SEAMIST Public Area

Search Site

Contact Us

Site Map

Today's Prayer Requests

Latest South East Asia News Headlines

 


JESUS
wants to reach
these countries
and peoples
with His Good News now.

SEAMIST
DOES TOO!

We NEED
Your help!

Quick Clicks


June 2004:  This page is being discontinued.

This people group is no longer on our least reached list.

 

ALAS-KLUET BATAK OF INDONESIA

LOCATION : Aceh province, Sumatra
HOMELAND :
Bukit Barisan Range
POPULATION :
80,000
LANGUAGE :
Batak-Alas Kluet
PEOPLE CLUSTER :
Mandailing people
RELIGION : Muslim (Sunni) 99.9%
% OF CHRISTIANITY :
0%
SCRIPTURE : None
RADIO BROADCAST : None
JESUS FILM :
None
GOSPEL AUDIO RECORDING : None
CHURCH PLANTING TEAM / MISSION AGENCY WORKING AMONG THEM :
None

The Alas-Kluet Batak (a subgroup of the Batak), live o­n the Indonesian island of Sumatra, primarily in the remote central highlands of the Aceh province. Like most Sumatran peoples, the Alas-Kluet Batak speak a Malayo-Polynesian language. The Alas-Kluet Batak are near neighbors to the Gayo people and have a very similar lifestyle and culture. They are also close neighbors to the radical Islamic Acehenese, whose sultans conquered them and forced them into slavery during the first half of the 1600's. For many years, the area of the Alas-Kluet Batak remained unknown and unexplored. The Dutch ultimately gained control of their region, but the Alas-Kluet Batak resisted this occupation from 1904 to 1942.

The chief occupation of the Alas-Kluet Batak is agriculture, especially the growing of rice, which is their staple food. They also eat dried fish and meat. Some cattle and horses are raised. They primarily live in extended households in small mountain villages. The most important house in the village is the umah ("dwelling house"). The umah has two galleries, o­ne for the men and the other for the women. The individual family sleeping quarters are located in the middle. Each village also has a meresah ("men's house"), which is the traditional place that boys over eight years of age, unmarried men, widowers, and strangers spend the night. This house is also used for religious and training purposes. Alas-Kluet Batak marriages are exogamous, which means that they marry outside their own family groups. Polygamous marriages (having more than o­ne spouse) are rare, though permitted. First marriages are usually arranged by the families o­n both sides. The engagement lasts from o­ne to three years, in order to give the man time to acquire the bride price, and the woman, the dowry. Weddings are celebrated according to Islamic customs. Villages are ruled by chiefs who inherit their positions. The villages are divided according to family groupings. The smallest unit of government is a sub-division of a family group, called a rodjo.

The Alas-Kluet Batak have been Muslims at least since the 1600's, but they have little knowledge or real concern for Islam. The majority of people in the rural areas still believe in friendly and unfriendly spirits and ghosts, and in saints. All of these must be appeased through gifts and cult practices. In the few modern towns, these beliefs are less prevalent, although healing by use of exorcism is common. Numerous semi-religious rituals are conducted at various stages of life, including a hair cutting ceremony that takes place seven days after birth. O­nly o­ne lock of hair is left o­n the baby's head. If the child becomes sick, this lock is removed, in the hope that the bad luck will also be removed. The child is bathed in a nearby river at this time. At eight years of age, both boys and girls have their jaw teeth filed and permanently blackened.

Because the Alas-Kluet Batak live in a somewhat isolated region, they have been very difficult to reach with the Gospel. Today, they are still without a translation of the Bible, Christian radio broadcasts, the Jesus film, or missionary efforts. They need to know that Jesus is the o­ne who has the power to set them free.

PRAYER POINTS

  • Ask the Lord of the harvest to send forth missionaries, laborers or chruch planters to work among the Alas-Kluet Batak of Indonesia.
  • Pray that the Lord will raise up anointed Christian linguists who can help develop a written language for the Alas-Kluet Batak and be able to translate the Scripture for them.
  • Pray that the Jesus film will soon be produced in their language.
  • Pray that the Lord will strengthen, protect, and encourage the small number of Alas-Kluet Batak believers.
  • Take authority over the spiritual principalities and powers that are keeping the Alas-Kluet Batak bound.
  • Ask God to raise up a mighty army of prayer warriors who will intercede for the Alas-Kluet Batak.
  • Pray that God will reveal Himself to the Alas-Kluet Batak through dreams and visions especially to their village leaders.
  • Pray that strong local churches will be raised up among the Alas-Kluet Batak.

links to related information: http://www.bethanynorth.com/profiles/profile1.html , www.joshuaproject.net

last updated:

Last modified: 06 June, 2006

This website is ALWAYS under Construction...
Click Here To Return To The Seamist Home Page or to Member's Area Home Page

If you have Questions or Comments, we want to hear them?  Please, e-mail us: webservant@seamist.org
Copyright © 1998-2004 BartZart