Lombok Special: Glow Worms and Stick Fighting
We happened to be in Kuta during the week leading up to Nyale, Lombok's largest annual festival, celebrated in Kuta. Legend has it that a great war started between the suitors of a beautiful princess, each vying for her hand in marriage. The princess went to the Gods for help stopping the violence, but they told her that it was in her hands alone. In a desperate and selfless act, the princess drowned herself in the waves on Kuta's main beach to end the war once and for all. On the full moon of her death, thousands of glowing sea worms floated on the surface of the water and every year since, on the full moon of the same month, the worms return. To celebrate the miracle, villagers put on a week-long festival leading up to the full moon and the appearance of the worms (which they gather, cook and eat). The festival includes traditional competitions, such as horse racing and stick-fighting, the latter of which we were lucky enough to attend with our home stay family.
If you've never been to a Lombok stick fight, here's how it works. Local men from the crowd volunteer (yes, volunteer!) to enter the ring at the behest of a dancing referee / master of ceremonies. They are armed with a bamboo stick and a shield and dressed in a ceremonial longi (sarong) and head wrap. That's when the action starts. The two opponents enter the ring and beat the shit out of each other with bamboo sticks. It's fast and furious, each man trying to get as many hits in before the round is called. Before you know it, it's over and the crowd is looking for the next volunteers. It sounds innocent enough, but we saw the whelps, split skin and scars that prove one thing... bamboo sticks hurt! After the most violent rounds, it took twenty to thirty minutes of coaxing to get more men into the ring.
There were hundreds of spectators, in from villages around Kuta to watch the excitement. Luckily, our home stay Mama was not a woman to be taken lightly. She elbowed and glared her way (and us) to the front of the crowd. It was only after, in the safety of the car, that we learned the sport can be dangerous even for spectators... someone in the front row had been hit by a misaimed strike the day before! Ouch.