{
    "success": true,
    "data": {
        "id": 17665,
        "msgid": "this-island-paradise-might-be-indonesia039s-best-kept-secret",
        "date": "2015-06-26 00:00:00",
        "title": "This island paradise might be Indonesia's best kept secret",
        "author": "Kay O&#039;Sullivan",
        "source": "DailyLife",
        "tags": null,
        "topic": null,
        "summary": "For most of its history, Nihiwatu has flown under the radar. Every now and again, the name would crop up when travellers of a certain ilk got together. Surfers knew about it. The wave that is Nihiwatu's raison d'etre saw to that. The best left-hand break in Indonesia was the word. But not everyone who made it to Nihiwatu on the island of Sumba was a surfer. Well-heeled Australian families, European royalty, nature lovers and the odd American cultural icon were all part of the guest mix.",
        "content": "<p>For most of its history, Nihiwatu has flown under the radar. Every now and again, the name would crop up when travellers of a<br>\ncertain ilk got together. Surfers knew about it. The wave that is Nihiwatu&apos;s raison d&apos;etre saw to that. The best left-hand break<br>\nin Indonesia was the word.<\/p>\n<p>But not everyone who made it to Nihiwatu on the island of Sumba was a surfer. Well-heeled Australian families, European royalty,<br>\nnature lovers and the odd American cultural icon were all part of the guest mix. What this motley crew had in common was the<br>\ndetermination to get there and, to be frank, the wherewithal to make it a reality.<\/p>\n<p>From whatever corner of the globe you are coming, Sumba is a long haul. It&apos;s one of the Lesser Sunda group of islands, about<br>\n400 kilometres east of Bali. Regular flights from Denpasar are a recent occurrence and then it&apos;s 90 minutes of hard driving to<br>\nthe remote south-west coast.<\/p>\n<p>But as soon as you arrive at the cliff-top entrance, you get what all the fuss is about. Edge of wildness is the sign that<br>\nwelcomes visitors; surrounded by wildness is more like it. Out front, that legendary wave rolls in. Look down, and a tangle of<br>\ntrees, vines and palms is broken only by tall thatched roofs. To the right, a wide, white sandy beach stretches around the<br>\ncoast. To the left, patches of blue merge where the Indian Ocean meets the horizon.<br>\nAdvertisement<\/p>\n<p>Nihiwatu&apos;s back story is the stuff of Hollywood movies. American surfer scours the planet for four years, searching for the<br>\nperfect surf break. He finds his wave off Sumba&apos;s isolated south-west coast in 1988.<\/p>\n<p>There, he encounters the fiercely traditional, territorial and tribal Sumbanese, one of the last thriving megalithic cultures, a<br>\npeople whose lives are guided by the animistic Marapu religion and its ancient blood-spilling rites and intricate burial<br>\nrituals. Officially, headhunting was banned in the 1950s. Unofficially? Rumours abound.<\/p>\n<p>None of which deters the surfer Claude Graves and his wife, Petra, who pitch their tent on the beach between the wave and jungle<br>\nand set about building a resort that will appeal to others who love the finer things in life, like perfect waves, a simple<br>\nlifestyle and an ancient and mysterious culture.<\/p>\n<p>Graves also secured the rights to the wave and limited the number of surfers to 10 a day, an act that won him no fans among the<br>\nwider surfing community, but assured Nihiwatu&apos;s exclusive status.<\/p>\n<p>And so they came. First, the surfers to check whether the wave was all that it was cracked up to be. It was. God&apos;s wave, they<br>\ndubbed it. Others preferred the moniker Occy&apos;s Left, homage to Australian world surfing champion Mark Occhilupo&apos;s mastery over<br>\nthe Nihiwatu tubes.<\/p>\n<p>Then came people whose names are their fortune \u2013 Hermes and Rockefeller, for instance \u2013 seduced into recidivism by the location,<br>\nluxe comforts and the camaraderie of the surfing culture. But it was the people who kept Graves anchored to the spot, and guests<br>\nwho could afford to go anywhere returning.<br>\nA Sumbanese horseman takes part in the pasola ritual.<\/p>\n<p>A Sumbanese horseman takes part in the pasola ritual.<\/p>\n<p>The Sumbanese are among the poorest people of Indonesia. Most of the 600,000-strong population live in remote villages untouched<br>\nby modernity. Jann Wenner, the co-founder of Rolling Stone magazine and a Nihiwatu devotee, describes Sumba as a world that time<br>\nhas left behind. &quot;What I witnessed in the amazing ancestral villages of West Sumba has left a lasting impression on me,&quot; he has<br>\nsaid.<\/p>\n<p>THE CULTURE<\/p>\n<p>Less than 30 minutes into the journey from the airport to Nihiwatu, my driver, Marthen, indicates a crowd on the side of the<br>\nroad. &quot;There&apos;s a buffalo being slaughtered there if you look now,&quot; he says. I do and he is right. When he points out another<br>\ngroup a short time afterwards \u2013 this time it is a pig \u2013 I keep my eyes fixed on the road.<br>\nAn alfresco breakfast at Ombak restaurant.<\/p>\n<p>The sacrificing of animals is one element of Sumba&apos;s complex funeral rites; massive sarcophagi outside the homes we pass are<br>\nanother. Successive Indonesian governments have tried to convince the Sumbanese to abandon their traditional ways with limited<br>\nsuccess. Wives and servants are no longer sacrificed and while the pasola, a wild and bloody ritual that involves armies of<br>\nhorsemen charging at each other, is still held annually, these days the horsemen&apos;s spears are blunt.<\/p>\n<p>THE NEW ERA<\/p>\n<p>You could be forgiven for thinking, as I did when I heard that an American billionaire had bought Nihiwatu: well, there goes the<br>\n&apos;hood. Billionaires used to dealing in stratospheric numbers are not a natural fit with eco-hideaways in fragile landscapes. But<br>\nbuying Nihiwatu was not a business decision for Chris Burch, the co-founder of the Tory Burch fashion and retail empire. Like so<br>\nmany others, Burch fell in love with the place and the people of Sumba.<br>\nGod&apos;s Wave breaks off the beach at Nihiwatu.<\/p>\n<p>God&apos;s Wave breaks off the beach at Nihiwatu.<\/p>\n<p>&quot;Very rarely does something so profoundly touch you that you need to be part of it, &quot; he has said.<\/p>\n<p>While there have been substantial changes and additions to the 230-hectare property under Burch and his business partner,<br>\ninternational hotelier James McBride, Nihiwatu remains an ode to both the people of Sumba and the glory of God&apos;s wave.<\/p>\n<p>Significantly, Burch is donating all profits to the Sumba Foundation, which was set up and is still run by Graves to improve the<br>\nlives of the Sumbanese.<\/p>\n<p>Every aspect of the resort&apos;s rejuvenation \u2013 from the layout, design and building materials to the food, uniforms and activities<br>\n\u2013 references Sumbanese culture. The resort&apos;s 32 villas are built from local timbers and grasses and are configured like Sumba&apos;s<br>\nvillages (although swimming pools take the place of the sarcophagi). Interiors pick up the colour palette and patterns of the<br>\nikats or woven cloths for which the Sumbanese are famed. More than 90 per cent of the 250-strong staff come from surrounding<br>\nvillages, and are dressed in traditional garb, machete at the waist. The produce is sourced locally \u2013 Nihiwatu has its own<br>\norganic gardens and has nurtured partnerships with local producers \u2013 and the menus are proudly Sumbanese and Indonesian, with a<br>\nnod to Western tastes.<\/p>\n<p>THE GLAMOUR FACTOR<\/p>\n<p>Nihiwatu is not the place for people who equate glitz with glamour or want to prance around in heels. You can&apos;t anyway; there&apos;s<br>\nsand everywhere \u2013 on the pathways that weave in and around trees and palms, surrounding the villas and in the communal spaces.<br>\nThe spectacular Ombak restaurant and bar, cantilevered over the ocean with an all-encompassing view of that famous wave, has<br>\nsand on the floors and a thatched roof, but it is still the most effortlessly glamorous place I have seen.<\/p>\n<p>Life can be as social or as solitary as you want at Nihiwatu. Most nights, guests congregate to watch the sun set at either<br>\nOmbak or at the Boat House, the aquatic sports hub, and there can be no more spectacular way to finish a day than watching God&apos;s<br>\nWave roll in, a G&apos;n&apos;T in one hand, lime-drenched sashimi carved from fish that day in the other. With a bit of luck, Graves, who<br>\nstill lives on the property, will be around and up for a chat about the latest developments of the foundation.<\/p>\n<p>But if you are craving solitude, that&apos;s easily sorted, too. Hammocks and day beds are tucked away in pandanus nooks and beach<br>\nshacks for massages. Nihiwatu&apos;s private beach was deserted during my stay, save for wandering buffalos and the occasional bunch<br>\nof local kids splashing about in the shallows.<\/p>\n<p>Surprisingly for a place that sounds so sophisticated on paper, Nihiwatu is a kid-friendly zone. The set-up of the multi-villa<br>\nenclaves makes them perfect for extended families, while the communal Menara Bale has table tennis and pool tables, games and books.<\/p>\n<p>SPOILT FOR CHOICE<\/p>\n<p>You don&apos;t have to be a surfer to fall madly, deeply in love with Nihiwatu. I did and the closest I got to the wave was paddle<br>\nboarding down the end of Nihiwatu&apos;s private bay, which was as far away from the swell as I could get.<\/p>\n<p>Still, most days most of the 10 surf spots on the wave are filled for most of the day. The resort&apos;s team of watermen, headed by<br>\nAmerican big-wave surfer Mark Healey, are always on hand to supervise and coach if needed.<\/p>\n<p>The activities and extras on offer at Nihiwatu \u2013 horse riding, nature treks into the hinterland, reef diving, deep-sea fishing<br>\nand, most particularly, visiting the local villages are about acquainting guests with Sumba. It&apos;s a good fit. Sumba is known as<br>\nthe cowboy island and horseracing is popular with locals.<\/p>\n<p>THE CARE FACTOR<\/p>\n<p>Everyone inside Nihiwatu is keen that I get out and visit a village. &quot;Then, you will really understand,&quot; I&apos;m told.<\/p>\n<p>They are right. Waihola, a cluster of 20 or so houses surrounded by boulders, rubbish and piles of wood, is extremely confronting.<\/p>\n<p>To my Western eye, the only beauty is in the people who greet us shyly, but are eager to show us their prized possessions:<br>\nmosquito nets supplied by the Sumba Foundation, a flimsy but effective barrier between life and death from malaria.<\/p>\n<p>Nihiwatu, as a resort, delivers the holiday of a lifetime, but with Nihiwatu comes an introduction to Sumba and its people, and<br>\nthat is truly unforgettable, perhaps even life-changing, as Jann Wenner said.<\/p>\n<p>THE SUMBA FOUNDATION<\/p>\n<p>The Sumba Foundation, which was established by Graves in 2001 and is funded by donations from Nihiwatu&apos;s guests, provides aid<br>\nfor water, health, education and economic projects. The goal, as defined by Graves, is to improve the lives of the Sumbanese,<br>\nwhile preserving their culture and traditions.<\/p>\n<p>More than 20,000 people have been treated by five health clinics built and staffed by the foundation; malaria rates in the area<br>\nhave been reduced by 85 per cent; more than 60 water wells and 240 water stations have been developed; and 16 primary schools<br>\nhave been provided with water, toilets, books and supplies. The foundation also provides scholarships for students to attend<br>\nnursing and trade schools, with the best students offered employment with Nihiwatu Resort and the foundation.<\/p>",
        "url": "https:\/\/jawawa.id\/newsitem\/this-island-paradise-might-be-indonesia039s-best-kept-secret",
        "image": "sumba-beach.jpg"
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    "sponsor": "Okusi Associates",
    "sponsor_url": "https:\/\/okusiassociates.com"
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