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Davelor, Dawera-Daweloor of Indonesia

Davelor, Dawera-Daweloor

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Davelor, Dawera-Daweloor of Indonesia map
Population [2] Language Religion % Christian % Evangl Online NT Jesus Film Progress
1,400 Dawera-Daweloor Christianity 66.00 % 5.00 % Not available Not available 3.1  

Davelor, Dawera-Daweloor of Indonesia

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Introduction / History
The Dawelor people live in the Babar Islands in the eastern part of the country of Indonesia in the South West Pacific near North Australia. The Babar Islands are thought to have been inhabited for 40,000 years, starting with Australoid people, then more recently (from 3000 years ago) with waves of Austronesians mixing in. The Dawelor Islanders were traditional animists and pretty much left alone until about 100 years ago when the Dutch colonial government forced them all to come down out of their cliff-top fortresses, live by the beach, and stop warring with each other. Church officers from the Maluku Protestant Church (/Gereja Protestan Maluku-GPM)/ were dispatched to "civilize" and Christianize the Babar Islanders en masse, build church structures and install priests to conduct religious services. The GPM, the dominant religious institution in the Babar Islands, is 403 years old and is Asia's oldest Protestant denomination. The communities of the Babar Islands are nominally Christian, but there is little evidence of faith. The spiritual lives of Babar Islanders are characterized by a mixture of Christianized surface symbols and rituals layered over their deeper traditional animistic and occultic practices and beliefs.

Where are they located?
Dawelor Island is located in the Babar Islands roughly 160 miles east of East Timor and 300 miles north of Darwin, Australia or 7 degrees 66 minutes south and 129 degrees 40 minutes east. The arid Australian climate has a significant effect on the Babar Islands. While there is plentiful rain from Christmas till June, there is no rain from July till Christmas again. The wind blows almost constantly from the East from April through December, and from the West from January to March. There is a calm season in both November and March.

Babar Island, the archipelago's namesake, at a height of around 700 meters dominates the local horizon. While Babar Island itself is relatively fertile and has abundant water due to its size and height which attracts rain clouds, it is surrounded by five much smaller and lower islands (located roughly at the cardinal directions) that are arid and infertile. Dawelor Island is one of these smaller, desert islands. For several months just before Christmas water becomes so scarce that the people often have to line up and wait at the well for their meager ration, they drink less than a liter each per day and must bath, launder and wash dishes in sea water. Fresh fruit and vegetables are unavailable due to the infertility and aridity, so malnutrition is a problem. Malnutrition makes people more susceptible to contracting illnesses and infections, and less able to recover from them as well.

The villages of Dawelor Island are located near the seashore either on flat sandy areas or among house sized coral boulders, cliffs and outcroppings. Every village has coconut palm trees towering above the thatch roofs providing shade and a constant whispering in the never-ending trade winds. Most houses do not have glass windows and are open to any breeze that might chance by, allowing flies, mosquitoes and dust ample opportunity for entrance.

What are their lives like?
Everyone lives in villages within a few meters of the ocean. Before dawn when the roosters begin crowing and the tiny birds are atwitter most people rise and amble down to the ocean to relieve themselves. Alternatively they walk to the back of the village near the invariable cliffs to relieve themselves, contributing to the risk of cholera spread by the abundant flies. Also at dawn from every household comes the rhythmic swishing of sweeping the dirt yard invariably by some adult female with a long whisk. A deep thumping shakes the earth from various quarters signifying some women using large mortars and pestles to pulverize maize (a kind of white, starchy tasteless corn), their chief staple. After pounding the maize into a coarse meal, they boil and eat it like rice.

Dogs, chickens, pigs and goats all prowl about the sandy streets and yards looking for morsels to eat. Partially or entirely unclad toddlers wander around in unsupervised gangs terrorizing grasshoppers. There are always women at home who start a wood fire in their kitchen hut and boil up some rice or pulverized maize for the day. The smoke of the cook fires seeping through all the thatch roofs rises to form a temporary haze in the still season. Many ladies fry donuts fresh or prepare their day-olds for sale to the kids on their way to school.

Mothers, aunts or older sisters serve up some cold rice or ground corn or a donut to the school aged children after they have washed their faces and put on their red and white school uniforms. At 7 AM a teacher in a tan uniform at the school rings the hand bell and the children line up at attention and then all march into school. Some girls carry a large Tupperware bucket full of donuts for sale at school.

There is no forest on the outlying Babar Islands and gardening is minimal so most of the Dawelor men paddle out a few kilometers to sea in their small dugout canoes to go fishing for small tuna with a line and hook, no rod. There are no streams so the women bundle up their dirty clothes and detergent to pound their wash at the concrete public laundry plazas strategically placed throughout the village. At each plaza one faucet serves all comers.

At 8 AM adult men and women in uniforms of brown, green, tan, grey or blue stroll along the streets on their way to their respective government offices, the men invariably puffing on a cigarette. In the remote villages the only kinds of government work are the different kinds of schools, the three or four village staff and possibly a health clinic. In the municipal capitols there are various kinds of church officials, policemen, military, postal, environmental, agricultural, education and many other kinds of civil servants.

By 11 AM the youngest children are already headed home from school. Oftentimes they go play in the ocean, especially liking to play with dugout canoes which they use as surf boards. Once a week a couple children from each family are sent out to find firewood, which consists of dead branches as thin as their wrists. Hanging by a woven fiber strap that goes across their forehead, a pail-sized woven basket rides on their back ready to carry the firewood.

The men have come back from fishing. Every man fishes and so every family has fish; it is not sold in the village. Everywhere there are mollusk innards, fish, octopus and sea cucumbers hanging out to dry on stick racks. Giant clam shells are filled with seawater in the morning and set out to evaporate into salt for curing the fish. The excess fish is traded for corn to people from the big Babar island.

Around 10 AM you might see old men from every quarter shuffling their way to one particular house. If you passed by that house you would see them sitting around discussing in the indigenous language cases and lawsuits. One younger man stands by holding a bottle of coconut whiskey and a glass to take a drink to each elder who makes a short speech before quaffing back about an ounce's worth.

Around 1 PM the civil servants amble home from work unless they are a teacher. If you pass by some teacher's house in mid-afternoon you might see a group of three or four students getting a paid, private tutorial.

On many mornings can be heard the chug-chug-chug of a diesel engine of a small wooden boat arriving or leaving, ferrying goods and passengers from the municipal capitol to villages on other islands or villages that have no road. The boat weighs anchor 100 meters from shore beyond the pounding surf, and dugout canoes weave their way out through the breakers to unload cement bags, boards, boxes of ceramic floor tile or corrugated metal roofing panels, along with passengers. People take live chicken, pigs and goats and especially dried fish and coconut meat (called "copra"). Kitchen wares, plastic lawn chairs and stereo equipment might be seen being unloaded.

There are no bicycles on the outer Babar islands because the ground is so rocky, with fingers and knife-like ridges of jagged coral sticking up everywhere. Some days people will walk to other villages on their island to visit relatives (such as children boarding in town going to high school) or wait for a ship or sell lunches on passing cargo ships.

By mid-afternoon most of the children are out playing. Swimming, marbles, dolls, complicated games that look like a combination of tag, British bulldog, and ten other games rolled into one, hopscotch, skipping rope, hunting and trapping birds.

At 5 PM there is often some kind of religious service so just before sunset you can usually see men, women or children freshly bathed and wearing their best clothes with their hair combed carrying an Indonesian Bible and prayer book strolling off to some kind of meeting.

The sun slips into the sea and most of the huts grow dark with only one or two very dim oil lanterns since kerosene is expensive. One or two of the more well-off residents, usually a civil servant, will turn on their diesel generator and their brilliantly illuminated house with stereo or TV blaring becomes the magnet for dozens of neighbors to come sit and listen or watch.

What are their beliefs?
The Dawelor people believe first of all that there is a profound connection between all things physical and spiritual. Something done in the physical always has an impact on the spiritual. The other fundamental assumption is solidarity. They must remain united in their activities at all costs. Spending time alone is seen as a symptom of imbalance if not derangement. Doing things individualistically could also have negative spiritual and physical consequences. They think it is very important to be together at the various religious services and rites prescribed by the nominal church. While they do not understand the meaning of the rites they perfunctorily perform, they always complain about those who are absent, believing that the lack of solidarity will have a bad consequence like crop failure, injuries or epidemics. They believe that there are malevolent spirits all around them just waiting to pounce at the slightest provocation. So they have many superstitions for every aspect of life, designed to appease the spirits. They are afraid to go into the forest alone at any time, and especially not at night at which time they believe that bloodthirsty spirits wander about seeking whom they may devour.

What are their needs?
The Dawelor people feel it is impossible for them to develop a decent standard of living. They are a minority in various ways (visibly, linguistically, culturally, religiously, geo-politically, and historically) and they feel they are not allowed to advance and develop as they would like. There are resources and potential at their disposal which they could develop, however. Beyond the need for self-directed development of their islands, what the Dawelor people need most is the comforting, empowering and life-changing presence of the Holy Spirit received as pure gift by faith alone in the life, death and resurrection of Jesus. While the Bible in Indonesian is available, they neither understand Indonesian well enough nor feel enough positive attachment to it.

Prayer Points
* Pray for a spiritual awakening.
* Pray that the Dawelor people be truly reconciled to God and indwelt by Him by faith and grace alone.
* Pray for a Holy Spirit directed prayer movement for revival.
* Pray for Dawelor Island evangelists to rise in the power of the Spirit to preach repentance and reconciliation to God.
* Pray specifically against the stronghold of religious pride so the Dawelor people will listen to the pure message of reconciliation to God and abundant life by the power of the indwelling spirit by grace alone.
* Pray for prophets, apostles and evangelists (Eph.4:11) to be filled with the Holy Spirit and rise up and confront and cast out demons, cast down and take into captivity every thought and principality opposed to God.
* Pray for miraculous healings and other signs and wonders that confirm the truth of God's message of reconciliation to Him and abundant life in His loving presence.
* Pray for the exposure of the works of darkness and the deceiving spirits that keep people in bondage.
* Pray for godly sorrow and true repentance for sensual, escapist, selfish and cruel behavior; specifically unfaithfulness, promiscuity, unwanted pregnancies and herbally-induced abortions, drunkenness, brawling, domestic violence
* Pray for translation of the Bible to begin in this people group's primary language.
* Pray for the availability of the Jesus Film in the primary language of this people.
* Pray for Gospel messages to become available in audio format for this people group.

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Country: Indonesia
Continent: Asia
Region: Southeast Asia
Persecution Rank:45 (Only top 50 ranked, 1 = highest persecution ranking)
10/40 Window: Yes
Total Provinces on file:1
Location in Country:South Maluku, Dawelor Island, Wiratan, Watuwei and Nurnyaman; Dawera Island, Welora, Letmasa and Ilmarang northeast of Babar Island
(Source: Ethnologue 2010)
   
 
Maps
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Country Map:Political map
Ethnolinguistic Map:University of Texas or other map
Linguistic Map:Ethnologue language map
 
  Peoples [3]
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People Name in Country: Davelor, Dawera-Daweloor
People Name General: Davelor
Alternate People Names:
Dawera-Daweloor
ROP3 Code: 102478
Joshua Project People ID: 11513
Indigenous: Yes
Population in Country: 1,400
Population all Countries: 1,400
Least-Reached: No
   
 
Affinity Bloc: Malay Peoples
People Cluster: Maluku-Southern
People Name General: Davelor
Ethnic Code: MSY44v
Ethnic Relationships: Affinity Bloc -> People Cluster -> Peoples Ethnicity Tree
   
 
Language
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Primary Language: Dawera-Daweloor (1,400 Speakers)
Language Code (ISO): ddw    Ethnologue Listing
Total Languages: 1
   
 
Religion [4]
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Primary Religion: Christianity
Religion Sub-division:Protestant
Major Religions:
Buddhism0.00 % 
Christianity66.00 %(Evangelical: 5.00 %)
Ethnic Religions34.00 % 
Hinduism0.00 % 
Islam0.00 % 
Non-Religious0.00 % 
Other / Small0.00 % 
Unknown0.00 % 
Christianity Segments:
Anglican0.00 %
Independent10.00 %
Protestant80.00 %
Orthodox0.00 %
Other Christian0.00 %
Roman Catholic10.00 %
 
(Evangelicals distributed across Christianity segments)
   
 
Progress Indicators [5]
Progress Scale[6] 3.1   Evangelicals >2% but <=5%
Least-Reached: No
GSEC Status:Level 6   Greater than or equal to 10% Evangelical
 
 
Bible Translation Status
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Bible Portions: Help start a Bible Translation
New Testament: None Reported
Complete Bible: None Reported
 
 
Ministry Resources [7]
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None Reported
 
 
Ministry Activity
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Davelor, Dawera-Daweloor of Indonesia

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    Maluku-Southern     Southeast Asia    
     
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      Davelor Indonesia    
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            Davelor, Dawera-Daweloor of Indonesia          
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Direct link:  http://www.joshuaproject.net/people-profile.php?peo3=11513&rog3=ID