Serafin Tanti Nita
STKIP Persada Khatulistiwa Sintang

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Traditional Ritual of Karue Ase: Local wisdom and cultural conservation in the Labian Ira'ang Society Adriana Gandasari; Markus Iyus Supiandi; Didin Syafruddin; Serafin Tanti Nita; Mawardi Mawardi
JPBIO (Jurnal Pendidikan Biologi) Vol 7, No 1 (2022): April 2022
Publisher : STKIP Persada Khatulistiwa Sintang

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.31932/jpbio.v7i1.1521

Abstract

 Karue Ase's traditional rituals to the people in Labian Ira'ang have been performed for generations, but they are delivered orally from generation to generation and have never been documented and published. The purpose of this study is to document and describe the traditional rituals of Karue Ase in the Labian Ira'ang community. This study uses survey methods. Data collection uses in-depth interview sheets and field observations. Data analysis uses qualitative descriptive analysis. The results showed that the people in Labian Ira'ang used plants, animals, and stones to perform Karue Ase rituals. The plants used are Piper betle L., Areca catechu L., Uncaria gambir (Hunter) Roxb., Nicotiana tabacum L., and Cocos nucifera L. Types of animals used among others Cervus unicolor, Pilsbryoconcha exilis, and Rasbora sp. The types of stones used are Panulung stone, Lanying stone, Kait stone, and Baram stone.
Indigenous knowledge source: Plants and animals as traditional medicine dayak tamambaloh’s of labian ira'ang village Adriana Gandasari; Markus Iyus Supiandi; Didin Syafruddin; Serafin Tanti Nita; Mawardi Mawardi; Siti Zubaidah; Susriyati Mahanal
JPBIO (Jurnal Pendidikan Biologi) Vol 8, No 1 (2023): April 2023
Publisher : STKIP Persada Khatulistiwa Sintang

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.31932/jpbio.v8i1.2039

Abstract

Indigenous knowledge regarding plant and animal knowledge as traditional medicine in the Tamambaloh Dayak community in Labian Ira'ang Village has been passed down from generation to generation. The aim of the researchers is to explore the ethnography of the sources of animal and plant knowledge as traditional medicine in the Tamambaloh Dayak community, Labian Ira'ang Village. Data processing was carried out qualitatively using data mapping and data reduction techniques. The results of data processing are presented in the form of data presentations by displaying comprehensive data and the results of the research are presented in a qualitative descriptive manner. The study involved two traditional healers or medicinal shaman as subject I and eight people with disease who were purposively selected to be subject II divided into two categories, namely external disease and internal disease. The results of the research show that the source of knowledge about plants and animals as traditional medicine is obtained through ancestral revelations given in dreams as evidenced by the presence of supernatural shamanic insights from elders and obtained from the family tree.