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Native Indonesians

Native Indonesians, also known as Pribumi or Bumiputra (lit.'first on the soil'), are Indonesians whose ancestral roots lie mainly in the archipelago, distinguished from Indonesians of known (partial) foreign descent, like Chinese Indonesians (Tionghoa), Arab Indonesians, Indian Indonesians, Japanese Indonesians and Indo-Europeans (Eurasians).

Pribumi Nusantara
Indonesians wearing their indigenous costume during cultural carnaval
Total population
More than 300 million
Including Indonesian ancestry
c. 270 million
Indonesia 2020 census[1]
c. 210 million
Worldwide; 2006 estimate[2]
Regions with significant populations
 Indonesia c. 270 million[2]
Languages
National Language
Indonesian
Regional Language
Javanese, Sundanese, Malay, Madurese, Minangkabau, Betawi, Batak, Balinese, etc.
Religion
Majority
Islam (mostly Sunni, minority Shia, and Non-denominational)
Minorities
Christianity (Protestantism, Catholicism and Orthodoxy), Hinduism, Buddhism, Animism, Shamanism, Sunda Wiwitan, Kaharingan, Parmalim, Kejawen, Aluk To Dolo, Others.
Related ethnic groups
Indonesians

Etymology and historical context edit

The term pribumi was popularized after Indonesian independence as a respectful replacement for the Dutch colonial term inlander (normally translated as "native" and seen as derogatory).[3] It derives from Sanskrit terms pri (before) and bhumi (earth). Before independence the term bumiputra (Malay: son of the soil) was more commonly used as an equivalent term to pribumi.

Following independence, the term was normally used to distinguish indigenous Indonesians from citizens of foreign descent (especially Chinese Indonesians). Common usage distinguished between pribumi and non-pribumi.[4] Although the term is sometimes translated as "indigenous", it has a broader meaning than that associated with Indigenous peoples.

The term WNI keturunan asing (WNI = "Indonesian citizen", keturunan asing = foreign descent), sometimes just WNI keturunan or even WNI, has also been used to designate non-pribumi Indonesians.[5]

In practice, usage of the term is fluid. Pribumi is seldom used to refer to Indonesians of Melanesian descent, such as Moluccans and Papuans, although it does not exclude them. Indonesians of Arab descent sometimes refer to themselves as pribumi. Indonesians with some exogenous ancestry who show no obvious signs of identification with that ancestry (such as former President Abdurrahman Wahid who is said to have had Chinese ancestry) are seldom called non-pribumi. The term bumiputra is sometimes used in Indonesia with the same meaning as pribumi, but is more commonly used in Malaysia, where it has a slightly different meaning.[6]

The term putra daerah ("son of the region") refers to a person who is indigenous to a specific locality or region.

In 1998, the Indonesian government of President B. J. Habibie instructed that neither pribumi nor non-pribumi should be used, on the grounds that they promoted ethnic discrimination.[7][8]

The Dutch East India Company, which dominated parts of the archipelago from the 17th century, classified its subjects mainly by religion, rather than ethnicity. The colonial administration which took power in 1815 shifted to a system of ethnic classification. Initially they distinguished between Europeans (Europeanen) and those equated with them (including native Christians) and Inlanders and those equated with them (including non-Christian Asians).

Over time, native were gradually shifted de facto into the Inlander category, while Chinese Indonesians, Arab Indonesians and others of non-Indonesian descent were gradually given separate status as Vreemde Oosterlingen ("Foreign Orientals"). The system was patriarchal, rather than formally racial. A child inherited his/her father's ethnicity if the parents were married; the mother's ethnicity if they were unmarried. The off-spring of a marriage between a European man and an Indonesian woman were legally European.

Today, Indonesian dictionary defines pribumi as penghuni asli which translates into "original, native or indigenous inhabitant".[9]

Background edit

 
Asmat woodcarver

Pribumi make up about 95% of the Indonesian population.[2] Using Indonesia's population estimate in 2006, this translates to about 230 million people. As an umbrella of similar cultural heritage among various ethnic groups in Indonesia, Pribumi culture plays a significant role in shaping the country's socioeconomic circumstance.

The United States Library of Congress Country Study of Indonesia defines Pribumi as:

Literally, an indigene, or native. In the colonial era, the great majority of the population of the archipelago came to regard themselves as indigenous, in contrast to the non-indigenous Dutch and Chinese (and, to a degree, Arab) communities. After independence the distinction persisted, expressed as a dichotomy between elements that were pribumi and those that were not. The distinction has had significant implications for economic development policy

— Indonesia: A Country Study, Glossary[10]

There are over 1,300 ethnic groups in Indonesia,[11]

The largest ethnic group in Indonesia are the Javanese people who make up 41% of the total population. The Javanese are concentrated on the island of Java but millions have migrated to other islands throughout the archipelago.[12] The Sundanese, Malay, Batak, and Madurese are the next largest groups in the country.[12] Many ethnic groups, particularly in Kalimantan and the province of Papua, have only hundreds of members. Most of the local languages belong to the Austronesian language family, although a significant number, particularly in North Maluku, Timor, Alor, and West Papua, speak Papuan languages.

The division and classification of ethnic groups in Indonesia is not rigid and in some cases are unclear as the result of migrations, along with cultural and linguistic influences; for example some[who?] may agree that the Bantenese and Cirebonese belong to different ethnic groups with their own distinct dialect, however others[who?] might consider them to be Javanese sub-ethnicities, as members of the larger Javanese people. The same considerations may apply to the Baduy people who share so many similarities with the Sundanese people that they can be considered as belonging to the same ethnic group. The clearest example of hybrid ethnicity are the Betawi people, the result of a mixture of different native ethnicities that have merged with people of Arab, Chinese, and Indian origins since the era of colonial Batavia (Jakarta), as well as the population of Larantuka known as Topasses who were of mixed descent from the Malaccan Malays, the Lamaholot, and Portuguese.

 
Several major ethno-linguistic groups of Indonesia

The proportional populations of Native Indonesians according to the 2010 census is as follows:

Ethnic groups Population (million) Percentage Main regions
Javanese 95.217[13] 40.2[13] Central Java, Yogyakarta, East Java, Lampung, Jakarta[13]
Sundanese 31.765 15.4 West Java, Banten, Lampung
Malay 8.789 4.1 Sumatra eastern coast, West Kalimantan
Batak 8.467 3.58 North Sumatra
Madurese 7 .179 3.03 Madura island, East Java
Bugis 6.000 2.9 South Sulawesi, East Kalimantan
Minangkabau 5.569 2.7 West Sumatra, Riau
Betawi 5.157 2.5 Jakarta, Banten, West Java
Banjarese 4.800 2.3 South Kalimantan, East Kalimantan
Bantenese 4.331 2.1 Banten, West Java
Acehnese 4.000 1.9 Aceh
Balinese 3.094 1.5 Bali
Dayak 3.009 1.5 North Kalimantan, West Kalimantan, Central Kalimantan
Sasak 3.000 1.4 West Nusa Tenggara
Makassarese 2.063 1.0 South Sulawesi
Cirebonese 1.856 0.9 West Java, Central Java

Smaller groups edit

 
Torajan girls
 
Balinese boys

The regions of Indonesia have some of their indigenous ethnic groups. Due to migration within Indonesia (as part of government transmigration programs or otherwise), there are significant populations of ethnic groups who reside outside of their traditional regions.

See also edit

Non-Pribumi Indonesians edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Hasil Sensus Penduduk 2020" (PDF) (in Indonesian). Statistics Indonesia. December 15, 2022. p. 9. Retrieved January 21, 2021.
  2. ^ a b c . Encyclopedia of Modern Asia. Macmillan Reference USA. Archived from the original on July 11, 2007. Retrieved October 5, 2006.
  3. ^ William H. Frederick and Robert L. Worden, Indonesia: A Country Study (Washington: Library of Congress, 6th ed., 2011), p. 409.
  4. ^ Kwik Kian Gie, in Leo Suryadinata, Political Thinking of the Indonesian Chinese, 1900-1995: A Sourcebook (Singapore University Press, 2nd ed., 1977), p.135.
  5. ^ James T. Siegel, "Early Thoughts on the Violence of May 13 and 14, 1998 in Jakarta", Indonesia 66 (Oct. 1998), p. 90 (pp. 74–108).
  6. ^ Sharon Siddique and Leo Suryadinata, "Bumiputra and Pribumi: Economic Nationalism (Indiginism) in Malaysia and Indonesia", Pacific Affairs, Vol. 54, No. 4 (Winter 1981–1982), pp. 662–687.
  7. ^ Purdey, Jemma (2006). Anti-Chinese Violence in Indonesia, 1996–1999. Singapore: Singapore University Press. p. 179. ISBN 9971-69-332-1.
  8. ^ Hasanah, Sovia (October 17, 2017). "Dasar Hukum yang Melarang Penggunaan Istilah "Pribumi"" [Law that based ban of "Pribumi" term]. hukumonline.com. hukumonline.com. Retrieved June 11, 2018.
  9. ^ "Pribumi". KBBI (in Indonesian).
  10. ^ The Library of Congress, Federal Research Division. "Glossary—Indonesia". A Country Study: Indonesia. Retrieved October 4, 2006.
  11. ^ "Mengulik Data Suku di Indonesia". Badan Pusat Statistik. November 18, 2015. Retrieved February 12, 2020.
  12. ^ a b Indonesia's Population: Ethnicity and Religion in a Changing Political Landscape. Institute of Southeast Asian Studies. 2003.
  13. ^ a b c "Sebaran Suku Jawa Di Indonesia". www.kangatepafia.com. May 18, 2015. Retrieved April 19, 2016.

Further reading edit

  • Center for Information and Development Studies (1998). Pribumi dan Non-Pribumi dalam Perspektif Pemerataan Ekonomi dan Integrasi Sosial [Pribumi and Non-Pribumi in the Perspective of Economic Redistribution and Social Integration]. Jakarta, Indonesia: Center for Information and Development Studies.
  • Suryadinata, Leo (1992). Pribumi Indonesians, the Chinese Minority, and China. Singapore: Heinemann Asia.

native, indonesians, also, known, pribumi, bumiputra, first, soil, indonesians, whose, ancestral, roots, mainly, archipelago, distinguished, from, indonesians, known, partial, foreign, descent, like, chinese, indonesians, tionghoa, arab, indonesians, indian, i. Native Indonesians also known as Pribumi or Bumiputra lit first on the soil are Indonesians whose ancestral roots lie mainly in the archipelago distinguished from Indonesians of known partial foreign descent like Chinese Indonesians Tionghoa Arab Indonesians Indian Indonesians Japanese Indonesians and Indo Europeans Eurasians Pribumi NusantaraIndonesians wearing their indigenous costume during cultural carnavalTotal populationMore than 300 million Including Indonesian ancestry c 270 million Indonesia 2020 census 1 c 210 million Worldwide 2006 estimate 2 Regions with significant populations Indonesia c 270 million 2 Malaysia Indonesian Malaysians Netherlands Indo people Saudi Arabia Indonesian Saudis Singapore Indonesian Singaporeans South Africa Cape Malays TaiwanHongkongUnited StatesUnited Arab EmiratesSuriname Javanese AustraliaBruneiJapanPhilippinesSouth KoreaSri Lanka Sri Lankan Malays ChinaQatarBahrainGermanyCanadaetc LanguagesNational LanguageIndonesian Regional LanguageJavanese Sundanese Malay Madurese Minangkabau Betawi Batak Balinese etc ReligionMajorityIslam mostly Sunni minority Shia and Non denominational Minorities Christianity Protestantism Catholicism and Orthodoxy Hinduism Buddhism Animism Shamanism Sunda Wiwitan Kaharingan Parmalim Kejawen Aluk To Dolo Others Related ethnic groupsIndonesians Contents 1 Etymology and historical context 2 Background 3 Smaller groups 4 See also 4 1 Non Pribumi Indonesians 5 Notes 6 Further readingEtymology and historical context editThe term pribumi was popularized after Indonesian independence as a respectful replacement for the Dutch colonial term inlander normally translated as native and seen as derogatory 3 It derives from Sanskrit terms pri before and bhumi earth Before independence the term bumiputra Malay son of the soil was more commonly used as an equivalent term to pribumi Following independence the term was normally used to distinguish indigenous Indonesians from citizens of foreign descent especially Chinese Indonesians Common usage distinguished between pribumi and non pribumi 4 Although the term is sometimes translated as indigenous it has a broader meaning than that associated with Indigenous peoples The term WNI keturunan asing WNI Indonesian citizen keturunan asing foreign descent sometimes just WNI keturunan or even WNI has also been used to designate non pribumi Indonesians 5 In practice usage of the term is fluid Pribumi is seldom used to refer to Indonesians of Melanesian descent such as Moluccans and Papuans although it does not exclude them Indonesians of Arab descent sometimes refer to themselves as pribumi Indonesians with some exogenous ancestry who show no obvious signs of identification with that ancestry such as former President Abdurrahman Wahid who is said to have had Chinese ancestry are seldom called non pribumi The term bumiputra is sometimes used in Indonesia with the same meaning as pribumi but is more commonly used in Malaysia where it has a slightly different meaning 6 The term putra daerah son of the region refers to a person who is indigenous to a specific locality or region In 1998 the Indonesian government of President B J Habibie instructed that neither pribumi nor non pribumi should be used on the grounds that they promoted ethnic discrimination 7 8 The Dutch East India Company which dominated parts of the archipelago from the 17th century classified its subjects mainly by religion rather than ethnicity The colonial administration which took power in 1815 shifted to a system of ethnic classification Initially they distinguished between Europeans Europeanen and those equated with them including native Christians and Inlanders and those equated with them including non Christian Asians Over time native were gradually shifted de facto into the Inlander category while Chinese Indonesians Arab Indonesians and others of non Indonesian descent were gradually given separate status as Vreemde Oosterlingen Foreign Orientals The system was patriarchal rather than formally racial A child inherited his her father s ethnicity if the parents were married the mother s ethnicity if they were unmarried The off spring of a marriage between a European man and an Indonesian woman were legally European Today Indonesian dictionary defines pribumi as penghuni asli which translates into original native or indigenous inhabitant 9 Background edit nbsp Asmat woodcarverPribumi make up about 95 of the Indonesian population 2 Using Indonesia s population estimate in 2006 this translates to about 230 million people As an umbrella of similar cultural heritage among various ethnic groups in Indonesia Pribumi culture plays a significant role in shaping the country s socioeconomic circumstance The United States Library of Congress Country Study of Indonesia defines Pribumi as Literally an indigene or native In the colonial era the great majority of the population of the archipelago came to regard themselves as indigenous in contrast to the non indigenous Dutch and Chinese and to a degree Arab communities After independence the distinction persisted expressed as a dichotomy between elements that were pribumi and those that were not The distinction has had significant implications for economic development policy Indonesia A Country Study Glossary 10 There are over 1 300 ethnic groups in Indonesia 11 The largest ethnic group in Indonesia are the Javanese people who make up 41 of the total population The Javanese are concentrated on the island of Java but millions have migrated to other islands throughout the archipelago 12 The Sundanese Malay Batak and Madurese are the next largest groups in the country 12 Many ethnic groups particularly in Kalimantan and the province of Papua have only hundreds of members Most of the local languages belong to the Austronesian language family although a significant number particularly in North Maluku Timor Alor and West Papua speak Papuan languages The division and classification of ethnic groups in Indonesia is not rigid and in some cases are unclear as the result of migrations along with cultural and linguistic influences for example some who may agree that the Bantenese and Cirebonese belong to different ethnic groups with their own distinct dialect however others who might consider them to be Javanese sub ethnicities as members of the larger Javanese people The same considerations may apply to the Baduy people who share so many similarities with the Sundanese people that they can be considered as belonging to the same ethnic group The clearest example of hybrid ethnicity are the Betawi people the result of a mixture of different native ethnicities that have merged with people of Arab Chinese and Indian origins since the era of colonial Batavia Jakarta as well as the population of Larantuka known as Topasses who were of mixed descent from the Malaccan Malays the Lamaholot and Portuguese nbsp Several major ethno linguistic groups of IndonesiaThe proportional populations of Native Indonesians according to the 2010 census is as follows Ethnic groups Population million Percentage Main regionsJavanese 95 217 13 40 2 13 Central Java Yogyakarta East Java Lampung Jakarta 13 Sundanese 31 765 15 4 West Java Banten LampungMalay 8 789 4 1 Sumatra eastern coast West KalimantanBatak 8 467 3 58 North SumatraMadurese 7 179 3 03 Madura island East JavaBugis 6 000 2 9 South Sulawesi East KalimantanMinangkabau 5 569 2 7 West Sumatra RiauBetawi 5 157 2 5 Jakarta Banten West JavaBanjarese 4 800 2 3 South Kalimantan East KalimantanBantenese 4 331 2 1 Banten West JavaAcehnese 4 000 1 9 AcehBalinese 3 094 1 5 BaliDayak 3 009 1 5 North Kalimantan West Kalimantan Central KalimantanSasak 3 000 1 4 West Nusa TenggaraMakassarese 2 063 1 0 South SulawesiCirebonese 1 856 0 9 West Java Central JavaSmaller groups edit nbsp Torajan girls nbsp Balinese boysThe regions of Indonesia have some of their indigenous ethnic groups Due to migration within Indonesia as part of government transmigration programs or otherwise there are significant populations of ethnic groups who reside outside of their traditional regions Java Javanese Sundanese Betawi Bantenese Tengger Osing Badui and others Madura Madurese Sumatra Batak Minangkabau Malays Acehnese Lampung Kubu and others Kalimantan Dayak Banjar Kutai and others Sulawesi Makassarese Buginese Mandar Minahasa Buton Gorontalo Toraja Bajau Mongondow Buroko Bolango and others Lesser Sunda Islands Balinese Sasak Rotenese Atoni and others Moluccas Nuaulu Manusela Wemale and others Papua Dani Bauzi Asmat and others see List of ethnic groups of West Papua See also editCulture of Indonesia Ethnic groups in Indonesia List of indigenous peoples List of Indonesian people National costume of Indonesia Overseas IndonesiansNon Pribumi Indonesians edit African Indonesians Arab Indonesians Chinese Indonesians Dutch Indonesians Filipino Indonesians Indian Indonesians Jewish Indonesians Pakistani Indonesians Japanese IndonesiansNotes edit Hasil Sensus Penduduk 2020 PDF in Indonesian Statistics Indonesia December 15 2022 p 9 Retrieved January 21 2021 a b c Pribumi Encyclopedia of Modern Asia Macmillan Reference USA Archived from the original on July 11 2007 Retrieved October 5 2006 William H Frederick and Robert L Worden Indonesia A Country Study Washington Library of Congress 6th ed 2011 p 409 Kwik Kian Gie in Leo Suryadinata Political Thinking of the Indonesian Chinese 1900 1995 A Sourcebook Singapore University Press 2nd ed 1977 p 135 James T Siegel Early Thoughts on the Violence of May 13 and 14 1998 in Jakarta Indonesia 66 Oct 1998 p 90 pp 74 108 Sharon Siddique and Leo Suryadinata Bumiputra and Pribumi Economic Nationalism Indiginism in Malaysia and Indonesia Pacific Affairs Vol 54 No 4 Winter 1981 1982 pp 662 687 Purdey Jemma 2006 Anti Chinese Violence in Indonesia 1996 1999 Singapore Singapore University Press p 179 ISBN 9971 69 332 1 Hasanah Sovia October 17 2017 Dasar Hukum yang Melarang Penggunaan Istilah Pribumi Law that based ban of Pribumi term hukumonline com hukumonline com Retrieved June 11 2018 Pribumi KBBI in Indonesian The Library of Congress Federal Research Division Glossary Indonesia A Country Study Indonesia Retrieved October 4 2006 Mengulik Data Suku di Indonesia Badan Pusat Statistik November 18 2015 Retrieved February 12 2020 a b Indonesia s Population Ethnicity and Religion in a Changing Political Landscape Institute of Southeast Asian Studies 2003 a b c Sebaran Suku Jawa Di Indonesia www kangatepafia com May 18 2015 Retrieved April 19 2016 Further reading editCenter for Information and Development Studies 1998 Pribumi dan Non Pribumi dalam Perspektif Pemerataan Ekonomi dan Integrasi Sosial Pribumi and Non Pribumi in the Perspective of Economic Redistribution and Social Integration Jakarta Indonesia Center for Information and Development Studies Suryadinata Leo 1992 Pribumi Indonesians the Chinese Minority and China Singapore Heinemann Asia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Native Indonesians amp oldid 1192636993, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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