The Cocos Malays possess a specifically cultural practice of child adoption. The Malay term for "anak angkat". A literal but loose translation would be 'taken up child', but it is usually translated as "adopted child". The parents don't sign papers and Australian law doesn't recognise it. The adopting parents' role can range from something akin to what Westerners would call a 'god-parent' (largely symbolic parenthood); to a kind of shared parenting (in which the child can go back and forth from the biological to adopted parents); and, at the other extreme, an intensive role in raising a child.
Everyone we spoke with seemed to have a slightly different take on Cocos adoption in general. So we have focused on actual stories. But often even what constituted the facts of these stories are inconsistent (e.g. who requested the adoption). It's probable that Cocos Malays themselves might find my account inaccurate.
A childless couple receives the 'special gift'
I ran into one of my friends, Rahman. He and his wife, Sinti, have been married for several years. They have been trying, without success, to conceive a child. He told me that they had adopted a child called Rubiya from Mak & Pak Nabila. Now, as is the Cocos Malay custom (see my blog on teknonymy) Rahman and Sinti are known as Mr & Mrs Rubiya [Pak & Mak Rubiya]. They have Rubiya for five days/week; and Pak & Mak Nabila have Rubiya for two.
A few days later I bumped into Mak & Pak Nabila as they were walking their procreative daughter, Rubiya, in her pram as their first daughter Nabila was riding alongside. I asked them about the adoption. They are both fluent English speakers and explained to me in no uncertain terms that there is no way that they would just give away their daughter. They felt very sorry for Rahman and Sinti not being able to conceive their own child. It would be inconsiderate to let Rahman and Sinti be without when they were already blessed with children. And, at the same time, they love both their daughters equally--it would be inconceivable for them to just give one away and never see her again. Because their houses are only 3 minutes walk away, they are constantly in contact. So I guess you could say that, viewed from the Cocos Malay perspective, giving Nabila to Rahman and Sinti was the 'natural solution' "We're all family anyway" But why did Mak & Pak Nabila, and not someone else on Home Island, give their child? Put simply, Mak Nabila and Sinti are related. First, they are 'sisters', but not in a sense that is usually recognised in the West. They both suckled from the same woman, their "mak netek" or "ibu susu". I guess because Mak Nabila and Sinti are so close. Second, as Sinti explained to my wife, both Mak and Pak Nabila are her cousins from her mother and father's side essentially, her adopted child is thus a close family member, that they are all related and part of an extended family. I think she said something like "we're all family anyway".
The biological parent has the right to put on Nikah (religious aspect of wedding) not the adopted parent. Even if the biological father has died, it has to be another biological male who marries Maureen lamented that she couldn't put on the wedding for her adopted child. Nek Arena explained that, according to tradition, the "jemput makan" or "party" is also at the biological father's house. However, the adopting father "tetap ada di samping". (by contrast, when Allen's adopted son got married, it was at Allen's house, and Nek Fifi ada di samping--but maybe this only reinforces the point because in the case it was a formalised arrangement).
The practice is fluid. The kind of adoption I'm interested is not once-and-for-all. For example in one instance, an infertile couple began adopting a chid through weekly visits. They took their teknonym from the chid. However, the mother did conceive. They began to scale back the visits and the teknonym began not to be applied any longer.
Mak Laila's second daughter had a blood problem--low in white cells?. So diambe anak angkat by the next door neighbour Nek Fifi. [Eventually Mak Laila and Nek Fifi had an affair.] Nek Fifi will be responsible for the child financially, but the child also lives with Nek Fifi full time.
Becoming adopted parents
When parents give birth to their first child (call her Ayesha) in Cocos Malay society they, take the child's name. The dad becomes Pak Ayesha and the Mum, Mak Ayesha. I have written about this practice of teknonymy, as anthropologists call it, in another blog.
What I didn't realise when I wrote that blog is that you can get a teknonym even if you are unmarried! A single woman Monika spoke to adopted her neighbour's child and took a teknonym. The biological mother's teknonym came from her first child. Asi got her teknonym from the second child.
Additionally, Asi's fiancé got his teknoym from this second child, even though the two of them are not married.
Examples of adopting
- Nek Sofia was the youngest biological child in her large family. She was adopted by her Mak and Pak Susu. They had a son but hadn't had a daughter. They were neighbours. The her Mak & Pak Susu had two more kids after they adopted her. She only remembers two things clearly. She remembered that by the age of 6 or 7 she wanted to go to sleep with her biological family. At the age of 10 or 11 she said that she would live back with her biological family. She still would visit her adopted family for meals. These day she visits Geraldton, where her adopted parents live. Her adopted brother sends her sate from Katanning; and her daughter sends sate from . The fish she sends are fish from the inside (lagoon fish) not outside fish (like tuna, sailfish etc.)
- Emira (Emi): Arena told me that Nek Fazrih gave Emirah to her adik younger cousin (or perhaps younger sister) Mak Emi. In this case there was what is regarded as a close family relationship between the giver and receiver.
- Mak Zizi (Grace) : Someone gave their fifth child to Grace. There was a connection between Grace and the child's biological mother. Grace requested the baby (kalo anak itu lahir saya minta anak itu).
- Faizie: Lala is engaged to Azra. they've been a couple for 8 years. Mak Faizie is Lala's mother's niece [making them cousins]. Mak Faizie is Faizie's biological model. The situation in the family was 'difficult' [perhaps because Pak Faizie was from Malaysia?]. Faizie became Lala her anak angkat because he called her "mak" from the age of two when he started sleeping at her house sleeping. She's had the boy, Faizie, since he was 4 years old. That was when Faizie's father, Elzan, passed away last year. At that point, Faizie started calling Lala's fiance, Azra, Pak. However, the biological still goes by the name of Mak Faizie; which runs against the common practice of the adopting parent taking the child's name. Lala and Azra plan to Perth after they get married. Faizie will not go with them, because now his Dad has died, Faizie, at the age of 5 years notwithstanding, has become his mother's wakil (or formal representative). [This is the first case I've heard of in which an unmarried woman became a Mak Angkat].
- Nek Salbiah explained that her first child died. The baby girl was born with a kind of 'cut' in the head. Her husband was cutting wood, someone warned him, "don't cut wood your wive's pregnant--it's bad luck"--but the fact that this man voiced this warning was the bad luck. Then they had two sons--Wedding and Wezen. Then Nek Farid, Nek Salbiah's younger sister, had two boys and three girls. The couple wanted a daughter; so they adopted the three girls. Nek Salbiah helped look after the three girls. Nek Salbiah said that Nek Farid had requested. Because they didn't have a daughter, she and her husband were very happy to look after the girls. The girls called the "mak" and "pak" and visited them on Hari Raya. So Nek Salbiah explained that all her anak angkat. Siang malam makan di sini sejak bayi.
- After the interview finished, Mak Alfin, Nek Salbiah's daughter-in-law said that it is not true that the girls called the "mak" or "pak", it was only "wak"; and maybe it was the first child who could be considered an anak-angkat, but not the other two. Nevertheless, she said, her mother-in-law does love all three girls, because they bathed them, wiped their bums, fed them, cooked for them. They really did take care of them, but the girls don't really treat them like adopted parents; they always go back to their mothers. Their mother never told them to call Nek Salbiah "mak". And when the girls got married, the tarob was at Nek Farid's not at the adopted parents.
- Mak Alfin says that the girl who Nek Fifi has adopted calls her Mak but she doesn't want to acknowledge this. If you acknowledge someone, in her opinion, you are responsible for the child, you will be . She gives her selawat and food because the child lacks care. It's as if she wants to be adopted.
- Nek Sumila said that he had an Indonesian adopted parents. The couple were on Home Island, apparently as part of a religious congregation or gathering. It wasn't clear if Nek Sumila was still be in contact with them
From the child's perspective
The parents do not seem to push the adoption too hard. It seems that the kids have big say. Children kids often decide which of their parents' house' they will sleep. Often it seems the kids decided 'seenak-enaknya' (just as it suits them).
I'm not sure what this all looks like from the child's perspective. Most people seem to agree that they tend to 'milk' it. When they are young they get typically get spoiled with food and drink, special treats. As they get older, if they get in trouble with one set of parents, they go and stay with the other parents.
From the Imam's perspective
I asked Nek Arena, a religious specialist (imam) about this. His opinion was different to other I came across. H:
Allah Ta'ala supaya Azrin dan Munirah bleh mempunyai anak. Ikut, mengikut, supaya Azrin boleh mempunyai anak.
In his opinion, an adopted child, according to Islam, may not inherit from the adopted parents; or at least not inherit anything if there is an 'actual child'
Fluidity of adoption
The practice is fluid. The kind of adoption I'm interested is not once-and-for-all. For example in one instance, an infertile couple began adopting a chid through weekly visits. They took their teknonym from the chid. However, the mother did conceive. They began to scale back the visits and the teknonym began not to be applied any longer.
What makes a couple want to give the 'special gift'
On Home Island, Nek Arena told me of a case in which a young boy was continually unwell. It was thought that something between the kids and the biological parents, something unseen ('alus') was affecting the child. The biological parents decided that he would be adopted.Mak Laila's second daughter had a blood problem--low in white cells?. So diambe anak angkat by the next door neighbour Nek Fifi. [Eventually Mak Laila and Nek Fifi had an affair.] Nek Fifi will be responsible for the child financially, but the child also lives with Nek Fifi full time.
What makes a couple want to receive the 'special gift'
By pull factors, I mean what makes a couple want to adopt a child:
- Not having a child.
- Not having a child of a specific gender.
- Replace a child who had passed away (childbirth etc)
- The people who receive the child may be The childless married couple
- To be blessed eventually with a biological child, the adopted child helps bring about 'good luck' to the household and eventual fertility, or to the woman if she is 'single'
- To help a family member, a neighbour or a friend in difficult need of babysitting, a single mother, a young mother with heavy responsibility either ritual or employment, mother with many children -- doing a good deed and getting the love of a child in return who calls you 'mak' or 'pak' which is an honorific given to you whether or not you are single/married in the case of an anak angkat or adopted child.
Challenges
All this suggests to me that it is very difficult to understand if one starts by assuming a biological family as a natural unit. I don't think Cocos Malays share this assumption. Instead, the family is much more fluid. shouldn't go too far with this. When speaking with me English, Cocos Malays often refer to the biological parents as actual parents. In other words English term 'adopted child' is sometimes used. To distinguish what I would, awkwardly and ambiguously call the 'biological child, the English term "actual child" is also frequently used. In Cocos Malay, the term 'anak betol' (an actual child) explained as 'anak dari kandong sendiri' or 'anak yang dilahirkan dari kandongannya sendiri' seem to be common .- Pak Emi (policeman brother of Haji Adam) adopted Emi from Nek Sari
- Nek Fifi (Haji Zaitol) had all boys but were looking for a girl Norain from (Mimi) Mak Pak Lelah (Suranah and Asman)
- Mak Arena from Balong Kokos was an anak angkat
- Saufie
- Jane Collin is adopted. Madie Sigma (guy in Parth) is her biological brother. This adoption was formalised; she took [her grandfather's ?] name.
- Ashari Allen (who got married after we were in the pink house) his biological dad is nek fifi. But he was raised by Pak Allen Medis (Nek Awlia; Pak Ashari--pak ashari is nek fifi's nephew). Maybe I could talk to Ashari???
Adoption in Banyuwangi, East Java
What makes biological parents want to make the special gift of a child? In Banyuwangi Indonesia, I heard of cases where the newborn baby is too much for the biological parents. The parents already had too many children, or particularly, gave birth to twins. I have also heard of cases in which the biological parents were not married. For instance, an unmarried woman gave birth to a boy. The boy was taken up by the unmarried woman's father, who, in a sense, adopted his grandson. Another reason is that one or both parents might have died. In other words, the situation made it more difficult to raise the child. Most generally, it seems, in my fieldwork location, there was a sense of 'kasihan'--a sense of pity towards couples who do not have a child--and a desire to help out.
In Banyuwangi it is common for a married couple who already have at least one biological child to give a baby to a childless married couple. Sometimes the married couple is not childless. They may only have daughters and thus they might be given a son. The practice is usually informal; there are no adoption papers etc. In one case I knew of, there was some misgiving over inheritance--the adopted child had inherited from his adopted parents. This was contrary to the rules, at least as local people understood them, of Islamic inheritance.
Adoption in Australia'Western' style adoption
Westerners would be familiar with adoption in a number of circumstance. For example, if a young child's parent's die, if a child is 'born out of wedlock'*, if the biological parents are deemed legally unfit to raise a child. that child may be adopted. Since the 1970s, gay and lesbian parents have turned to adoption to build families.
In Western conceptions of self, possession, and giving; giving is a way of transferring ownership from one individual to another. To take it to an extreme, in the West, an individual is a completely separate unit, extricable from his or her social context. What the individual owns is entirely this individual's business; no one else has say. When this individual gives a gift; the gift becomes the possession of another individual. The giver has no special claim or say over it anymore, This becomes complicated in cases of adoption though...
*A child is said to be 'born out of wedlock' if the child's biological mother is unmarried or she is married, but the biological father is not thought to the woman's husband. The phrase is uncommon these days, but even up to the 1960s it was thought to be a big problem.
No comments:
Post a Comment