Bromo-Tengger: The Tengger Sadhu Communities
Expedition Overview
The Tengger people are the last Hindu community in Java — 600,000 people living in the caldera highlands around Mount Bromo who maintained their faith through the centuries of Islamisation that converted the rest of Java. Their Kasada ceremony (held annually at the full moon of the twelfth Tengger month — approximately June–July) involves a mass pilgrimage to the Bromo crater rim, where offerings of food, flowers, livestock, and money are thrown into the volcano as an offering to the mountain deity. It is one of the most extraordinary religious photography events in Southeast Asia.
This expedition focuses on the Tengger community as a photography subject — their daily life, their temple festivals, and their relationship with the landscape they consider sacred. It complements the Bromo Volcanic Sunrise expedition (which focuses on the landscape) with a deeper cultural documentary strand that is rarely pursued by photographers visiting the caldera.
Expedition Itinerary
Day 1: Ngadisari Village & Daily Life
The Tengger villages on the approach roads to Bromo maintain their distinctive cultural architecture and festival cycles. A day spent in Ngadisari and its sister villages documents the daily rhythm: morning temple prayers, agricultural work on the volcanic slopes, and the social life of the potato-farming Tengger economy.
The Goal of the Day: Indigenous mountain community documentation; the daily life of a Javanese Hindu minority.
Day 2: Bromo Crater Rim & Kasada (if timing aligns)
When the expedition runs in June–July, the Kasada ceremony transforms the crater rim: thousands of pilgrims arriving by jeep and on foot through the night, offerings thrown into the smoking caldera, and the extraordinary spectacle of men rappelling into the crater to catch the offerings before they reach the floor.
The Goal of the Day: Mass religious ceremony photography at volcanic scale.
Day 3: Ngadas Village & Widodaren Spring
Ngadas, in the high ridge country south-east of the caldera, is a Tengger village maintaining traditional architecture and an extraordinary setting above the green Ranu Pani valley. Widodaren spring temple is a pilgrimage site with a ceremony that runs throughout the year.
The Goal of the Day: High-altitude village photography; pilgrimage water temple documentation.
Day 4: Sunrise Panorama & Return
A final dawn from the Penanjakan rim for the standard Bromo panorama — now seen with the depth of knowledge of the Tengger community that lives within the caldera, making the photograph a different thing from the tourist snapshot.
The Goal of the Day: The landscape photograph informed by cultural knowledge.
Book Your Expedition
Note: Final price may vary based on specific expedition details and customizations.
Expedition Leaders
Professor Nasrul Eam
Professor Nasrul Eam is a seasoned explorer and visual storyteller who has spent over two decades traversing Asia’s diverse landscapes and cultures. As Dean of the Department of Art and Photography at Light & Composition University, he leads immersive photography expeditions to regions like the Himalayas, Sundarbans, and Bali. These journeys blend cultural exploration with hands-on learning, culminating in a complete photography diploma. With a portfolio of over 50 publications—including The Quintessence of Photography and Illuminating Nature—his work captures the profound beauty of everyday life. His background in advertising, linguistics, and visual arts enriches his mentorship, guiding participants to uncover compelling narratives through their lenses. Professor Eam’s expeditions are transformative experiences, inspiring photographers to engage deeply with the world around them.
Travel Information
Nearest airport: Surabaya (3 hours by road) or Malang (2 hours). Best season: year-round for village photography. Kasada ceremony: June–July (check Tengger calendar annually — date varies).
What to Bring
• Wide-angle for the caldera panorama and ceremony crowd photography
• 70–200mm for portraits and ceremony details
• Dust protection for camera at the crater rim
• Warm layers for pre-dawn caldera (cold at 2200m)


