Wali Pitu and Muslim pilgrimage in Bali, Indonesia : inventing a sacred tradition / Syaifudin Zuhri.
Material type:
- 9400604319
- 9789400604315
- Muslim pilgrims and pilgrimages -- Indonesia -- Bali Island
- Muslim saints -- Prayers and devotions
- Islamic worship, rites and ceremonies
- Social groups
- RELIGION / Islam / Rituals & Practice
- Muslim pilgrims and pilgrimages
- Muslim saints
- Indonesia -- Bali Island
- Islam
- Islamic life and practice
- Pilgrimage, Indonesia, Islam, Wali Sanga, Wali Pitu, Tourism, Sanctity, Hindu, Religious economy
- 297.3/559862 23/eng/20220422
- BP187.55.I5 Z84 2022
- online - EBSCO
Item type | Current library | Call number | URL | Status | Notes | Barcode | |
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Biblioteca "Angelicum" Pont. Univ. S.Tommaso d'Aquino Nuvola online | online - EBSCO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Online access | Not for loan (Accesso limitato) | Accesso per gli utenti autorizzati / Access for authorized users | (ebsco)3368310 |
This ethnographic book deals with the emergence of the Wali Pitu (seven saints) tradition and Muslim pilgrimage in Bali, Indonesia. It touches upon the issues of translocal connectivity between Java and Bali, Islam-Hindu relationship, relations between Muslim groups, and questions of authority and authenticity of saint worship tradition. 0It offers a new perspective on Bali, seeing the island as a site of cultural motion straddling in between Islam and Hinduism with complexities of local figurations, and belongings of 'Muslim Balinese'. The study also urges the intricate relationship between religion and tourism, between devotion and economy, and shows that the Wali Pitu tradition has facilitated the transgression of spatial and cultural boundaries.
Online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on April 22, 2022).
Cover -- Table of Contents -- Acknowledgement -- Note on Transliteration and Translation -- List of Figures -- Figure 1: Map of Java and Bali -- Figure 2: Map of Bali, Tombs of Wali Pitu, and Wisata Religi Itinerary -- Figure 3: Popular image of the Wali Sanga -- Figure 4: The first version of Wali Pitu image -- Figure 5: The second version of Wali Pitu image -- Figure 6: Haul of the Wali Pitu -- Figure 7: Wisata religi with modest facilities and the pilgrims -- Figure 8: Spatial distribution of sacred places in Loloan -- Figure 9: Pilgrimage at the grave of Ali Bafaqih -- Figure 10: Keramat Gunung and its pilgrims clockwise: the building of Keramat Gunung in 2014, the renovated building in 2015, the steeping trails heading to Keramat Gunung, and the grave -- Figure 11: Candikuning and its banjar division -- Figure 12: From Pamereman to Pura Keramat Ratu Mas Sakti Two top photos by Sri Margana: the pamereman and the grave with two tombstones. Two bottom photos by the author: the pilgrim before the grave with one tombstone and the Hindu temple of Pura Keramat -- Figure 13: Map of Seseh and the Hierarchy of Spaces of Pura Keramat Ratu Mas Sakti -- Figure 14: Sharing the Sacred -- Maps -- Introduction: Muslim Pilgrimage in Bali -- Part 1: Java and Bali in the Invention of the Wali Pitu -- 1. Saint Veneration in Indonesia -- 2. The Invention of the Wali Pitu -- 3. Wisata Religi: Pilgrimage and Tourism in Bali -- Part 2: Questions of Authority and Authenticity -- 4. Al-Qablal Wujud: Identity and Religious Economy -- 5. Keramat Gunung: Islam and Muslim Politics in Candikuning -- 6. Sharing the Sacred: Hybridity and Transgressing Boundaries -- Conclusion: 'Made in Bali, by Java' -- Bibliography -- Glossary and Abbreviation -- Notes -- Index.