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KATE NAPTHALI falls in love with the Togians, and discovers that health and education are major needs.
Lonely Planet says of the Togians: 'This archipelago of pristine coral and volcanic isles
in the middle of Teluk Tomini is a riot of blue, gold and green. Undisturbed jungle
shelters a variety of wildlife, reefs around the islands support rich marine life, and the
seven or so ethnic groups sharing this place are extraordinarily hospitable'.
But reefs, pristine now, are under threat from poisoning and bombing by fishermen
driven to the margin by credit merchants. And the healthy jungle biodiversity is being
invaded by plantations leaking into them in the face of worsening copra yields from
existing plantations.
Lying less than one degree south of the equator, the island group is made up of seven
major islands and more than a hundred smaller ones. They lie in the transition zone
separating the Australia-like flora and fauna of Eastern Indonesia from those of
Asia-like Western Indonesia.
Ethnic groups
The original Togian people of the Togian Islands are still found towards the central part
of the island group. Their major village Benteng is the oldest community in the Togians
and was the former capital of the Benteng Kingdom. It is known for durian and
avocado.
Sea nomads
From birth, the sea is 'part of them' - their home, their work and their source of food.
The dead are buried on land, away from the living community. Bajau-Sama divers go
down to 30 metres without breathing apparatus in search of sea cucumber and pearl.
They are found either in permanent or in seasonal fishing communities. Travelling as a
family, they often move between permanent and seasonal fishing communities.
Health
Other important infectious diseases include tuberculosis, leprosy, and most enteric
infections (e.g. the dysenteries, rotaviruses, giardia). Upper respiratory tract infections
accounted for approximately 33% of cases in one sub-district. Many of these may be
misdiagnosed worm infections such as roundworm, hookworm and strongyloides. The
larvae of the worms migrate to the gut via the lungs causing similar symptoms.
Education
On these indicators, education in the Togians is very poor. Follow-on rates to junior
secondary high school are only 2-3%. Primary school dropout levels are high, and
teaching materials are poor or non-existent. Teachers, not necessarily untalented, are
usually unmotivated, partly due to poor salaries.
Most primary aged children receive some schooling, though many drop out during the
harvest seasons or major fishing months. There are only two junior high schools and
one senior high school, making expense a major consideration. Parents who can
afford it may send their children out of the Togian Islands to continue their education,
creating a 'brain drain'.
Poor people who have had some experience of primary education often question its
relevance to their needs. One farmer in Desa Kolilio on Pulau Una-Una commented
that schooling tended to create false expectations, and knowledge was something
which could not be taken to heaven. High drop-out rates probably reflects rational
decision making by the parents. Perceiving few benefits from state education, parents
withdraw their children to work.
Community programs
The inclusion of vocational training, family health and nutrition and environmental
education in the school curriculum would benefit the local community. Although local
knowledge systems regarding their immediate environment are good, their
understanding of sustainable farming and agricultural methods is not. Hopefully, NGOs
can include these matters in their educational programs in future.
Artikeln är hämtad ur Inside Indonesia, läs mer om Indonesien där.
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