Episode Details
Back to EpisodesPigs and Pride: Defending Batak Culture at Lake Toba
Description
At the shores of Lake Toba, a cultural festival has become something more than a celebration—it is an act of defiance. As Indonesia promotes halal-friendly tourism to attract visitors, the Batak people, many of them Christian, see their food, dress, and traditions squeezed by a rising tide of religious conservatism. In this episode, we explore how symbols as ordinary as pork have taken on political meaning, why local residents fear the erosion of ancestral identity, and how debates over tourism reveal a deeper struggle over who gets to define Indonesia’s future. The tension at Lake Toba captures a national question: can pluralism survive when culture, religion, and development pull in opposite directions?
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/11/08/world/asia/indonesia-lake-toba-pig-festival.html