RADAR TULUNGAGUNG – Papua creation myths continue to draw attention as cultural researchers and historians revisit indigenous oral traditions from eastern Indonesia. Stories from the Asmat, Dani, Marind-Anim, and Ngalum communities describe how ancient Papuan societies understood the origins of humanity, nature, and spiritual life long before modern religions reached the region.
Papua stands among the world’s most culturally diverse regions. Hundreds of ethnic groups live across the island and speak hundreds of local languages, many of which survive through oral storytelling traditions. Researchers say these myths preserve important cultural values and reflect deep relationships between people, mountains, rivers, forests, and ancestral spirits.
Interest in Papuan mythology has also grown as academics and indigenous communities push for stronger cultural preservation efforts. Many traditional stories now face the risk of disappearing because younger generations rarely document them in written form.
Asmat Myth Connects Humanity to Wood and Music
The Asmat people, who live along the southern coastal region of Papua, remain famous for their wood-carving traditions. Their mythology directly connects those artistic practices to the creation of humankind.
According to Asmat oral tradition, a spiritual figure named Fumeripits traveled across rivers before a giant crocodile or large fish attacked him. After surviving the encounter, he reached a coastal area where supernatural beings helped heal his wounds.
Fumeripits later built a traditional longhouse called a Jew and spent his time carving wooden statues shaped like humans. Although the carvings looked complete, they could not move or speak.
The story says Fumeripits then created a drum similar to the traditional tifa instrument. When he played the drum and danced, the wooden figures came alive and became the ancestors of the Asmat people.
Cultural experts often link this mythology to the Asmat community’s strong connection with forests, trees, and carving traditions that still survive today in South Papua.
Dani and Hubula Stories Describe Ancestors Emerging From Caves
In the central highlands of Papua, several oral traditions among the Dani or Hubula people describe humanity emerging from caves or subterranean worlds.
The Dani people mainly inhabit the Baliem Valley and surrounding mountainous regions in Papua Highlands. While “Dani” became the more widely known external term, many local communities identify themselves as Hubula.
One traditional narrative states that a man named Pumpa and a woman called Nali-Nali emerged from a cave sometimes identified in local stories as Kali Huam or Kontilola Cave. According to the oral tradition, the pair carried important knowledge, including fire-making techniques, along with crops and livestock before establishing early human settlements in the Baliem Valley.
Other versions of Dani mythology mention ancestors emerging from lakes or different sacred locations around Jayawijaya.
Some stories also contain symbolic explanations about mortality. In one narrative, a bird and a snake competed to determine humanity’s fate. The tradition states that humans would have become immortal if the snake had won, but death became part of human existence after the bird emerged victorious.
The Dani people are also widely known for traditional honai houses, highland agricultural culture, and stone-burning cooking traditions. Historical records additionally document the former existence of Iki Palek, a finger-cutting mourning ritual that has largely disappeared in modern times.
Marind-Anim and Ngalum Beliefs Reflect Spiritual Connections to Nature
In southern Papua, the Marind-Anim people preserve spiritual traditions involving ancestral entities known as Dema. According to several traditional accounts, a supreme creator figure called Sam Anem created the universe before spiritual beings were assigned responsibility over elements of nature such as forests, sunlight, land, and the sky.
Different versions of Marind mythology describe ancestral figures including Geb, Sami, and other Dema entities as the origins of clan groups within Marind society.
Historical studies also note that some Marind communities practiced headhunting rituals during the pre-colonial era before Dutch colonial authorities and Catholic missionaries suppressed the practice in the early 20th century.
Meanwhile, among the Ngalum people in Pegunungan Bintang, Mount Mandala is regarded in oral tradition as a sacred location connected to the beginning of creation. The mythology states that a supreme being known as Atangki created the earth, water, plants, animals, and the first human pair in the region.
The stories also explain the origins of major clan lineages in parts of Pegunungan Bintang through the descendants of those ancestral figures.
Anthropologists say many Papuan myths remain difficult to document because the traditions are primarily oral and differ between communities. Researchers have also warned that modernization and language loss could threaten the survival of indigenous storytelling traditions across Papua.
Cultural observers increasingly argue that Papua’s indigenous heritage deserves broader preservation efforts alongside international attention on the region’s natural resources.

