The Masked Monkeys of Indonesia

Ed Wray
Ed Wray
A monkey tears off a rubber baby doll head it is being trained to wear at Kampung Cipinang Besar, also known as "monkey village" in Jakarta, Indonesia.

Ed Wray was terrified the first time he encountered a masked monkey. Having lived and worked in Jakarta as a freelance photographer for years, he was accustomed to seeing the animals, cruelly leashed by chains, jumping through hoops or riding trikes on the sidewalks. But for Wray, the mask was a terrifying twist.

“When I first saw a monkey with a rubber baby doll’s head stuck over its head as a mask, it immediately struck me as horrifying and beyond weird.” Wray said. “Something about the combination of the doll head – which I think is scary looking to begin with – and a long tail just struck a chord in me.”

Shocking to many Westerners, it’s a common sight on the streets of Jakarta. Most Indonesians pass along unfazed or mildly amused and a few give the handlers money. “Whether they feel more sorry for the monkey or handler, I don’t know.” Wray added.

Wray decided to venture past the sidewalk performances and explore where the monkeys lived and how they were trained. “Initially I was purely interested in the masked monkeys,” Wray said. “But once I saw the village and the condition in which the people there lived alongside the monkeys, another grim layer was added to the pictures and to my thinking about the monkeys.”

“The idea came to me that the disturbing image of the monkeys wearing the masks is a visual distillation of the kinds of horrible things that happen when people are driven to desperation by poverty.”

Wray said he was going to continue with the project, adding, “One thing I would definitely like to concentrate on is how the monkeys get to the city from the jungle—the commercial process that brings them into urban areas as pets or performers.”

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  • mareno

    I’m an Indonesian, and is working at Jakarta. Actually this monkey thing (Topeng Monyet, as how we call it) is happening not just in Jakarta, my hometown Bandung also has it share of Topeng Monyet…I personally am heart broken everytime I see those monkeys, they’re not built for the asphalt and the polutions, but the dillema is that we can’t expect the government to do something about it, afterall, they’re not doing anything to take care of the human handler, hard to expect them to give an attention to the monkeys….here’s what I do, and I don’t know if this helps, everytime I encountered the Topeng Monyet, I gave the handler some small change, and tell them to handle the monkey in a more subtle way…because most of the handlers don’t have any clue as to how to treat animals properly…again, Im probably just shooting blanks with that effort, but I just gotta do something

  • http://www.jakartaanimalaid.com femke den haas

    This cruelty has keot us from the jakarta animal aid network very busy. Going up and down to endless meetings with the government about how to stop this. Discussing with childprotection organizations about how to help the streetkids involved that are in fact being exploited as well by the ‘monkey boss’ the man who keeps and rent out the monkeys. We are ready to rehabilitate these traumatized monkeys but are still pushing through much burocracy. For more information please visit our website and sign the petition. Thank you

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