The Forest's Daughter

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The Forest's Daughter

The forest’s daugher

WORDS AND IMAGES BY BONNIE SANDERS

Many have probably heard something about the palm oil problem in Sumatra and how palm oil is threatening the rain forest.  It is one thing to hear about it and it is another thing to see it for myself through the lens of my friend Nayla Azmi Dalimunthe, an Indigenous,  Batak woman  who grew up on a palm oil plantation and who has forged her own path in conservation–truly a daughter of the forest and a force for change in our world.

The time I spent in Sumatra with Nayla as part of a Photographers Without Borders workshop were a mix of emotions as Nayla helped me understand the complexity her people face as they seek to protect the forest.

She shared that during the Dutch colonial period, several crops were introduced to Sumatra including tobacco and rubber trees, but it is the palm oil plantations that overtook the land.  Palm oil is a high-yield crop that local farmers grow in hopes of securing their families’ future. Unfortunately it also depletes free ecosystem services such as aquifers because it requires so much water to grow, causing many communities who have never had water problems to have to purchase water for bathing, cooking, cleaning, etc.

As we drove through the countryside of the island, I was struck by the impact. These palm oil trees, a non-native species stolen from Africa, line the road and the hills as far as the eye can see.  At first what seemed beautiful now remind me of oil wells that line the landscape of Texas, stripping the land of its natural richness.

Nayla stands in front of a palm oil processing factory.

Sadly, the harm done by colonialism extends far beyond the palm oil plantations, and has been a devastating force that has stolen the identities and cultural heritage of local Indigenous people.  For Nayla, who sees the forest as her home, it has been a long journey to find herself in her own story. She has had to overcome discrimination, bullying, sexual harassment and gender bias to be able to follow her dream of working in conservation.  The Batak people are known to be fighters, and true to her people, Nayla has stayed in the fight and has found her own voice amidst those who have tried to silence her.

Orangutans are arboreal beings that do not belong in cages. We bore witness to the role that zoos play directly or indirectly in promoting animal trafficking through commodification of wildlife and unhealthy power dynamics.

An orangutan mother teaches her child the ropes. Orangutan mothers are known for being some of the most protective amongst species.

Nayla shared her journey to reclaim her Indigenous roots, understanding where she has come from and how important the forest is to her people. She has found a home in the forest, with ecosystems and non-human being that that her people consider ancestors. She taught us that in Batak, the word for tiger is “Opung,” which means “grandparent.”  Her desire to protect the forest and the animals who live there comes from a deep place of love and respect for all living things.  When you see the tiger or the orangutan as your ancestor, of course you would do everything you can to protect them from harm.  The abuse and corruption that Nayla has experienced in the field of conservation has compelled her to stand firm in her values and find places and people with whom she aligns.

“Orangutan is a word created by the Dutch that means “person of the forest.” The local Indonesian name for orangutan is “mawas.” The Batak refer to orangutan as “Opung,” which is a respectful term that means “grandparent” or “ancestor.”

When Nayla met Darma Pinem, founder of Nature for Change, and a former National Park ranger, she knew she had found someone who cares as deeply about the forest as she does. Nayla’s organization started working with Nature for Change during in 2011, and together they support the local community providing programs that center around reforestation, forest patrol, education and community empowerment. 

From left: Devi (Nuraga Bhumi patrol team), Darma (Nature for Change), Nayla (Nuraga Bhumi founder).

While walking with Nayla in the forest, we watched as a mother orangutan built her nest (they build new nests every day).  Nayla is also building something new.  In 2021, Nayla launched her own company rooted in her story, her commitment to equality and her passion for ethical conservation work. She named her organization the Nuraga Bhumi Institute.  In Batak, “nuraga” means new body and deep dedication, while “bhumi” means land or earth.  Together “nuraga bhumi” signifies a new body with a deep dedication to the earth.

 Learning wisdom from one of the best mother’s in the world, Nayla has chosen to focus her attention on the next generation, teaching the young ones the ways of the forest through her community school, offering Caring For The Earth classes to women in her community and creating an all women ranger program that partners with the Gunung Leuser National Park to protect the forest.

Members of the Nuraga Bhumi patrol team.

Her community school keeps growing.  Right now they have 75 children coming to their classes and they hold three different classes a day. They hold these classes in a small room above a garage, but Nayla already has a space picked out to build a new school to enrich and serve this community program that has already been so successful.

When I visited Nayla’s school, the children were learning about recycling by making keychains out of a mixture of recycled paper and glue.  There was much joy, laughter and learning happening in that small room crowded with young ones who will become future protectors of the earth.

Caring for the Earth class, with the village children in Bukit Lawang.

Nayla’s all women ranger team is made up of her former students.  They survey and protect forest borderlands, looking for traps and evidence of poaching, as well as planting new fruit trees to support the natural habitat.

I’m not sure I can adequately explain the significance of this ranger program.  Often in Sumatra, for a girl to make money to help support her family, she is sent to Malaysia to work in a factory for a very small wage.  Nayla has created a community program that currently employs seven women.  They are paid well, can stay in the community, support their families and they have the opportunity to work in the male dominated field of conservation, to reclaim the forest for themselves.

Nuraga Bhumi patrol team plant native trees to help reforest an area they patrol that is home to critically endangered Sumatran tiger.

When we stopped at a vista overlooking Lake Toba, the ancestral land of the Batak people, Nayla sat in the same way her grandmother once did in this place.  I asked her later what she was thinking about.  She told me about how she feels vulnerable and empowered at the same time.  Vulnerable, as she understands how long it takes to reclaim and reconnect to her roots.  Empowered because she knows there is always a way to come back and believes that our ancestors will guide us.  As Nayla said, “ There is a reason I was born on this land, water, air.  I am a protector like my ancestors and it’s my time to continue, regenerate, nurture, protect, conserve and sustain for my own legacy, as I will be an ancestor one day.”

Nayla praying at Lake Toba, a central region for Batak heritage.

This journey has left me with my own questions.  What land do I connect with?  What are the roots that run deep within me?  How can I also be a protector of this beautiful planet we are all living on? So often the dominant culture has us living in a state of disconnection. 

But I must take off my shoes and feel the earth and run my hand through the sand, remembering where I come from. I, too, am a daughter of the forest.

This story was made on assignment during Storytelling School Indonesia. Our intention with these workshops is to support storytellers in the continual process of decolonizing the storytelling process, learning to work in collaboration, and to support our community partners. Proceeds from this workshop go to support the Nuraga Bhumi Institute.

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