Tiger Airways, this low-cost offspring of Singapore Airlines
turned nine in September and had promotions that led Simon to make an „impulse
purchase“. For a weekend trip, he saw a super offer to go to Yogyakarta
and just purchased two tickets for him and his travel companion Ana.
Yogyakarta? Never heard of
it?
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A great city has to have an international airport terminal... |
Well, Yogyakarta is much smaller than the Indonesian capital and monster-city of Jakarta
but it is also located on Java, the world’s most populous island and one of the
most densely populated places in the world (less than 10% of Indonesia’s
surface but more than 60% of its population). Yogya (as it is called) is
supposedly the “soul of Java” but more importantly, it has two historic sites
in its vicinity: The temples and world heritage sites of Borobudur
and Prambanan.
To explain this, we need to go a bit into the turbulent
history of what is today Indonesia.
Will keep it short in order not to bore the reader but it is quite interesting
anyhow. As Indonesia’s name
suggest, the region of thousand islands was strongly influenced by India and trade
relations with the subcontinent brought Buddhism as well as Hinduism to the
region as early as in the 4th century. (Along these trade routes,
Islam would spread later and replace Buddhism and Hinduism by the 16th
century). The kingdoms of Java were very religious and since both religions
were equally spread, the temples of Borobudur with 504 Buddha statues and
Prambanan, the largest Hindu temple complex in Southeast
Asia have been built roughly at the same time. (For further
reading: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Indonesia)
To make the most of their weekend, Ana and Simon spent
Friday night in the town of Borobudur
in a lovely colonial hotel. As Borobudur is Indonesia’s
single most visited tourist attraction, they decided to get up at 4:00 AM to
see the sunrise at 5:15 at the temple site and thus avoid all the tourists that
would leave early in the morning in tour buses from Yogyakarta.
It was quite impressive at the early hour, with the mist lifting in the valley
and hundreds of Buddha statues as well as countless stupas and stone carvings
giving quite a different view to Western tourists. Just when the first buses
arrived, they had seen most of the temple and could enjoy a good breakfast
buffet before going back to Yogyakarta.
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First view of Borodbudur from the park entrance |
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After sunrise from the top of the temple complex |
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So peaceful |
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A lot of rebuilding needs to be done |
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One of the small temple areas near Prambanan |
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These little temples all aligned behind the larger one |
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Find the tourists |
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And obviously, the surroundings are very green and tropical |
The major temple complex is a definite highlight. The Hindu
“trinity” – the Trimūrti – is expressed with three temples that are dedicated
to the gods Brahma (the creator), Vishnu (the preserver) and Shiva (the
destroyer). Around them there were more than 230 little temples of which only a
few have been reconstructed. Ana and Simon shared a guide with a French tourist
and he had some great stories to tell. The level of detail on the stone work
was very impressive and really putting churches/cathedrals in Europe into
perspective. At the end, they easily spent more than 2 hours at the complex. This way, they could also see the sun setting behind the temples.
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First impression of Prambanan |
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The main building for Vishnu |
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Many stone carvings, even more detailed than in Borobudur |
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Ganesha cannot be missed |
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Stunning lights |
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Ana had to touch many carvings for good luck and wealth (hope it works!) |
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The complex in the beautiful setting of the park |
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The sun is setting |
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Very happy with the light effects |
One
special feature of the Prambanan temple is that it acts as the background for
an old and very colorful ballet – the Ramayana. This is a Hindu epic story - the
Ramayana ballet is performed with the most amazing costumes, colors and
make-ups by a sheer mass of 200 performing artists. After a good Indonesian dinner against the background of the lit Prambanan temple, the performance started at 7:30 PM. Although it also started to
rain quite heavily in the middle of the show (and it was open air), it turned
out to be a great spectacle and thus a Grande Finale of a long day.
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The background for Ana and Simon's dinner |
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The costumes, postures and make-up were beautiful |
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The show ended with parts of the stage set on fire (almost as in Hollywood) |
Before heading back to Singapore,
Ana and Simon also checked the Yogyakarta city
center. Yogya is supposedly much less chaotic than other Indonesian cities and
quite scenic.
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The main draw of downtown Yogyakarta - the Kraton Palace |
Well,
everything is relative and they just realized that Indonesian temples, beaches
and landscape are more beautiful.
Waouh! That looks so so beautiful!
ReplyDeletePS: I found out the buddha ;)
Beautiful photos, loved the matching sarongs ;-)
ReplyDeletei like your "skirts"! simon, you should wear that more often! ;o) thanks for all your interesting stories and pics - enjoy the following months! kind regards from wiesbaden... .o)
ReplyDelete