MOTHER’S DAY WITH AN INSPIRATIONAL MINANGKABAU WOMAN / 27.03.22

MOTHER’S DAY WITH AN INSPIRATIONAL MINANGKABAU WOMAN

Saraz Sapio Credit: Irvan Pratama Putra

Herstory presents a unique free online event for Mother’s Day. If you missed the live event you can watch the video on Herstory’s YouTube channel now.

Join us for a fascinating conversation with Saraz Sapio, an inspirational and independent young woman from the  Minangkabau tribe in Sumatra, Indonesia.

The Minangkabau are the largest matrilineal society in the world with a population of 8 million people. It’s the opposite of the patriarchy, where inheritance is passed from mother to daughter. As Saraz says, she believes Minang women ‘should run the world like Beyoncé.’

Saraz is a successful entrepreneur and fashion designer for kids clothing line @balikind_ . Every week she volunteers with the youth development NGO @stellaschild , teaching English to underprivileged kids in Canggu. She’s been everywhere before deciding to make Bali her home, thriving and enjoying her best life!

Saraz comes from a unique, feminist culture that offers much wisdom and insight to the West. The Minang are matrilineal and Muslim. Saraz says this is contradictory but that’s the beauty of it. She has a beautiful, progressive faith that inspires and empowers her to be kind and realise her potential.

Anthropologist Peggy Reeves Sanday discovered that the Minang society is founded on the coexistence of matrilineal custom and a nature-based philosophy called adat. She says the key to Minangkabau matriarchy is found in the ever-present adat idea expressed in the proverb ‘“growth in nature must be a teacher.” One must nurture growth in humans, animals, and plants so that society will be strong,’ people told her.

Credit: Frank Beyer

The Minang choose to focus on the nurturing elements of nature as opposed to predator vs prey dynamics. ‘While we in the West glorify male dominance and competition, the Minangkabau glorify their mythical Queen Mother and cooperation,’ said Dr. Sanday. In the village social relations women are likened to ‘the center where the fish net meets.’

Credit: Saraz Sapio

She remains optimistic about the strength of the culture and this strength lies in its innate flexibility to adapt to a changing world; “Had the Minangkabau chosen to fight rather than to accommodate the numerous influences that impinged on their world over the centuries, had they chosen to assert cultural purity, no doubt their ‘adat’ would have long ago succumbed. The moral of the Minangkabau story is that accommodating differences can preserve a world.” 

If you missed the event you can watch the video on Herstory’s YouTube channel now: