Erupting Merapi's Guardian Not Scared
Thousands Flee As Volcano Blows But Spiritual Leader Won't Run
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Play CBS Video Video Indonesian Volcano Awakens CBS News RAW: Indonesia's Mount Merapi volcano rumbles into action, belching clouds of black ash and lava.
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A villager watch Merapi volcano spews a huge cloud of hot gas Sunday, May 14, 2006, as seen from Dukun village in Magelang, Central Java, Indonesia, Sunday, May 14, 2006. (AP Photo/Purwowiyoto)
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A policeman guarding a checkpoint leading to the upper villages on Indonesia's Merapi volcano looks at a giant cloud of hot gas and debris spewed out by the erupting volcano Monday May 15, 2006 in Slemen village, outside Yogyakarta, the capital of Central Java province, Indonesia. (AP Photo)
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Hot lava runs down from the Mt. Merapi volcano as seen from Kalikuning village May 13, 2006. Thousands of villagers began fleeing their homes in the path of red-hot lava flows, as officials said an eruption looked imminent. (AFP Photo)
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The Mount Merapi volcano's crater glows with molten lava seen from Bebeng village early Thursday, May 11, 2006 in Central Java, Indonesia. (AP Photo/Purwowiyoto)
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(CBS)
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Photo Essay Lava In Java The Mount Merapi volcano spews more lava and superheated gas amid fears the mountain's dome could suddenly collapse.
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Fast Facts Indonesia Learn about the people, economy and history.
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Clouds of deadly ash, rock fragments and hot gas surged down Merapi's slopes Monday as activity intensified to the highest level since the volcano rumbled back to life weeks ago.
One eruption sent an avalanche of debris and ash rolling more than 2 miles down the mountain's western flank, said Ratdomopurbo, the region's chief vulcanologist. It was followed by several other huge explosions.
"There is no risk," Maridjan said outside his home just four miles from the crater, which was billowing ash and searing-hot gas clouds Monday. "I am still waiting here."
Maridjan, who jokes constantly with visitors and occasionally falls into a trancelike state while looking at the peak, was given the official title of "key holder of Mount Merapi" by the highly respected late king of the nearby court city, Jogjakarta.
He leads yearly ceremonies when rice and flowers are thrown into the crater to appease spirits that he and most other nearby villagers believe live over the mountain, which rises from the heart of Indonesia's mystical island of Java.
His refusal to budge is angering local authorities in charge of evacuation efforts. They say he is setting a wrong example, stopping other villagers from leaving.
Police officers on Monday visited his village, deep within the mandatory evacuation zone around the country's deadliest volcano, and fruitlessly tried to change his mind.
Former Indonesian President Abdurrahman Wahid telephoned him last week with the same request, one of Maridjan's aides said.
"People have to realize that Maridjan is not a god," said Widi Sutikno, the official coordinating the government's emergency operation, who noted that Jogyakarta's current ruler has called for all to leave the mountain.
But Maridjan, who inherited the honorary position from his father, insists he will not go, saying he is waiting for a sign from the long-dead king who appointed him. A handful of other people in his village are also staying behind with him.
Maridjan and many others living on Merapi's fertile foothills offer a glimpse into Indonesia's deeply mystical and Hindu-Buddhist traditions, which have more recently been overlaid with Islam, the professed faith of the more than 90 percent of the country's 220 million people.
Maridjan says there "are many spirits above the mountain, too many to count."
Although he is a practicing Muslim, many fellow believers would likely consider some of his beliefs a violation of their strictly monotheistic faith.
Visitors to Maridjan's house address him as Mbah, an honorific title meaning grandfather, and speak to him in a high form of the local language reserved for people of status.
One police officer sent to persuade him to come down off the mountain says he, too, is an admirer.
"He has a special connection to Mount Merapi," said Eko Rudi, as he walked off to perform the midday Islamic prayer. "When I am with him, I feel like a child talking to his father."
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