PENDET DANCE
Pendet is the presentation of an offering in
theform of a ritual dance. Unlike the exhibition dances that demand
arduous training, Pendet may be danced by everyone: male and female
pemangkus, women and girls of the village. It is taught simply by
imitation and is seldom practiced in the banjars. Younger girls
follow the movements of the elder women who recognize their
responsibility in setting a good example. Proficiency comes with
age, and often, t is the grandmothers who possess the most Man of
the grouli. As a religious daqce, Pendet is usually performed during
temple ceremonies.
All dancers carry in their right hand a small offering of incense,
cakes, water vessels, or flower formations set in palm leaf With
these they dance from shrine to shrine within the temple. Pendet,
thus, may be performed as a serial and continue intermittently
throughoin,the day and late into the night during temple feasts.
In 1968, a huge religious procession in Tabanan produced many
versions of Pendet. One was danced by a member of the household, who
presented the family’s offerings in a slow Pendet before the
approaching wave of thousands of people. In larger villages, a
selected group of young girls, bare-shouldered and formally dressed
in wraps of gold cloth, carried silver bowls of flowers as they
danced a more elaborate Pendet, choreographed in interweaving rows
and files (see page 103). When the procession settled before a small
temple, old women dressed in ordinary clothes began to dance still
another form of Pendet. They carried no offerings but moved
feverishly as if possessed by the music.
Recently, Pendet was introduced to open the Legong. Here, the young
girls are accomplished members of a dance troupe, and their
movements are coordinated and exact. Toward the finish of the dance,
the girls make praying gestures and throw flowers to the audience-a
welcome and blessing to the public.
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