Anne Samat
Puteri 3 (Ulek Mayang Series)
Anne Samat’s Puteri 3 references Ulek Mayang, a classical Malay dance, performed in a ritualistic pre-Islamic context. It is based on the myth of a princess from the sea who steals the soul of a fisherman she falls in love with, leaving his body lifeless. A battle ensues for the soul of the fisherman, between a shaman (bomoh) trying to bring back the spirit into the earthly flesh and the princess aided by five of her sisters. The undecided struggle only ends when the more senior seventh sister intervenes and restores the cosmic balance and order of things disturbed by love. She thus separates the sea worlds from the earthly ones, allowing the spirit of the fisherman to leave the depths of the ocean and the thralls of love and to return to his mortal body. As a sign of gratitude towards the elder princess, the fisherman’s community offers coloured rice to the sea in an elaborate ceremony of which Ulek Mayang was a part of. This practice-turned-tradition continued until very recently when it was threatened by the rising Islamization movement that has opposed many other cultural forms arising from a syncretic Malay tradition.