The jury is still out on whether the bones identified as Homo floresiensis represents a new species. Mike Morwood, an Australian scientist who was part of the research team that excavated the site and published the first scientific papers on Homo floresiensis, is convinced, based on the jaw structure, lack of chin, brain capacity, height, relative length of arms and legs and other details, that they found a completely new species. Some scientists, notably Indonesia’s Teuku Jacob of Gadjah Mada University, suggest that the individuals found were Homo sapiens suffering from microcephaly, a development disorder which causes the head and brain to be much smaller than average. [More recently another theory has been proposed that the individuals were Homo sapiens born without a functioning thyroid due to an iron deficiency in pregnancy, which led to severe dwarfism and reduced brain size.]
The most important prehistoric archeological site in Indonesia today is Liang Bua (“cold cave”), where Homo floresiensis was discovered. The cave lies 14 kilometers north of the Flores town of Ruteng. Motorcycles or trucks can cover the last three-kilometer section of bad road, but of course one could walk, as we did.
Although the archeological digs have been filled with dirt, Hendrikus Bandar, the “key keeper” of the cave, showed Boedhi and me around.
The cave itself is in the form of a fat crescent, maybe 50 meters across, with several levels, opening to a green valley. It was almost too perfect; I could see the site being used as the setting for a cave man movie.
In A New Human, a book co-authored by Mike Morwood, an Australian scientist who has been involved in the Homo floresiensis research from the beginning, the authors write that as Morwood was leaving Indonesia after a session of ten weeks of excavation in 2003, he jokingly asked Emanuel Wahyu Saptomo “when are you going to find us a pre-modern hominid skull” to go with the bones of pygmy elephants, giant rats and stone artifacts that had been excavated.
His colleagues obliged and Rokus Due Awe, a 64-year-old paleoanthropologist from Flores, describes the eureka moment when they realized that they were dealing with something special.
Digging at a depth of some six meters, Pak Benny, one of the researchers, had found a “whitish expression in the clay”, according to Rokus. In his zeal to see more, Pak Benny accidentally sliced off what turned out to be the left brow ridge of the skull of the first Homo floresiensis discovered.
Pak Benny fortunately stopped his trowel-work and called Emanuel Wahyu Saptomo to have a look. Wahyu himself wasn’t sure what they had discovered and asked Rokus to have a look.
“It’s a skull,” Rokus said.
“Monkey or human?” Wahyu asked the older man.
“Human”, Rokus answered.
“Really? Are you one hundred percent sure?”
“Two hundred percent.”
The skull was very soft, “the consistency of wet blotting paper,” according to Rokus. They cut around it and took the block of stone back to the Hotel Sindha.
Room 19 of the Hotel Sindha in Ruteng hardly looks like the control center for a mega-scientific discovery. It’s spacious enough, at about 16 square meters, and the price is right – just US$10 a night. The room comes with a plain wooden desk, two twin beds with worn floral linen, cream-colored painted cement walls, a mirror and a pair of electrical wires hanging from the ceiling. In the bathroom the bright yellow sink has stains that defy analysis. There’s no hot water, but the friendly staff will boil up a bucket of water that you can mix with the cold to take a bath, which is welcome since Ruteng is at an altitude of 1,100 meters and it can get a bit fresh at night.
Before they could study the fossil the Ruteng crew had to harden the bone, which they did by buying acetone in the local drugstore, which they mixed with epoxy glue. The piece of the skull, of a female which was later named Flo, took three days to dry.
Rokus explains those exciting early days. “First I thought it was from a child about ten-years old, but after cleaning it we could see that the teeth were very worn, indicating an age of perhaps 28–30 [equivalent to an age today of 50–60].”
The team had just made one of the most sensational discoveries in the history of evolution.
Rokus Due Awe, a scientist involved in the discovery and identification of Homo floresiensis, remembers that his father warned his children not to leave the house when it was raining, lest they be captured by an orang pendek- type creature called kuraci or ebu ngiu. Rokus, a Flores native who grew up near Bajawa, explained that the children were told that the animal ran very fast, was hairy over its entire body, lived in the jungle, stole vegetables from farms and was smaller than one meter tall. I asked Rokus, a smiling middle-aged man whether he really believed the stories. “Yes,” he replied, he did. But, perhaps realizing that he had a persona as a scientist to portray, he added, “of course we can’t prove anything unless we catch one.”
People in this part of Flores tell stories about a sort of local bogeyman, the ebu gogo. Curiously, one of the possible origins for the English phrase “bogeyman” derives from stories about Indonesian Bugis pirates from south Sulawesi that British parents told their children to get them to behave.
Ground Zero for ebu gogo is the region around Ebu Lobo (“all ancestors”) volcano, at 2,149 meters a prominent and beautiful landmark. And the main story-teller about ebu gogo, which roughly means “ancestor which eats anything”, is Pak Epe, the Kampong Boawae headman who describes a creature with a hairy body, which lives in caves and eats raw meat and climbs vertical rock faces like a lizard. A female ebu gogo has breasts so long that she can flip them over her shoulder, he adds.
Pak Epe tells a campfire legend he has down pat. He’s clearly told it numerous times before, and is particularly keen to show us a business card of a producer of the American TV show “60 Minutes” who interviewed him several years ago.
Pak Epe estimates he’s about 69. He’s bald on top, with white flyaway hair on the sides. He has sparkling eyes and speaks in clear Indonesian.
His story, which he claims is “thousands of years old”, is simple, albeit fuzzy. Once upon a time, a group of ebu gogo came into a village to steal vegetables from the gardens. For reasons that were not clear, one time they stole a five-year-old boy, who was raised by the ebu gogo. Years later, they sent the wild child back to the village to steal fire (shades of Prometheus), and he was caught. The villagers forced the boy to show them the cave where the ebu gogo lived and the humans proceeded to set fires which killed all but two of the wild men, who escaped to do something, somewhere.
Boedhi and I agreed that, as origin legends go, this is pretty feeble stuff. No mythical elements, nothing mystical or sacred, just an old-wives tale that would probably sound better when told around a campfire with the rice wine flowing. As we leave Pak Epe requests a gift for his time.
We give him a few dollars, and ask one last question. “Do the ebu gogo still exist?” “Probably not,” he reluctantly decides.
There are many conditions and diseases that can cause short stature, according to Little People of America, a nonprofit organization that provides support and information to people of short stature and their families. By far the most frequently diagnosed cause of short stature is achondroplasia, a genetic condition that results in disproportionately short arms and legs; the average height of adults with achondroplasia is 1.52 meters. The website dwarfism.org says that this condition occurs in all races and with equal frequency in males and females, and affects about one in every 40,000 children, which means there are some 200,000 little people worldwide.
Traveling with Boedhihartono is a bit like spending time with a full university faculty. Although his business card explains that he’s in the University of Indonesia Faculty of Social and Political Sciences, with a focus on tourism, his PhD from the Sorbonne in Paris is in human ecology, and his Berkeley post-doc studies were in paleoanthropology.
And he’s a medical doctor.
One morning Boedhihartono becomes a geology professor, explaining the difference between
volcanic felsic and mafic lava flows, then he segues into a few words of praise about James Lovelock’s “Gaia Hypothesis”, explains why it’s bad to drink cold liquids in hot weather, and weaves in tales of his visits with the remote, magical and notably-xenophobic Badui people of West Java.
During tea he explains the history of craniometry, and the difference between dolichocephalic, brachycephalic, and mesocephalic skull types.
And after dinner he might take the role of a politically-incorrect history of religions professor, urging the Javanese to return to the glory days of the Hindu Majapahit Empire, stressing that Asians should follow Asian religions.
And it doesn’t take much to get him to discourse on one of his favorite topics – cryptozoology. Boedhihartono thinks that relict tigers still live in Java (specifically not in east Java where they were thought to have most recently gone extinct, but in west Java) and seeks funding for an expedition. Similarly, he has been searching for orang pendek on the large Indonesia islands of Java, Sulawesi and Sumatra and on the smaller island of Bangka.
In our modern world many vertically-challenged men and women have achieved greatness and fame. Some examples of short men who have made it big:
Sammy Davis Jr., Mahatma Gandhi, Nikita Khrushchev, and Voltaire were short men, standing 160 cm, which is a couple of centimeters taller than Balzac, Buckminster Fuller, Yuri Gagarin, Paul Simon, St Francis of Assisi and John Keats, who were in turn relatively tall compared to Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec (150 cm) and the even more diminutive Alexander Pope (137 cm).
Local people are proud of Liang Bua, and government tourism officials in the regional capital Ruteng are hoping that the Homo floresiensis nicknamed “Flo” will do for western Flores what Brigitte Bardot did for St. Tropez. The Ruteng visitors’ office has published leaflets and posters showing a rather fanciful drawing of “Flo”, and there are plans to pave the dirt road leading to the cave. There are also plans to construct a visitors center near the cave, but, according to Ardi Suardi, an economics professor at Komodo University in Ruteng, the local villagers who own this land are asking about US$10,800 for land that might be worth a fraction of that amount, and negotiations continue.
After wandering around Liang Bua we visited neighboring Kampong Rampasasa, just a ten-minute walk, to ask what they knew about orang pendek.
We were greeted warmly, as is the case in most Indonesian villages, and escorted into the headman’s house, a large airless room with packed earth floor, half the size of a tennis court, which doubles as the community meeting hall. The headman asked if we would like a welcome ceremony, which came in two sizes: the Traditional Lite for US$5, and Traditional with Rice Wine for US$10. I remembered Boedhi’s warning in Jakarta to “be careful what you eat or drink in the villages.” In the safety of Jakarta I had asked what he meant, and he vaguely indicated the possibility of magic and spells.
But I happen to think that spells only work if the spellee believes that they work, and figuring we would get better answers for the extra $5, or at the very least contribute a bit to the local economy, we sat and drank, surrounded by the usual assortment of children, old women, and men who hadn’t gone to the farms that day.
We were asked to introduce ourselves, and Boedhi did the honors. The headman repeated the potted bios back to his seated neighbors, and I whispered to Boedhi.
“Boedhi, you’re getting all the credit. I’m a university professor too, not just a western tourist.”
I said this, of course, to enhance our dual stature and to show that we were men of science and not day-tripping thrill-seekers.
So Boedhi reintroduced me, and in spite of the glowing words, which made me sound like the inventor of the internet, author of more books than Erle Stanley Garner and educator of malleable minds the world over, I noticed a wizened old lady look at me with what seemed to be amused skepticism. She murmured, to no one in particular, the universal aspersion used to describe uninvited, inappropriately-attired visitors with more money than tact: “Turis.”
Regardless, Boedhi still had me trumped. He was a medical doctor, and after a few swigs of rice wine poured from a large white plastic jerry can, he was swarmed with villagers telling them about their ailments.
And then we asked the requisite questions about orang pendek. Have they heard any stories? Are they themselves descendants of the folks in Liang Bua? Are any small folks still alive?
And our $10 paid off, or at least confirmed free information we had received earlier. “Not here, but there are some short people up in Kampong Arkel.”
And so we set off up the hill.
But what about really short people? Gul Mohammed, the world’s shortest man, died in 1997 at the age of 40. He was 57 cm tall, and weighed 17 kg. By comparison, Verne Troyer, the actor who played Mini-Me in the Austin Powers movies, stands at 81 cm and Charles Becker, the actor who played the mayor of Munchkinland in The Wizard of Oz, was just over one meter. By comparison, the Mbuti Pygmies of central Africa generally stand at less than 150 cm.
Setting off up the hill is a common experience in Indonesia when searching for strange happenstances. In Sumatra, near Kerinci-Seblat National Park, I was looking for tiger magicians who could capture man-eating tigers by singing them lullabies.
When I asked educated people living in the large cities of Java and Sumatra about these pawang harimau, the answer was usually “we’ve heard about these things but that’s the domain of our wild, savage, near-naked cousins who live in the snake-infested jungles. Why do you want to go there anyway? No Starbucks in the jungle.”
This is the common arrogance of the lowland elite, seen throughout Southeast Asia. Without saying it, people say: “We’re educated, we have a big powerful religion, our culture is active but refined through centuries of subtle evolution, we have good personal hygiene, we have electricity (TV!) and wear attractive clothes and speak several languages and we don’t want to know anything about what our rural forefathers were doing just a few generations ago.”
So I set out to seek tiger magicians, just as I’ve set out to seek men in west Java who can turn themselves into thieving pigs, and a tribe of giant white cannibals in Halmahera. Each time I get to the provincial capital and people will roughly point in the direction of the mountains. I’ll get to the mountains, where the villages become simpler, where there are fewer purchased goods, where there might not be electricity or plumbing, and the people will say: “It’s not us boss, you want those crazy dudes across the valley and high up the next ridge. Be careful, they’ve got magic.” So I keep on climbing up the increasingly narrow trail, and at the end of the line, far from the nearest road or internet café, and really out of cell phone range, I reach a small village and find people who are quite normal. They have families, they farm, they respect whatever spirits they think are important, they laugh, they cry. And once in a while, if I ask the right questions in the right way, and if I’m smart enough to figure out “what did that guy really say?” I get some insights.
In a sense, the “over the next hill” attitude reflects the existence of orang pendek stories. By common understanding, people on the coast are handsome, smart and sophisticated. People in the outback are hillbillies. When you’re at the bottom of the social totem pole, how do you maintain your humanity? We define ourselves partly by what we are not. And these end-of-the-line folks have no other social groups to look down on so they create an intermediate creature, more-than-ape but less-than-human. These stories consolidate the value and integrity of rural folk, as well as helping to maintain some social control.
From Kampong Rampasasa and Liang Bua, we walked half an hour towards Kampong Arkel and then hitched a ride the rest of the way on a passenger truck to reach the top of the steep hill.
Arkel is a small, poor village, without the impressive carvings, statuary, weaving and visible cultural richness found in some other Flores communities. It has no school. No running water. Sort of the end of the line.
In small villages like Arkel the arr
ival of any strangers is reason to gather and gawk. The “Hobbits” were waiting for us, almost on cue.
We were quickly introduced to four small people, none of whom was taller than 130 cm. They were the living Hobbits we had sought, the holy grail of our search. It was all too easy.
Four members of the clan’s short family were on hand to greet us: Margaretha Ndindis, Petrus Bambut, Yohanes Jerahi, and Laurensius Jema. Other family members were living in different parts of Indonesia, they explained.
Petrus, the patriarch, said he might be 100 years old. Boedhi was in his element, and asked him what he did during the “Japanese war”, referring to WWII. Petrus said that when the war started he had just gotten married but had not yet had children, which would make him about 20 in 1940, and about 85 today. Not 100 as he claimed, but a significant age in any case.
Laurensius Jema is kepala adat of the village, the keeper of the traditions. He’s married to a woman of normal height and has four children; his brother Yohanes has five children.
Their aunt, Margaretha Ndindis, was also of an advanced age, and she asked Boedhi for medicine to treat a chronic headache. Boedhihartono obliged, giving her a jab of analgesic on her bum, watched by curious villagers. His medical advice reflected his own personal beliefs – eat lots of pork and drink tea without sugar.
While Margaretha was lying on the mat Boedhihartono got out his caliper and sliding caliber and measured the width and breadth of her skull, her nose length, the width of her mandible and jaw. He might have asked permission to take cranial measurements of the other three small folks, but I don’t remember hearing much polite discourse as Boedhihartono also measured Laurensius, Yohanes and Petrus.
The Sultan and the Mermaid Queen Page 9