Sulphur miners risk their lives on an active volcano. How do they do it?
Ciaran Harman
Agus Alam turned from watching me struggle
up towards him, and looked down the mountainside beside the steep path
to the squares of rice fields far below. Beyond him, the stubby
grey-treed slope, folding and unfolding like a fan, was cut with a path
like a fault-line. The first miners were beginning the first descent of
the day down it from the smoky crater high above. Slung across their
backs were woven baskets filled to the brim with brilliant yellow ore.
Sulphur.
In Kawah Ijen (One Crater), far eastern
East Java, sulphur ore is mined by hand from an active volcanic crater.
On a break from my studies in Yogyakarta in April, I took the night bus
heading out that way with vague intentions of photojournalism and
trying to understand what a life of hard physical labour would be like.
I came back knowing only that I would probably never be able to
understand the lives the people I saw, and that to write about them here as though I did would be a flat-out lie.
Java's buckled spine of volcanoes, from
Krakatau off the west coast to Gunung Merapi and Kawah Ijen in the far
east, form part of the 'ring of fire' that surrounds the Pacific Ocean.
Earlier, as my motorcycle taxi buzzed towards the volcano and up its
slopes, I had seen the nearby peaks by the vast triangles of stars they
blotted out in the pre-dawn sky. Now the sun was feeling its way across
the slopes, slowly unfolding them to me, yet leaving so much hidden.
I had caught up with Agus as I began up the
path that led from the end of the road and the weigh station where the
transport truck was parked. It was 3km up to the crater rim. Short and
simple hair, a dirty tee shirt, shorts and thongs; he was in his
twenties, about my age or younger, and walked slowly, unwillingly. It
was his first day as a sulphur miner.
Agus Alam quietly answered my questions as
we ascended. He said he had come to work as a miner for the same
reasons his father had many years before. They were poor and owned no
land. Agus told me how every day his father left their home well before
dawn to walk almost 20km from their village to the crater. Sometimes he
stayed away for a couple of weeks and lived on the mountain in a shack
shared with other miners. Agus would only ever see his father in
daylight on the days he was too sick or tired to work.
Ailments
His father, I imagined, suffered from many
of the ailments I was told are common to those who work in the sulphur
clouds. Bad eyes, sore lungs, teeth corroded from the acid fumes. Agus
must have known that he too would develop the calluses on his shoulders
where up to 100kg of sulphur was balanced for three descents from the
crater every day. He said he hoped not to work there long. You could
earn a fair bit of money, especially if you were strong. The miners
were paid for the weight they carried: about Rp200 (less than 5 cents)
a kilo. He would save enough, perhaps, to buy a motorbike and cart
around the throngs of tourists that come to see the crater and snap
pictures of themselves and a miner in the dry season. But Agus carried
his fear as a burden up the mountain, just as later he would carry
those yellow rocks down, the load measured with every step.
We came to a station on the path where the
sulphur is weighed and the miners' shacks stand that Agus had told me
about. In one shack, before my eyes became used to the gloom, it seemed
as though stars surrounded me. I remembered for a moment the stars that
had been blotted out from the night sky by the mountains. These
pinpoints of light, however, turned out to be a thousand holes in the
walls and roof. I wondered what the miners did when it rained. They
would never be able to avoid a drip from the ceiling or a draught from
the walls. The black soot coating everything and the pile of wood in
the corner bore testament to the way they staved off the cold and
clogged their lungs with smoke at the same time.
Up the path the vegetation began to thin
out. There was less lush green. The trees were getting greyer and the
undergrowth withered to a scrubby, stunted tangle. And then, as I
turned a corner in the path, just by where an old miner had stopped to
adjust his load of brilliant yellow rocks, I was there. It was as
though the peak of the mountain had been struck and shattered. The
grey, gaping wound was filled with a grey, steaming lake. The crater
rim, jagged like torn paper, encircled it. I could smell the sulphur; I
could see it too. Yellow steam roared out of vents in the rock below
me. It twisted upward and was carried east by the morning breeze. To
the west, up an invisible path through the exploded landscape, the
miners ascended, visible only by the way their burdens flared against
the dead landscape. It was like Jacob's Ladder in reverse. But these
were men, not angels or devils.
Gas would drift over me and I would be reduced to a
hacking, coughing mess between the grey rocks.
My descent into this pit was graceless. The
miners, balancing the baskets of ore on their shoulders, knew where to
place their sandaled feet. They heaved their way up the occasionally
vertical route to the rim. I clambered over boulders and slid across
sections of gravelly stones, thankful I had my steel-capped work-boots
on. The path seemed to go on forever. The rim thrust up above me like a
wall. I crossed a stream of hot water where a miner washed the yellow
from his hands and then I was at the mine face.
The sulphur vents were far above me.
Spilling down from them was a wall of congealed sulphur ore, that
brilliant, noxious yellow. Pipes had been built to capture some of the
gas and carry it down the slope and let it sweep back up, aiding the
process of congealment. The miners would climb up by the pipes and
break off the ore, their eyes and lungs stinging from the fumes. By the
time I got there though, most of the miners had gone. Just a few old
men were left, making artificial sulphur stalactites for tourists by
getting the sulphur to congeal on twigs and leaves. I would have to go
soon, they said. The wind was about to change and blow the gas
westward, over the path to the rim. I watched the rushing steam and the
dead lake for a while and then climbed back up the crater wall.
Occasionally the gas would drift over me and I would be reduced to a
hacking, coughing mess between the grey rocks.
I can never place my feet in their sandals
and walk that ruptured path to the rim. I can't tell you what it is
like to wonder if one more rock will feed your family or break your
back. All I can do is tell you of the shadows of desperate men I saw up
there. Some old, trapped in a job that will destroy their health and
perhaps ultimately kill them, but that provides for their families, as
long as they keep carrying ore. Some young, with their eyes constantly
turned down the slopes, working at the mine only so that, one day, they
will not have to any more.
Ciaran Harman (ciaran69@hotmail.com) is a student at the University of Western Australia in Perth. He was participating in the Acicis Study Indonesia Program in Yogyakarta.
Inside Indonesia 64: Oct-Dec 2000
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