When I heard the name Forum Lingkar Pena (henceforth, FLP), there surely will flash in my mind the image of nice women in veils speaking politely and marrying with nice pious men they have only heard about previously (not to say that they have never met nor been boy/girlfriends since the term boy/girlfriend itself is virtually inexistent to them). Forum Lingkar Pena is a banner under which one can find Moslem writers writing to syiar (spread out) Islamic teachings of love, peace, good conducts. It’s me to blame for not knowing deeper about their works, not reading any full books any of them has written, accusing them of practicing black-and-white literature (meaning, their characters are not round with bad guys being still being bad guys and the good ones still good ones by the end of the story), accusing them of writing tediously predictable stories (with a long-haired band singer or guitarist turning into a pious young man after knowing—and, of course, falling in love with—a nice pious girl wearing veil). I realize that it is way too evil to accuse them as such now that I have read a book published by FLP entitled Ketika Cinta tak Mau Pergi (When Love Won’t Leave).
Written by Nadhira Khalid, a female writer and translator living in Mataram, Lombok Island, Ketika Cinta tak Mau Pergi ably tells a love story between Lalu Kertiaji and Sahnim. Both of them are close to each other since they were very young like 9 years of age. Living in adjoining hamlets, Presak Bat (meaning West Presak) and Presak Timuq (East Presak), they arrange their rendezvous under an old tamarind tree in the border of both hamlets. They keep meeting in a secret place around the tamarind tree even when both hamlets build up animosity against each other due to a third party’s desire to drive out the inhabitants of both hamlets, appropriate their land, and mine pumice from under their feet. Animus intensifies between both hamlets and their people, and they started to kill each other during mass fights. The two lovers insist on loving each other as if to forget the fact. After being embarrassed before teens of young men by Sahnim’s father, who disagrees to their relationship, Lalu Kertiaji even plans to “steal” Sahnim from her house, and he does. However, against traditional belief strongly held by Sasak community, Sahnim’s father, Ismuhadi, with some people from his hamlet, snatches her back from the stealer. The incident triggers a mass riot between the two hamlets, and that kills several people. After being an inch from marriage, they are now separated miles away. Sahnim falls from grace in the eyes of every young man since she has once been stolen by a man, she’s a second hand girl now. She is put in house detention until a young man proposes to marry her. As for Kertiaji, also wearing disgrace all over his face, agrees to his father’s idea to join transmigration to a nearby island Sumbawa with the hope to get away from penury and, for the part of Lalu Kertiaji, to stay away temporarily from the love of his life.
It was the initial story that triggers more related actions in Ketika Cinta tak Mau Pergi. The story develops into a deeper dip into the life of Sasak community in Lombok Island as well as Sumbawa. We will be introduced then to the state of Lombok’s people life, the poor condition of a group of Sasak community already living tens of years in a seaside hamlet in Sumbawa, the life of trans people (transmigrated people who receive life support from the government during the first years of their life in the new place. In a wider context, we can also see the incident behind the transmigration of Presak people and the appropriation of Presak’s peole’s land: the establishment of pumice mining factory.