Rain washed over the yard at Sevilla International School in Pulo Mas, East Jakarta, on Saturday. But it was not enough to dampen the spirits of students anticipating a visit from the Indonesian Museum of Records (better known by its acronym, MURI).
More than a thousand people had gathered to try and break the MURI record for the most people drawing batik designs in wax simultaneously.
The event was named �Pagelaran Batik 1,500 Canting� (�Batik Show of 1,500 Canting�), after the small pens used to apply the wax for batik, called canting, and the school�s target of 1,500 participants.
The previous record was set in 2007, with 1,130 participants.
Based on a manual count by a MURI official, Sevilla International School broke the earlier record by more than 500 participants, as 1,780 people joined in the batik-making process.
�This event is one way we can show our love for batik, as well being an effort to raise the younger generation�s awareness of batik as part of the internationally recognized cultural heritage,� said Sudhamek AWS, president director of the school.
Batik was recently recognized by the United Nations� cultural branch, Unesco, as part of the world�s intangible heritage.
�The point of this event is not merely to get the certificate from MURI,� Sudhamek said. �It�s about how to not only preserve batik, which has been around for thousands of years, but also to develop it further through the young generation.�
Robertus Budi Setiono, the school�s chief operational officer, said batik studies would be incorporated into the school�s curriculum, �so that the students can know and appreciate batik from an early age.�
Saturday�s participants comprised students at the school, ranging from kindergarten to high school, as well as their friends and families.
Dressed in uniform white T-shirts, they sat on the bare concrete or stretches of grass throughout the school working on their designs.
The batik makers were divided into groups of 10. Each participant was given a canting and a square of cloth marked out with a classic batik design.
A total of 150 meters of cloth and 30 kilograms of wax were distributed during the event, with each group sharing a pot of wax with an open flame.
Participants didn�t try their hand at dipping their cloth squares into colored dyes, which was probably a good thing as a big mess might have ensued.
Dealing with the wax alone was a messy business. On a number of occasions a school official armed with a fire extinguisher was called upon to put out a fire that had started in one of the wax pots.
But aside from that, the event went smoothly.
A fifth-grader, who did not want to give his name because he was �shy,� was completely absorbed in the process, clutching a canting in his right hand and an almost-finished cloth in the left.
He said it was his first shot at making batik. Asked how he felt about the canting process, the boy responded, �It�s hard, but fun!�
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar
Catatan: Hanya anggota dari blog ini yang dapat mengirim komentar.