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Room 308 - The Queen's suite of the Samudra Beach Hotel

A view of the sea shore at Pelabuhanratu

Pelabuhanratu hills and the mist
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Few public relations
officers would deem a ghost with a fondness for green bathing suits as a
great selling point for a beach resort, but don't tell that to the
hoteliers of Pelabuhanratu--one of Jakarta's favorite getaways.
Pelabuhanratu, a picturesque seaside
resort 90 kilometers south of Jakarta as the crow flies but four hours
drive as the road winds, is a popular weekend retreat from Indonesia's
bustling capital that has remained remarkably underdeveloped over the
decades.
Sukarno, Indonesia's first president and a avid hotel builder, between
1962-65 constructed the Samudra Beach Hotel--now part of the
government's INNA Hotel Group--on the stretch of black sand beach that
extends to the west of Pelabuhanratu town.
Rumor has it he intended the 100-room establishment to become
Indonesia's first casino, a dream that was not to be.
The hotel site is near one of the resort's chief tourist attractions,
the Karang Hawu cliff, an impressive Java flow formation from which the
legendary Nyai Loro Kidul (Princess of the South Sea) flung herself into
the waves below in an effort to restore her beauty and end a run of bad
luck.
Under Sukarno's instructions, Room 308 at the Samudra Beach Hotel has
always been left vacant for Nyai Loro Kidul.
"Our first president received a message when he was praying that it
would be possible to build a hotel there, but please spare one room for
the queen," explained Yayat Hidayat, marketing manager for Samudra
Beach Hotel.
The Nyai Loro Kidul legend runs deep in
Pelabuhanratu, where the rough surf and strong undertow have claimed
many unwary victims.
The Nyai Loro Kidul was the daughter of the West Javanese King Prabu
Silwangi and his beautiful yound wife Princess Kadita.
As the legend goes, Silwangi's other wives were jealous of Kadita and
her equally beautiful daughter so they used black magic to bring down a
horrible disease on the twosome that destroyed their good looks and made
them stink.
The stench forced the king to send the pair packing, and after some
wondering and privations the mother died and Nyai Loro Kidul, harking to
sirens in the waves below, took her famous plunge.
Instead of dying, she was transformed into a beautiful sea goddess who
continues to haunt the bay, preying on fishermen and sea bathers,
especially those wearing green--her favorite color.
Over the years, the Samudra Beach Hotel
has turned Room 308 into a shrine to the Nyai Loro Kidul legend, which
can be visited by guests.
The room is packed with lavish green furniture, a green wardrobe in the
closet and decorated with numerous portraits of the famous sea goddess
along with one of Sukarno, not in green.
If anything, the room adds to the hotel's rundown and slightly spooky
ambience.
"I've tried to change the room's image a bit, to advertise it not
as a place for her to rest but as a place to remember the legend,"
said Hidayat. "Some people were scared of the room. I'm
trying to change our image as a hotel of mystery."
That might be a good strategy for the entire resort, which now boasts
about 1,000 hotel rooms, and appears to be searching for a market niche.
New establishments at Pelabuhanratu (Queen's harbor) include fairly
upmarkets resorts such as newcomers Ocean Queen and Kuda Laut, which
cater to Jakarta's expatriate and well heeled Indonesian crowd,
especially those with their own vehicles.
The resort is only reachable by road, and the poor condition of the
stretch between Bogor and Pelabuhanratu means the drive takes at least
four hours, although the scenery is nice.
Kuda Laut, run by Dutchman Rob DeLange, is attempting to push the resort
as a energetic getaway by offering trekking tours to the nearby Sukabumi
forest reserve, in which he has helped establish 15 different walking
routes.
"there is no other organized trekking operation in Indonesia,"
said DeLange, who is working on his soon-to-be-published book, aptly
titled, "Hiking in Sukabumi."
DeLange, who opened Kuda Laut in 2000
with a dozen tastefully constructed bungalows near the beach (no TV, no
A/C and no phones) has devised his own practical way of dealing with the
Nyai Loro Kidul sea goddess.
"We always tell
our guests to watch the waves," he said. "If you watch
the waves, I think nothing can happen, but if you turn your back on
them, anything can happen."
By Peter Janssen
Pelabuhanratu, West Java, dpa
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