Finished products: A woman passes between two barongsai lion heads hung by Doel in front of his workshop
Finished products: A woman passes between two barongsai lion heads hung by Doel in front of his workshop.
Martinus Doel Wahab is nearly 90 years old but the old man is still doing the one thing he has loved to do since his childhood days and that is crafting barongsai (lion dance) equipment.
In Doel’s workshop two yellow barongsai lion heads hang neatly and once in a while the wind moves them.
Doel combines his creativity with a collection of childhood memories to produce barongsai equipment from cardboard and used paper. The barongsai has been a large part of his life since his childhood.
From the age of seven Doel befriended many Chinese-Indonesians. He also watched and joined barongsai troupes around his home in the Kemetiran area, Yogyakarta.
The barongsai was not the only art form that Doel took an interest in as a young man. He joined various art groups before finally choosing pencak silat martial arts as his main way of life.
The choice was not wrong. In 1957, Doel became an Indonesian cultural ambassador to Eastern Europe and for three-and-a-half months he traveled to Czechoslovakia, Poland, Russia, Hungary and Egypt to promote pencak silat.
Nevertheless, Doel still maintained his love of barongsai. He then established a barongsai group in Yogyakarta. The group was named Isaku Iki, which sounds like it is Mandarin, but it is in fact Javanese, meaning “this is what I can do”.
Given his age, Doel Wahab has retired, and the group is now led by his daughter and her husband.
These days, Doel is the go-to guy if people want to purchase barongsai equipment to celebrate Chinese New Year, known locally as Imlek.
He sells a mini barongsai for Rp 100,000 (US$7.35), which requires one week to make. He also supports himself and his wife by selling various household needs from his stall, which is located not far from Senen Market, Gedongtengen, Yogyakarta.
— Photos by Anggertimur Lanang Tinarbuko
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