The diamonds and other gems collected from Pumpung are processed in small workshops in the neighbouring town of Martapura where there are many small stores selling the jewels. Visitors come from all over Indonesia to these jewellery stores in Martapura. These are not fancy stores of the big cities; just countless beads hanging from walls and doorframes and the more precious jewels housed inside glass-top wooden cupboards. On the streets, one will come across individual sellers who just walk from one prospect to another, taking out his handkerchief to show his collection of gems.
It is time for lunch and the miners gather at a makeshift warung which has been set up by one of the villagers near the pit. ‘Each pit has its own warung, if she sees us walk over to the next warung, she will scream louder than these pumps’ the man who prays takes a break to crack this joke about the warung’s owner and the entire group breaks into laughter. Mostafa says, ‘Yes, that’s another rule for the miners. Even though our house is just a five-minute walk, we have to have lunch at our respective warungs.’ Lunch is instant noodles with a glass of tea and afterwards, as the miners relax over a smoke, I head on to the neighbouring pits.
Again, the young men digging the sides are overjoyed and pose for me, asking for photographs, some raising Ronnie James Dio’s famous sign of the horns. The youngest of the lot slides in the walls of the pit and lands in the water below. He then goes completely under the muddy water. His elder brother, Ahmed, walks up to talk to me, ‘My brother is a water buffalo. He can’t take the heat for long and goes into the water every now and then.’ Ahmed is 25 and has been working at the mine for five years, ‘I have two daughters already. Both go to school. Here, we get married by the time we are 20.’ Ahmed says that working in the mines is safe but tough, especially for beginners, ‘When I started here, I used to get fever every few days. The sun was unbearable. And then you are always with water. But you get used to it.’ The miners work from sunrise to sunset and take a day off on Friday, the day for prayers.