guardian.co.uk,
Kate Hodal in Bangkok, Wednesday 25 January 2012
Dancers perform a traditional dance in Ubud, Indonesia, during an exorcise ritual against spirit possession. Photograph: Olivier Matthys/EPA |
A
38-year-old Indonesian security guard has been charged with assault after
kicking a 20-year-old woman in the face after mistaking her for a predatory
ghost.
The guard
was on duty in Bandung, Java, when "suddenly a figure, who was sitting on
the floor and clad in white with hair covering the face, moved slowly in a
weird way toward the elevator", according to the Jakarta Post.
The guard
"sensed a threat to himself and the others in the elevator" and
kicked the ghost to the floor "so that everyone ... could run and save
themselves," the security officer's lawyer told the Jakarta Post.
But guard
Sunarya's seemingly noble deeds have landed him more punishment than accolades,
as the "ghost" turned out to be the 20-year-old daughter of a coal
businessman who was in the hotel playing a "ghost trick" for a
friend's birthday. She was later hospitalised for a bruised face and broken
tooth.
Sunarya now
faces charges of assaulting the girl, who was dressed as suster ngesot, a
"crawling nurse ghost".
The
Indonesian archipelago, while predominantly Muslim, is strongly influenced by
spiritual and supernatural myths from its Malay, Hindu and Buddhist heritage.
Common ghost sightings often refer to floating female figures dressed in white,
with long hair and, sometimes, long fingernails.
Ghost and
vampire movies are wildly popular in Indonesia (some erotic, many others
homemade), but supernatural action is not confined to the screen. In December,
at least 10 people were reportedly possessed by spirits after visiting a
mahogany tree in Jakarta said to house a pocong (shrouded corpse ghost) and
kuntilak (female vampire ghost). The tree had to be cut down and the religious
affairs minister called in to calm hysterical crowds, but the spirits were
reported to have merely moved on to a neighbouring tree.
As
supernatural creatures in Indonesia can often take on terrifying forms – such
as the jenglot, a mummified vampiric doll with fangs and long hair who feeds
off human and animal blood – it is not surprising that many Indonesians
approach ghosts with some trepidation.
As one
reader, following Sunarya's story, wrote to the Jakarta Post: "Sunarya
should receive a medal, or at least be showered with honours, for acting so
courageously in facing what he initially thought was a real ghost."
But the
security officer remains modest. "I have a wife and two little children, I
hope everything will be fine," he told reporters. "I just did
my job as a security guard."
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