By: Aboeprijadi Santoso, Contributor the Jakarta Post/Lamno, Aceh 
Hundreds of Acehnese men, women and children of mixed Portuguese origin were swept away by the tsunami last December.
They  were the last remaining descendants of Portuguese-Acehnese communities  in Lamno. Like the "depoks" (residential areas) of mixed Dutch origin  living near Jakarta, they were part and parcel of the local society.
Yet  they have always been considered exceptional, with Acehnese being both  proud and fond of them. Girls of mixed Portuguese-Acehnese birth are  said to be very beautiful, and are referred to as mata biru (blue-eyes).
That  exotic image is now gone. Of this mixed-blood group, there is now  probably only one survivor, Jamaluddin Puteh, in Lamno, the city port of  West Aceh where Portuguese sailors arrived centuries ago. A local paper  (Waspada, Jan. 26, 2005) reports that a little girl, aged about 8, has  also survived and is now in Medan.
I met two people of Portuguese descent in Aceh; Cut Pudo in Darussalam, Banda Aceh, and Jamaluddin Puteh in Lamno.
Lamno,  a coastal town some 200 km from the provincial capital, Banda Aceh, is  beautifully situated at the foot of a hill, like Beirut and Lisbon. The  town was one of the areas most devastated by the earthquake and tsunami.  The coast used to be a natural port and fishing village; what remains  now is just a vast flat area, full of debris.
There are no  reliable figures about the Portuguese; they may have totaled some 400  men, women and children, local sources said. Very few lived outside  Lamno; some may have left for Meulaboh, Banda Aceh or Jakarta before or  shortly after the tsunami.
Sources living in camps for displaced  people in Lamno said one of the two extended families of Portuguese  origin, who lived in Banda Aceh, recently returned to Lamno, but were  swept away by the tsunami.
The Portuguese used to live close to  each other, making the impact of the disaster even more dramatic for  some kin groups living near the coast, as they lost more than other kin  groups living elsewhere.
Lamno's coastal villages of Kampung  Kuala, Kuala Daya, Lambasu and Ujung Muloh, where most  Portuguese-Acehnese lived, were fishing communities. Of their 300  fishing boats, only 30 remain.
They have been integrated into  Acehnese society for centuries, preferring to stay in their original  locality, Lamno, yet also showing an openness towards the outside world.
There  is nothing surprising about this cosmopolitanism. Aceh, after all, was a  center of trade and learning in the 17th century. Even today, Acehnese  still refer to their homeland as the "Veranda of Mecca", meaning a holy  place one has to pass through to learn about Islam before going to the  holiest place of all, Mecca.
Almost nothing distinguishes  Portuguese-Acehnese from other Acehnese; whether in terms of language,  religion or housing patterns, nor in their way of life.
It was  purely their appearance -- white skin, white or yellow hair and women  with blue eyes -- that set them apart. They appear exotic, with women  being called "the blue eyes of Aceh".
Now they have almost all  gone. Reportedly, there are still a few Acehnese families and  individuals of Portuguese origin living in Banda Aceh, Meulaboh, Medan  and possibly Jakarta.
Cut Pudo, an 80-year-old grandmother,  survived the tsunami. Her name, which uses the Acehnese honorific "Cut",  indicates that she married into an aristocratic family.
The wave  carried her for some kilometers, but miraculously, she survived and  joined with other displaced people who walked to Banda Aceh, as Lamno  was completely isolated for the first few days of the disaster.
A  military helicopter took her to a medical clinic and she is now being  treated by a Danish orthopedic team in Darussalam, Banda Aceh.
One  month after the disaster, she looks fresh, but is still traumatized and  confused, and was crying when Radio Netherlands found her in a hospital  tent. She speaks only Acehnese, but is still unable to tell her story.  Her relatives say she has even forgotten her real name, claiming to be  Siti Hawa (Eva).
Jamaluddin Puteh, 40, is most probably the only survivor remaining in Lamno. A fisherman, he was at sea when the tsunami hit.
As  the wave ebbed he returned home to find his village, Kampung Kuala,  gone, along with his three daughters. His wife, now in Meulaboh,  survived as did his sons, Dedi Darmadi and Irwandhy, who live in Sabang  and Banda Aceh.
"What can I do now? I don't know, I have nothing, absolutely nothing," he said calmly, but with a hint of desperation.
Pak  Jamaluddin is popular among locals. He often asks people to join him  for a chat in a coffee shop. Amicable, modest and soft-spoken, he is  known as gamputeh (the white man). This nickname has absolutely nothing  to do with the name of the separatist group, GAM, but comes from the  words agam (man) and puteh (white).
The families of Portuguese  origin had always lived peacefully and happily in Aceh until the day of  the disaster, said Jamaluddin. The tsunami has changed everything.
"The disappearance of Portuguese-Acehnese is a great loss for Aceh," he said.
(The writer is a journalist with Radio Netherlands.)

 
fake... Lamno is derived from Islam-espaniol( from andalusia) who came here for survival.
ReplyDeletelolllll eles continuam a querer mudar a historia de forma a levar as correntes a favor deles !! o povo de andaluzia era portugueses e espanhois, nuva o povo invasor teve olhos azuis !!!
DeleteHi! Can you please contact me? I'm doing some research on Lamno and Barus and I'd like to have some information exchange with you. Terima kasih.
ReplyDeleteI swear to Al mighty God that somewhere in 2009 i captured the Photo of this girl during my educational program at her school in Banda Aceh. then I posted in social media Facebook telling that I finally found a blue eye girl, but I am not sure my self she is the blue eye or not as she did not want to talk and it was very hard to ask her for a good shoot.. so that was the only clear captured of her i have ever able to shoot. and as I am writing this comment I was surprised that I found her photo in this article...in 2016 I was going to look for her again and see how old is she now and how is she look like... any way,, i still got no time to find out...
ReplyDelete