10.14764/10.ASEAS-0022
Sousa, Lúcio
State Appropriation of Traditional Actors and Oral Narratives in Timor-Leste
Austrian Journal of South-East Asian Studies
2019
2019-10-30
2019-10-30
2019-12-26
2019-12-24
en
Article
14-282-3214
209-223 Pages
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
In Timor-Leste, the lia na`in (lian = word; na`in = lord, master) – leaders of customary practice – are becoming key to tradition, to “kultura” (culture), an emerging area of public cultural policies. Traditionally associated with the local communities and the mountains, they are the ones that know and pronounce the words that uncover the origin of the world, and the relationship between mankind, nature, and ancestors. Since 20 May 2002, when political power was handed from the United Nations to the Timorese authorities, several episodes have illustrated that the involvement of the lia na`in has shifted from their traditional local contexts to national ones. From small-scale sociopolitical agents, the lia na`in became a resource as buffers of conflict or of reconciliation, as council members of the suco, the smallest administrative division, and as actors in national state ceremonies, taking part in the process of (re)creating the nation’s cultural identity. The purpose of this article is to discuss the role assigned to lia na`in in state affairs and the nation, particularly the role concerning conflict resolution. The argument, I propose, is that the participation of the lia na`in, as a ritual authority, in state-sponsored ceremonies has become a major resource of credibility to the new national authorities.
Austrian Journal of South-East Asian Studies, Vol 12 No 2 (2019): Violence in Southeast Asia