CHAPTER SEVEN

OLD AND NEW CHRISTIANITY IN THE SOUTHEASTERN ISLANDS

In chapters four and fi ve we have discussed the beginning of Christian com- munities in the southeastern islands that nowadays are called Nusa Tenggara Timur, NTT. Th ese are the three larger islands of , Sumba and Timor, with a number of smaller ones, especially the group of , , Lomblen (or ), and Alor, east of Flores, and the islands of Rote and Sawu to the Southwest of Timor. With a population of 3,823,154 in 2000, it was the province with the highest percentage of Christians, 87,7%. Out of the three other provinces with a majority of Christians it was in absolute numbers and in percentage by far the most ‘Christian’ (Papua with 75,5%, North Sulawesi with 69,3% and the Moluccas, not including North Moluccas, with 50,2%). In this chapter we will see the local variations on a renewed race with Islam in the late nineteenth and early twenthieth century, the very slow transition from sixteenth and seventeenth century Portuguese and Dutch Christianity towards a modernising Christianity that accepted schools, hospitals and other aspects of modernity as part of a new culture and religion in the twentieth century. More than in Java or in Sumatra, even than in Sulawesi, in this part of traditional religion could survive. In Flores and Timor it survived partly as a hidden tradition under the cover of formal or nominal Christianity. In Sumba traditional religion could quite strongly survive as the major reli- gious tradition of an important, however dwindling minority. Catholicism in Flores has been given here much more attention than the developments in the two other islands that have stronger Protestant communities, because of its exceptional situation as a Catholic majority. Besides, many issues for the whole of NTT are discussed in the longer fi rst section on Flores.

Flores as a Catholic stronghold

Th e diffi cult transition from old Portuguese to new Dutch Catholicism in Flores and Timor, 1859–1904 Th e political status of East Flores and of the islands from Adonara until Alor was until the mid-nineteenth century still uncertain. Th e Portuguese from Dili, East Timor, claimed sovereignty over this region and from time to time a Catholic priest was sent to look aft er the fl ock in , Sikka and 230 chapter seven

Maumere. Due to fi nancial problems, the governor of Dili had to borrow money from the Dutch in Batavia and when it proved impossible to pay back this amount of 80,000 guilders, negotiations started to give some territory to the Dutch for an additional sum of money instead of paying back the loan. In the 1850s these negotiations discussed also the religious status of the ‘new Dutch territories.’ Th e Portuguese wanted to include a remark that Catholicism would continue to be protected by the new overlord, but Dutch parliament wanted also to include the religious freedom of Protestants. In the fi nal agreement it was stated that “the freedom of religion is mutually guaranteed to the citizens of the areas which are ceded by the present treaty.” Notwithstanding this posi- tion, the Batavia administration deemed it necessary to send a Catholic priest to Larantuka. By decision of the governor general on 12 September 1859 a request was sent to the Apostolic Vicar P. Vrancken in Batavia: While still waiting for approval by Parliament, this government wants to prepare now already the possibility of the execution of this special require ment, by provid- ing the residents of the most important location of our new possession, Larantuka, with the convenience to practice the Roman Catholic worship, which seems to be practised in that area and for which the pres ence of a Roman Catholic clergyman is required.1 In 1851 the Dutch army had already taken possession of the fortifi cations of Larantuka and Wureh, on the island of Adonara, just some 6 km from Larantuka on the other side of Strait Solor. Th is was done as guarantee for the fi rst loan of 80,000 given to the Portuguese governor of Dili. Th e Portuguese priest Gregorio Maria Barreta is said to have told his former parish, “You may change your fl ag, but you should never change your religion.” He had told his fl ock that there were sorani tua and sorani muda, old and new Christians. As Protestants the Dutch were considered as representatives of new Christians. In order to correct this image the governor general had deemed it necessary to make an exception to a ruling that was defi ned only a few months earlier. Answering the requests of a small group of Chinese Catholics in the island of Bangka to send a priest, it was stipulated that Catholic priests would be paid by the colonial government only for the pastoral care of European Catholics, but not for native people. For strategic and political reasons, however, an exception should be made for these new citizens of the colony in East Flores. Th ere had been only occasional contacts between the Catholics of East Flores and Adonara with the Portuguese centre in Dili. Th ere were in the fi rst half of the nineteenth century only one or two priests in the neglected Portuguese colony, which had become part of the diocese of Macao in China. Th e first

1 Government Secretary to Vicar Apostolic P. Vrancken, Batavia, 12–9–1859, see Steenbrink 2003–I:73.