In Malaysia, indigenous community’s circumcision ritual dates back generations
2023.07.24
Jerantut, Pahang, Malaysia
Boys in the Jahut tribe, an indigenous community in Malaysia’s Pahang state, were mass circumcised recently during a ritual practiced for generations to mark their transition into adulthood.
Their village in the Jerantut district held a two-day celebration, which included a feast and night-long dance with the “Tok Mudims” – the men who performed their circumcisions.
Before the dance, the Tok Mudims cast a spell and tied a thread with a ring around the boys’ bodies for protection.
On the second day, the boys bathed in a river and dressed in traditional warrior attire before the Tok Mudims carried them on their shoulders to ancestral graves to pay final respects and receive blessings.
They also encircled the Rumah Adat, the traditional house of the Jahut tribe, three times as a mark of respect before being circumcised.
The families of each boy donated to cover the feast, which featured buffalo and chicken meat shared by the whole village, along with the Tok Mudim and shaman fees.
Although the tradition appears to be similar to the one practiced by members of Malaysia’s Muslim majority, the tribe shaman said the Jahut ritual was non-religious.
“Similar but not the same. Jahut circumcision ritual is full of tradition as practiced by our ancestors,” shaman Busu told BenarNews.
The ritual brings all in the village together regardless of religious beliefs, he said.
“They may have assimilated into other traditions, hold different beliefs but when there’s a celebration, many will return home to celebrate it together,” Busu said.