Kucapungane Arrival: Culture is not Static

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Culture is not static, but is architecture?

When arriving to Kucapungane after a seven hour hike, my first priority was resting. There was a shared space near the home where our group would be sleeping. It was a roofed area that was open on all sides and was positioned in a way that felt as if I was cantilevered over the mountain.  Peaking over the edge, I could see the structure was situated in a way that if I dropped something below it might be impossible to retrieve it. The common area was organized with a place to cook, dine, and casually gather. It is space that can provide protection from the rain, but still allow for 360 degree views of Beidawu Mountain (北大武山). This is where our group shared most of our meals. Taking a moment to sit on an actual surface, I observed the home directly across from me. While admiring the stone slabs, the proportions of the apertures, and the personalized objects surrounding; I glanced at the roof and noticed a small solar panel.  The Kucapungane settlement  has been in existence for an estimated six hundred years, and I was witnessing one of the most modern environmental integrations for energy collection. This solar panel represents the symbolic conflict within the Rukai Tribe to evolve while maintaining authenticity.  Efforts to preserve Kucapungane and teach younger tribe members historic building techniques, are important to tribal identity. Unfortunately, there seems to be a conflict between the modern and the traditional.  Once Rukai tribe members had access to “on-the-grid” comforts in successive relocated sites, preserving Kucapungane  as it was originally conceived historically has been challenging.  Culture is not static, people are not static, but there is an expectation that historic architectural sites should be.

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The Solar Panel

Only Rukai members 40 and over have lived in the original settlement of Kucapungane and community members that have a strong memory of this place are aging.  In 1978, the Rukai Tribe made a decision to relocate to the base of the mountain. In 2009 after Typhoon Morakot, they were forced to relocate again.  The current settlement, Rinari,  sits at the base of the mountain. In 2017, the Kucupugane site was named a World Monument, and the government of Taiwan started to invest in the restoration of the Kucapungane settlement.  They have proposed to renovate forty of the over 20 homes over the next 10 years.  Each year, four homes will be selected from an application process that requires partial investment from the family and a requirement of a family member to participate in the construction process.  

What is the future of Kucapungane?  From my observations, three options remain a possibility.  It can be a space treated as a sacred heritage site that is frozen in time as a museum-site artifact, or it can be treated as a space for Rukai members to re-occupy, retrofit, and evolve as community members see fit, or it can be a combination of the two. The long term goals of the space are not clear, but the reality is that it will be difficult for those living with electricity and indoor plumbing to return. So, what does it mean if  you freeze a culture in time?  Is is subjected to cultural tropes that are outdated and fictionalized?  There seems to be a danger that exists with freezing a heritage in the memory of greater society. Especially a group of people that are continuing to evolve.  It is important to reconcile the ways that culture is not static.  The ancestors existed in the past, but they live in the now.   And in the now, many people want to access indoor plumbing and electricity.  The challenge of how they reconcile these competing factors continues to be an issue.

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Kucapungane Aerial View

Indigenous Architecture & Site Planning:

The most striking element of the Kucapungane settlement is the creative site planning.  The way the homes are organized and settled into the mountain required intentional and thoughtful planning.  Even the spacing of the homes among each other are harmoniously consistent. Each home is linked by a common patio and that patio acts as a sidewalk connecting each building.  Imagine that to walk from home to home, you would have to enter your neighbors front yard. Imagine the ways that your relationships with your neighbors may be different if this was the approach to the design.  The shared patios is inlaid with slate. Some homes had a seating area surrounding the patio signaling that they were spaces welcome for a pause and others were just enclosures that signaled you should pass quickly through.  The architecture itself is in various states of preservation. There are homes that have been continually maintained by families throughout the years, and there are others that are in a ruinous state. I could clearly see the slate stacked walls have the staying power in the structural longevity of the space.  They remain peaking out at various heights. The size of the homes may vary based on the hierarchy and importance of the family. The range from 168 m wide to 250 m wide. When walking into the spaces, what I’ve noticed not only here but throughout Asian is the threshold height is quite low and the threshold is built so that you must raise your foot to step inside.  If you bump your head once, you will remember that in order to enter this spaces you must always bend down and lift your foot. The typical door height is below 5’4”. One could imagine that the time these areas were built the society was in general shorter, but it has also said that when you enter into the home you must humble yourself by bowing and the compressed structure makes this a physical requirement. You must bow before you enter the home. Once you enter, the interior material is a dark stone and the space has minimal windows.  In fact, when we slept in one of the homes, the morning was so evident as when the first person opened the door, light punctured the space like a shard.  The space had a total of two similarly sized rooms. There were twelve people total asleep in the house, and I think we were all so exhausted from the hike that sleeping on a stone slate floor in a sleeping bag seemed comfortable. We were lined up like sardines on the raised platform.  The exterior environment in the mountain is so pleasant. I can imagine the public exterior area was occupied more than the home throughout the day. The home serves the function for protection from extreme weather, some cooking, storage of  personal items, and sleeping.

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Rukai Women Weaving Group

Rukai Women

When in Rinari Settlement the Rukai women I immediately sensed the women are the heartbeat of the community. When visiting, I can also see that the older generation of women serve a critical function in the community with babysitting and taking care of the younger children. I imagine that in 1970’s version of Kucapungane, women would go to the weaving room (the tabelangane) to make the clothing, they would care for the children, they would clean and require the natural meat for the hunt, and tend to the farming.  Anything that would be needed as a purchased item would have to be carried in the (four-eight hour) hike. The logistical distance from the school, the healthcare, the grocery store are a barrier to any permanent re-settlement.

The Rukai community is organized around activities in the community churches. Within the Rinari Settlement, there are a total of four churches.  So, on Wednesday and Sunday many people are engaged in church activities. (The Ming Dynasty stopped the growth of Christianity in the 1860’s early following Spanish and Dutch colonization, but in the mid 19th century US and UK missionaries promoted Christianity.) We arrived on Easter Sunday, and were invited to a church event.  There wasn’t pageantry or special hats and dresses that I have grown to anticipate on Easter. Women and men were in work clothes and several church members were installing the new patio stone flooring on the exterior patio. This looked like grueling and intensive work.

Women and housing present an interesting issue. Like many cultures, historically Rukai women were unable to inherit property. This was also the case for the Rukai Settlement. So many of the places that are in Kucupagane, the women in the society have less input because in general, they don’t have ownership.  This creates a complexity in deciding the future of Kucupagane. Women may feel connected to the place, but they do not have any legal connection to the land.

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Tabelangane Rinari

The Tablegane in Rinari

The tabelgane (weaving room) is a women only space, and in Kucupangane (top of mountain) it is in a ruinous state.  They have re-built an example of this very particular space in the Rinari Settlement. The space is currently unused. When reaching Kucapungane, I realized that Tabelgane has a big problem. It does not fit the context. It was built in as a standalone home, not a rear retaining wall against a tiered mountain structure. Also, the front patio area and other contextual surroundings are missing. A building alone does not represent culture or the context of its history.  You can not transport a building to a place and insert the people and expect the building will be able to do the work but the beauty of Kucapungane is the intelligent site planning. This is missing from the latest Tablegane.

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Ruins Kucapungane School

 

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Ruins Kucapungane School

Japanese Colonization (1895-1945):

Throughout Taiwan there is evidence of Japanese culture, and this is also clear in Kucapungane. Japanese colonizers added a prison and a school.  The prison was quite small and the school was large, but the school proved to be a substantial shift in the culture. Rukai young people were required to learn Japanese and had a structure built dedicated to this purpose.