The Punan Busang
is one of the smallest and remotest communities in Sarawak. A tiny community
tucked away at Long Lidam in Ulu Belaga, itís struggling to survive.
Henry Chan, 35, who has a Masters of Philosophy in Anthropology, wrote his thesis
on this fringe group comprising 90 people from 15 families. Modernisation has
dealt them a great blow.
In an interview with the Borneo Post, Chan who spent three years in research,
said that with the recent encroachment of logging activities into their area
the lifestyle of the Busang (the Busang refer to themselves as Vuhang) has been
disrupted. Chan, the first Sarawakian awarded the Asian Public Intellectual
(API) Fellowship of the Nippon Foundation recently, said that the Busang were
nomadic foragers in the Upper Danum-Melinau-Bahau region. In 1969, Kayan trader
Taman Bulan persuaded them to cultivate hill paddy.
Since then the
Busang have been held in high regard by their Kayan counterparts because they
are experts in the art of making the finest rattan products. "Their reputation
is so great that the Kayan have composed poems in their honour. How long the
Busang will remain as experts in the jungle is left to be seen. "No doubt
their numbers have doubled since 35 years ago, but the effects of modern living
particularly the logging industry which has disturbed their hunting ground and
water resources will not only make their life all the more difficult but also
disrupt their cultural activities,' said the University of Malaya graduate.
Among the people
who have taken interest in the Busang are Lim Poh Chiang who has a collection
of photographs taken of this community when he first visited them at their settlement
in 1969; British army Captain (retired) D.B. Ellis who first met the group during
the Confrontation and Professor I.A.N Urquart who was the first to write an
elaboration on the tribe. Chan's thesis on the Busang is entitled "Punan
Vuhang: Survival in the Rainforest". Chan will spend several months in
Thailand and Indonesia for his API Fellowship programme where he will prepare
a report on forestry and conflict management. Chan who was a consultant in the
joint venture Malaysian-German Forest Management Information Systems Sarawak
(FOMISS) project which ended in May, hoped that he could use his experience
to shed light on how to deal with similar problems in Sarawak.
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