Journal Screenshot

International Journal of Academic Research in Business and Social Sciences

Open Access Journal

ISSN: 2222-6990

The Use of Plants in Traditional Medicine of The Melanau Community in Malaysia

Salmah Omar, Malisah Latip

http://dx.doi.org/10.6007/IJARBSS/v12-i5/13028

Open access

Traditional and modern medicine have the same goal of curing diseases and alleviating the suffering experienced by patients in their own concepts and way. Like other traditional communities, the Melanau community also relies on traditional medicine to overcome health-related problems. The entry of elements of modern medicine into the Melanau society does not entirely affect their knowledge and trust in the traditional medical system. This situation occurs because the traditional system is still relevant. It is believed that its ability to heal and cure a disease is incompatible with modern medicine and treatment. The focus of this study was to investigate the use of plants in the traditional medicine of the Melanau community in Sarawak. Primary data was obtained as a result of field studies and library research. Field studies involved the method of interviews with the primary informants, shamans and midwives, and observations of the plants used by them. The information obtained includes how they gain knowledge about the use of plants, the types of plants used, how the plants are used, when they are used, what purpose they are used, and their effects on patients. In general, medicinal plants among the Melanau community have two functions, the first to cure the disease and the second to prevent the disease from developing infections. This study shows that the use of plants in traditional medicine among the Melanau community continues to develop and is practiced until this day. This is because the Melanau community is surrounded by a natural environment that supplies plants in their daily lives. Plants can be found on the banks of rivers, swamps, and forests and planted around the house. The use of natural plants in the environment does not require considerable capital and does not involve a large amount of energy. The continuation of this traditional practice is also influenced by generations' beliefs, knowledge, experience, and skills inherited by the Melanau community. The values, beliefs and heritage of the Melanau community in the use of plants are seen as still relevant and can survive the challenges of today's development and modernization.

Bidin, A. A., & Aishah, M. (1998). Kegunaan tumbuh-tumbuhan. In Wan Hashim Wan Teh, & Ismail Hamid, Nilai Budaya Masyarakat Desa, Kajian Etnografi Di Wang Kelian Perlis, 1, 162-197. Kuala Lumpur: Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka.
Bidin, A. A., & Aishah, M. (1998). Kegunaan tumbuh-tumbuhan. In Robiah Sidin, & Juriah Long, Nilai Budaya Masyarakat Desa, Kajian Etnografi Di Kampung Tekek, Pulau Tioman, Pahang, 2. Kuala Lumpur: Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka.
Abdul, S. A. (1982). Kitab Perubatan Melayu. Kuala Lumpur: Dewan Bahasa Dan Pustaka.
Clayre, Ian. (1970). The spelling of Melanau. The Sarawak Museum Journal, XVIII (36-37), 330-352.
Colson, A. C. (1970). The Prevention of Illness in a Malay Village: An Analysis of Concepts and Behavior. PhD Thesis. Stanford: Stanford University.
Etkin, N. L., & Ross, P. J. (1982). Food as medicine and medicine as a food: An adaptive framework for the interpretation of plant utilization among the Hausa of Northern Nigeria. Social Science and Medicine, 16 (17), 1559-1573.
Fasihuddin, A., & Hasmah, R. (1993). Kimia Hasilan Semulajadi dan Tumbuhan Ubatan. Kuala Lumpur: Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka.
Jeniri, A. (1988). Komuniti Melanau. In Zainal Abidin Zulcifly (Eds.), Adat Resam Penduduk Sarawak (173-211). Kuching: See Hua Daily News Bhd.
Lantis, M. L. (1959). Folk medicine and hygiene: Lower Kuskokwim and Nuvinak-Nelson Island areas. Anthropology Papers of the University of Alaska, 8(1).
Nanda, S., & Warms, R. L. (2007). Cultural Anthropology (9th Ed.). USA: Thomson Wadsworth Group.
Marvin, H. (1984). Kemunculan Teori Antropologi: Sejarah Teori-Teori Kebudayaan, 2. Kuala Lumpur: Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka.
MacDonald, M. (1968). Borneo People. Singapore: Donald Moore Press Ltd.
Morris, H. S. (1978). The Coastal Melanau. Essays on Borneo Societies, ed. Victor T. King. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Muhamad, Z., & Mustafa, A. M. (1992). Tumbuhan dan Perubatan Tradisional. Selangor: Fajar Bakti Sdn. Bhd.
Mullen, V. (1967). The Story of Sarawak. Kuala Lumpur: Oxford University Press.
Nuraeshah, M., & Noraini, A. (1991). Petua Nona. Kuala Lumpur: Berita Publishing Sdn. Bhd.
Pembrooke, M. A. (1984). The Cultural Construction of Illness in Bali. PhD Thesis. Berkeley: University of California.
Read, M. (1960). Children of Their Fathers: Growing Up among the Ngoni. New Haven Connecticut: Yale University Press.
Salmah, O. (2018). Amalan Penjagaan Kesihatan Masyarakat Melanau. Kuala Lumpur: Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka.
Salmah, O. (2018). The use of plants in traditional medicine among the Siamese community in Kedah. Indian Journal of Public Health Research & Development, 9(1), 476-484.
Scudder, T. (1962). The ecology of the Gwembe Tonga. Kariba Studies, 2. Manchester: Manchester University Press.
Yasir, A. R. (1987). Melanau Mukah: Satu Kajian Budaya. Kuala Lumpur: Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka.
Zaini, O. (1998). Bahasa Melanau: Suatu tanggapan awal. In Aidan Wing (Eds.), Sejarah, Budaya dan Realiti Baru Kaum Melanau (237-248). Kuching: Lembaga Amanah Kebajikan Kaum Melanau Sarawak.

In-Text Citation: (Omar & Latip, 2022)
To Cite this Article: Omar, S., & Latip, M. (2022). The Use of Plants in Traditional Medicine of The Melanau Community in Malaysia. International Journal of Academic Research in Business and Social Sciences, 12(5), 1069 – 1080.