatherers like the Punan
Vuhang to survive long periods of scarcity and strengthened the case for their being able
to subsist without depending on agrarian people for food. The last piece of evidence
considered was that of trade. Hoffman (1984, 1988) contends that Punan huntergatherers were originally agriculturalists who became hunter-gatherers in order to trade
forest produce for agricultural products. Brosius (1991), on the other hand, argues that no
agricultural products entered into trade between shifting cultivators and hunter-gatherers.
To consider this argument, we looked at the ethno-historical evidence. According to
Punan Vuhang oral history, there were originally only Punan groups occupying the
Rejang River basin. When shifting cultivators first migrated into this area, the Punan
Terkalet attacked them. They fought against the Iban and the Kayan, even attacking
Kayan traders seeking to visit them. When the Kayan took revenge, the Punan Terkalet
sought refuge among the Punan Vuhang. The Punan Nuo followed and also merged
temporarily with the Punan Vuhang.
Decades later, these groups faced threats from the Kenyah, another group of
shifting cultivators who came to populate parts of Central Borneo that the Kayan had
abandoned. The Punan then retreated into the headwaters of the Danum, Linau and
Bahau, all tributaries of the upper Balui. This uninhabited area was inaccessible due to
long stretches of impassable rapids, waterfalls and mountains. The Punan Terkalet and
321

Punan Nuo made this their new home while the Punan Vuhang returned to their original
home in the Balui headwaters. Then, events of the early 20th century involving Iban
aggression brought them together before the Punan Vuhang settled down in the Kajang
basin in 1968.
Three inferences can be made from this outline of oral history. First, before the
Punan Vuhang migrated to their present area, they could not have depended on shifting
cultivators for food because they had no regular contact with cultivators. Second, after
they migrated into their present area, if the Punan had depended on shifting cultivators
for food, it is unlikely they would have attacked them. In fact, from the 18th century
onwards, the Punan were constantly on the move, fleeing from expansionistic shifting
cultivators. We can only deduce that the Punan Terkalet acted in such a hostile way
because they had no need of cultivated food. Third, from the turn of the 20th century up
to 1968, when they settled down, trading for food was never an option because
expeditions into Punan Vuhang country took up to three or more months and involved
hauling boats over rapids and then crossing mountain ranges. By the end of this journey,
the traders own food rations were exhausted. Thus, instead of offering food in trade,
visiting traders depended on the Punan Vuhang for their own food. Rather than food,
traders brought with them items such as adzes, knives, cooking pots, clothes and
tobacco for which the Punan Vuhang offered various forest products in return.
Supporting Brosiuss (1991) argument against Hoffman (1984, 1988), even though they
engaged in trade, the Punan Vuhang appear to have relied in the past entirely on
themselves for food.
The ethno-historical evidence thus suggests that the Bornean rainforest was
scarcely a Green Desert and that trade with farming societies was not the way in which
the Punan Vuhang subsisted. Having made the case for Punan Vuhang self-sufficiency,
we turned to the question of why the Punan Vuhang took up farming and settled down.
We began by comparing the case of Punan Vuhang with Sellatos (1994:171-175)
observation of the process of settling down among other Punan hunter-gatherers in
Indonesian Borneo. According to Sellato, there are three gradual phases of settling
down. In the first phase, traders persuaded the Punan to settle at a trading post so that
the forest products would not be traded elsewhere. In addition, with women working the
farms, men could concentrate on collecting forest products. Initially a few households
could be persuaded to settle and they planted hardy crops which were easy to cultivate
like cassava and bananas. Then, during the second phase, they planted some rice and
continued to collect forest products. While some remained in the second phase, others
went on to the third phase and became full-time farmers.
In Chapter Seven, we described the Punan Vuhangs experience in settling down.
This differs notably from the process outlined by Sellato. Instead of a few households
taking up farming, the Punan Vuhang made a collective decision to settle down together.
Informants mentioned that the decision to take up cultivation was not without
controversy, for the elders were initially against it. However, the elders gave in to the
young members when they insisted on taking up the new way of life. After they had
cleared small patches of forest for planting, they realized they had no seeds. They then
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walked for two weeks to collect rice seeds, cassava stems and banana shoots from the
nearest Punan group in Kalimantan that had taken up farming earlier. After planting, they
did not weed their fields. As a result, they obtained a meager amount of rice which, owing
to their lack of knowledge, was harvested unripe and tasted bitter. This case of adopting
farming without prior knowledge appears to be uncommon among hunter-gatherers in
Borneo who learned farming from their neighbors and/or traders (Sellato 1994:171-2;
Puri 2005:162; Jayl Langub 1974:297).
During the two consecutive years after having adopted farming, the Punan Vuhang
contracted malaria and many died. They thought the deaths and meager harvest were
spirit punishment for abandoning their traditions. Much weakened by illness, only a few
were able to collect sago. Almost starving, they were on the verge of giving up cultivation
when an influential leader persuaded them to persevere. Instead of spirit punishment, he
argued that their ignorance was the cause of their farming failure. As a shaman, the
leader could not find any spirit connection to the deaths. He argued that since they had
already begun cultivation, they should continue with it until they had mastered the
necessary skills.
The community relented and as they entered into the third year of cultivation, their
lot improved. They regained their health and were able to collect sago. With more food,
their dogs recovered from starvation and were able to hunt wild boars. Cassava and
bananas planted in the first cultivation had ripened and the occurrence of a major fruit
season provided them with an abundance of food. They gained confidence in their ability
to farm and constructed durable shelters at Long Lidem where they have lived ever
since.
We then addressed the question of why the Punan Vuhang took up farming
despite having no knowledge of this new activity. During the 1963-1966 MalaysiaIndonesia confrontation, British Commonwealth Forces patroled the border areas where
the Punan Vuhang lived. For strategic reasons, the soldiers followed the Punan Vuhang
wherever the latter camped. Hunters exploring the forest helped to look out for enemy
soldiers crossing into Sarawak. The soldiers were generous and gave them food and
tobacco which allowed the Punan Vuhang to remain longer in each camp. Life was easy
and the young people took a liking to staying a long time in each place, instead of
constantly moving about looking for food.
This suggested a change of mind that influenced the young Punan Vuhang to
consider taking up cultivation. At the end of Confrontation, representatives of the
Malaysian government tried but failed to persuade the Punan Vuhang to settle. A Kayan
trader with a good relationship with the Punan Vuhang saw the advantages of settlement
for the Punan Vuhang community and tried to convince them to settle. According to the
Punan Vuhang, the trader told them that by settling down, traders could visit their
settlement easily rather than having to travel and search for them over a wide area. He
also told them that by planting food, they could remain in one location. The trader
advised them to adopt Adet Bungan to avoid negative auguries that would otherwise
hinder their farm work, and in order to avoid having to flee from death-sites. The older
generations, as mentioned above, were reluctant to abandon their traditional life. On the
323

other hand, the younger members of the community, having experienced the comfort of
living for long periods in a single camp, found the idea compelling. They were adamant
and the elders gave in to their demand.
The community, having made up its mind to settle, persisted with the decision, and
despite the occurrence of deaths and other hardships during the first two years of
farming, they endured. It also happened by chance that two Indonesian Kayan men
visited them and taught them proper farming methods. The Punan Vuhang eventually
became successful farmers. Nonetheless, they did not enter into the third phase of what
Sellato calls the irreversible shift when hunter-gatherers become full-time farmers and
no longer collect forest produce for trade, for the Punan Vuhang continue to trade
whenever traders visit them.
A crucial factor that determined the transition from a nomadic life to sedentism was
the role of Punan Vuhang leadership. In Chapter Five, we noted that an individual with
leadership qualities drew people to follow him because his opinions usually proved to be
correct and so beneficial to the community. Even when the people went against his
opinion, a good leader would not sulk, but instead would lead the people to carry out
whatever the community had decided. Hence, in the first instance, when the elders
opinion was disregarded, Negen, the community leader at the time, out of concern for the
groups unity, urged them to adopt the new course of life. Later, he was able to persuade
the community to persevere.
Chapter Nine and Ten provided an ethnographic account of how the Punan
Vuhang have changed as a result of settling down. While staying permanently in one
place along the Kajang River, the Punan Vuhang not only farm but they continue to hunt,
fish and gather, although limiting themselves to the middle reaches of the Kajang basin
and adjacent watersheds. This is an area covering 30 square miles, compared to the
area of 1500 square miles that they had exploited when they were nomadic. With this
98% reduction in area they exploit, the Punan Vuhang have had to adjust their hunting
methods. Frequent hunting causes animals to develop avoidance habits to elude
hunters. Hunters no longer use blowpipes or noose traps. They still use hunting dogs to
track, pursue and wear down wild boars and now often hunt with shotguns. They now
use boats for hunting, thereby extending their hunting range. Also with boats, they use
cast nets and fixed gill-nets for fishing. With cultivation, Punan Vuhang seldom consume
sago, which has now become a famine food for use in times of food scarcity, as
evidenced in 1994 when a flash flood swept away the communitys newly harvested rice.
In resource tenure, too, we see a dramatic change. Cultivation and living in durable
houses have altered resource rights. The household that first clears a plot of forest for
planting holds private rights to the land and to its yield. This notion of private rights to the
fruits of ones labor helps make the Punan Vuhang successful cultivators, as individuals
are willing to put in effort to produce their own food. In contrast, among some Penan of
Sarawak, who hold common property rights to crops, individual farmers are reluctant to
put much effort into planting, as they cannot stop others from taking their crops.
Consequently, they continue to harvest wild sago as their staple for several months a
year, unlike Punan Vuhang who harvest sago only in times of famine.
324

In barter trade, change is even greater. While they now plant tobacco and no
longer buy it or exchange for it, many Punan Vuhang depend on traders for kaki tiga, a
kind of stimulant and painkiller. Being addicted to kaki to relieve pain and fatigue, most
persons work very hard to produce trade goods to barter for the drug. The provision of
credit by some traders allows purchase of costly items such as chainsaws and outboard
motors. In turn, chainsaws and motors require fuel to operate, which the Punan Vuhang
can only buy with cash at the downriver logging camp. This makes the Punan Vuhang
demand cash from traders for their rattan products.
In comparison to longhouse shifting cultivators (Chan 1991; Chin 1985; Rousseau
1977), the Punan Vuhang cultivate very small farms. This is because hunting continues
to be an important activity that requires them to devote much time to it; hunting from
daybreak to late evening, even during busy periods in the farming year. In contrast,
longhouse farmers concentrate on farming large swiddens in order to produce enough
rice to last through the year. The Punan Vuhang, on the other hand, plant less rice for
they eat a variety of other staples, namely cassava, bananas, yams and potatoes.
Except for rice, these plant crops continue to yield a return two or three years after
planting. A swidden that can produce food for up to three consecutive years does not
need to be large. Because of these small swiddens, most Punan Vuhang men cultivate
alone, without the cooperation of others. In almost all cases, in contrast to neighboring
swidden cultivators, the women do not accompany their husbands to work the farms.
This lack of communal work and the non-involvement of women in farming is consistent
with their experience as hunters. Having practiced solitary hunting, Punan Vuhang men
do not find it difficult to work their farms by themselves. A longhouse shifting cultivator
would find it almost impossible to do such monotonous farm work alone (see, for
example, Chan 1991:141; Rousseau 1977:138).
This prior situation of food sufficiency, from the past through 2001, was shattered
as the Punan Vuhang entered the 21st Century. In 2001, logging intruded into the
remote rainforest and since then has drastically impacted the Punan Vuhang, both
physically and socially, as it has left an altered, empty landscape littered with fallen
branches and muddy soil. The Punan Vuhang feel frustrated and angered with this
wanton destruction of their forest. They spend much time hunting in distant forests, but
often return empty handed. Instead of sharing, successful hunters sell meat to loggers
whose demand is insatiable. Many Punan Vuhang men frantically search for scarce
aloewood to sell before it is destroyed by logging. Consequently, they neglect their farms
and they have to buy rice and sago starch from the logging camps grocery shop. Hence,
with deforestation, it seems that they have now become truly dependent on outsiders for
food. Disturbed by these events, a grandmother whose voice reflects the feelings of
others, lamented that their knowledge based on a pristine forest environment is now
useless. To survive, they need new skills but she is doubtful whether they know where to
acquire the knowledge. She fears her people will end up begging for money, like others
she saw on her travels to the towns. Unable to bear such helplessness, many Punan
Vuhang have resorted to alcohol and frequently become drunk.

325

Faced with this present situation, we may wonder whether the settled Punan
Vuhang will be able to survive the destruction of the forest environment upon which they
depended in the past. As the forest disappears, hunting and gathering are likely to come
to an end. The Punan Vuhang, who have taken up farming but continue to hunt and
gather, will eventually be forced to enter into what Sellato (1994) calls the final phase of
sedenterization the irreversible shift when hunter-gatherers become full-time
farmers. Indeed, historically, there have been hunter-gatherers with close contacts with
farming communities who have fully settled on their own. It is likely that the rapid
deforestation will accelerate this process among the Punan Vuhang. We can only hope
that their past resilience will prevail over the tendency to escape into alcohol addiction,
and the Punan Vuhang will adapt and survive to become successful farmers.

326

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344

Appendix 1: Glossary
_________________________________________
Punan
English; Vernacular;
Vuhang
Scientific Names
_________________________________________

_________________________________________
Punan
English; Vernacular;
Vuhang
Scientific Names
_________________________________________

A
adet
Adet Bungan

avang vireh

way of life, customs, belief


an indigenous central Borneo religious
reform movement
Adet Servireh
taboo committed when a community
separates into two or more groups on
the same day
ahu
dog
ajat
a type of small basket
ajat kalong
small basket with woven design,
produced mainly for barter trade
ajat kawang
a loosely woven basket
alum jian paung literally (lit.,) - game completely
surrounded and brought to bay with
hunting dogs
amin ayak
Kayan, amin ayak headmans
household
ang
time; which
angkun
food
anui
a type of sweet-smelling leaf used by
the suket spirit
apan
sago mashing platform
apau
plateau
aran
to see (verb)
arin
younger sibling
arok
many
arok san
Kayan, urok san, pineapples (Ananas
comosus)
asal
origin, original
assee
a type of omen bird, Banded
Kingfisher, (Lacedo pulchella
melanops)
ate
liver
avan
widower
avang
illipe nut; Shorea sp.
avang buang
a type of hardwood tree used to make
columns and planks

avong

avut
ayok
ayu

B
bado
bae
bahah
bahak pui
bahik
bajik
bak
bakeh
baloh
balong
balu
Bangau
bangat
barak
bareh
barok
barong
basak
batak
bat

a type of hardwood tree used to make


house post
a type of edible fruit of the rambutan
family (Nephelium mutabile, N.
uncinatum Radlk.)
be afraid
big, much, a lot
female friend; address term for a girl
friend used by a female speaker

Kayan, bado, jade fruits (Artocarpus


heterophyllus)
Kayan, bae, secondary forest
a type of easily split wood
live coal, ember
diligent
cool
alike, same
friend
lazy
a type of river snail
widow
crane, a brand of tobacco
sand
flower, referring to all flowers
fine; small
pig-tailed macaque (Macaca
nemestrina)
front portion of game
see navan basak
pole used as a sign to indicate a
message or to point a direction
a horizontal piece of wood in the
noose trap

Note: The Glossary includes short phrases and words referred to in the text. Those in the quotations and Appendices
below are not listed here as their translations appear next to the quoted texts.

345

Appendix 1: Glossary
_________________________________________
Punan
English; Vernacular;
Vuhang
Scientific Names
_________________________________________
batang
batin
batu
batu orun
batu tulik

a fallen trunk of a tree


the whole leg
stone
large boulder
container for keeping healing
potions used by shamans
batun pui
battery
bavak
mouth
bavang
a point above the shoulder blade of
an animal
bavet
a type of edible fruit
bavih
edge
bavih lanum
river bank
bavui
wild boar; the Bearded Pig (Sus
barbatus)
bavui tone
fruit foraging wild boar
bayit
a type of fruit eaten by wild boar
bayu
strong wind
beh
let it be, signifying approval or
assent
behok
augury; omen; see otu behok
behok gang lau daybreak augury
belatup
explode
belahut
the spirit realm below the land
belavan
a type of hard wood
beliti
the edible rambutan fruit
(Nephelium lappaceum L.)
ben
enough
ben telo
referring to the fat of a wild boar, lit.,
three fingers thick
bengo
benyi
berkaku
berkatih

bersangit

sago shell, outer sheath of the


palm trunk
now
slow walking pace during move to
a new camp
a) a low pass on a ridge or a range
that separates two river systems;
b) a stretch of slope with
descending and ascending
gradient
a type of civet

_________________________________________
Punan
English; Vernacular;
Vuhang
Scientific Names
_________________________________________
bertayit
bikop
bisan
bisirok

pregnant
baby
parents of ones children-in-law
lowest part of a valley, between
slopes, that is usually dry
bitong
point below the shoulder blade of
an animal; the most vulnerable part
of a game animal, when pierced in
this spot, death is instant.
bitu
fish; (Tor douronensis) when small,
tanguh when mature
blian
Kayan, blian, brideswealth
boep
sun bear (Helarctos malayanus)
bohok
dry season
bohok magahan / bohok unyat
very long
drought
bongak
a river that branches to form two
equal sized rivers
bongat
the grey leaf-monkey or Hoses
Langur (Presbytis hosei)
bongok
see pelaput bongok
bosok
broom-like pole used for burning
and sweeping bees from a beehive during honey collecting
boson le
father-in-law
botak
mountain top
botik
inverted U-shaped green stick of a
noose trap
bua
fruit, lit., of any kind
bua upak
a type of fruit eaten by wild boar
bua ehyin
a type of edible fruit
bucang
a type of civet
bui
white-fronted langur (Presbytis
frontata)
bukat
emergency summons
buku
pangolin (Manis javanica)
buling
fine given by a widow or widower to
his/her close relatives for first
sexual intercourse after the death
of spouse
bulu
bamboo
bulu bangap
bamboo water container
346

Appendix 1: Glossary
_________________________________________
Punan
English; Vernacular;
Vuhang
Scientific Names
_________________________________________

_________________________________________
Punan
English; Vernacular;
Vuhang
Scientific Names
_________________________________________

bulu hor
bamboo cylinder
bulukuk
mountain
bulukuk pun berkatih
the stretch of slope that
rose from the lowland by the river
buluvuh
a tree, its bark used to make a
back strap
buruan
soul
busui
the musical bow played during a
nyangen ritual
butek livang
the Areca borneensis plant with
broad leaves
buvut
leaving camp for a new camp site
buwau
an omen animal
buyun
type of delicacy cooked with the
blood of a wild boar hunted by the
kusi hunting method

dok linau
duo
dui
dungan

dwarf - sometimes a malevolent


spirit
they (for human being)
they, the phrase that can also refer
to non-humans, as in dok kavoh,
those who are dead
human-beings
2
thorn
a type of large carnivorous fish

E
ehyin

a type of edible fruit

C
celeyon
ciap
ciet

gahing
gait
galuk
gantang

ciu
ciu otu

civu
cukui botak

circling around
white (color)
edible larvae of large weevil
(Rhynchophorus ferrugineus)
to throw (an object)
the phenomenon of the spirit of the
dead throwing away the yield of
any activity conducted for the first
time since the end of mourning
rising water
temporary separation of a married
couple

D
dak
dari
dayong

blood
they (for animal)
Kayan, dayong, shaman, religious
teacher
dee-taa- dee-taa Morse Code electric telegraph
dei
go from place to place
derry-can
jerry can, a five gallon container for
keeping liquid (English, jerry can)
dipen
Kayan, dipen, slave

347

dogkek
doh
dok

G
gahah

Gembala
gen
giham
git git
gong
gulak
gum
gum tokong
H
hai
harin
hei-hei
heyan
hin

area within which overripe fruit drop


to the ground
type of tree felled for firewood
piece of tool used as a hook
breaking of an item
Malay, gantang, a volume
measurement usually for grain
Malay, gembala, Christian pastor
all kinds of fish
rapid
scrapping last bit of pith from the
sago shell
a kind of brassware that when hit
emits the gong sound
Kayan / Malay, gula, sugar
bring, can also mean collect
leader of a group or band

where
sibling (used specifically for brother
and sister)
whoever
8
meat

Appendix 1: Glossary
_________________________________________
Punan
English; Vernacular;
Vuhang
Scientific Names
_________________________________________
hinan

hipuy
hor
hujan
hujan tohon
I
iak
icik
igek
ikgong
ikgong pok

ikgong uhuk
itpot
ilet
inak
inan
ingoh
ingon
Injil
inu
irab
isang
isau

itpot
itu
ivah
ivak
ivei
ivit
ivok
ivun

mother, referring also to mother of


animal, e.g., hinan bavui, mother
pig
Kayan, lower level aristocrat
a type of large bamboo
rain
heavy rain

and
small
near
frame of sago filtering platform; see
Figure 11
boulders and stones used to hold
cloth in place on sago filtering
platform
main part of the frame making up
sago filtering platform
bait to trap fish and game
tight
the address term for mother
reference term for mother
thatch leaves of roof
fed-up on food; monotonous
Bible
bead for all types
face
ear adornments
a type of edible longan-like fruit
(Pometia pinnata Forst.;
Xerospermum sp.; Dimocarpus
longan Lour)
bait to trap fish and game
the small fish of the Elxis sabanus
foot print of game animal
only
loin-cloth
a type of spirit found in the realm of
the sea
hair of humans
pole for noose trap; fishing rod

_________________________________________
Punan
English; Vernacular;
Vuhang
Scientific Names
_________________________________________

J
jait
jalak
jalik
jan
janang
janin
jangin singot
jarum
jayum
jeliri
jik
jian
joh
jongan

julan
jungap kabai
K
kabun
kai
kajang
kak lolau
kakjiknya
kakop
kalen

kali

348

bridge
cast net
a type of sweet-smelling leaf used
by the suket spirit
chin
a type of edible fruit favored by
pregnant women
patron-spirit used by shaman to kill
others
adult honey bees
curse that causes death to dwarf
spirits
Crested-Wood Partridge (Rollulus
rouloul)
a type of tree used for firewood
1
good; fine
the negative reply no
a) type of sport played by the spirits
b) the taboo requiring waiting at the
edge of the camp until nightfall
before a trapper could return to his
shelter
9
lower portion of roof connected to
main roof of shelters
Malay, sabun, soap
we, inclusive of others in the same
group
two sticks on a noose trap; see
Figure 22
spirit region; lit., beyond the sky
next time
underneath, below
a) stuck and unable to move
b) a very hard wood used as
firewood
realm of the dead

Appendix 1: Glossary
_________________________________________
Punan
English; Vernacular;
Vuhang
Scientific Names
_________________________________________
kali kevoh

kalong
kalop
kaman
kan
kapen
kasai
kasai puti
kasut
katib
katu
kau
kavakob
kavangoh
kavoh
kavok
kayu
kayu bua
kayu laroh
kayu maram
kayu mati
kayuk busui

ke
kea nyat

kea ulong
kehep
kejuai

the plain babbler bird


(Malacopteron affine). Its signing at
the beginning of the flowering
season indicates an impending
heavy fruiting season
a) design as in weaving
b) the large carrying basket
tortoise
to eat (verb)
to give, as to give something to
someone
direction
a deep-fried sago dish
a deep-fried mashed banana dish
Malay, kasut, shoe
piece of cloth worn by Punan
Vuhang women
empurau fish (Tor Tambroides)
you
a type of fruit eaten by wild boar
fruit of sago (Eugeissona utilis
Becc.)
to die (verb)
a type of monitor lizard
wood, as pronounced as kayuk
wood felled from fruit trees that is
used as firewood
small trees about 2 inches in
diameter
dry wood
a felled tree entangled with other
trees or vines
a ritual implement that when
shaken by the shaman, produces a
flute-lie sound in the spirit realm
to, towards
ascending the slope between two
streams that fork from a main
stream
bypassing meandering section of a
river by walking overland
the Ganua palm with broad leaves
land on the opposite bank of a river
349

_________________________________________
Punan
English; Vernacular;
Vuhang
Scientific Names
_________________________________________
kejian
kek

kekah
kelarkin
kelavet mongo
kelepang

kelikit
kelingo
kelipah
keloai
keluar

kelunau
kemusang

kepang
keramu
kerangan
ketan
ketikgob
ketitei
kew
kewoh
keyap
kohop
kok
koloson
kopak
kopi

leader
grandparent, granduncle,
grandaunts, also used as reference
term for elderly people
piglet, immature pig
very brave
Bornean gibbon (Hylobates
muelleri)
a tree, its broad leaves are used to
prevent fibrous pulp from dropping
and touching the ground during the
sago mashing process
to change direction when trekking
to listen (verb)
crossing a river to the opposite
bank
a type of tree used for firewood
unlucky person who frequently fails
to get anything when hunting or
collecting
Kayan, kelunau, harvesting
fern used to ward off harmful soul;
its fruit is favored by pregnant
women
wooden roof shingles
an edible type of wild olive fruit
a type of chestnut
binturong or bear cat (Artictis
binturong)
knowledgeable on a particular
subject
type of gutta purcha; wild rubber
river crabs
Plain Babbler (Malacopteron affine)
to walk (verb)
split, as to wood
type of civet
the edible sago beetle
(Rhynchophorus ferrugineus Oliv.)
Crimson-Headed Partridge
(Haematortyx sanguiniceps)
coffee

Appendix 1: Glossary
_________________________________________
Punan
English; Vernacular;
Vuhang
Scientific Names
_________________________________________
kotokek
Kristian
kuan
kucei
kuen
kuhuwei
kulat
kuli
kumom
kumulang
kun

kunyuling
kusi
kuvuk
kuvulung
kuyat
L
lagek
lahut
lahut tasak

lahut luan

lajaring
lak
lakaruh
lakot
lalat
lalik

respectable elderly leader


Christian
Kayan, kuan, brideswealth
a monkey; silvered langur
(Presbytis cristata)
according to
large tree that arches over rivers
(Dipterocarpus oblongifolius Bl)
mushroom, fungi
clouded leopard (Neofelis
nebulosa)
red leaf-monkey or maroon langur
(Presbytis rubicunda)
type of plant used to ward off
harmful spirits
refers to all kinds food, e.g., kun
linau edible food, kun bavui
food for wild boar
powerful spirit inhabiting the realm
beneath the land
hunting wild boar armed only with a
spear
to descend (verb)
fish (Glaniopsis gossei)
long-tailed or crab-eating macaque
(Macaca fascicularis)
shallow
hot (temperature)
severe stomachache on children
due to eating root of tasak, food of
otu kunyuling spirit
chest pain on children due to eating
root of luan, food of otu kunyuling
spirit
a type of poisonous snake
to carry (verb)
container for carrying blowpipe
darts
a fish (Gastromyzon spp.)
downstream direction
taboo

_________________________________________
Punan
English; Vernacular;
Vuhang
Scientific Names
_________________________________________
lalit
lalit guat

tree roots
exposed roots on embankment of
a river
langane
moon
langane jik
first month
langane nakui full moon
langareh
back portion of a game
langau
the elevated platform of the lapo le
lean-to shelter (see Figure 6.)
langik
leaf shoot; sago shoot
langon
otter (Lutra (Lutrogale) perspicillata;
Aonyx (Amblonyx) cinerea)
languh
house fly
languk
brother-in-law
lanum
water, also river
lanye
pig lard
lapaun
a type of edible fruit
lapah
hand
lapo
hut
lapo pare
rice storage hut
lapo bono
simple lean-to hut
lapo le
lean-to hut with a partially raised
platform with one end resting on
the ground
lapo luek
durable shelter occupied up to
three months
lapo jungap
durable shelter with one roof
lapo porah
durable shelter with a lower portion
of roof connected to the main roof
(see Figure 7)
laput
estuary of a stream
larkin
brave
laroh
small tree trunk
lasaring
omen millipede
latung laut sungei the top part of a river
latup belati
thunder-storm
lau
day; sun; sky
laun
leaf
laut
a) upstream direction
b) animals
lavavang
butterfly

350

Appendix 1: Glossary
_________________________________________
Punan
English; Vernacular;
Vuhang
Scientific Names
_________________________________________
lavu

house, longhouse; different from


lapo simple shelter
lawang
a plant, its broad leaves are used to
prevent fibrous pulp from dropping
and touching the ground during the
sago mashing process
le
man, male
legeheh
a type of plant used for healing
rituals
legehek
omen bird; trogon (Harpactes spp.)
legereh
small sticks placed across
horizontal stick in a noose trap
leheh
Hoses Civet (Hemigalus hosei)
lehik
new
lejeb tatang
rock bar along a shallow part of
river
lemakje bulukuk top of a slope
lemirik
Kayan, lemirik, slash undergrowth
in shifting cultivation
lemukjan
a type of palm with multiple usages
(Salacca sp.)
lepo via
temporary camp occupied for one
to two days after moving away
from a death site
lengakja
a type of edible fruit
langau
elevated platform in the lapo bono
lean-to shelter
lengunang
spirit realm of the sea
letapak
a fish (Gastromyzon borneensis)
leverap
a fish (Puntius bramoides; Puntius
bulu)
leyan
to borrow (verb)
leyeb languk
roof beam
li
a fish (Protomyzon borneensis;
Protomyzon whiteheadi)
liang
large deep river bays
ligang
light as in weight
likiyan
omen bat
likun avun
spirit realm in the sky inhabited by
the otu tulik
lili
base of a blowpipe dart
lilit
aerial tree root
351

_________________________________________
Punan
English; Vernacular;
Vuhang
Scientific Names
_________________________________________
lilit okar
limo
limo ayok tup
limo kanying
limo mohom
linau
lingit
lingoh
linut
lipan
lirap
liring
lirong
lisi
litang
litok
living
logak
lokok
lokong
lolong
lolong ook
long

longan
longotu

lorong

umbilical cord wrapped round the


body of the new born baby
lime; the number five
pomelos (Citrus grandis)
oranges (Citrus reticulata Blanco;
Citrus sinensis)
limes (Citrus aurantifolia)
human being
a) neighbor
b) stand sideway
type of tree that produces the best
firewood
sago paste
Iban, lipan, tractor
type of tree used for firewood
wall of a house
huge river bay
type of palm with very little starch
tired; exhausted
a type of tree used for firewood
the Pinanga mirabilis palm with
board leaves
tuber of a palm only eaten by wild
boar in times of food scarcity
tobacco
crane brand tobacco
feast celebrated during period of
food abundance
festival celebrated during arrival of
wild boar migration season
tuber of a palm only eaten by wild
boar in times of food scarcity, its leaf
is used in rituals to ward off
malevolent spirits
heart; feeling
a prolonged period of rainfall,
resulting from the first conduct of any
activity that had once been carried
out with the dead person during his
lifetime
invisible spirits inhabiting the highest
part of the heavens

Appendix 1: Glossary
_________________________________________
Punan
English; Vernacular;
Vuhang
Scientific Names
_________________________________________
lotik
lovangoh irab

Malay, roti, dry biscuit


the swollen chin of male boar during
mating season
lowar
a type of honey bee (Apis florae)
luan
a type of root eaten by the otu
belahut and otu kunyuling spirits
luang
stomach
luang tutu
the long straight stretch of a river
lubuhok
a type of spirit inhabiting the realm of
the sea
lubunyun
type of tree that produces good
firewood
lubuyun ciap I lubuyun singot
type of tree
which young trunks are used to
make torch for sweeping bees from
their beehives
luek
rest
lug
sago starch
luguk
brother-in-law
luhieng
dried pig fat; a delicacy
lujuk
a) send; deliver
b) a tree, its broad leaves are used to
prevent fibrous pulp from dropping
and touching the ground during the
sago mashing process
lukjung
end, as in the last part of something
lukukun
a) white-crested (white-crowned)
Hornbill (Berenicornis comatus)
b) a type of fruit, its flowering
indicates occurrence of the major
fruit season
c) a tree that produces good
firewood
lukut
valuable beads
lulu
Kayan, lulu, straight stretch of river
lumak
easy, as in not difficult
lumuluk
to search for game
lumut
moss; object hurled by the dwarf
spirit to hurt children
lungan
a type of big fish (Hampala
macrolepdidota)
lunuk
fig ( ficus spp.)

_________________________________________
Punan
English; Vernacular;
Vuhang
Scientific Names
_________________________________________
lupoh

rinsing sago fibers with starch


solution
luru
thunder
luru palati
flashing lightning
lutuk
bottom, buttock
luvang
hole
luvang laut
underground nest of mammals
luvang malam a deep hole to imprison malevolent
spirits captured during nalau ritual
luvang manok underground nest of birds
luyan
durian fruit (Durio zibethinus Murr.)
luyuk
spawning of fish
M
magahan
magom
mahak
mahap

maheh
mahik
mak
mak mek
makah
mahak
makeh
makit
makjom
malam
malat bukal
malin
mamek
man
manan-manan

352

extreme; too much!


hold, like grasp
a) a type of edible fruit
b) to sharpen a knife
a) mashing sago pith into fibrous
pulp for filtering
b) Kayan, mahap, corve labor
system practiced by Kayan
banded langurs (Presbytis
melalophos)
sympathy; to like
father
uncle
to chase a wild boar
a type of edible fruit
cross a slope to bypass a long
stretch of river bend
scoop water
put out fire
night
ornamental knife with decorated
sheath
loss
giant squirrel (Ratufa affinis)
father
any kind, as in any kind of food
(angkun manan-manan)

Appendix 1: Glossary
_________________________________________
Punan
English; Vernacular;
Vuhang
Scientific Names
_________________________________________
manator

a large tree with fruit consumed by


wild boar (Shorea spp.; Anisoptera
spp.); its wood is used to make
columns and planks
mangahin
remove meat from bone (lower leg)
and skull
mangari
a very hard wood (Kompassia
malaccensis)
mangin
dogs chasing a wild boar
manok
a) bird
b) a type of hardwood tree suitable
for construction
manok kuan / manok otu Rhinoceros Hornbill
(Buceros rhinoceros borneansis)
mapet
to chop (verb)
maram
rotten
maren
Kayan, maren, aristocrat
marun
descend
masap
cut away dead frond from sago
trunk
matan
eye; sun; noose (trap)
maton
swollen
matuk
bite; murky water
mavu
deaf
mee
Malay / Kayan, mee, noodle
mek aran bikop name giving ceremony for a baby
mek singot
to harvest honey
meligoh
very fast
mepet
lopping off protruding branches
before burning
meruka
Gurkha soldiers during the
Indonesian-Malaysian
Confrontation
meseken
fierce
minek
aunt
minit
minute (English, minute)
minun
seeing through the little space in
between leaves during hunting
minyak
Malay, minyak, oil
mirat
tear
misan
stay overnight
misan lug
overnight sago camp
353

_________________________________________
Punan
English; Vernacular;
Vuhang
Scientific Names
_________________________________________
misep
mitu
modung
mohi
mohoi
mojob
mojuk
mok
molang
mon
mongo
monyo

morip
motet
mu'jun
muhuat
mukgak
mulet
mulong
munguhut
mungulung
munim

mupit
murik
musing
mut
mutu
muvung
muvut
muxit
muxit barak

selfish
to catch the itu fish (Nemachilus
olivaceus; Elxis sabanus)
papaya (Carica papaya)
to fish with line and hook
to approach, come near
hungry
far
filtering process of sago starch;
trample and thrash mashed sago
a type of edible fruit
first, as in you go first
real, correct
imitating the call of birds to draw
them within blowpipe shooting
distance
live, alive
to fell tree
a type of tree used for firewood
massage; rub the body
dogs chasing small useless
animals
to return
an omen
shaving a piece of wood for
burning
a taboo bird; trogon
a kind of civet that can be hunted
for food; an omen animal pertaining
to warfare
to shoot with blowpipe
a) cook; boil
b) toward upriver
rat
call as in calling somebody (verb)
cut; sever
roof
to leave a camp site or an area in
order to move to another
exit, to leave a house; to emerge
as in rising sun
flower blooming

Appendix 1: Glossary
_________________________________________
Punan
English; Vernacular;
Vuhang
Scientific Names
_________________________________________

_________________________________________
Punan
English; Vernacular;
Vuhang
Scientific Names
_________________________________________
ngepua

N
nabur

Kayan, nabur, weeding in shifting


cultivation
nagak
to hunt with dogs
nak
child, children
nakayok-nakayok molding sago starch into a
bigger dough
nakarong
ascend, as to climb up
naken
nephew
nalau
healing ceremony performed by
shaman
nam
6
napalu
to spear game
nasok
try
natek
hit; beat
natong
flat rivers with hard beds located
immediately above big and high
waterfalls
navan basak
process sago on the day of
departure from a camp
nek
because (cause of)
ngajoh
dont have
ngait
using a hook
ngajel
traditional dance
ngakat
raise (get up)
ngalasik
to look after a seedling that
naturally sprouted
ngalong
to notch tree trunk
nganak
to give birth (verb)
ngaput
close-up a hole; block a stream as
in ngaput lanum
ngarang
temporary gathering of bands
during fruit seasons
ngasuk
Kayan, ngasuk, hunting with dogs
ngavoh
kill
ngebarak
flowering (season)
ngehet
to scrap
ngelela
to look for food
ngemulang
to use the kumulang ritual leaves to
ward off evil spirits

ngiting

nguin
ngun

ni
niut
no
nok hun sun
nokjou
nu?
nuan
nukuvok
nulip
nugan
nuluvei
nupi
nupok
nutong
nutuk
nutak
nyahang
nyahun
nyak
nyalakoh
nyalapen
nyamakoh
nyamu
nyangen
nyapalut
354

to use a burning torch to sweep


bees away from beehive
a) to tie small pieces of wood to
form a river obstacle
b) twigs set around the tagalong
trap to resemble a nest
head of a fish tilting downwards
a type of fish (Rasbora rutteni;
Schismatorhynchus
heterorhynchus)
here; like that
right on target during spearing or
blowpipe hunting
the Licuala orbicularis palm with
board leaves
instant death to game
to spear or hurl a spear from a
distance
what?
noun, place
to cross (verb)
to fly (verb)
Kayan, nugan, to dibble or sow rice
seeds
to mold, press and round sago
starch into small balls of dough
shaman; dream
to pound rice
to make a fire to burn a farm
Kayan, nutuk, to lop branches
to vomit (verb)
the color yellow
grandchild, also used as an
address term
a layer of fat on a wild boar
trick; deceptive scheming
lightning/thunderstorm
sago (arenga sp.)
fiber used to start a fire
singing; the ritual involving singing
spirit songs by the shaman
wood that is difficult to split

Appendix 1: Glossary
_________________________________________
Punan
English; Vernacular;
Vuhang
Scientific Names
_________________________________________
nyat
nyatong
nyau
nyauo
nyegehok

nyeliou
nyelupoh
nyemuwak
nyikot
nyikow
nyioh
nyium
nyohut
nyokat
nyokonu
nyoon
nyovu
nyupopok
nyiur
nyumuwak
nyuvulu

O
oan
ogak
ohuk
ok
oii
oit
okar
okar kalei
okar lunuk
okgong
okjob

slope; ridge
Kayan, to swim (verb)
the predator bird, eagle
yes; available
a) become familiar with someone
b) diligently hunting all kinds of
small animals
to walk on the side of a slope, at
the same elevation (see Figure 4)
disbelief; disobey; disrespect
trailing monkeys in blowpipe
hunting
to sew
to steal
coconut
dont
a type of tree used for firewood
a tree, its bark used to make a
back strap
to think (verb)
accuse
traveling towards downriver
blowing into the palm to make the
popok popok sound
coconuts (Cocos nucifera L.)
sighting animal foot prints
a type if tree that is suitable for
house construction

wife
ladder
A-shaped part of chest
me; the positive reply yes
shoulder strap
a type of edible fruit
root; vine
a tuber eaten by wild boar
fig vine
wood submerged underwater that
can be used as firewood when dry
hungry
355

_________________________________________
Punan
English; Vernacular;
Vuhang
Scientific Names
_________________________________________
oku lanye

literally, bury lard kept inside


containers in the banks of small
tributaries
opai
a type of edible fruit
orak
a) a type of firewood which dries
very fast, usually used during
honey collecting
b) its broad leaves are used to
prevent fibrous pulp from dropping
and touching the ground during the
sago mashing process
oram batang
pieces of heavy wood on top of
leaves to keep thatch from being
blown away by strong winds
orip
pet
oriu
a type of edible fruit
oroh
woman; girl; female
oroh balu
malevolent widow spirit
otet
foot, feet
otu
spirit; ghosts
otu behok
augural spirits
otu belahut
the spirit inhabiting the belahut spirit
realm below the earth
otu dogkek
dwarf - sometimes a malevolent
spirit
otu kunyuling
the spirit inhabiting the kunyuling
spirit realm below the earth
otu laput lanum spirits inhabiting the spirit realm of
the river mouths
otu tanok
dwarf spirits living inside big rocks
or boulders found in the mountains
otu tulik
the best known spirits in the Punan
Vuhang cosmos; found in the
realm of the heavens (likun avun),
rising sun (muxit matan lau) and
mountains (bululuk)
otu pahkavoh
killing spirits
oun
middle
ovan
noun, wound
oven
waterfall
ovet
noose trap

Appendix 1: Glossary
_________________________________________
Punan
English; Vernacular;
Vuhang
Scientific Names
_________________________________________
ovi
ovow

ovow civu
ovow luyuk
ovow malam
ovow tutu

P
paean bulu
pahkavoh
pakak
pakgoh

knife (referring to the bush knife,


against yu for the small blade)
a) long as in measurement
b) go away
c) traditional fish trap
fish trap set at a small river during
high water
fish spawning trap
fish trap set at night time
fish trap set in a big river during
high water

bamboo bats
noun, kill (see verb, ngavoh)
column or post of a shelter
dart equipped with a metal tip used
for killing big game and enemies
paklug
to check the content of sago starch
paknak
kindred
paknyat
mountain range
paknyot
adultery
pakri lipoh
second cousin
paku
fern
palajeu
a type of tree growing along the
river bank
palang
a) penis pin
b) a device in the noose trap (see
Figures 13 and 14)
palaput
confluence of a side stream with a
main river
palaput bongok a stream or river that branches to
form two equal sized streams
palati
thunder
palet
portion / section of sago trunk
pali
taboo
palik
taboo, alternative pronunciation
palit
victim of taboo
palu
hammer for mashing sago
pamit
to pull (verb)
pan
hind quarter thigh of an animal

_________________________________________
Punan
English; Vernacular;
Vuhang
Scientific Names
_________________________________________
pangin
pangok
panyin
papangab
paran
paroh
paroh utok
pasarip
patar
patasang
patik
patup
patup bua
pau
paung
payau
pee-it
pejaak
pelanuk
pelar
pelayan
pelekoh
peluru

Pendeta
pengatang
pengivu
petitik
peyak
pikgok
piksat
356

a type of edible fruit; mango


(Mangifera pajang Kost)
the waiting period for an animal to
die from blowpipe poison
a) Kayan, panyin, commoner
b) a group of animal
mating for wild boar
bat
to be in pain; sick
headache
to be extra careful when hunting
animal
a type of fruit (Parkia speciosa)
fight; a term use to refer to fighting
between monkeys
a type of tree used for firewood
muddy water
fruit buds
an edible insect attracted to fire
during the night
hunting dogs surrounding a wild
boar
sambar deer (Cervus unicolor)
an omen bird
a hardwood used for firewood
mousedeer (Tragulus javanicus;
Tragulus napu)
peace ceremony
Christian deacon
to throw (as in throwing a spear)
a steeply descending stretch of
river where the water flows
smoothly over the river bed
Christian missionary
beams supporting the takgung
sago filtering platform
a container for scooping water
used in sago filtering
to splash water
sago fiber obtained by mashing
sago pith
staying awake throughout the night
divide (as divide into parts )

Appendix 1: Glossary
_________________________________________
Punan
English; Vernacular;
Vuhang
Scientific Names
_________________________________________
piksat lapo

a married couple setting up their


own household, literal meaning
divide a house
pinak
when
pingitan
a) noose trap string
b) vine for sewing a cut on a
carcass
pingu
to accompany friends; to court
pipik kayu
firewood kindling
pipoh
shaking a bundle of burning
kindling to distract the bees from
attacking climbers during honey
collecting
pohi mamit
to fish using line and hook
pok'an
a component of sago filtering
platform
pokolong
to repeat (chant in the context of a
ritual)
polongan
same feeling; same heart
pon
the forearm; upper limb of front
quarter of an animal
pongehok
lowering of river level
popoya
to mate (wild boar)
portunuk
to curse
puhuk
ancestry; pedigree
puhuk pui
fireplace
pui
fire
pui sirong
fire thrown to the spirit of the dead
at the end of mourning
pujuak
searching for fruits so that hunting
can be directed towards where
animals are eating fruit
puknyik
to whisper (verb)
puklik-ulik
to return to camp on the same day
from hunting and/or gathering
puklung
the long cooing call that greets the
hunter returning with a wild boar
pukulap
to teach (verb)
pukulap nuo
reciting and teaching somebody
access routes to a distant area
pukulim
to hide (verb)
pukulim puknyik whisper secretly
357

_________________________________________
Punan
English; Vernacular;
Vuhang
Scientific Names
_________________________________________
pulo
pulu-pulu
pulujuk

10
tens of tens
to send belongings ahead to a new
camp before the day of moving
puluvit
to roll (verb)
pun berkatih
stretch of ascending slope
pun busui
patron spirit of shaman
pun kayu
a huge tree with large buttress
roots
pun nyat
higher part of a slope that
converges with a ridge or a range
pun sap nyat bongok
the higher parts of the
range
punguhut
shavings of dry wood used to start
a fire
punuk
a type of edible fruit
pupak
platform of a shelter made from
tree bark
purip
life
pusong
a type of edible fruit
putdong
huge log of firewood for continuous
burning
puti
banana (Musa sapientum L.)
putom
everybody
putuhok
meeting, a gathering of people
putulat
to divide; share
puyat
to play (verb), games
S
S. I. B

Sidang Injil Borneo; Borneo


Evangelical Church
sa'ai
frog
sagek
waist
sai
python (Python reticulatus)
salah
nest
samak pokan layer of leaves at the bottom of a
sago filtering platform
samak takgung layer of broad leaves on a takgung
platform
san
a type of lean used for ritual
sangen
singing
sanik
happy; glad

Appendix 1: Glossary
_________________________________________
Punan
English; Vernacular;
Vuhang
Scientific Names
_________________________________________
sanok

the sago processing stage when


the starch solution settled
sapah
to cut meat for distribution during
sharing
sape
stringed musical instrument
sarap
to run away, or flee, until nightfall,
without eating food
sarit
type of firewood which dries very
fast, usually used during honey
collecting
satung
stringed bamboo musical
instrument
sauk
tomorrow
savut
an omen bird, Brahminy Kite
(Haliastur indus intermedius)
seketok
A line and bait fishing method using
a small vine inserted through
several earthworms. When the fish
bits the earthworm, it sinks its teeth
into the vine. When the person
yanks up the rod, the fish remains
biting the worm and the vine.
selangap
fish-spear/harpoon
selangap bengo fish-spear carved from the sago
trunk shell
selangap titei
iron harpoon
selatok
singing during honey collecting as
encouragement to the men up in
the tree
seliat
illness caused by spirits
seluan
a type of fish, eaten by the dwarf
spirit
servireh
see adet servireh
servilak
blood-pact; swearing ceremony;
blood-brother
siau
salt
sidah
Kayan, sidah, to wait by a river
bank for migrating wild boar to
cross a river spot
sik
snail
sikot
binding that stitches the cutting on
wild boar

_________________________________________
Punan
English; Vernacular;
Vuhang
Scientific Names
_________________________________________
silat
silat koyan
silit
singot
sirau
soak

soar
sok
suket
sumin
sung

suqu'ak
T
tabalak
tabat
tabin
tabu
tagagau
tain
tain titei
tajuk
takang
takgeh
takgung

takjem
takjem tipluk

358

a broad palm leaf for thatching roof


(Licuala valida Becc.)
the Johannestysmannia palm with
broad leaves
ritual severing malevolent spirits
effect from the victim
honey bee (Apis dorsata)
a type of tree used to construct
boat
interfluves, the stretch of higher
lands separating one valley from
the next
longhouse corridor
at (location)
spirits inhabiting the heavenly
realm; story about suket
the sumin rattan with fine vines
the vulnerable front point of an
animals body
to take turns

type of fruit; durian (Durio


kutejensis)
medicine
buttock protector made from deer
hide
sugarcane (Saccharum officinarum
L.)
the Ganua palm with broad leaves
intestine
rusty metal
sago (Eugeissona utilis Becc.)
part of head above the jaw
blowpipe dart
small platform on top of the sago
filtering platform frame, where the
rinsing of sago starch is done
blowpipe poison (Antiaris toxicaria)
see tipluk

Appendix 1: Glossary
_________________________________________
Punan
English; Vernacular;
Vuhang
Scientific Names
_________________________________________
takjem uhu

a type of blowpipe poison handed


down over several generations
takul
wild boar escaping from hunting
dogs
talabangat / talajantan
sparkling and bright
talanak
landscape features used as
reference points
talang
sago (Arenga) (Kayan, talang)
tali
string; squirrel (Callosciusrus spp)
tali tin
a string tied above the ankle on the
right foot to prevent the spirit of a
dead child from causing the death
of another child
talo
3
talong
a type of edible fruit favored by
pregnant women
talun
Kayan, talun, secondary forest
tamaru
rhinoceros (Dicerorhinus
sumatrensis)
tanok
a) soil; land
b) a type of hardwood tree suitable
for construction
tanok apau
infertile land with exposed roots on
ground surface
tanok bajik
cool soil - flat land with a stream
meandering across it that irrigates
the soil (from bajik; cool)
tanok batu
rocky surfaces
tanok pulo
a ritual to neutralize the effects of
augury spirits that prevented
leaving from a campsite
tanok terkaket very steep slope
tanguh
a type of fish (Tor douronensis)
tasak
a type of root eaten by otu
kunyuling spirit
tanyit
huge tree with bee-hives; a shorter
variety is used for making
blowpipes
tapah
rare; few
tapui
a person who is highly successful
in hunting or collecting
taret
a type of fruit eaten by wild boar
359

_________________________________________
Punan
English; Vernacular;
Vuhang
Scientific Names
_________________________________________
tarok
tasapan
tason

neck
salt-lick
type of fruit much favored by wild
boar, when eaten boars become
very fat (Cotylelobium spp.;
Anisoptera kostermans)
tatang
rock bar along the river bank
tatang babang tuber of a palm only eaten by wild
boar in times of food scarcity
tatapup
the Ganua palm with broad leaves
tatuk
fire stand; hearth
tau
right-hand as opposed to left-hand
tavat
talk
tavat nyat sanik joking and cheerful conservation
tavun
a general phrase for all kinds of
snake
tawak
Kayan, tawak, the brassware that
fetches very high price
tavung
neck portion of a wild boar
tebulu
type of fruit (Litsea garciae Vidal);
its wood is used to make house
post
teggelam kavok a type of hardwood tree used to
make house post
tekurang
a unknown type of animal, its bone
used as fish hook
telau
barking deer (Muntiacus muntjac;
Muntiacus atherodes)
telajan
an omen bird (Platylophus
galericulatus coronatus)
telo
3
temahah
strong small tree, trunk used for
spring pole in a noose trap, and
boat pole (Eugenia sp.)
temanyit
adult male wild boar
temuai
visitors, usually from a longhouse
(Iban, temuai, stranger, visitor)
terbulu
a type of edible fruit
terjaku
helmeted hornbill (Rhinoplax vigil)
terkakjeh
kicked apart, the result of which is
death due to adet servireh

Appendix 1: Glossary
_________________________________________
Punan
English; Vernacular;
Vuhang
Scientific Names
_________________________________________
terkalet
terkukup
terloa
ternongob
terpakgau
tesing lau
tet
tet ahu
tikgob
tilong
tinu koh

tipluk
tiring busui

tising

titei
titing
tiu
tobo
tokek
tokek lapo
tokik
tokong
tokut

tolang
tolang puklik
tolang paknyot

a chestnut tree, a type of fruit eaten


by wild boar
upside down; baby born breech
delivered
too much
head of a fish tilted downwards
monkey being cautious of
predators, wary
evening period of the day
towards, as in tet lalat towards
downstream
to hunt with dogs
knowing
store; house
presence of a white tinge on a knife
blade indicating a sufficient amount
of starch in the sago palm
a very powerful blowpipe poison,
lit., cut the throat
patron-spirits house serving as
congregation of otu tulik for the
performance of nyangen ritual
final stage of sago processing,
draining water from the settled
starch
iron
fence; line of obstacles
camouflaging a noose trap
again
a type of edible fruit
leader
headman
metal or lighter for lighting fire
a community
spear shaft; turn over as in rotating
sago pulp during the filtering
process
divorce or temporary separation
temporary separation after which
the spouses reunite
separation due to a proven
allegation of adultery

_________________________________________
Punan
English; Vernacular;
Vuhang
Scientific Names
_________________________________________
tolang kak ciu

during a period of separation, one


of the spouses marries another
partner, literal meaning permanent separation
tolo
trunk notched into portions
tone
over ripe fruits that drop to the
ground
totung
porcupine
totung kelien
porcupine (Thecurus crassispinis)
totung mucit
porcupine (Hystrix brachyura)
tovih
together; with
tuan
Malay / Kayan, tuan, white man;
Caucasian
tubo
fish poison (Linostoma pauciflorum
Griff.; Diospyros piscicapa Ridl.)
tubo kaling
Croton tiglium L. fish poison
tubo okar
Derris elliptica Benth. fish poison
tubo pari
Derris spp fish poison
tubu
to plant
tuei
to come
tujuk
to point
tukang
stomach
tukap
chip, notch
tuket
a) behavior; attitude
b) a plant found in mountainous
area, its broad leaves are used to
prevent fibrous pulp from dropping
and touching the ground during the
sago mashing process
tukgah berkatih descending part of a slope, in
relation to the river, sloping down to
the river
tukjuk
7
tulah
supernatural consequence due to a
prohibited act
tulat
divide; sharing
tulik sangen
otu tulik spirit who teaches songs to
an apprentice shaman
tulong
Malay, tulong, help
tun lanum
malevolent spirit that swims in the
middle depth of the river
tup
the whole carcass of a game
360

Appendix 1: Glossary
_________________________________________
Punan
English; Vernacular;
Vuhang
Scientific Names
_________________________________________
tup paknyat
tup tanok
tupat
tupuit
tunyui
tupob
tupok
tupunying
tusungoh
tuvak

mountain range
peak of a hill or mountain
groove; entire length of hard sago
pith hacked into a straight groove
straight
meandering part of a river
type of civet
pounding paddy
to tip-toe
a civet, yellow-throated marten
(Martes flavigula)
to go downstream

U
ucuk
uhuk

spear
See Figure 11:
a) sago filtering platform
b) pool of water upstream of the
filtering platform
c) pool of water accumulating
inside the filtering platform
d) piece of cloth in the sago filtering
platform
ukik
treeshrews (Tupaia spp)
ulik
to return
ulun
a) enemy captured in warfare and
turned into slave
b) forequarter of a mousedeer
carcass
uma
Kayan, uma, house
upak
bubble
upit
blowpipe
urak
piglet
usam
wild animals becoming highly
alerted towards hunters
uteng
penis pin
utok
head
uvow
to run (verb)
uwei gak / uwei mongo
the high quality
Calamus caesius rattan used to
produce baskets with woven
design and fine mats
361

_________________________________________
Punan
English; Vernacular;
Vuhang
Scientific Names
_________________________________________
uwei janan

V
vaan
vak
vireh
visi
vuhang
vulei
Y
yek
yiang

yu
yun
yut

type of large rattan cane


(Retispatha dumetosa Dransf.)

Kayan, vaan, cultivated vegetable


head downriver, come back
a plant used to make floor
a part, or a portion of an item
island
left-hand side

elder brother/sister
malevolent spirit in the form of an
animal such as a wild-buffalo, deer,
or barking deer inhabiting the spirit
realm of large deep river bays
small knife
to carry something heavy on the
shoulder
basket used for filtering sago starch

Appendix 2: Genealogy of Thirteen Kin Groups


The genealogies below belong to thirteen kin groups. Every person in the
community can trace his or her genealogy to at least one of these kin groups. Luhat
Tehin, the oldest living individual in the community is my primary informant on the
names of the ancestors. Most people do not know the names of their ancestors
beyond the third generation because before the community became Christian in the
early 1970s, it was forbidden to mention the names of the dead, except during the
name-giving ceremony (see Chapter Eight). We hope that these genealogies may be
used by Punan Vuhang to choose names for their children.
These genealogies reflect the bilateral nature of Punan Vuhang kinship in
which kinship ties are traced equally through both the father and the mother. As for
Langin Nguwei (13), because his father, Nguwei, was originally a Punan Kihan from
Kalimantan, Luhat does not know the name of his ancestors.

Table 22: Order of Egos Genealogy according to


Household Residence
Genealogy
No.

Name of Ego

Household
Number

2.1
2.2
2.3
2.4
2.5
2.6
2.7
2.8
2.9
2.10
2.11
2.12
2.13

Lajang Ap
Naro Pua
Milang Ruyong
Nigau Liwan
Naut Negen
Riyek Sion
Sayun Liwan
Bawek Sanei
Kilat Ngeting
Nguwek Putan
Tawing Agek
Luhat Tehin
Langin Nguwei

1
3
3
5
6
6
9
11
12
12
13
15
deceased in
1994

362

363

Note: G is abbreviation
for Genealogy

Liku

children

Mean

Lating

Uji

Lajang

Loyen

Tumin

Elon

Ekok

See G 5

Ap

Paren

See G 2.2

Jiu

Jaun

2.1 Genealogy of Lajang Ap

364

Naro

Vihing

Surek

Viring

Naro

Ukin

Mangu

Note: G is abbreviation for Genealogy

Sayun

G 2.7

Liwan

G2: 4, 7

Yiobin Siamat

Nalim

Ngo

Matjai

Naut

Surek

G 2.3
Ella

HH 2

Mangu

Nyinyang

Enang

Nyaing

Sapau

Tosu

Ngui

Sep

Lobin

Ulok
Imang

Negen

G 2.4

Liuk

Loyen

G 2.1
Lajang

Senah

Nyaweng

G2. 4
Pua

Malah

2.2 Genealogy of Naro Pua

Sangom

Kiam

Nanyab

Igeng

Siamat

Jungeu

Liwan

Maak

Ap

Baby

Mangu

Surek Naro G 2:4; 2.7

Putan

G 2.10

Sayun

Same Sayun Liwan as individual on left of chart

Yiobin

Riing

Marik

365

Ruyong

Nikoi

childless

Nyali

Vihang

G 2.10

Benik

Nahon

childless

at Long Unai
Nyutam Soe

Tinyoi

Jibet

G2. 9

Kudun

Milang

Narin

Riyek

Mean

Jimol

Noim

Rape

Ukin

G 2.4
Ngui

Kirup

Nanyab

childless

Nguwek

Donga

Biyen

G 2.2
Surek

Narup

G 2.8

Ella

G 2.8
Bawek

childless

Rape

G 2.4
Pon

Lurak

Ngion

childless

Varong

Sabung

Nunyou

Dogek

Senahoh

Lungon

Nginup

Joot

2.3 Genealogy of Milang Ruyong

G 2.10
Igeng

Nua
?

Sudan
?

childless

Vihing

Ngion

G2.2;G2.7
Nguwei

G2. 2
Naro

Ella

Nyali

Sayun

Nojab

Kudun

Biling

Jail

Jihan

Agek

G 2.7
Ngarik

Manya

Iroh

366

Loyen

Ping

Lidut

childless

Ayong

Turang

G9

Igeng

Livu

Mean

G 2.2
Naro

Cheri

Sakeh

Mangu

childless

Aboh

Jeli

Lobin

Lihim

childless

Olan

Ukong

Loyen

G 2.10
Lohong

Kiam

Pua

Nyuling

G 2.2
Nyaweng

Tiong

2.4 Genealogy of Nigau Liwan

Senah

Pon

G2.3

Ngui

Ukin

G 2.3
Jimol

Mean

G2: 2, 7
Liwan

G 2.5
Rahut

Lat

Nanyo

Kabili

G2. 8
Tarang

Neu

Jungi

Negen

Nigau
z

G 2.5
Nahen

Naling

Lavut

367

Nalim

Naro

Ngo

Matjai

Surek

Viring

Naut

Lating

G 2.1
Mean

Tosu

G 2.2

Mangu

Tanyut

Sai

Lating

Uji

Negen

Enang

Ngui

Nahen

Naut
z

Mean

G 2.3
J imol

Childless

G 2.6
Riyek

2.5 Genealogy of Naut Negen

Ukin

Ngui

Rahut

Tanyut

Jiang

Kirup

Negen

G 2.4
Nigau

Nolet

Tagak

Joot

Guleh

368

Muan

Lenit

Sion

G 2.10
Nyuwei

Nyalau

Lidut

Riyek

G 2.2
Kiam

Narin

Soing

Nguwek

Unget

G 2.11

G 2.5
Naut

childless

Riyek

Vilak

Lunow

Langat

Siau

Ella

Napok

Donga

Piniun

childless

Sudan

Nganyan

2.6 Genealogy of Riyek Sion

Nubik

Nuwang

Langat

Nubit

Uman

childless

Nyalau

Pitak

369

Tingom

Jimol
Ngilot

Nyiinyang

childless

Bawe

childless

Puen

Majat

Agek

Uji

Tumin

G 2.1
Mean

childless

Tawing

Unget

Milak

Lating

Uji

Tanyut

G 2.5
Sai

Nojab

Sayun

Linyah

Childless

G 2.9
Kuyang

Lating

2.7 Genealogy of Sayun Liwan

G 2.13
Langin

G 2: 2, 4
Liwan

Sanei

Jilei

Lean

Tigang

Nojab

Ngarik

G 2.3
Nahon

G 2.3
Kudun

childless

Agek

Junan

G8
Nunyou

370

Sakung

Kiam
Dolau

Meti

Lungon

Guleh

Nikong

Nolet
?

Kirup

Tagak

Varong

Nyinup

Joot

G 2.3

Milang

Ava
G 2.9

Ngae

Vihing

Ruyong

Biyen

G2. 4
Nigau

Nyuling

Dogek

Kiam

Dolau

Lurak

Donga

G 2.2
Surek

Lungon

G 2.7
Nojab

Meti Lungon

Tarang

Senahoh

Ella

Bawek

Jilei

Rape

G 2.3

Sanei

2.8 Genealogy of Bawek Sanei

G 2.9
Bom

Ngion

childless

G 2.3
Varong

G2.2

Nunyou

childless

Nyinyang

Nyaing

Lean

Tigang

Junan

Sakung

Nyidei

adopted by
Kuyang G2.9

G 2.9
Soing

Viring

371

Lean

Ap

Ngeting

Kuyang

Junut

Tumin

childless

Kuyang

childless
adopt
Nyidei
(Soings son)

G2. 7
Sayun

Uji

Tawing

G 2.1 Lajang

Banai

Toing

Tigang

G 2.2
Kiam

Galeh

Tiong

Surau

Masan

Tagak

Jibet

Sabung

Romin

Selobi

Lanyu

Kilat

Ava

G 2.10
Lidut

Ngihang

Bom

Biyen G2.8

Nuling

Mawan
adopt
Tiong
(Masans daughter)

Olan

Ngae

Liku

Nikoi

G 2.2
Mangu

Benik

childless

Nyaing

Ruyong
G23

Kudun

2.9 Genealogy of Kilat Ngeting

Jibet

Junan

Soing

Nuhey

Nyidei

G 2.8
Sakung

Nahan

Turang
G 2.4

Narin

Riyek

Vihang

Noim

Putan
G2.2

Nguwek

372

Malah

Igeng

Nyinyang

G 2.2

Riing

Maak

Nanyab

Putan

G 2.9
Olan

adopt
Tiong
(Olans brothers daughter)

Nyaweng

Yiobin

Siamat

Jungeu

Mangu

Mawan

Lidut

G2. 4
Lihim

Igeng

Lohong

G 2.3
Varong

Long

Milang

G 2.3

Nikoi

childless
adopt Varongs D Ella & Ngion

Marik

Kudun

2.10 Genealogy of Nguwek Putan

Jibet

G 2.9
Noing

Narin

Vihang

Noim

G 2.9
Kilat

Nguwek

childless
adopt Sabongs D Yiobin

Nguwek

Benik

Riyek

373

Tingom

Puen

Uji

Agek

Larik

G 2.7

Linyah

Latin

Sayun

Sanei
Jilei

Nojab

childless

Bawe

G 2.2
Nyinyang

Ngarik

Sion

Lenit

G 2.6

Matjat

Uman

Narin

G 2.1
Tumin

Soing

Nguwek

childless
adopt Liuk
(Lajangs D)

Tawing

Lidut

Riyek

2.11 Genealogy of Tawing Agek

Vilak

Sangom

Unget

Lunow

Tinyoi

Ukin

374

Masan

Ucat

Ngion
Surek

G 2.2
Nyaweng

Liuk

Luhat

Tehin

childless

Bakeh

Ngiun

Kudun

childless
childless
adopt Naro
Nyawengs son

Vihing

Bakup

Jungek

Lumek

Lai

Usun

Nimut

G 2.4
Lat

Mujang

Bunge

2.12 Genealogy of Luhat Tehin

Nubi

Jaun

Gociu

Umek

Ngurik

Lijin

Poyang

Kabilong

Lurah

Lobin

375

Panyo

Mean

Selei

Nguwei

Langin

Miden

Ngihun

Jihin

Ngeom

Nojab

Nyidoh

Dolau

G 2.7
Ngarik

Volin

Kiam

G2. 8
Lungon

Ngihun

G 2.2
Kiam

Dogek

Lurak

Lidon

Senahoh

Rawa

Nguwi

2.13 Genealogy of Langin Nguwei

Nyorie

Tagan

Tasing

G2. 1
Tumin

Ujei

Meyan

Meti

Sabet

Nyipin

Kawit

Appendix 3: A List of Some Plants used by the Punan Vuhang


Scientific Name

Punan Vuhang

Vernacular Name

Use

Acorus calamus L.
Agathis borneensis
Warburg
Aglaia lancifolia

sukot
tukuli

sweet flag
a damar tree

asak

a fruit growing on
river-bank shrub
pineapple

medicinal use1
the damar resin is
valued for knife handles
snack

Ananas comosus
Anisoptera Grandiflora *

A. grossivenia *
A. laevis *
A. kostermans *
A. marginata NN153*
A. marginata S8038*
A. marginata S7083*
A. marginata S2718*
A. marginata 9278*
A. marginata 9290*
A. marginata 9772*
A. marginata 9773*
A. marginata 0463*
A. marginata 9827*
A. marginata S13992*
A. marginata 189862*
A. marginata 21177*
A. marginata 22640*
A. marginata 15418*
Antiaris toxicaria
Aquilaria malaccensis

arok san
manator; bua
upak -with fruit;
lanyu - when
young tree
tenak
kavakub
tason
laui
balapi
balapi
tenak
tenak
manator
manator
lop
lop
lop
tenak
tanak
laui
kavakob
manator
takjem pingitan
Garu lala

A. microcarpa

Garu lala

Areca borneensis
Arenga undulatifolia

butek livang
nyamakoh

the fragrant garu


wood
the fragrant garu
wood

snack; cultivar
fruit eaten by wild boar

fruit eaten by wild boar


fruit eaten by wild boar
fruit eaten by wild boar
fruit eaten by wild boar
fruit eaten by wild boar
fruit eaten by wild boar
fruit eaten by wild boar
fruit eaten by wild boar
fruit eaten by wild boar
fruit eaten by wild boar
fruit eaten by wild boar
fruit eaten by wild boar
fruit eaten by wild boar
fruit eaten by wild boar
fruit eaten by wild boar
fruit eaten by wild boar
fruit eaten by wild boar
fruit eaten by wild boar
blowpipe poison
the precious aloe wood;
for trading
the precious aloe wood;
for trading
leaf for thatch roof
Starch as staple

The reference of scientific names and utility is obtained from Chin 1985:254-281. From the Kenyah Lapo Tau
names mentioned by Chin, informants identified and translated the plants into Punan Vuhang names. Several plants
recorded by Chin, however, were not known to informants. Plants with asterisk * have been identified by two
informants (Naro Pua and Uji Lating) at the Sarawak Herbarium of the Forest Department Research Center,
Kuching. Due to lack of time and the large number of specimens, only plants in the Dipterocarpus family were
identified. Even so, the identification was limited to the Dipterocarpus species.
1

376

Appendix 3: A List of Some Plants used by the Punan Vuhang


Scientific Name

Punan Vuhang

Vernacular Name

Use

Artocarpus elasticus
Reinw.

paap

a tree

Artocarpus
heterophyllus Lam.
Artocarpus
odoratissimus Bl.
Athyrium asperum
Baccaurea lanceolata
Baccaurea macrocarpa
Benincasa hispida
Calamus caesius Bl.

bado

jackfruit

latex as source of
birdlime;
bark as source of fiber
cordage used for barkcloth
Snack

boa torai

a fruit

Snack

paku lalo
lapau
torai
tarak
uwei mongo;
uwei gak

a big fern
a fruit
a fruit
wax gourd
rattan

Calamus optimus Becc.

uwei telong

rattan

Canarium
odontophyllum Miq.
Capsicum annuum L.
Capsicum frutescens L.
Carica papaya
Castanopsis costata
Castanopsis motleyana
King
Castanopsis sp.
Casuarina equisetifolia

lavai

a fruit

used for healing wound


a sour snack
Snack
side-dish; cultivar
the most valued rattan
cane, about 0.8 cm in
diameter, used for
basketry, mat and fine
binding
a fine cane of about 1.5
cm in diameter used for
weaving.
Snack

liak
liak
modung
bongan
bongan

chillies
chillies
papaya
chestnuts
chestnuts

to flavor food
to flavor food
snack; cultivar
Snack
Snack

bongan
palu; balahak;
soru
limau mohom
limau ayok tup
limau kanying
limau kanying
nyuir
cukai
tason lanum

chestnuts

Snack
for sago meshing
pounder/ thrasher
snack; cultivar
snack, cultivar
snack; cultivar
snack; cultivar
snack; cultivar
staple; cultivar
fruit eaten by wild boar

Citrus aurantifolia
Citrus grandis
Citrus reticulata Blanco
Citrus sinensis
Cocos nucifera L.
Colocosia esculenta
Cotylelobium
lanceolatum 47031*
C. lanceolatum 28068*
C. melanoxylon 11855 *
C. melanoxylon 7059 *

lime
pomelo
mandarin
sweet orange
coconut
taro; yam

fruit eaten by wild boar


fruit eaten by wild boar
a very hard tree; fruit
eaten by wild boar

tason
sulit
balapi
377

Appendix 3: A List of Some Plants used by the Punan Vuhang


Scientific Name

Punan Vuhang

C. melanoxylon 9565 *
C. melanoxylon 9592 *
C. melanoxylon 6317 *
C. melanoxylon 12743 *
C. melanoxylon 1277 **
Cratoxylum
arborescens
Cratoxylum
sumatranum
Croton tiglium L.

sulit
lamahon
litian
tikjai
tason lanum
irat

a large tree

irat

a large tree

tubo kaling

a tubo shrub

Cratoxylum
arborescens
Cratoxylum
sumatranum
Curculigo latifolia
Dryand.
Dacryodes rostrata

irat

a large tree

irat

a large tree

selivui long

a plant

kalamu

an olive fruit

Daemonorops
pseudomirabilis Becc.

uwei selingo

Rattan

Derris elliptica Benth.

tubo okar

the tuva liane

Derris sp.

tubo pari

tubo plant

Dimocarpus longan
Lour.
Diospyros piscicapa
Ridl.
Dipterocarpus
acutangulus F21367 *
D. acutangulus 24220 *
D. acutangulus 24184 *
D. applanatus *

isau

a longan-like fruit

tubo paleng

a tubo tree

D. alatus *
D. baudii 28008*
D. borneensis 9767 *
D. caudatus *
D. caudatus SSP
penangi anus 25652 *

Vernacular Name

lop batu

Use
fruit eaten by wild boar
fruit eaten by wild boar
fruit eaten by wild boar
fruit eaten by wild boar
fruit eaten by wild boar
wood for planks and
making knife sheath
wood for planks and
making knife sheath
fruits crushed and used
for fish poison
wood for planks and
making knife sheath
wood for planks and
making knife sheath
leaf is used for rough
bindings
Fruit eaten as snack
and sometimes as
staple
cane for binding and
making large carrying
basket (kalong)
roots crushed and used
as fish poison
a species of Derris
which root is used as
fish poison.
Snack
fruits crushed and used
for fish poison
fruit eaten by wild boar
fruit eaten by wild boar
fruit eaten by wild boar
fruit eaten but less keen
by wild boar
fruit eaten by wild boar
fruit eaten by wild boar
fruit eaten by wild boar
fruit eaten by wild boar
fruit eaten by wild boar

lop mongo
arang ajan
laui tanok
laui tanok
laui mongo
tupuruh
lumuning
tikjai

378

Appendix 3: A List of Some Plants used by the Punan Vuhang


Scientific Name

Punan Vuhang

Vernacular Name

D. caudiferus *
D. caudiferus S. 646*
D. chartaceus 94871 *
D. confertus 29475 *
D. confertus V.
S113473*
D. conformis SSP.
Parvus Ashton 25654 *
D. conformis V. S1
SSP. Borneensis
Ashton 24240*
D. conformis V. S1
SSP. Borneensis
Ashton 3390 *
D. oblongifolius Bl.

laroh laui
laui
laui lanum
laui
kihan

fruit eaten by wild boar


fruit eaten by wild boar
fruit eaten by wild boar
fruit eaten by wild boar
fruit eaten by wild boar

tenak

fruit eaten by wild boar

tenak

fruit eaten by wild boar

kavakob

fruit eaten by wild boar

D. coriacous V.S1 0410


*
Dryobalanops
lanceolata Burck.
Durio kutejensis

laui tanok

Durio zibethinus Murr.

kuhuwei

a large tree that


arches over the
river

Use

platform for fish


harpooning
fruit eaten by wild boar

tepuruh

a large tree

tabalak
luyan

a fruit commonly
known as durian
fruit

Dyera costulata

litok

a large tree

Eurycoma longifolia
Eugeissonia utilis Becc.

kayu tabat
tajuk

sago

Eugenia spp.

temahah

Fagraea racemosa
Jack ex. Wall.
Ficus spp.

lop batu

a slender
understorey tree
to 4 or 5 m tall
a very hard wood

lunuk

fig

kubuwan

a shrub

aseasonal fruits eaten


by birds and primates
medicinal use

tagagau
kehep
tatapup
kevitei

gutta-percha tree

thatch roof
rubber hardened gutta-

Goniothalamus
dolichocarpus Merr.
Ganua
Ganua
Ganua
Hevea spp.

379

for construction as
planks and beams
snack; when abundant
consumed as a staple
much relished snack,
staple food when
abundant
Honeybee tree; tapped
for latex
Medicinal plant
heart as snack and side
dish; starch as staple
trunk used to pole boat

for making blowpipe

Appendix 3: A List of Some Plants used by the Punan Vuhang


Scientific Name

Punan Vuhang

Vernacular Name

Ipomoea batatas
Johannestysmannia
Koompassia
malaccensis

ubi okar
silat koyan
mangari

sweet potato

Lagenaria siceraria
Lansium domesticum
Licuala orbicularis
Licuala valida Becc.

tabik
lasat
no
silat

a gourd
a fruit

Linostoma pauciflorum
Griff.
Litsea garciae Vidal
Macaranga sp.
Mangifera pajang Kost.
Manihot esculenta
Crantz
Momordica charantia L.

tubo iting

a shrub

tubulu
tugulung
pangin
ubi

a fruit
a fruit
a type of mango
tapioca

peria

the bitter gourd


vegetable

a large tree

a palm

percha for hafting tools


staple; cultivar
leaf for thatch roof
very hard wood;
buttress wood is used
for tool handles
side-dish; tools; cultivar
snack
leaf for thatch roof
leaf used for rood; heart
consumed while hunter
is hungry in the forest
roots crushed and used
as fish poison.
snack and staple
snack
snack
staple; cultivar
side-dish; cultivar
medicinal plant

Monophyllara sp.
Musa sp.
Musa sapientum L.
Nephelium lappaceum
L.
Nephelium mutabile Bl.

tong garing
ukjuei
puti
buluti

Nephelium uncinatum
Radlk
Nephrolepsis biserrata

abong
paku pait

a fruit that is
bristly-hairy
a fruit that is
bristly-hairy
a fern

Nicotiana tabacum
Oncosperma horridum
Parkia speciosa

lukok
tasak
patar

tobacco
a palm
a tree

Palaquium gutta
Parashorea macrophlla
Wyat-Smith
Phacelophrynium

kevitei dian
lunuk (?)

Gutta-percha
a forest tree

laun itek

a plant with very

abong

Use

a wild banana
banana
rambutan

380

snack, staple; cultivar


Snack
Snack
Snack
Consumed only when
lacking of other food
because of its poor
flavor
Addictive
heart a delicate snack
fruit eaten as side-dish;
tree bark cut to emit
smell to lure game into
noose-trap
Latex used as sealant

for wrapping rice,

Appendix 3: A List of Some Plants used by the Punan Vuhang


Scientific Name

Punan Vuhang

maximum

Vernacular Name

Use

large leaf blades

tobacco, lining inside


bamboo for storing pork
lard; and roof.
leaf for thatch roof
leaves mixed with fine
river clay to blacken
rattan strips by boiling
snack
for boat construction;
indication of fertile land
a large rattan cane
used for handles of
dibbles
the tough, woody stems
are used to fashion
parang handles
snack; cultivar

Pinanga mirabilis
Pithecellobium sp.

livang
ubow

a tree

Pometia pinnata Forst.


Pterospermum
subpeltatum

isau
bayu

A longan-like fruit
a river bank tree

Retispatha dumetosa
Dransf.

uwei janan

rattan

Roucheria griffithiana
Planch.

okar kale

a liane

Saccharum officinarum
L.
Salacca magnifila

tabu

sugarcane

tungolun

Salacca sp.

lemukjan

a palm

Schizophyllum
commune Fr.
Schizostachyum sp.

kulat

mushroom

bulu latong

a large bamboo

Shorea sp.

bua avang

illipe nut

S. argentifolia Sym.

manator

a large tree

S. hemsleyana

kavakob

S. leprosula Miq.

tenak

S. macrophylla

laui

S. splendita

tason

a large tree

381

food consumed by
humans
leaf rachis is slender but
tough, used as a tool for
honey collecting
side dish
water container; for
cooking lolong ok
a group of oil-bearing
seeds; collected
occasionally for trading;
fruit consumed by wild
boar;
for house and boat
construction; fruit
consumed by wild boar;
a honeybee tree.
fruit consumed by wild
boar
for house and boat
construction
fruit consumed by wild
boar
fruit during major fruit
season; in a Punan
Vuhang myth, only Kun

Appendix 3: A List of Some Plants used by the Punan Vuhang


Scientific Name

Punan Vuhang

Vernacular Name

Use
Kakap could cause it to
bear fruit
fruit consumed by wild
boar
fruit eaten as snack
side-dish
side-dish; cultivar
for making blowpipe

S. stenoptera

lemahong

Solanum torvum Sw.


Stenochlaena palustris
Solanum melongera L.
Xanthophyllum
cordatum Korth.
Willughbeia coriacea
Wall.
Xanthosoma
sagittifolium
Xerospermum sp.
Zea mays L.
Zingiber officinale Rosc.

ulem
paku paya
terong
lop batu

a shrub
a climbing fern
egg-plant
a very hard wood

katau

Snack

cukai

a fruit growing on
a liane
taro; yam

isau
pare jale
sukot

A longan-like fruit
maize
a ginger

Snack
staple food
for medicinal use

382

staple; cultivar

Appendix 4: Terrestrial Animals


Scientific Name

Punan Vuhang Name

Hystrix brachyura

totung mucit

Common Porcupine

Trichys fasiculata

teyan

Long -Tailed Porcupine

Thecurus crassispinus

totung kelien

Thick-Spined Porcupine

Helarctos malayanus

boep

Sun Bear

Martes flavigula

tusungoh

Yellow-Throated Marten

Mustela nudipes

sangangang

Malay Weasel

Rheithrosciurus macrotis

jamu

Tufted Ground Squirrel

Lutra (Lutrogale) perspicillata

langon beyan

Smooth Otter

Aonyx (Amblonyx) cinerea

langon bucang, langon boep

Oriental Small-Clawed Otter

Viverra tanalunga

besangit

Malay Civet

Cynogale bennettii

pukget

Otter-Civet

Artictis binturong

ketan

Binturong or Bear Cat

Arctogalidia trivirgata

munim

Small-Toothed Palm Civet

Paguma larvata

bucang

Masked Palm Civet

Paradoxurus hermaphroditus

bucang

Common Palm Civet

Hemigalus hosei

leheh

Hoses Civet

Hemigalus derbyanus

palong

Banded Palm Civet

Prionodon linsang

sengihat

Banded Linsang

Herpestes semitorquatus

tupob lanum

Collared Mongoose

Herpestes brachyurus

tupob mongo

Short-Tailed Mongoose

Herpestes hosei

tupob mongo

Hoses Mongoose

Neofelis nebulosa

kuli

Clouded Leopard

Felis planiceps

viat lanum (spirit)

Flat Headed Cat

Felis badia

viat lanum (spirit)

Bay Cat

Sus barbatus barbatus

bavui

Bearded Pig

Tragulus javanicus

pelanuk bicet

Lesser Mouse-Deer

Tragulus napu

pelanuk

Greater Mouse-Deer

Muntiacus muntjak

telau tanok

Bornean Red Muntjac (Common


Barking Deer)

Muntiacus atherodes

telau lapei

Bornean Yellow Muntjac

Cervus unicolor

payau

Sambar Deer

Dicerorhinus sumatrensis

tamaru

Asian Two-Horned or Sumatran


Rhinoceros

Source: Identified by informants from Payne, Francis and Phillip, 1985

383

English

Appendix 5: Tree-dwelling Animals


Scientific Name

Punan Vuhang Name

English

Tupaia gracilis
Tupaia minor
Tupaia minor
Tupaia montana
Tupaia dorsalis
Dendrogale melanura
Cynopterus brachyotis
Cynopterus horsfieldi
Cynopterus sphinx
Penthetor lucasii
Dyacopterus spadiceus
Rousettus amplexicaudatus
Rousettus spinalatus
Pteropus vampyrus
Cheiromeles torquatus
Rhinolophus philippinensis
Manis javanica
Cynocephalus variegatus
Nycticebus coucang
Tarsius bancanus
Presbytis rubicunda
Presbytis hosei
Presbytis frontata
Presbytis cristata
Presbytis melalophos
Nasalis larvatus
Macaca fascicularis
Macaca nemestrina
Hylobates muelleri
Pongo pygmaeus
Ratufa affinis cothurnata
Callosciusrus baluensis
Callosciusrus prevostii
pluto
Callosciusrus prevostii borneensis
Callosciusrus prevostii caroli
Callosciusrus prevostii sanggaus

tikerek
tikerek
manyik
monyongun
monyongun (?)
monyongun (?)
paran mongo
paran mongo
paran mongo
paran mongo
paran mongo
paran mongo
paran mongo
moak
paran nalau
paran barok
buku
kabung palanok
bekikei
ikek
kumom
bongat
bui
kucei
maheh
mekah
kuyat
barok
kelavet mongo
kuyui
mamek
tali mongo
tali masak

Slender Treeshrew
Lesser Treeshrew
Common Treeshrew
Mountain Treeshrew
Striped Treeshrew
Smooth-Tailed Treeshrew
Short-Nosed Fruit Bat
Horsfields Fruit Bat
Greater Short-Nosed Fruit Bat
Dusky Fruit Bat
Dayak Fruit Bat
Geoffroys Rousette
Bare-Backed Rousette
Large Flying Foxes
Naked Bat
Philippine Horseshoe Bats
Pangolin
Colugo or Flying Lemur
Slow Loris
Western Tarsier
Red Leaf Monkey or Maroon Langur
Grey Leaf Monkey or Hoses Langur
White-Fronted Langur
Silvered Langur
Banded Langur
Proboscis Monkey (Very Rare)
Long-Tailed or Crab-Eating Macaque
Pig-Tailed Macaque
Bornean Gibbon
Orang Utan
Giant Squirrel
Kinabalu Squirrel
Prevosts Squirrel

nak tali mongo (?)


tali bab
nak tali mongo (?)

Prevosts Squirrel
Prevosts Squirrel
Prevosts Squirrel

Source: Identified by informants from Payne, Francis and Phillip, 1985

384

Appendix 5: Tree-dwelling Animals


Scientific Name

Punan Vuhang Name

English

Callosciusrus prevostii atricapillus


Callosciurus orestes
Callosciurus notatus
Callosciurus adamsi
Sundasciurus lowii
Sundasciurus tenuis
Sundasciurus brookei
Sundasciurus jentinki
Dremomys everitti
Lariscus hosei
Lariscus insignis
Rhinosciurus laticaudatus
Rheithrosciurus macrotis
Exilisciurus whiteheadi
Exilisciurus exilis
Nannosciurus melantotis
Petaurillus hosei
Petaurillus emiliae
Petinomys setosus
Iomys horsfieldi
Hylopetes spadiceus
Hylopetes lepidus
Aeromys tephromelas
Pteromyscus pulverulentus
Petinomys genibarbis
Rattus norvegicus
Rattus exulans
Rattus rattus
Mus caroli (?)
Mus castaneus
Rattus tiomanicus sabae
Rattus argentiventer
Rattus tiomanicus jalorensis
Sundamys muelleri
Rattus baluensis
Sundamys infraluteus
Maxomys alticola

tali mongo
tali bab
tali bab
tali bab
ukik
ukik
lavang
lunang
manyik
lunang
maha lolau
tikerik batong
jamu
sukoh ketang
sukoh mongo
sukoh
kubong bui
kubong palanuk
kubong kumom
kubong kumom
kubong kumom
kubong kumom
kubong
kubong
kubong
musing telau
musing lomu
musing lubang
musing lavung
musing lavung
musing telau
musing telau
musing telau
musing telau
musing lomu
musing lomu
musing lomu

Prevosts Squirrel
Bornean Black-Banded Squirrel
Plantain Squirrel
Ear-Spot Squirrel
Lows Squirrel
Slender Squirrel
Brookes Squirrel
Jentinks Squirrel
Bornean Mountain Ground Squirrel
Four-Striped Ground Squirrel
Three-Striped Ground Squirrel
Shrew-Faced Ground Squirrel
Tufted Ground Squirrel
Whiteheads Pigmy Squirrel
Plain Pigmy Squirrel
Black-Eared Pigmy Squirrel
Hoses Pigmy Flying Squirrel
Lesser Pigmy Flying Squirrel
Temmincks Flying Squirrel
Horsfields Flying Squirrel
Red-Cheeked Flying Squirrel
Grey-Cheeked Flying Squirrel
Black Flying Squirrel
Smoky Flying Squirrel
Whiskered Flying Squirrel
Norway Rat
Polynesian Rat
House Rat
Ricefield Rat
House Mouse
Malaysian Field Rat
Ricefield Rat
Malaysian Field Rat
Mullers Rat
Summit Rat
Mountain Giant Rat
Mountain Spiny Rat

385

Appendix 6: Birds
Scientific Name

English

Punan Vuhang

Reference

Anhinga anhinga
Egretta intermedia intermedia
Butorides striatus
Ixobrychus sinensis
Ixobrychus cinnamomeus
cinnamomeus
Ardeola bacchus
Gorsachius melanolophus

Darter
Intermediate (Plumed) Egret
Little Green Heron
Yellow Bittern
Cinnamon Bittern

manuk siuk
manok ciap
cuk
cuk
cuk

Ellis:164
35:1
35:4
35:5
35:6

cuk

35:7
35:8

cuk
cuk
savut
tapasik
kun buku
nyau tawan
nyau eh eh
nyau langit
kokah
manuk latah
oui taun

35:9
35:10
38:3
38:4
38:6
38:8
Ellis: 164
38:10
47:2
47:8
79:bottom

Great Argus
Crested Wood Partridge

oui latah
jayum

Haematortyx sanguiniceps

Crimson-Headed Partridge

kopak

Lophura bulweri
Numenius phaeopus
Numenius madagascariensis
Treron capellei magnirostris
Treron curvirostra curvirostra
Treron fulvicollis baramensis
Treron olax olax
Treron vernans griseicapilla
Ducula aenea
Ducula badia badia
Chalcophaps indica indica

Bulwers Pheasant
Whimbrel
Long-Billed (Eastern) Curlew
Large Green Pigeon
Thick-Billed Pigeon
Cinnamon-Headed Pigeon
Little Green Pigeon
Pink-Necked Pigeon
Green Imperial Pigeon
Mountain Imperial Pigeon
Emerald Dove

nyokuei
tisit
tacam
wek
boyou
boyou
boyou
boyou
boyou
pakgom
punukon

79:top
70:bottom
left
70:bottom
right
70:top
86:8
86:10
130:1
130:2
130:3
130:4
130:5
Ellis: 164
134:6
143:6

Dupetor flavicollis flavicollis


Ixobrychus eurhythmus
Haliastur indus intermedius
Accipiter trivirgatus
Butastur indicus
Spilornis cheela pallidus
Ichthyophaga ichthyaetus
Ictinaetus malayensis
Rhizothera longirostris longirostris
Lophura ignita nobilis
Polyplectron malacense
schleiermacheri
Argusianus argus grayi
Rollulus rouloul

Chinese Pond Heron


Tiger Bittern (Malayan Night
Heron)
Black Bittern
Schrencks Bittern
Brahminy Kite
Crested Goshawk
Grey-Faced Buzzard
Crested Serpent Eagle
Grey-Headed Fishing Darter
Black Eagle
Long-Billed Partridge
Crested Fireback
Malaysian Peacock-Pheasant

Note: Reference according to Smythies (1981) and Ellis (1975:164-166). Numbers without
name refer to Smythies according to the page and the number in the plate.
386

Appendix 6: Birds
Scientific Name

English

Punan Vuhang

Reference

Psittacula longicauda longicauda


Psittacula alexandri alexandri
Loriculus galgulus galgulus

Long-Tailed Parakeet
Red-Breasted Parakeet
Malay Lorikeet (Blue-Crowned
Hanging Parrot)
Blue-Naped Parrot
Blue-Rumped Parrot
Blue-Throated Bee-Eater
Blue-Tailed Bee-Eater
Red-Bearded Bee-Eater
Broad-Billed Roller (Dollarbird)
Common Koel
Raffles Malcoha

kiking
kiking
kiking

147:1
147:2
147:3

kiking
kiking
kiking
kiking
kuku boep
kiking
babai upit
kopang

147:4
147:5
147:6
147:7
147:8
147:9
150:2
159:1

Chestnut-Bellied Malcoha
Lesser Coucal
Short-Toed Coucal
Common (Greater) Coucal
Bay Owl
Reddish Scops Owl
Mountain Scops Owl
Common Scops Owl
Collared Scops Owl
Rajahs Scops Owl
Brown Hawk-Owl
Barred Eagle-Owl
Brown Wood Owl
Buffy Fish Owl
Collared Owlet
White-Rumped Spine-Tail Swift
Black-Nest Swiftlet
Brown Spinetailed Swift
(Needletail)
White-Bellied Swiftlet
House Swift
Asian Palm Swift
Silver-Rumped Swift
Crested (Grey-Rumped) Tree
Swift
Whiskered Tree Swift
Pacific Swallow
Diards Trogon

orok
bubut
bubut
bubut
ukong
ukong
ukong
ukong
ukong
ukong
ukong
ukong
ukong towan
ukong
ukong
langau
langau
langau

159:3
159:6
159:7
159:8
166:1
166:2
166:3
166:4
166:5
166:6
166:7
166:8
166:9
166:10
166:11
Ellis: 164
198:1
198:2

langau
langau
langau
langau
langau

198:3
198:4
198:5
198:6
198:7

langau
lenganau
mungulung ()
legehek ()

198:8
198:9
207:1

Tanygnathus lucionensis lucionensis


Psittinus cyanurus cyanurus
Merops viridis viridis
Merops philippinus
Nyctyornis amictus
Eurystomus orientalis orientalis
Eudynamis scolopacea malayana
Phaenicophaeus chlorophaeus
fuscigularis
Phaenicophaeus diardi borneensis
Centropus bengalensis javanensis
Centropus rectunguis
Centropus sinensis bubutus
Phodilus badius badius
Otus rufescens rufescens
Otus spilocephalus luciae
Otus scops mantanensis
Otus bakkamoena lemurum
Otus brookei brookei
Ninox scutulata borneensis
Bubo sumatrana tenuifasciatus
Strix leptogrammica leptogrammica
Ketupa ketupu ketupu
Glaucidium brodiei borneense
Chaetura leucopygialis
Collocalia maxima lowi
Hirundapus giganteus
Collocalia esculenta cyanoptila
Apus affinis subfurcatus
Cypsiurus balasiensis
Rhaphidura leucopygialis
Hemiprocne longipennis longipennis
Hemiprocne comata comata
Hirundo tahitica javanica
Harpactes diardi diardi

387

Appendix 6: Birds
Scientific Name

English

Punan Vuhang

Reference

Harpactes duvauceli

Scarlet-Rumped Trogon

207:2

Harpactes kasumba impavidus


Harpactes whiteheadi

Red-Naped Trogon
Whiteheads Trogon

Harpactes oreskios dulitensis

Orange-Breasted Trogon

Harpactes orrophaeus viduus

Cinnamon-Rumped Trogon

Lacedo pulchella melanops

Banded Kingfisher

Halcyon concreta borneana

Chestnut (Rufous)-Collared
Kingfisher
White-Collared (Collared)
Kingfisher
Ruddy Kingfisher
Black-Capped Kingfisher
Stork-Billed Kingfisher
Blue-Eared Kingfisher
Blue-Banded Kingfisher
Common Kingfisher
Black-backed Kingfisher
Rufous-Backed Kingfisher
White-Crested (White-Crowned)
Hornbill
Wreathed Hornbill
Wreathed Hornbill
Wrinkled Hornbill
Bushy-Crested Hornbill
Black Hornbill
Helmeted Hornbill
Rhinoceros Hornbill
Pied Hornbill
Brown Barbet

mungulung ()
legehek ()
mungulung tajuk
mungulung ()
legehek ()
mungulung ()
legehek ()
mungulung ()
legehek ()
jangoh;
aseee
mati
mati

210:3

mati
tingang asak
tingang asak
mati
mati
mati
mati
mati
lukukun

210:4
210:5
210:6
210:7
210:8
210:9
210:10
210:11
227:1

matui; pussa
matui
kuan jalo
lukap
belieu
terjaku
manok otu / kuan
kuan jelo
niniu

Ellis: 164
227:2
227:3
227:4
227:5
227:6
227:7
227:8
230:1

kuku isak top


tak tarat ()
kuku ongan

230:2
230:3
230:4a

kuku laut

230:4b

tak tarat ()

230:5

Halcyon chloris chloroptera


Halcyon coromanda minor
Halcyon pileata
Pelargopsis capensis innominata
Alcedo meninting verreauxi
Alcedo euryzona peninsulae
Alcedo atthis bengalensis
Ceyz erithacus motleyi
Ceyx rufidorsus rufidorsus
Berenicornis comatus
Aceros undulatus
Rhyticeros undulatus undulatus
Rhyticeros corrugatus corrugatus
Anorrhinus galeritus
Anthroceros malayanus
Rhinoplax vigil
Buceros rhinoceros borneoensis
Anthrococeros coronatus convexus
Calorhamphus fuliginosus
fuliginosus
Megalaima henricii brachyrhyncha
Megalaima eximia
Megalaima mystacophanos
mystacophanos
Megalaima mystacophanos
mystacophanos
Megalaima australis duvaucelii

Yellow-Crowned Barbet
Black-Throated Barbet
Gaudy (Red-Throated) Barbet
()
Gaudy (Red-Throated) Barbet

207:3
207:4
207:5
207:6
210:1;
Ellis: 170
210:2

()

Little (Blue-Eared) Barbet


388

Appendix 6: Birds
Scientific Name

English

Punan Vuhang

Reference

Megalaima rafflesii rafflesii

Many-Colored (Red-Crowned)
Barbet
Gold-Whiskered Barbet
Golden-Naped Barbet
Mountain Barbet
Checker-Throated Woodpecker
Crimson-Winged Woodpecker
Banded Woodpecker
Golden-Backed Three-Toed
Woodpecker
Crimson Backed Four-Toed
Woodpecker
Great Slaty Woodpecker

kuku molang

230:6

kuku upak
kuku sak tot iak orob
kuku ongan
takali mongo
takali mongo
takali mongo
takali sulau

230:7
230:8
230:9
239:1
239:2
239:3
239:4

takali sulau

239:5

takali pakgang

239:6

Great Black (White-Bellied)


Woodpecker
Olive-Backed Woodpecker
Orange-Backed Woodpecker

takali pakgang

239:7

takali sulau
takali mongo

239:8
239:9

Rufous Woodpecker
Maroon Woodpecker
Rufous Piculet
Rufous Piculet
Speckled Piculet
Grey-and-Buff Woodpecker

takali pakgang
pee-it
wit
bukang
wit
takali sulau

242:236
242:2
242:3
Ellis: 164
242:4
242:5

Buff-Rumped Woodpecker
Grey -Capped Woodpecker
Buff-Necked Woodpecker
Brown-Capped Woodpecker
Hoses Broadbill
Green Broadbill
Whiteheads Broadbill
Long-Tailed Broadbill
Black-and-Yellow Broadbill
Black-and-Red Broadbill

takali pakgang ()
takali pakgang
takali pakgang
takali pakgang
tabok
kututiu (?)
kiking
kiking
lokokoh mongo
gangek

242:6
242:7
242:8
242:9
246:1
246:2
246:3
246:4
246:5
246:6

Banded Broadbill
Dusky Broadbill
Blue-Banded Pitta
Giant Pitta
Blue-Headed Pitta

lokoh luru
tergait
bunge
oui olek
bunge

246:7
246:8
255:1
255:2
255:3

Megalaima chrysopogon chrysopsis


Megalaima pulcherrima
Megalaima monticola
Picus mentalis humei
Picus puniceus observandus
Picus miniaceus malaccensis
Dinopium javanense borneonense
Chrysocolaptes lucidus andrewsi
Mulleripicus pulverulentus
pulverulentus
Dryocupus javensis javensis
Dinopium rafflesi dulitense
Chrysocolaptes validus
xanthopygius
Micropternus brachyurus badiosus
Blythipicus rubiginosus parvus
Sasia abnormis abnormis
Picumnus innominatus malayorum
Hemicircus concretus
coccometopus
Meiglyptes tristis micropterus
Picoides canicapillus aurantiiventris
Meiglyptes tukki tukki
Picoides moluccensis moluccensis
Calyptomena hosei
Calyptomena viridis gloriosa
Calyptomena whiteheadi
Psarisomus dalhousiae
Eurylaimus ochromalus ochromalus
Cymbirhynchus macrorhynchus
macrorhynchus
Eurylaimus javanicus brookei
Corydon sumatranus brunnescens
Pitta arquata
Pitta caerulea hosei
Pitta baudi

389

Appendix 6: Birds
Scientific Name

English

Punan Vuhang

Reference

Pitta granatina ussheri


Pitta sordida muelleri
Pitta guajana schwaneri
Pitta moluccensis
Coracina striata sumatrensis
Hemipus picatus intermedius
Hemipus hirundinaceus
Dendronanthus indicus
Motacilla caspica melanope
Anthus cervinus
Motacilla flava simillima
Motacilla alba ocularis
Motacilla flava taivana
Anthus novaeseelandiae
Pericrocotus divaricatus

Garnet Pitta
Hooded Pitta
Banded Pitta
Blue-Winged Pitta
Bar-Bellied Cuckoo-Shrike
Bar-Winged Flycatcher-Shrike
Black-Winged Flycatcher-Shrike
Forest Wagtail
Grey Wagtail
Red-Throated Pipit
Yellow Wagtail
White Wagtail
Yellow Wagtail
Richards Pipit
Ashy Minivet

255:4
255:5
255:6
255:7
259:1
259:2
259:5
262:1
262:2
262:3
262:4
262:5
262:6
262:7
271:1

Pericrocotus solaris cinereigula

Mountain (Grey-Chinned) Minivet

Pericrocotus igneus igneus

Fiery Minivet

Pericrocotus flammeus insulanus

Scarlet Minivet

Artamus leucorhynchus
leucorhynchus

White-Breasted Wood-Swallow

Artamus leucorhynchus
Aegithina viridissima viridissima
Aegithina tiphia viridis
Chloropsis sonnerati zosterops
Chloropsis cyanopogon
cyanopogon
Chloropsis cochinchinensis
viridinucha
Irena puella criniger
Pycnonotus atriceps atriceps

White-Breasted Swallow- Shrike


Green Iora
Common Iora
Greater Green Leafbird
Lesser Green Leafbird

bunge koyan
bunge mongo
oui olek
oui olek
luburop ayok
luburop
luburop
ubin-ubin
ubin-ubin
ubin-ubin
ubin-ubin
ubin-ubin
ubin-ubin
ubin-ubin
mungulung ()
legehek ()
mungulung ()
legehek ()
mungulung ()
legehek ()
mungulung ()
legehek ()
mungulung ()
legehek ()
seninit
seninit
manok hom
lisiroh

Blue-winged Leafbird

manok hom

(Asian) Fairy Bluebird


Black-Headed Bulbul

Pycnonotus brunneus
Pycnonotus erythrophthalamos
Pycnonotus eutilotus
Pycnonotus melanicterus montis
Pycnonotus melanoleuco
Pycnonotus plumosus

Red-Eyed Brown Bulbul


Lesser Brown Bulbul
Crested Brown Bulbul
Black-Crested Bulbul
Black-and-White Bulbul
Large Olive Bulbul

vivit
luvurop;
telajik
luvurop; siko luyan
lururop
tured; tayay
ciap lop
tolid
luvurop

278:5;
Ellis:165
278:6
287:1
Ellis: 165
Ellis: 165
Ellis: 165
Ellis: 165
287:2
Ellis:165
Ellis: 165

390

271:2
271:3
271:4
271:5
Ellis:165
278:1
278:2
278:3
278:4

Appendix 6: Birds
Scientific Name

English

Punan Vuhang

Reference

Pycnonotus squamatus borneensis


Pycnonotus cyaniventris paroticalis
Pycnonotus zeylanicus
Pycnonotus flavescens leucops
Criniger bres gutturalis

Scaly-Breasted Bulbul
Grey-Bellied Bulbul
Straw-Headed Bulbul
Pale-Faced (Flavescent) Bulbul
Grey-Cheeked Bulbul
Olive White-Throated Bulbul
Finschs Bulbul

luvurop
luvurop
lavaho
lavaho
teyei;
turid; siko luyan
luvurop;
saw-it
titiu
beryu-beryu
takut
lavaho
lisiroh
oan viat (spirit)
oan viat (spirit)
pee
pee
pee

287:3
287:4
287:5
287:6
287:8;
Ellis: 165
287:10;
Ellis: 165
287:11
Ellis: 165
294:8
294:9
Ellis: 165
303:2
Ellis: 165
303:4
303:5
Ellis: 165

wit
seninit
wit
ovin layok
pian panyin
tokut
tapajok; tekevit
tokut;
bawai upit; tapajok
manok kelepui;
tekluik
titiu
manok kelepui
kotoson

306:1
306:2
306:6
306:7
323:1
323:5
Ellis: 165
323:6;
Ellis: 165
323:7;
Ellis: 165
323:10
Ellis: 165
326:5

maroi;
manuk takung
manuk takung
cokeh nokeh
tepakjob
tepakjob

326:7;
Ellis: 166
Ellis: 166
326:8
326:10
326:11

tajay; kali kewoh;

Ellis: 166

Criniger finschii

Cettia whiteheadi
Chlorocharis emiliae emiliae
Seicercus montis montis
Brachypteryx montana erythrogyna
Eupetes macrocerus borneensis
Trichastoma rostratum macropterum
Trichastoma mallaccense
Trichastoma bicolor

Ochraceous Bulbul
Crestless White-Throated Bulbul
Hairy-Backed Bulbul
Streaked Bulbul
Hairy-Backed Bulbul
White-Rumped Shama
Orange Tailed Shama
White-Crowned Forktail
Chestnut-Naped Forktail
Kuhls or Chestnut-Headed
Ground Thrush
Short-Tailed Bush Warbler
Mountain Blackeye
Yellow-Breasted Warbler
Blue (white-Browed) shortwing
Rail-Babbler
White-Chested Babbler
Short-Tailed Jungle Babbler
Ferruginous Babbler

Trichastoma sepiarium harterti

Horsfields Babbler

Yuhina zantholeuca brunnescens


Pello neum capistratum
Pomatorhinus montanus borneensis

White-Bellied Yuhina
Black-Capped Jungle Babbler
Chestnut-Backed Scimitar
Babbler
Bornean Wren-Babbler

Criniger ochraceus ruficrissus


Criniger phaeocephalus
Hypsipetes criniger viridis
Hypsipetes malaccensis
Microscelis criniger
Copsychus malabaricus suavis
Copsychus pyrrhopygus
Enicurus leschenaulti borneensis
Enicurus ruficapillus
Zoothera interpres

Ptilocichla leucogrammica
Kenopia striata
Napothera atrigularis
Napothera crassa
Napothera epilepidota exsul.
Malacopteron affine

Striped Wren-Babbler
Black-Throated Wren-Babbler
Mountain Wren-Babbler
Small (Eye-Browed) WrenBabbler
Plain Babbler
391

Appendix 6: Birds
Scientific Name

Malacopteron cinereum
Malacopteron magnum
Macronous ptilosus reclusus
Stachyris nigricollis
Stachyris maculata
Stachyris erythoptera

English

Punan Vuhang

Lesser Red-Headed Babbler


Greater Red-Headed Babbler
Fluffy-Backed Tit-Babbler
Black-Throated Babbler;
Black-Necked Tree Babbler
Red-Rumped Tree Babbler
Red-Winged Tree Babbler

Orthotomus cuculatus cinereicollis


Orthotomus ruficeps borneensis
Cyonsis concreta everetti
Ficedula narcissina narcissina
Muscicapa cyanomelana
Muscicapa turcosa

White-Necked Babbler
Chestnut-Crested Babbler
Yellow-Bellied Wren-Warbler
Flyeater
Eastern Great Reed Warbler
Yellow-Bellied Warbler
Arctic Warbler
Red-Tailed Tailorbird
Black-Necked (Dark-Necked)
Tailorbird
Mountain Tailorbird
Red-Headed (Ashy) Tailorbird
White-Tailed Flycatcher
Narcissus Flycatcher
Blue-and-White Flycatcher
Malaysian Blue Flycatcher

Muscicapa rufigastra
Muscicapa caerulata

Mangrove Blue Flycatcher


Large-Billed Blue Flycatcher

Rhinomyias umbratilis

Rhipidura albicollis kinabalu


Rhipidura perlata
Rhipidura javanica longicauda
Terpsiphone paradisi borneensis

White-Throated Jungle
Flycatcher
Chestnut-Winged Monarch
Flycatcher
Black-Naped Blue Monarch
Flycatcher
White-Throated Fantail
Spotted Fantail
Pied Fantail Flycatcher
Asian Paradise Flycatcher

Prionochilus thoracicus
Prionochilus xanthopygius

Scarlet-Breasted Flowerpecker
Yellow-Rumped Flowerpecker

Stachyris leucotis obscurata


Yuhina everetti
Prinia flaviventris
Gerygone sulphurea salvadori
Acrocephalus orientalis
Abroscopus superciliaris schwaneri
Phylloscopus borealis borealis
Orthotomus sericeus sericeus
Orthotomus atrogularis atrogularis

Philentoma pyrrhoptera
Hypothymis azurea

392

manuk nyangin
tajay
tajay; selulukik
segakgong totung
cokeh cokeh;
manok kelepui
gogok
bawai upit;
segakgong
cokeh cokeh
cokeh cokeh
bougit
wit
luvurop
telakjek
selarut icik
takut
takut

Reference

Ellis: 165
Ellis: 165
335:1
335:5;
Ellis: 166
Ellis: 166
Ellis: 166
335:6
335:10
Ellis: 166
354:1
354:4
354:5
354:6
354:7
354:8

takut
takut
bivit
kongoh
vivit
bawai upit; opin
layeu
bawai upit
bawai upit; ting
penyaling
ting penyaling

354:9
354:10
371:6
371:16
Ellis: 166
Ellis: 166

bawai upit

Ellis: 166

bawai upit

Ellis: 166

sang seng
sang seng
sang seng
sikau luyan;
siko kouhap
wit
wit sebirop utok

374:1
374:2
374:3
374:4;
Ellis: 166
383:1
383:2

Ellis: 166
Ellis: 166
Ellis: 166

Appendix 6: Birds
Scientific Name

English

Punan Vuhang

Reference

Prionochilus percussus ignicapillus


Prionochilus maculatus maculatus

Crimson-Breasted Flowerpecker
Yellow-Breasted Flowerpecker;
Yellow-Throated Flowerpecker
Yellow-Vented Flowerpecker

wit
wit;
wit beurut
wit

383:3
383:4;
Ellis: 166
383:5

Brown-Backed Flowerpecker
Plain Flowerpecker
Black-sided Flowerpecker
Scarlet-Backed Flowerpecker
Scarlet-Backed Flowerpecker
Orange-Bellied Flowerpecker
Plain Sunbird
Red-Throated Sunbird
Purple-Naped Sunbird

wit
wit
wit lebanyit
wit leboyang
wit
wit nyahang
wit
wit lebanyit
tacam

383:6
383:7
383:8
383:9
383:10
383:11
Ellis: 166
390:1
390:5

Purple-Throated Sunbird
Purple-Naped Sunbird
Crimson Sunbird
Little-Spiderhunter
Thick-Billed Spiderhunter
Spectacled Spiderhunter
Long-Billed Spiderhunter
Yellow-Eared Spiderhunter

wit lebanyit
wit beurut
wit leboyang
ticit
ticit
tacam
tacam
tacam

390:6
Ellis: 166
390:9
399:1
399:2
399:3
399:4
399:5

tacam
tacam
kiking

399:6
399:7
406:7

Lonchura fuscans

Grey-Breasted Spiderhunter
Whiteheads Spiderhunter
Bamboo Munia (TawnyBreasted ParrotFinch)
Dusky Munia

Dicrurus annectans
Dicrurus leucophaeus stigmatops
Dicrurus paradiseus brachyphorus
Dicrurus hottentottus borneensis
Dicrurus aeneus malayensis
Surniculus lugubris
Oriolus hosei
Oriolus xanthornus tanakae
Oriolus chinensis maculatus
Oriolus cruentus vulneratus
Oriolus xanthonotus xanthonotus
Gracula religiosa religiosa

Crow-Billed Drongo
Grey (Ashy) Drongo
Greater Racket-Tailed Drongo
Spangled Drongo
Bronzed Drongo
Drongo-Cuckoo
Black Oriole
Black-Hooded Oriole
Black-Naped Oriole
Black and Crimson Oriole
Dark-Throated Oriole
Grackle or Hill Myna

manok pit;
manok upit
tisiang
tisiang
tisiang
tisiang
tisiang
tisiang lanum
tisiang
tisiang
tisiang
tisiang
tisiang
kiau

406:9;
Ellis: 166
415:1
415:2
415:3
415:4
415:5
Ellis:164
415:6
415:7
415:8
415:9
415:10
423:3

Dicaeum chrysorrheum
chrysorrheum
Dicaeum everetti
Dicaeum concolor borneanum
Dicaeum celebicum monticola
Dicaeum cruentatum nigrimentum
Dicaeum trochileum trochileum
Dicaeum trigonostigma dayakanum
Anthreptes simplex
Anthreptes rhodolaema
Hypogramma hypogrammicum
hypogrammicum
Nectarina sperata brasiliana
Nectarina hypogrammica
Aethopyga siparaja siparaja
Arachnothera longirostra buttikoferi
Arachnothera crassirostris
Arachnothera flavigaster
Arachnothera robusta robusta
Arachnothera chrysogenys
harrissoni
Arachnothera affinis modesta
Arachnothera juliae
Erythrura hyperythra borneensis

393

Appendix 6: Birds
Scientific Name

English

Punan Vuhang

Reference

Platylophus galericulatus coronatus


Corvus enca compilator
Pityriasis gymnocephala
Amaurornis phoenicurus
Microhierax caerulescens
Copsychus saularis

Crested Jay
Slender-Billed Crow
Bornean Bristle-Head
White-Breasted Waterhen
Common Falconet
Magpie-Robin

telajan
kukuhang
kukuboep
-

423:6
423:9
430:3
Ellis: 164
Ellis: 164
Ellis: 165

394

Appendix 7: Fish
Scientific Name

Punan Vuhang

Reference

Betta unimaculata
Cyclocheilichthys apogon
Cyclocheilichthys repasson (Bleeker)
Elxis sabanus
Epalzeorhynchus kalliurus
Garra borneensis
Gastromyzon borneensis Gnther
Gastromyzon danumensis
Gastromyzon fasciatus
Gastromyzon lepidogaster
Gastromyzon punctulatus
Gastromyzon monticola
Glaniopsis denudata
Glaniopsis gossei
Glaniopsis hanitschi
Glaniopsis multiradiatus
Glyptothorax major
Hampala macrolepdidota sabana
Homaloptera stephensoni
Kryptopterus parvanalis
Leiocassis robustus
Lobocheilus bo (Popta)
Nemachilus olivaceus
Ophicephalus melanosoma
Osteochilus spilurus
Paracrosssochilus acerus
Protomyzon borneensis
Protomyzon whiteheadi
Puntius bramoides
Puntius bulu
Puntius collingwoodi
Rasbora hubbsi
Rasbora sumatrana
Rasbora sumatrana
Schismatorhynchus heterorhynchus
Tor douronensis
Tor Tambroides

urun (only at Kihan and Balui rivers)


turing
turing
itu
ngun otu (found only at higher elevation of small streams)
ngun
letapak
lakot
lakot borot
lakot borot
lakot borot
lakot borot
kalang
kuvulung
kuvulung
kalang
kalang
lungan
li (?) / kalang
selakop buai
nalam
paloh
itu
sak sek
paloh
ngun
li
li
leverap
leverap
hanya
seluan
seluan; ngun
seluan batung
ngun
bitu when small; tanguh when mature
katu

SC-39
66
68; SC-10
SC-34
SC-18
SC-17

Note: Fish Species in Inger and Chin (1990) as Identified by Punan Vuhang

395

SC-21
SC-25
SC-23
SC-24
SC-22
SC-27
SC-29
SC-28; 107
SC-27
145
SC-12
SC-32
SC-36
SC-37
SC-13
SC-35
155
90
101
SC-31
SC-30
76
70
77
SC-9
SC-8 ; 57
57
87
SC-13
Not mentioned
in Inger and
Chin

Appendix 8:

Other Animals Eaten by Punan Vuhang with Scientific Names

Scientific Name
Apis dorsata
Apis florea
Cipangopaludina sp.
Potamonidae (Family)
Python reticulatus
Rhynchophorus ferrugineus
Oliv.
Rhynchophorus ferrugineus
Oliv.
Trionyx cartilagineus Boulenger
Varanus spp.

Punan Vuhang Name


singot
lowar
kuep
kew
sai
ciet (when larvae)
koloson (when mature)

English
honeybee
honeybee
a small fresh water snail
river crabs
the reticulated python
larvae of the large weevil;
sago larvae
sago beetle

balabi
kavok

terrapin
monitor lizard

Appendix 9: Other Types of Animals According to Punan Vuhang and General Names
(without Scientific Names)
Punan Vuhang
menyawak
katip
kavok
sai mongo
sai lanum
bongi
motuk mongo
motuk nyah
limong
timun
tisiah
saai
tavab
lopokang

General Name
lizard
lizard
lizard
python
water python
python
snake
snake
snake
snake
snake
frog
frog
frog

Punan Vuhang
lopaut
oui tanok
oui lanum
keu mongo
keu lokoh
salit
salit bosun
salit ivoh
salit mango
celuhot
ciet
koloson
singot
murop
munim

396

General Name
frog
terrestrial toad
toad
snail
snail
snail
snail
snail
snail
shrimp
sago caterpillar
sago beetle
bee
bee
bee

Index
Chan, Henry
Iban headhunting 60
Kayan 51, 138
Kayan leaders 167, 169
sharing 93
shifting cultivation 270, 271, 279, 325
Chan, Henry and Lim Teck Ghee 299
Chin, S.C. 270, 283, 284, 325
Christensen, Hanne 123
Christianity 177, 185, 206, 226-231,
Colinvaux, Paul A., and Mark B. Bush 6
collecting 287, 122
firewood 126
medicinal plants 128
rattan 140
cooperation 313
conservation 143, 145, 146
courtship 249

abundance
cycles 67
fish 119
food 30, 98
fruits 22-23, 80, 91, 96
sago 59
wild boar 88, 225
adaptation 69
agriculture 225
cultivation 214, 218, 219-225, 268
rice 220 270
shifting cultivation, swidden 270-281
staple foods 285
tobacco 286
alcoholism 312
Altman, John C. 4
Bahuchet, Serge 80
Bahuchet, Serge and H. Guillaume 5
Bahuchet, Serge, Doyle McKey and Igor de
Garine 7
Bailey, Robert C. (et al.) 4, 6
barter trade 66, 122
after becoming sedentary 288-291, 325
during nomadic times 136-142
legal prohibition to barter forest products
301
Bird-David, Nurit 5, 9
Blackburn, R.H. 5
blowpipe poison 64, 103, 152
trees 143
Brosius, J. Peter,
critique on Hoffman 8, 9, 67
dependence debate 7-9, 320-322
Penan dependence on sago 7, 48, 68
writing on Punan Vuhang 11, 16
Bruenig, Eberhard F. 306
Burgess, P.F. 23

Daes, Erica-Irene 300


death 62
belief 201-208, 222
death site 186, 202- 204, 297
mourning 203
spirits of the dead 205-208
spouse 259
demography 232-233
Dentan, Robert 6, 9, 22, 125, 320
distribution 78, 90
game 93,133
honey 125
sharing system 130
fruit 150
sago 172
divorce 236, 256, 258
dogs
dog healing ritual 86
selective breeding of dogs 89
taboo 85
treatment of hunting dogs 88

Caldecott, Julian 94
Cashdan, Elizabeth 133, 172, 312

397

Index
Headland, Thomas N. 5
Headland, Thomas N. and Lawrence A.
Reid 4, 5
History 48
Oral History 48
Early period of regional history 49
Prehistory 49
Pre-Nineteenth Century 50-58
Early Twentieth Century 58-66
Era of the Second World War 66-67
Era of Indonesian-Malaysian
Confrontation 215-219
Chronological development of the
adoption of cultivation 219-224
Permanent settlement at Long Lidem,
224-231
Hoffman, Carl L. 5, 7- 9, 67, 321, 322
honey collecting 27, 122-125
honey bees 25
Hooker, M.B. 300
household 232, 236-248, 257
Huehne, W.H. 12-13
hunting 80, 281, 303
big game 112
birds 110
medium-sized tree-dwelling animals 104
small tree-dwelling game 111
with blowpipe 27, 103, 281-283, 320
with dogs 80
without dogs 91

Dove, Michael R. 270, 276


drought 23-24
season 27, 67, 76, 144
fishing 117
ecology 32
rainforest 6-7, 23
Ellis, D. B. 11, 15, 33, 165, 225, 229, 252
Endicott, Kirk M. 5, 32, 69, 177, 189, 205,
213
Endicott, Kirk M., and Peter Bellwood 7, 320
exchange
barter trade 7, 13, 67, 140
labor 278
reciprocity 89, 130
fieldwork 16-17
interviews 16
participation observation 16, 17
firewood 45, 126-127, 155
depletion 297
legal prohibition against cutting tree for
firewood 301
resource tenure 143
fishing 27, 117-122, 283-284
impact from logging 307
nets 67
Fox, Richard G. 5
Freeman, Derek 259, 260, 270
fruiting 27, 80, 91
major fruit season 24, 27, 28
minor fruit season 24, 28

individual autonomy 170-175


Jayl Langub 11, 15, 29, 251
conservation 146
leadership 159, 163
sedenterization 219, 323
Jordan, C.F. 6
Jensen, Erik. 208
Jensen, P.C.M. (et al) 22
Johen, Francis 299

Gabler, Robert, Robert J. Sager, and Daniel


L. Wise 35
Gardner, Peter M. 5, 170-175, 321
Green Desert Theory 6, 22, 320, 322
Golley, F.B. 6
Griffin, P.B. 4, 5
Harrisson, Tom 11, 14-15, 48
Hart, T.B. and John A. Hart 4

398

Index
first longhouse 225-226
rebuilding of longhouse 230
Longman, Kenneth A. and Jan Jenk 23

Kedit, P.M. 48
Kent, Susan 5
Keesing, Roger 259
King, Victor T. 208, 270
kinship 130, 173, 259-266, 362-375

Mackie, J.A.C. 217


marriage 249-251
marriage between Punan Terkalet and
Punan Vuhang 51
remarrying after death of spouse 259
rules of marriage among cousins 261
Marshall, Laura 4
Martinez, Miguel Alfonso 300
Mc Elroy, Ann, and Patricia K. Townsend 6
medicinal plants 128-129
Metcalf, Peter A. 208
Milton, Katherine 4
mobile economy 21, 32, 67, 320
exploration 34-43
mobility within a river system 43-45
mobility based on sago consumption 48
Morris, Brian 5
mourning 190, 203-205
Myers, Fred R. 5

affinal terms 264-266


consanguineal terms 260-263
kinship terms 260
knowledge
animals 69, 80,
environment 21, 168, 310, 320
mental map 43
resources 160
keystone resources 22, 24, 102, 319
Lake Baling 209, 226
landscape 43
exploration into a new area 34-41
impact from logging 303, 306-308, 325
movement of wild boar 82, 84,
Leacock, Eleanor, and Richard Lee 5, 171
Lee, Richard B. 4, 5, 170
Lee, Richard B. and Irven DeVore 170, 321
Legislation 299
Forests Ordinance 301-302
Land Code 299-301
Native Customary Rights 300
Leighton, M., and D.R. Leighton 23, 24
Lim Poh Chiang 13
Literature Review 4-17
logging 303-318
deforestation 326
economic response 307-311
impact on resource tenure 314-315
physical impact 306-307
Punan Vuhang response 303-311
relationship with the Company 316-317
social impact 312-313
longhouse
construction materials 295-297
demography and layout 232-239

Needham, Rodney 7
Negen 154, 159, 162, 165, 220
Ng, F.S.P. 23
Nicolaisen, Johannes 15, 163
Nyuvuhan 50, 162, 164, 169, 174
Oldrey, T.B.N. 252
Owen, Donald A. 10, 65
Payne, Junaidi 21, 22
Peterson, Jean Treloggen 5
Peterson, Nicolas 93
political system 51, 157
aristocracy 157, 165-167
authority (lack of) 167, 170, 312
conflict 49, 57, 159
consensus 33, 157, 158, 161
egalitarianism 157, 170-175

399

Index
materials for building houses 295-297
sago143-149, 294-296
revisionists 4-6, 67, 319, 320
Rousseau, Jrme
augury beliefs 208-209, 226
genealogy 259
Kayan migration 49
Kayan brideswealth 138
shifting cultivation 270, 279, 325

Kayan authority 169


leaders 157-160, 162-170
leadership 157-164
legitimization of authority 160-162
political skills 161, 161-163
stratification 167
Pringle, Robert 49
problems in hunting 108
hunting wild boar 84-85
medium sized tree dwelling animals 108110
trapping strategies 115-117
property rights systems 143, 146
open access property 144, 146, 150, 155
private property 143, 146, 147, 149, 152
Puri, Rajindra K. 21
knowledge of animals 80
choosing good dogs 90
hunting107, 320
learning how to survive 170, 321
sedenterization 323

sago 48, 69-80, 143


Sahlins, Marshall 4, 9,
salt lick springs 107
Sarawak Gazette 60, 62, 65, 164
Sather, Clifford 208, 260
scarcity 31, 33
Arenga sago 295
coping with scarcity 170, 318, 321
food 16, 94, 324
food dependency debate 6-9
periods / seasons of scarcity 121, 132133
Seeley, Thomas D., R.A. Morse, and P. K.
Akratanakul 122
Seitz, S. 117
Sellato, Barnard J.L.
band fission 33
belief 202, 204, 212-213
conservation of sago 145
food independence debate 68, 174
kinship 260
marriage 251
mobility 48
Punan leadership 159, 163,170
property rights 292
sedenterization 10, 322, 323
settling down 214-226
sharing 90, 130, 136
Antiaris blowpipe poison 153
as associated with risk reduction 133
cessation (of sharing) 309, 325
fruits 151

reciprocity 89, 90, 130


gaining authority 161
generalized reciprocity 172
means to enhance survival 155
reciprocity as insurance 132
religious belief 212-213
augury 33, 86, 208-212, 220, 229
cosmology 177-189
dog healing ritual 87-89
ritual 177, 189-193, 196
shaman 193-197
spirits 197-201
residence (post marital) 257
resource tenure 143-155, 292-297, see also
property right system
blowpipe poison 152-154
crops 292-293
firewood 155
fruit trees149-152
land tenure 297-299, see also legislation

400

Index
tobacco
craving for 64, 215
trade good 137-141, 288
as a crop 286, 293
traditionalists 4-5, 319
traps 112, 306
trapping strategies 115
Turnbull, C. M. 213

network 79, 132


wild boar 93, 135
Soepadmo, E. 22
socialization 163, 170, 255, 321
Solway, Jacqueline S. and Richard B. Lee 5
Speth, J., and Katherine Spielman 6
Sponsel, Leslie E. 6
Stearman, Allyn MacLean 7
Strickland, S.S 7
sufficiency 4, 137, 322
survival 2
dependency debate 6
roles of leaders 159, 175
skills 163, 168, 176
share and reciprocate 321
synchronized calendar 23-32

Urquhart, I.A.N. 11, 12, 48


Whitmore, T.C. 21- 23
Whittier, H.L. 9
Wiessner, Polly 132-133, 321
wild boar 27, 30, 85, 92-103,135, 321
ecological perspective101-102
migrating wild boar 96
sedentary wild boar 94
varieties of wild boar 94
Wallerstein, Immanuel 5
Wilmsen, Edwin N. 5
Wilmsen, Edwin N., and J. Denbow 5
Woodburn, James 5, 6, 9
World Rainforest Movement and Sahabat
Alam Malaysia 301

taboos 79
animal taboos 252, 253
dog taboos 85
taboos in mobility 33
taboos in trapping 117
Testart, Alain 93, 130
Thambiah, Shanthi 236, 251, 259, 260, 261,
279
Tillema, Hendrix 10

Yellen, John E. 5

401

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