Orang-Pendek
From: http://www.angelfire.com/ak/darksecret/zoo.html
Although mysterious hairy bipeds are stereotypically imagined as
giant, hulking brutes, there have been reports of exceptions to
that rule. The Orang-Pendek of the Indonesian island of Sumatra
is described as a petite creature standing about two and a half
to five feet tall. Its name means "little man" or "short
person." The creature is said to have a pinkish-brown skin
covered by a short, dark fur with a mane of long hair around the
face that flows down the back. The Orang-Pendek is sometimes called
the Sedapa, and in the forests of nearby Borneo there are similar
reports of a creature known as the Batutut.
Considered more humanlike than apelike, the Orang-Pendek is said
to walk mostly upright and to possess relatively short arms. Pint-sized
footprints about six inches long, shaped very much like human footprints
except for being proportionately rather broad, have been presented
as evidence of the creature. Some accounts indicate that the Orang-Pendek
walks with its feet reversed so that its toes point backward. According
to Bigfoot investigator John Napier, this peculiar podiatric condition
is a long-recurring theme common to man-monster stories around
the world.
Natives of Sumatra have generally accepted the Orang-Pendek as
a genuine animal for centuries, and because they believe it to
be a gentle creature that only attacks small animals for food,
they regard it with tolerance and respect, rather than fear. Skeptics
argue that people have mistaken the island's orangutans, gibbons
and sun bears as this creature, but Orang-Pendek eyewitnesses insist
that what they have seen is none of those animals.
In 1910 there occurred one of the first Orang-Pendek sightings
by a European, who reported "a large creature, low on its
feet, which ran like a man, and was about to cross my path; it
was very hairy and it was not an orangutan; but its face was not
like an ordinary man's." A Dutchman named Van Herwaarden reported
a similar encounter in 1923. He was an experienced hunter and armed
with a rifle, but as would also be the case with Bigfoot spotter
William Roe, he found himself unable to shoot the creature because
it looked so human. "I suddenly felt that I was going to commit
murder," Van Herwaarden said. Recent years have seen an explosion
of interest in the Orang-Pendek, thanks primarily to the efforts
of British travel writer Deborah Martyr. During a tour of southwestern
Sumatra in 1989, Martyr's guide pointed out areas where Orang-Pendeks
were frequently spotted, claiming that he had seen the creature
twice himself. This was the first Martyr had ever heard of the
Orang-Pendek and she was highly skeptical, but she was intrigued
enough to investigate further. Before long, she had the opportunity
to examine firsthand the characteristic tiny tracks allegedly made
by the creature, and she judged them to be unidentifiable. Martyr
was thorough enough to address the most obvious explanation for
scaled-down humanlike footprints:
"If we had been reasonably close to a village, I might have
momentarily thought the prints to be those of a healthy
seven-year-old child," Martyr reported. "The ball of the foot was,
however, too broad even for a people who habitually wear no shoes."
Martyr took a plastic cast of the tracks, but unfortunately she
sent it to the Indonesian National Parks Department and never saw
it again, leaving some to speculate whether the evidence was lost
or purposely suppressed. But Martyr continued her search, making
a second career out of stalking the Orang-Pendek. In 1994, while
on an expedition with an organization called Flora and Fauna International,
Martyr reported making a personal sighting of the creature. She
has since claimed to see the Orang-Pendek a total of three times.
There was a confused flurry of news reports in 1997 that a Flora
and Fauna International group had succeeding in taking clear and
convincing photographs of the Orang-Pendek, but these proved to
be unsubstantiated rumors. The only photographic evidence yet collected
is dark and blurry, leaving us to consider nothing more substantial
than a series of odd footprints and scores of colorful stories
of the short man of the Sumatran forests.
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