Monday 6 July 2015


Graves of the King of Loleh and the King of Four Kingdoms (behind)
Graves looking out over the Timor Sea

On a recent anthropology field school to Indonesia, students from ANU worked in conjuction with students from Universitas Kristen Duca Wacana (UKDW). Living for a month in the remote community of Bebalain Two hamlet, on the island of Rote, students were taken to the site of the graves of the Royal Family. The graves have recieved no previous public recognition, despite their significance to locals. They look out over the Timor Sea (Olidale in the local language), and in pride of place lie two past Kings; the King of Four Kingdoms, Kilo Pelo (baptised as Daniel Petrus Zacharias) and his second son, the King of Lole, Pau Ki’a (baptised as Paulus Semuel Zacharias).
Official records on the graves are scarce, with some colonial Dutch records in existence, as well as a book on the history of the graves, copies of which are elusive in the extreme to find, with the nearest apparently to be found in Kupang. Instead their history is remembered by the community in its oral history. The existing members of the Royal Family know the broader history of the graves, however they lack specifics of dates and locations for who is buried where; details that are highly valued in historical research.
Those buried in the Royal Family Graves include more than just the Royal Family, and they also include the family’s servants and soldiers. Additionally, there are people from “The East”, from Timor Island, who lived with the King (it is uncertain which generation) and were buried in unmarked graves.There is a separation between the Royal Family’s graves and those of their servants, however the boundary is now mostly broken as the graves are in a state of disrepair.
The majority of graves are made from stone and have been weathered by their lofty hillside position, recieving the full force of the ocean breezes. They all point west, according to local tradition, and have been arranged in deference to rank. There are seven graves where their structure can be relatively well perceived, with some ornamentation visible. Some have about 20cm of cut stone around the edge of the graves, while others have only the outline of the grave at ground level, with few remaining stones around the edge. There is a line of stones that border some of the graves (not the largest Kings’ graves), however it is quite unclear and close to the ground.
In an interview with Pak Paulus Zacharias, an elder of the Zacharias family, he estimated that there were around 100 graves in the site. In a survey of the graves conducted by university students they found what they thought to be signs of 49 graves; of these, three looked like children’s graves, while two stone graves were touching (possibly indicating a connection of marriage, close family or time of death), as were the graves of two couples with blue ceramic tiles.
Before 2013 the graves were cleaned in preparation for Christmas, with cleaning commencing from one week before until the 24th of December. As part of a local tradition, after cleaning the graves the family would make an offering of beetle nut, areca nut, chalk and tobacco and spread flowers on the Kings’ graves, and two recent graves. This tradition has ended, with the reason given by the family that it does not show sufficient respect for their Christian faith.
Reasons given by Pak Alfa  Zacharias, a member of the Royal Family, for the neglect of the graves revolved around financial limitations, however much of the family was unwilling to talk about their views or reasons for not maintaining the graves. It is possible that the family is time poor as well as financially poor, and cannot be away from the work they must pursue for financial support to spare time for the graves.
Within the community many have been unimpressed with the state of the graves. Most have preferred not to say anything to the Zacharias family about their disapproval of the limited maintenance by the family, and have preferred to remain quiet and keep their social interactions comfortable.
Most of this information is derived from interviews with Pak Paulus Zacharias, his wife Mama Damaris Zacharias, their son Pak Alfa Zacharias and two elders of the hamlet, Nene Naomi Balukh and Nene Julina Ndi’i Petrus.

If you are interested in learning more about the graves please contact the family representative, Alfa Zacharias, on 0853 3346 5545. You can also contact the head of Customs Leaders Communication Forum for Cultural Awareness, Pak Yohannes (Jhon) Ndolu, on 0857 3955 6073.
They both speak Indonesian.