Uma Lulik: bee jerál suku Bahu Tuir Major Ko’o Raku (lia na'in suku Bahu), iha tempu uluk liu hafoin foho tutun sira sai mai husi bee-laran, ema Baucau tun husi Mundo Perdido (tuir istória ne’e, iha momentu ne’ebá grupu haat tun husi foho ema seluk sira bá hela iha fatin seluk iha parte tasi mane no lorosa'e). Ema na'in-rua ne’ebé to’o iha Baucau mak kaben na'in, fen ho laen, sira hetan rai ida ne’ebé maran no bee laiha. Atu sira bele moris iha fatin ne’e, laen mak la'o loron hitu, kalan hitu no fila fali ba nia fen ho au-boot ida nakonu ho bee lulik husi Luca. Nia fakar be’e ne’e iha nia fen nia ain klaran no bee-matan ida mosu husi rai. Mane mak tau naran Wai Lewa nia mak fundador Baucau nian, ne’ebé mós naran Wai Lewa. __________________ Uma Lulik: village water source of Bahu According to Major Ko'o Raku (lia na'in suku Bahu), at some undefined point after the emergence of mountain peaks and dry land from a world of water, the first people of what is now Baucau descended from the central peaks of the Mundo Perdido range (according to this account they descended at the same time as four other parties who founded settlements elsewhere in the north east region). The two people who arrived in Baucau were a husband and a wife and they found themselves in a stony dry land bereft of water. So that they might eke out a living in this place, the husband set off for seven days and seven nights and returned to his wife with a bamboo cylinder full of sacred water from the southern kingdom of Luca. He threw down the water between the gap in his wife legs and a spring spewed forth out of the ground. This man took on the name of Wai Lewa and he became the founding father of Baucau, which was known then by the name of its spring, Wai Lewa.