A Cockroach Films & Gekko Studio Production for Films4Conservation
Transcript excerpt:
...The Orang Rimba are a nomadic forest people, small groups of whom still live in the jungles of Sumatra, Indonesia. Since the advent of President Suharto’s transmigration schemes in the mid-1980s, deforestation in Jambi Province has accelerated massively. Vast oil palm plantations continue to replace natural forest.
The filmmaking process attempted to enable a neutral forum for conversation between the geographically isolated Orang Rimba and the palm oil company executives in charge of running this industry from their offices in Jakarta, the Indonesian capital.
OPENING
Mangku Basemen:
The palm oil companies cleared the forest, thousands of hectares from each group.
There have been no benefits for the Orang Rimba.
Tumenggung Tarib:
Our forest is gone.
It’s already been made into oil palm plantations.
The whole of the Black Water area is our ancestral land.
The Dragonblood Land, the Forbidden Forest, the special land for childbirth…
…It has already been destroyed.
Tumenggung Majid:
We’re now sitting in a plantation.
When they arrived, they started to clear the forest in order to establish the plantation.
They completely ignored our customary laws and cut down all our culturally significant trees.
The ‘birth trees’ and the ‘life trees’. They cut down the sialang tree [where the honeybees nested], all the Durian and Duku [fruit trees].
When they began clearing the forest in this area, they cut all those trees down.
...
Mangku Basemen:
...
Every aspect of Orang Rimba life is tied to the forest.
All our culture…how we find our food…all the wealth that we have.
That is why I am happy to be Rimba.
When I see my forest being destroyed it makes me weep.
...
To keep reading - please visit www.films4.org/forests
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- Vierotchka
- added this
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This is yet again a sign of man's pure ignorance and greed, no matter what the consequences. Anyone with eyes could see what these companies have done
Very Sad -
Oh this is truly heartbreaking, how man has no respect for earth. Now it's all about profit and what can "we" get out of it. Where does that leave the people like the Orang Rimba?
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- naty_forty
- 12 months ago
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All this destruction in the name of progress? None of the speakers were aggresive in any way just asking simply for what is by rights theirs. They should be afforded a wider stage to express their honest views
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- themanwithadog
- 12 months ago
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This a sad story.
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such an important issues effecting so much of sumatra right now. it is time for customary and land rights to come before palm plantation rights given out by corrupt bureaucrats.





