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Revision as of 22:02, 28 March 2006 editTuai (talk | contribs)295 edits Politics← Previous edit Latest revision as of 05:10, 15 January 2025 edit undoPineapplethen (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users731 edits Better return to status quo numbers first, then if discuss it to change. What if the Iban, Bidayuh and Orang Ulu tribes live in Sabah, Labuan or Malay peninsula, will they be counted as Non-Dayaks, we will discuss in the talk page of how much are Dayaks in the WHOLE of Malaysia, not just Sarawak.Tags: Visual edit Mobile edit Mobile web edit 
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{{ethnic group| {{short description|Indigenous ethnic group of Borneo}}
{{EngvarB|date=June 2023}}
|group=Dayak
{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2022}}
|image=
{{Infobox ethnic group
|poptime=3 million
| group = Dayaks
|popplace=], ], ]
| native_name = ''Dayak''<br>''Dyak''
|rels=], ], ], ]
| native_name_lang =
|langs=]
| image = COLLECTIE TROPENMUSEUM Studioportret van een Dajak in krijgskleding TMnr 60033041.jpg
|related=], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ],]
| caption = Dayak chief as seen holding a spear and a ] shield.
| population = {{circa}} 4.2 million
| popplace1 = ''']''':
| region1 = '''{{Flagcountry|Indonesia}}'''
| pop1 = {{circa}} 3,289,938<ref>{{cite web|url=https://media.neliti.com/media/publications/49956-ID-kewarganegaraan-suku-bangsa-agama-dan-bahasa-sehari-hari-penduduk-indonesia.pdf|author=|date=|title=Jumlah dan Persentase Penduduk menurut Kelompok Suku Bangsa|website=media.neliti.com|publisher=Kewarganegaraan, suku bangsa, agama dan bahasa sehari-hari penduduk Indonesia|access-date=13 May 2022}}</ref>
| region2 = '''{{Flagcountry|Malaysia}}'''
| pop2 = {{circa}} 3,597,644<ref name="popbreakdown">{{Cite journal|title=Population Distribution and Demography|url=http://www.statistics.gov.my/portal/download_Population/files/census2010/Taburan_Penduduk_dan_Ciri-ciri_Asas_Demografi.pdf|journal=Malaysian Department of Statistics|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131113165406/http://www.statistics.gov.my/portal/download_Population/files/census2010/Taburan_Penduduk_dan_Ciri-ciri_Asas_Demografi.pdf|archive-date=13 November 2013}}</ref>
| religions = '''Predominantly'''<br>] ] (], ]) (62.7%)<br>'''Minorities'''<br>] ] (]) (31.6%)<br>] (4.8%)<br>and Others (i.e. ]) (0.9%)<ref>{{cite book |last1=Ananta |first1=Aris |last2=Arifin |first2=Evi |last3=Hasbullah |first3=M. |last4=Handayani |first4=Nur |last5=Pramono |first5=Wahyu |title=Demography of Indonesia's Ethnicity |date=2015 |publisher=ISEAS Publishing |location=Singapore |isbn=978-981-4519-87-8 |page=272 |url=https://bookshop.iseas.edu.sg/publication/2084 |access-date=8 May 2020}}</ref>
| languages = '''Indigenous'''<br>] (], ], ], ], ], ] ){{•}} ] {{•}} ] <br>'''Other'''<br> ] {{•}} ] {{•}} ] {{•}} ]
| related = ''']'''<br>]{{•}}Bornean ]{{•}}]{{•}}]{{•}}], etc.
}} }}


The '''Dayak''' ] (or '''Dyak''') are indigenous natives of ]. The term Dayak is principally used to describe the interior population of Borneo. It is a loose term for over 200 riverine and hill dwelling ethnic groups, each with its own language, customs, laws, territories and cultures, although common distinguishing traits is readily identifiable. Dayaks are generally categorised as part of a wider Austronesian speaking group,local to the Island of Borneo in the Indonesian Archipelago and mutually share the same racial characteristics of those indigenous inhabitants in South East Asia. To date, according to various census reports, there are about 3 million Dayaks on Borneo. The '''Dayak''' ({{IPAc-en|'|d|aI|.|@|k|audio=En-us-Dayak from Indonesia pronunciation (Voice of America).ogg}}; ]: '''Dajak''') or '''Dyak''' or '''Dayuh''' are one of the ] of ].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.ethnologue.com/14/show_iso639.asp?code=day |title=Report for ISO 639 code: day |work=Ethnologue: Countries of the World |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071001223408/http://www.ethnologue.com/14/show_iso639.asp?code=day |archive-date=1 October 2007 |df=dmy-all }}</ref> It is a loose term for over 200 riverine and hill-dwelling ethnic groups, located principally in the ] and ] of ], each with its own dialect, customs, laws, territory, and culture, although common distinguishing traits are readily identifiable. The Dayak were ] (] and Folk Hindus) in belief; however, since the 19th century there has been mass conversion to ] as well as ] due to the spreading of Abrahamic religions.<ref>{{cite news
|url=http://coombs.anu.edu.au/SpecialProj/ASAA/biennial-conference/2006/Chalmers-Ian-ASAA2006.pdf |title=The Dynamics of Conversion: the Islamisation of the Dayak peoples of Central Kalimantan |first=Ian |last=Chalmers |work=Asian Studies Association of Australia |year=2006 |access-date=3 December 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140307234306/http://coombs.anu.edu.au/SpecialProj/ASAA/biennial-conference/2006/Chalmers-Ian-ASAA2006.pdf |archive-date=7 March 2014}}</ref>
]'', housing the remains of a Pesaguan Dayak after ] ceremony which is a part of ] religion rituals.]]


==Etymology==
It is commonly assumed that the name originates from the ] and ] word for "interior people", without any reference to an exact ethnic group. Particularly, it derives from a related ] word for "upstream" (compare with ethnonym ]).<ref>{{cite book |last1=Lindblad |first1=J. Thomas |title=Between the Dayak and the Dutch: The Economic History of Southeast Kalimantan 1880-1942 |date=1988 |publisher=Foris Publications |location=Dordrecht |page=2}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |author-link1=Robert Blust|last1=Blust |first1=Robert |last2=Truseel |first2=Stephen |title=*''daya'' upriver, toward the interior |url=https://acd.clld.org/cognatesets/30288 |website=Austronesian Comparative Dictionary Online |publisher=Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology |access-date=8 December 2024 |date=2010}}</ref> The term was adopted by Dutch and German authors as an umbrella term for any non-Muslim natives of Borneo. Thus, historically, the difference between Dayak and non-Dayak natives could be understood as a religious distinction. English writers disapproved of the classification made by the Dutch and Germans, with ] preferring to use the term Dayak for only two distinct groups, the Land (Bidayuh) and Sea Dayaks (Iban).<ref>{{cite journal|url=https://openresearch-repository.anu.edu.au/handle/1885/116158|author= Tillotson |date=1994|title=Who invented the Dayaks? : historical case studies in art, material culture and ethnic identity from Borneo|website=Open Research Library|pages= 2 v |publisher=Australian National University|doi= 10.25911/5d70f0cb47d77 |access-date=13 May 2022}}</ref>


The Dutch classification from the 19th century has since continued in ] as a catch-all term for indigenous, often non-Muslim tribes on the island until today. The term gained traction in the early 1900s among rising middle class and intellectual figures (such as ]) from those tribes and being used as a unifying term for Dayaks in Kalimantan.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=van Klinken |first=Gerry |date=2007-11-15 |title=Dayak Ethnogenesis and Conservative Politics in Indonesia's Outer Islands |url=https://papers.ssrn.com/abstract=1030241 |language=en |location=Rochester, NY|ssrn=1030241 }}</ref> In ], the term Dayak generally reserves as an almost exclusively reference to the natives of ], namely ] (previously referred as Sea Dayaks) and ] (known as Land Dayak in the past).<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/Dayak|author=|date=|title=Dayak|website=Britanicca|publisher=Encyclopædia Britannica|access-date=13 May 2022}}</ref> However, some modern interpretations of the term also include the ] groups in Sarawak.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://minorityrights.org/communities/indigenous-peoples-and-ethnic-minorities-in-sarawak/|title=Indigenous peoples and ethnic minorities in Sarawak in Malaysia|website=Minority Rights Group|access-date=14 January 2025}}</ref>
==History==


==Ethnicity and languages==
Common interpretations in modern anthropology agree that all indigenous peoples of South East Asia, including the Dayaks, are descendants of a larger more common Austronesian migration from Asia, regarded to have settled in the South East Asian Archipelago some 3000 years ago. The first populations spoke various languages and dialects now termed under the collective Austronesian Lingua, from which Dayak languages are traced. About 2400 years ago, metallurgy was introduced and subsequently became widespread.
{{anchor|Languages}}<!---"Dayak languages" redirects here--->
Dayaks do not speak just one language.<ref name="Ave">{{cite book |last=Avé |first=J. B. |year=1972 |chapter=Kalimantan Dyaks |editor-last=LeBar |editor-first=Frank M. |title=Ethnic Groups of Insular Southeast Asia, Volume 1: Indonesia, Andaman Islands, and Madagascar |location=New Haven |publisher=Human Relations Area Files Press |pages=185–187|isbn=978-0-87536-403-2}}</ref> Their indigenous languages belong to different subgroups of the ], such as ], ], ], and ] languages.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Adelaar |first=K. Alexander |year=1995 |title=Borneo as a cross-roads for comparative Austronesian linguistics |editor1=Bellwood, Peter |editor2=Fox. James J. |editor3=Tryon, Darrell |journal=The Austronesians: Historical and Comparative Perspectives |edition=online |publisher=Department of Anthropology, The Australian National University |location=Canberra, Australia |pages=81–102 |isbn=978-1-920942-85-4 |url=http://press.anu.edu.au/austronesians/austronesians/pdf/austronesians-whole.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140629211758/http://press.anu.edu.au/austronesians/austronesians/pdf/austronesians-whole.pdf |archive-date=29 June 2014 |url-status=dead |access-date=29 June 2014 |df=dmy-all }}</ref><ref>See the language list at {{cite web |title=Borneo Languages: Languages of Kalimantan, Indonesia and East Malaysia |work=Royal Netherlands Institute of Southeast Asian and Caribbean Studies, Koninklijk Instituut voor Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde (KITLV) |url=http://www.kitlv.nl/thesaurus/00001573.htm |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120209002318/http://www.kitlv.nl/thesaurus/00001573.htm |archive-date=9 February 2012 |url-status=dead |df=dmy-all }}</ref> Nowadays most Dayaks are bilingual, in addition to their native language, are well-versed in ] and ], depending on their country of origin. Many of Borneo's languages are endemic (which means they are spoken nowhere else). This cultural and linguistic diversity parallels the high biodiversity and related ] of Borneo.


It is estimated that around 170 languages and dialects are spoken on the island and some by just a few hundred people, thus posing a serious risk to the future of those languages and related heritage.
The main ethnic groups of Dayaks are the Ibans of Sarawak and Kapuas, The Ngajus, Baritos, Benuaqs of East Kalimantan, the Kayan and Kenyah groups and their subtribes in Central Borneo and the sub Ibanic Embaloh (Maloh)and Taman populations in the Kapuas periphery. Other tribes include the Ahe,Jagoi, Selakau, Bidayuh, and Banjars.


In 1954, ] classified the various Dayak groups into 18 tribes throughout the island of Borneo, with 403 sub-tribes according to their respective native languages, customs, and cultures. However, he did not specify the name of the sub-tribes in his publication:<ref>{{cite journal |author=Masri Singarimbun |date=1991 |title=Beberapa aspek kehidupan masyarakat Dayak |journal=Humaniora |volume=3 |pages=139–151 |url=https://jurnal.ugm.ac.id/jurnal-humaniora/article/view/2083/1883 |access-date=3 May 2022}}</ref>
The Dayak people of Borneo, possess a relatively accurate account of their history, partly in writing and partly in common cultural customary practices and lore. Historical accounts and reports of Dayak activity in Borneo details carefully cultivated economic and political relationships with other communities as well as an ample body of research and study considering historical Dayak migrations. In particular, the Iban or the Sea Dayak exploits in the South China Seas are well documented, owing to their particular ferocity and aggressive culture of war against sea dwelling groups and emerging Western trade interests in the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries.


{| class="wikitable"
Coastal populations in Borneo are largely Muslim in belief, however these groups (Ilanun, Melanau, Kadayan, Banjar, Bisayah) are generally considered to be Islamized Dayaks, native to Borneo, and governed by the relatively high cultural influences of the Majapahit Kingdoms and Sultanates, periodically covering South East Asian history.
|-
! style="text-align: center; background: #aacccc;"|Cluster
! style="text-align: center; background: #aacccc;"|Tribe
! style="text-align: center; background: #aacccc;"|Number of sub-tribes
! style="text-align: center; background: #aacccc;"|Regions with significant population<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/355116976|author=Masri Singaribum|date=|title=Beberapa Aspek Kehidupan Masyarakat Dayak|website=media.neliti|publisher=|access-date=3 May 2022}}</ref>
|- valign="top"
| I. Ngaju
|
]<br>
]<br>
]<br>
]<br>
|
53<br>
8<br>
21<br>
8<br>
|Central-Southern Borneo
|- valign="top"
| II. Apukayan
|
]<br>
]<br>
]<br>
|
24<br>
10<br>
26<br>
|Eastern Borneo
|- valign="top"
| III. Iban/Sea Dayaks
|
]
|
11<br>
|Northwestern inland and coastal Borneo
|- valign="top"
| IV. ]/Land Dayaks
|
]<br>
Ketungau<br>
|
47<br>
40<br>
|Northwestern outback Borneo
|- valign="top"
| V. ]
|
]<br>
]<br>
Ot<br>
|
20<br>
24<br>
5<br>
|Central-East Borneo
|- valign="top"
| VI. Murut
|
]/]<br>
]<br>
]<br>
|
6<br>
10<br>
28<br>
|Northern Borneo
|- valign="top"
|VII. Ot Danum
|
]
|
61<br>
|Central-Southern Borneo
|- valign="top"
|}


==Economy== ==Religion==
{{Pie chart
|thumb = right
|caption = Religion of Dayak People in Indonesia
|label1 = ]
|value1 = 32.1
|color1 = Purple
|label3 = ]
|value3 = 30.6
|color3 = DarkBlue
|label2 = ]
|value2 = 31.6
|color2 = DarkGreen
|label4 = ]/]
|value4 = 4.8
|color4 = DarkRed
|label5 = Others, mostly ]
|value5 = 0.9
|color5 = Black


}}
===Kaharingan===
]
In Indonesia, the Dayak indigenous religion has been given the name ] and may be said to be a form of ]. In 1945, during the ], the Japanese referred to Kaharingan as the religion of the Dayak people. During the ] in the ] regime in 1980, the Kaharingan is registered as a form of ], as the Indonesian state only recognises ] i.e. Islam, Protestantism, Roman Catholicism, Hinduism, Buddhism, and Confucianism respectively. The integration of Kaharingan with Hinduism is not due to the similarities in the theological system, but because Kaharingan is the oldest belief in Kalimantan. Unlike the development in Indonesian Kalimantan, Kaharingan is not used as a religious designation in Malaysia, Brunei and Singapore, thus the traditional Dayak belief system is categorized as a form of folk animism or paganism outside of the Indonesian border.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Baier |first=Martin |date=2007 |title=The Development of the Hindu Kaharingan Religion: A New Dayak Religion in Central Kalimantan |journal=Anthropos |volume=102 |issue=2 |pages=566–570 |doi=10.5771/0257-9774-2007-2-566 |jstor=40389742}}</ref>


The practice of Kaharingan differs from group to group, but shamans, specialists in ecstatic flight to other spheres, are central to Dayak religion and serve to bring together the various realms of Heaven (Upper-world) and earth, and even Under-world, for example healing the sick by retrieving their souls which are journeying on their way to the Upper-world land of the dead, accompanying and protecting the soul of a dead person on the way to their proper place in the Upper-world, presiding over annual renewal and agricultural regeneration festivals, etc.<ref>The most detailed study of the shamanistic ritual at funerals is by Waldemar Stöhr, ''Der Totenkult der Ngadju Dajak in Süd-Borneo. Mythen zum Totenkult und die Texte zum Tantolak Matei'' (Den Haag: Martinus Nijhoff, 1966).</ref> Death rituals are most elaborate when a noble (''kamang'') dies.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Dowling |first=Nancy |date=1992 |title=The Javanization of Indian Art |journal=Indonesia |volume=54 |issue=54 |pages=117–138 |doi=10.2307/3351167 |jstor=3351167 |hdl-access=free |hdl=1813/53986}}</ref> Due to the institutionalization of Kaharingan beliefs in Indonesia, Kaharingan practices in Kalimantan have been recently codified and remolded into more organized religion, such as with codification of ''Panaturan'' as scripture of Kaharingan in 1971,<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Etika |first1=Tiwi |last2=Schiller |first2=Anne |date=2022-05-01 |title=Kaharingan or Hindu KaharinganWhat's in a Name in Indonesian Borneo? |url=https://online.ucpress.edu/nr/article/25/4/64/168635/Kaharingan-or-Hindu-KaharinganWhat-s-in-a-Name-in |journal=Nova Religio |language=en |volume=25 |issue=4 |pages=64–87 |doi=10.1525/nr.2022.25.4.64 |s2cid=248711574 |issn=1092-6690}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Sutama |first1=Putu |last2=Arina Luardini |first2=Maria |last3=Asi |first3=Natalina |date=2020-02-19 |title=The Religious Text 'Panaturan' of the Dayak Ngaju Community |journal=KnE Social Sciences |doi=10.18502/kss.v4i4.6489 |s2cid=212716036 |issn=2518-668X|doi-access=free }}</ref> creation of official Kaharingan body Hindu Kaharingan Religion Council (''Majelis Agama Hindu Kaharingan'') in 1980, and standarization of its house of worship buildings called ''Balai Basarah'' .<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Baier |first=Martin |date=2007 |title=The Development of the Hindu Kaharingan Religion. A New Dayak Religion in Central Kalimanta |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.5771/0257-9774-2007-2-566 |journal=Anthropos |volume=102 |issue=2 |pages=566–570 |doi=10.5771/0257-9774-2007-2-566 |issn=0257-9774}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Baier |first=Martin |date=January 2007 |title=The Development of a New Religion in Kalimantan, Central Borneo |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1683478x.2007.10552574 |journal=Asian Anthropology |volume=6 |issue=1 |pages=169–182 |doi=10.1080/1683478x.2007.10552574 |s2cid=129770494 |issn=1683-478X}}</ref>
Agriculture


===Christianity===
Dayak culture is consistently tied to the customary practice of Shifting Cultivation and hill padi rice farming. The rites, beliefs, customs and methods of rice farming amongst the Dayak vary from one ethnic group to the other, marking the entire economy as agricultural based driven. Periods of intense planting and harvesting takes place in all communities, and land is valued primarily for the production of hill rice farming amongst other agricultural commodities.
Over the last two centuries, many Dayaks have converted to Christianity, making them the majority of Christians in Borneo, abandoning certain cultural rites and traditional practices in the process. Christianity was introduced by European missionaries in Borneo by ] (later followed up by the ]).<ref>{{Cite book |last=Rahman Hakim |first=Arif |title=Sejarah kota Palangka Raya |publisher=Palangka Raya : Pemerintah Kota Palangka Raya |year=2003 |isbn=979-97978-0-2 |location=Palangka Raya |pages=18–20}}</ref> Religious differences between Muslim and Christian natives of Borneo have led, at various times, to communal tensions.<ref>{{cite book |first1=Jan B. |last1=Avé |first2=Victor T. |last2=King |title=The People of the Weeping Forest: Tradition and Change in Borneo |location=Leiden, Netherlands |publisher=] |year=1986 |isbn=978-9-07131-028-7}}</ref> Relations, however between all religious groups are generally good.


===Islam===
The main dependence on subsistence and mid scale agriculture by the Dayak has made this group active in this industry. The modern day rise in large scale monocrop plantations such as Palm Oil and Bananas proposed for vast swathes of Dayak land held under customary rights, titles and claims in Malaysia and Indonesia, threaten the local political landscape in various regions in Borneo. Further problems continue to arise in part due to the shaping of the modern Malaysian and Indonesian Nation State on the back of previous British and Dutch Colonial systems and their peculiar laws on Land Tenure. The conflict between the State and the Dayak natives on Land laws and native customay rights will continue for as long as the anglo-saxon colonial model on land tenure is used for defining relationships between the Dayak citizenry and the central authority of the State. Dayak cultivated land, interpreted by local customary law, is considered to be owned and held in right by the natives, and the concept of land ownership as thus, flows out of this central belief.This understanding of adat, is based on the idea that land is used and held under Native domain. Invariably, when European Colonial rule was established, conflict touching against the subjugation of territory under one foreign and alien authority, erupted various times between the Dayaks and the respective Colonial authorities.
Traditionally, in many parts of Borneo, embracing the Muslim faith is equated with ] (Indonesian/Malay: {{lang|ms|masuk Melayu}}), i.e. assimilation into the broader ]. There are, however, several Dayak sub-ethnicities (mainly in ]) that predominantly adhere to Islam, but self-identify as Dayaks. These include e.g. the ], who converted to Islam in the 19th century, but still have strong linguistic and cultural ties to the ]. They have adopted a positive attitude towards the label "Dayak" and self-identify as ''Muslim Dayaks''.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Chalmers |first=Ian |title=Asia Reconstructed: Proceedings of the 16th Biennial Conference of the ASAA |date=2006 |publisher=Australian National University |editor-last=Vickers |editor-first=A. |location=Wollongong, NSW |chapter=The Dynamics of Conversion: the Islamisation of the Dayak peoples of Central Kalimantan |hdl=20.500.11937/35283 |isbn=9780958083737 |editor-last2=Hanlon |editor-first2=M. |hdl-access=free}}</ref>


==Society and customs==
==Religion==
{{See also|Dayak in politics}}
] performance before the land clearing ceremony]]
===Economic activities===
Historically, most of the Dayak people are ] cultivators who supplement their incomes by seeking forest products, both for subsistence (ferns, medicinal plants, fibers, and timber) and for sale; by fishing and hunting and by periodic wage labor.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Colfer |first1=Carol J. Pierce |title=People Managing Forests: The Links Between Human Well-Being and Sustainability |last2=Byron |first2=Yvonne |date=2001 |publisher=Resources for the Future |isbn=1-891853-05-8 |location=Washington, DC}}</ref> Presently, many modern-day Dayaks are also actively engaged in many contemporary economic activities, especially in the ] of Borneo.<ref>{{cite journal|url=https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/14631360220132745|author=Boulanger|date=2010|title=Inventing Tradition, Inventing Modernity: Dayak Identity in Urban Sarawak
|language=|journal=Asian Ethnicity|volume=3 |issue=2 |pages=221–231 |publisher=Taylor & Francis|doi=10.1080/14631360220132745 |s2cid=144515877 |access-date=3 June 2022}}</ref>


===Toplessness===
In the ], ] was the ] among the Dayak people, ], and ] of Indonesia before ] and contact with Western cultures. In Javanese and Balinese societies, women worked or rested comfortably topless. Among the Dayak, only big-breasted women or married women with ] breasts covered their breasts because they interfered with their work. With the availability of shirts, toplessness was abandoned.<ref name="ReferenceA">{{Cite book |last=Duerr |first=Hans Peter |title=Der Mythos vom Zivilisationsprozeß |date=1997 |publisher=Suhrkamp |volume=4: Der Erotische Leib |location=Frankfurt am Main |language=de}}</ref>


===Tattoo===
The Dayak indigeneous religion is ], which is a form of ], although for official purposes it is categorized as a form of ]. Over the last two centuries, Dayaks have Islamized progressively, to the point of abandoning certain cultural rites and practices, including Dayak ethnic identity. Christianity was introduced by European Missionaries in Borneo and may have appeared to be a deliberate policy by the Colonial authorities to create a social bulwark against the complete and gradual Islamization of every single native Dayak. The religious division marking the differences between Muslim and Christian natives in Borneo, has led at various times, to eruptions of communal tension, however relations between both religious groups are considered to be good.
]
In many Dayak societies, a ] is regarded as a sacred creation that consolidates together the images of humans, flora, and fauna into a single body art.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://tattmag.com/dayak-tattoos/|author=Tattmag Team |date=16 December 2019|title=40 DAYAK TATTOOS: ORIGINS, MEANINGS & MORE|website=tattmag.com/|access-date=6 December 2023}}</ref> The tattoo is used as a spiritual expression of life, to unify the living, the spiritual powers, and the universe.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.larskrutak.com/in-the-realm-of-spirits-traditional-dayak-tattoo-in-borneo/|author= |date=23 November 2012|title=IN THE REALM OF SPIRITS: TRADITIONAL DAYAK TATTOO IN BORNEO|website=larskrutak.com|access-date=6 December 2023}}</ref>


Traditionally, there are various reasons why a Dayak man or woman would choose body art. For some, it was used to mark a person's ethnic origin and rank the society. For others, the tattoo served as an act of devotion, as a demonstration of skills, to commemorate a special occasion in life, or as a symbol for the ].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://tattmag.com/dayak-tattoos/|author=Tattmag Team |date=16 December 2019|title=40 DAYAK TATTOOS: ORIGINS, MEANINGS & MORE|website=tattmag.com/|access-date=6 December 2023}}</ref>
In Malaysian Borneo, the process of gradual Islamization has been furtively introduced and promoted by the State, with inducements given to those willing to convert. Muslim Dayaks have however retained their original identity and kept various customary practices consistent with their religion. In general, some Dayaks have converted to ] and ]. Although Dayaks live in two mainly religious countries (Indonesia and Malaysia), these religions have never really gained a foothold with them, largely because of certain taboos (e.g. the consumption of alcohol and pork) and the prohibition of several traditional practices.


===Elongated earlobes===
An example of common identity over and above religious belief, is the Melanau group. The small coastal Melanau population of Sarawak are evenly divided in two belief systems, one part Christianised and the other Islamized. The religious divisions remain, however the common identity of the Melanau is held above this divide.
Amongst several Dayak groups in the past, long female ]s are regarded as a symbol of beauty. The ] usually begins when the child is about 4 years old. During the initial stage, her ears will be pierced by an earring, so that the hisang (a special heavy silver or bronze earring) can be worn on her ears.


A new hisang will gradually be added with age. After a woman is married, her hisang will potentially be up to 20 pieces per-ear. As the hisang was sourced from precious and expansive metals like silver and bronze, it can signify her ], wealth, and social standing within the society. Thus, the longer her earlobes, the more important she is to the community. Presently, the practice of having stretched earlobes is almost limited to the elderly, as the practice of applying hisang amongst newborn babies has been rare since the 1960s.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://wwf.panda.org/wwf_news/?339150/The-Last-Long-Earlobes|author=Tattmag Team |date=27 November 2023|title=40The Last Long Earlobes|website=panda.org|access-date=6 December 2023}}</ref>
==Society==
Kinship is traced in both the male and female line. Although, in Dayak Iban society, male and females possess equal rights in status and property ownership, political office has strictly been the occupation of the traditional Iban Patriarch. Overall Iban leadership in any given region, is marked by titles, a Penghulu for instance would have invested authority on behalf of a network of Tuai Rumah's, and so on to a Temenggung or Panglima. It must be noted that individual Dayak groups have their social and hierarchy systems defined internally, and these differ widely from Ibans to Ngajus and Benuaqs to Kayans.


===Longhouses===
The most salient feature of Dayak social organization is the practice of Longhouse domicile. Those who have travelled extensively throughout the Island, would recognise the shape of a Longhouse: a structure supported by hardwood posts, stretching for a hundred yards or more along a terraced river bank. The Iban of the Kapuas and Sarawak have organised their Longhouse settlements in response to their migratory patterns. Examined from outside the community, it would appear that a Iban Longhouse
] longhouse with skulls and weapons along the wall, exhibiting their headhunter culture]]
is the outcome of some sort of communal or group organization and ownership. In reality, this inference is the reverse of true. The Iban Longhouse is primarily an aggregation of independently owned family apartments. The fact that these apartments are joined detracts very little from their autonomy. Iban Longhouses vary in size, from those slightly over 100 yards in length to huge settlements over 500 yards in length. The number of families occupying individual apartments in the Longhouse is equidistant to the number of doors (pintu) a longhouse has. For i.e a Longhouse of 200 doors is equivalent to a settlement of 200 families.
In the traditional Dayak society, the ] or ], is regarded as the heart of the community, it functions as the village, as well as the societal architectural expression. This large building, sometimes exceeding 200 meters in length, may be divided into independent household apartments. The building is also equipped with communal areas for cooking, ceremonies, socializing, and blacksmithing.


The superstructure is not solely about architecture and design. It is a part of the Dayak traditional political entity and administrative system. Thus, culturally the people residing in the longhouse are governed by the customs and traditions of the longhouse.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.kaltimber.com/blog/2020/7/20/dayak-architecture-and-art-the-use-of-longhouse|author= |date=20 July 2020|title=Dayak Architecture and Art: The Use of Longhouse|website=Kaltimber|access-date=16 May 2022}}</ref>
] remains an important part of Dayak culture in particular to the Iban, although the practice has gradually been kept in check over the last 30 years (Headhunting was government sanctioned affairs during the reign of the Brooke Rajahs and discouraged in Dutch Borneo by the authorities). Traditionally, victorious War Groups would return with captured enemy heads and the higher in number accumulated would complement the higher rise in recognised status and rank. A triumph for the victors would be marked by a special ceremonial occassion. Heads would be tied with rattan and hung in bundles from the ceiling of the longhouses.Each community was lead by a Leader who in turn formed alliances with local leaders. War Parties had a special warrior (Tau serang) who led the raids against the enemy. Besides massive coordinated raids, there were also individual retaliation attacks or the result of chance encounters in the forest.


===Beadworks===
Metal-working is quite elaborate and especially used for making ]s (]). The blade is made of a softer iron, to prevent breakage, with a narrow strip of a harder iron wedged into a slot in the cutting edge for sharpness. The parang is fairly short and serves both a weapon and for trailcutting in dense forest. It is holstered with the cutting edge facing upwards and at that side there is an upward protrusion on the handle, so the parang can be drawn very quickly with the the hand<!--???--> without having to reach over and grasp the handle first. The ceremonial parangs used for dances are as beautifully adorned with feathers as the dresses are. There are various terms to describe different types of Dayak blades. The Nyabor is the traditional Iban Scimitar, Parang Ilang is common to Kayan and Kenyah Swordsmiths, and Duku is a multipurpose farm tool and machete of sorts.
]]]
Based on the archeological records in Borneo, it was discovered that the early inhabitants of the island had used organic materials to make simple ]s. The beads were originally sourced from stones, bones, teeth, and shells. When the foreign traders arrived between the 8th-9th century, they further enhanced the ancient bead cultures of Borneo with the introduction of ]. These early beads are usually small, in basic colours of red, yellow, white, turquoise, and black. These were followed by multicolored beads around the 1500s-1600s.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.borneotalk.com/beads/|author= |date=|title=Beads Culture|website=Borneo Talk|access-date=16 May 2022}}</ref>


Traditional ]s have occupied a pivotal status in various Dayak communities. In many Dayak cultures, beads are not solely regarded as ornamental objects, but they are a major cultural influence.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://espace.curtin.edu.au/bitstream/handle/20.500.11937/86025/85847.pdf?sequence=2|author= Terry Justin Dit, Eileen Paya Foong |date=|title=The Importance Of Preserving Memories: A Story Of A Long Apu Family's Pesaka Beads |website=Curtin.edu|access-date=16 May 2022}}</ref> Some of the beads only being used for ritualistic practices and are worn during such ceremonies. While heirloom beads (known as pesaka) are regarded as an important family heirloom and oftentimes being inherited from one generation to another.
==Politics==


===Metal-working===
] is elaborately developed in making {{transliteration|mis|]}} (machetes – {{transliteration|ms|]}} in Malay and Indonesian). The blade is made of softer iron, to prevent breakage, with a narrow strip of a harder iron wedged into a slot in the cutting edge for sharpness in a process called {{transliteration|mis|ngamboh}} (iron-smithing).


In headhunting, it was necessary to be able to draw the {{transliteration|ms|parang}} quickly. For this purpose, the {{transliteration|mis|mandau}} is fairly short, which also better serves the purpose of trail cutting in dense forests. It is holstered with the cutting edge facing upwards and at that side, there is an upward protrusion on the handle, so it can be drawn very quickly with the side of the hand without having to reach over and grasp the handle first. The hand can then grasp the handle while it is being drawn. The combination of these three factors (short, cutting edge up, and protrusion) makes for an extremely fast drawing-action.
Dayaks in Indonesia and Malaysia enjoy a notable political history, and it appears that organised Dayak political activism of the Indonesian Modern Party State first appeared in Kalimantan in the form of the Dayak Unity Party (Parti Persatuan Dayak)during the late 19th century and crystallised with the formation of the DUP. Dayaks in Sarawak in this respect,compare very poorly with their organised cousins and brethren in Kalimantan due to in no part, the personal fiefdom that was the Brooke Rajah dominion. Political circumtances aside,the Dayaks in Kalimantan actively organised under various associations beginning with the Sarekat Dayak established in 1919, to the Parti Dayak in the 40s, and to the present day, where Dayaks occupy key positions in government.


===Headhunting and peacemaking===
In Sarawak, Dayak political activism had its roots in the SNAP (Sarawak National Party) and Pesaka during post independence construction in the 1960s. These parties shaped to a certain extent Dayak politics in the State, although never enjoying the real privileges and benefits of Chief Ministerial power relative to its large electorate. It can be said that successive Key Dayak parties in the State of Sarawak acquiesed real political credibility in favour of personal short term gain in junior ministerial posts and token positions in the Prime Minister's Cabinet and the ruling coalition government. Nevertheless, Dayaks dominate Sarawak politics and are present in all political formations within the State Barisan Nasional.
] taken in ''Tumbang Anoi village'' (c. 1894). ]]
In the past, the Dayaks were feared for their ancient tradition of ] practices (the ritual is also known as ''Ngayau'' by the Dayaks).


Among the most prominent legacies during the colonial rule in the ] (present-day Kalimantan) is the ''Tumbang Anoi Agreement'' held in 1894 in Damang Batu, Central Kalimantan (the seat of the ]). It is a formal meeting that gathered all the Dayak tribes in Kalimantan for a peace resolution. In the meeting that is reputed to take several months, the Dayak people throughout the Kalimantan agreed to end the headhunting tradition as it believed the tradition caused conflict and tension between various Dayak groups. The meeting ended with a peace resolution by the Dayak people.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Robert Kenneth |date=26 July 2019 |title=Dayaks Gather to Mark Peace Treaty |work=New Sarawak Tribune |url=https://www.newsarawaktribune.com.my/dayaks-gather-to-mark-peace-treaty/ |access-date=2020-01-18}}</ref>
Under Indonesia's ]me, settlers from densely-populated ] and ] were encouraged to settle in the Kalimantan provinces, but their presence was, and still is, resented by Dayaks. The large scale transmigration projects initiated by the Dutch and continued by present Javanese governments, caused widespread breakdown in social and community cohesion during the late 20th Century. In ] the ]n government ended the gradual Javanese settlement of Kalimantan that began under Dutch rule in ].


Subsequently, the headhunting began to surface again in the mid-1940s, when the ] encouraged the practice against the ] occupation of Borneo.<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2007/11/09/opinion/09iht-edheiman.1.8264661.html |first=Judith M. |last=Heimannov |title='Guests' can succeed where occupiers fail |date=9 November 2007 |newspaper=The New York Times |access-date=3 December 2016}}</ref> It also slightly surged in the late 1960s when the ] encouraged Dayaks to purge the ] from interior Kalimantan who were suspected of supporting communism in mainland China, and in a period of high tension between ] emigrants and Dayak during the ] and ] conflicts around the turn of the century.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://indahnesia.com/indonesia/SAMCHR/chronology.php |title=The Sampit conflict – Chronology of violence in Central Kalimantan |work=Discover Indonesia Online |access-date=3 December 2016}}</ref>
From ] to ] there were systemic and violent attacks on Madurese settlers, including a resurgence of the beheading practices. Inevitably, order was restored by the Military but this was somewhat too late in application.


==Further reading== ===Military===
The Dayak soldiers or trackers are regarded as equivalent in bravery to the ] or the ] soldiers. The Sarawak Rangers were absorbed into the British Army as the Far East Land Forces which could be deployed anywhere in the world but upon the formation of Malaysia in 1963, it formed the basis of the present-day ].<ref>Robert Rizal Abdullah (2019). The Iban Trackers and Sarawak Rangers: 1948–1963. Available at https://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/25997/1/The%20Iban%20Trackers%20and%20Sarawak%20Rangers.pdf {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211128120112/https://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/25997/1/The%20Iban%20Trackers%20and%20Sarawak%20Rangers.pdf |date=28 November 2021 }}. (Accessed on 18/01/2020)</ref>
*Victor T King, ''Essays on Bornean Societies'' (Hull/Oxford, 1978).

*Benedict Sandin, ''The Sea-Dayaks of Borneo before White Rajah Rule'' (London 1967).
While in Indonesia, ] was remembered as he led the first ] by ] on 17 October 1947. The team was known as MN 1001, with 17 October celebrated annually as the anniversary date for the ] ], which traces its origins to that pioneer paratroop operation in Borneo.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0fQGCgAAQBAJ|title=Mengenal Seni dan Budaya Indonesia|first1=R. |last1=Rizky |first2=T. |last2=Wibisono|year=2012|publisher=Penebar CIF|language=id|isbn=978-9797883102|page=74}}</ref>
*Eric Hansen , ''Stranger in the Forest: On Foot Across Borneo'', (Penguin, 1988), ISBN 0375724958 - a thrilling travel log by an informed traveller.

== Gallery ==
<gallery>
File:Maanyan Women at Keang Ethnic Festival 151030003.JPG|] women during Keang Ethnic Festival
File:Kenyah mural painting.jpg|Colorful wall art by the ] people
File:An Iban Warrior, Sarawak, Malaysia.jpg|An ] (Sea Dayak) man from Sarawak in his warrior costume
File:Rumah Adat Bidayuh.jpg|A ''Baluk'' in ], West Kalimantan, the ceremonial hall for ] (Land Dayak) people
Poenan meisje in de Apo Kajan op Oost-Borneo, KITLV 173982.tiff|A ] girl, some Dayak tribes are known for their ] formed by iron earrings (1931-1932)
File:Lansaran (9282850708).jpg|''Lansaran'', a ] traditional ] game
File:COLLECTIE TROPENMUSEUM Getatoeëerde Dajak Borneo TMnr 10002836.jpg|A ] Dayak man from Central Borneo, possibly of ] origin (1880-1920)
</gallery>


==See also== ==See also==
*] and their ] * ]
* ]
*] and their ]
* ]

==References==
{{Reflist|30em}}

==Further reading==
* {{cite book|title=The Sea Dayaks of Borneo Before White Rajah Rule|author=Benedict Sandin|year=1967|publisher=Macmillan}}
* {{cite book|author=Derek Freeman|title=Iban Agriculture: A Report on the Shifting Cultivation of Hill Rice by the Iban of Sarawak|year=1955|publisher=H.M. Stationery Office}}
* {{cite book|author=Derek Freeman|title=Report on the Iban|year=1970|publisher=Bloomsbury Academic}}
* {{cite book|author=Eric Hansen|title=Stranger in the Forest: On Foot Across Borneo|year=1988|publisher=Vintage Books|isbn=9780375724954}}
* {{cite book|author=Hans Schärer|title=Ngaju Religion: The Conception of God among a South Borneo People|publisher=Springer Science & Business Media|year=2013|isbn=9789401193467}}
* {{cite book|author=Jean Yves Domalain|title=Panjamon: I was a Headhunter|publisher=William Morrow|year=1973|isbn=9780688000288|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/ransomclea00clea}}
* {{cite book|author=Judith M. Heimann|title=The Airmen and the Headhunters: A True Story of Lost Soldiers, Heroic Tribesmen and the Unlikeliest Rescue of World War II|year=2009|publisher=Houghton Mifflin Harcourt|isbn=9780547416069}}
* {{cite book|author=Norma R. Youngberg|title=The Queen's Gold|year=2000|publisher=TEACH Services|isbn=9781572581555}}
* {{cite book|author=Peter Goullart|title=River of the White Lily: Life in Sarawak|publisher=John Murray|year=1965|isbn=0-7195-0542-9}}
* {{cite book|author=Raymond Corbey|title=Of Jars and Gongs: Two Keys to Ot Danum Dayak Cosmology|publisher=C. Zwartenkot Art Books|year=2016|isbn=9789054500162}}
* {{cite book|author=St. ]|year=1879|url=https://archive.org/stream/lifesirjamesbro01johngoog|title=The life of Sir James Brooke: Rajah of Sarawak: From His Personal Papers and Correspondence|publisher=Edinburgh & London}}
* {{cite book|author=Syamsuddin Haris|title=Desentralisasi dan Otonomi Daerah: Desentralisasi, Demokratisasi & Akuntabilitas Pemerintahan Daerah|publisher=Yayasan Obor Indonesia|year=2005|isbn=9789799801418}}
* {{cite book|title=Essays on Borneo Societies|author=Victor T King|year=1978|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=9780197134344}}


==External links== ==External links==
{{Commons category|Dayak people}}
*
*
*
* at the Hoover Institution Archives focuses on the interaction of Christian missionaries with Dayak people in Borneo.
* Documentary produced by the ] Series ]


] {{Ethnic groups in Indonesia}}
] {{Ethnic groups in Malaysia}}
{{Borneo}}


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Latest revision as of 05:10, 15 January 2025

Indigenous ethnic group of Borneo

Ethnic group
Dayaks
Dayak
Dyak
Dayak chief as seen holding a spear and a Klebit Bok shield.
Total population
c. 4.2 million
Regions with significant populations
 Indonesiac. 3,289,938
 Malaysiac. 3,597,644
Languages
Indigenous
Greater North Borneo (Malayic, Land Dayak, Kayan-Murik, Central Sarawak, North Sarawak, Sabahan ) • Barito  • Tamanic
Other
English  • Malaysian  • Indonesian  • Varieties of Malay
Religion
Predominantly
Christianity (Protestantism, Catholic) (62.7%)
Minorities
Islam (Sunni) (31.6%)
Kaharingan (4.8%)
and Others (i.e. Animism) (0.9%)
Related ethnic groups
Austronesian peoples
Banjarese • Bornean Malays • Sama-Bajau • Rejang • Malagasy, etc.

The Dayak (/ˈdaɪ.ək/ ; older spelling: Dajak) or Dyak or Dayuh are one of the native groups of Borneo. It is a loose term for over 200 riverine and hill-dwelling ethnic groups, located principally in the central and southern interior of Borneo, each with its own dialect, customs, laws, territory, and culture, although common distinguishing traits are readily identifiable. The Dayak were animist (Kaharingan and Folk Hindus) in belief; however, since the 19th century there has been mass conversion to Christianity as well as Islam due to the spreading of Abrahamic religions.

A sandung, housing the remains of a Pesaguan Dayak after Tiwah ceremony which is a part of Kaharingan religion rituals.

Etymology

It is commonly assumed that the name originates from the Bruneian and Melanau word for "interior people", without any reference to an exact ethnic group. Particularly, it derives from a related Kenyah word for "upstream" (compare with ethnonym Lun Dayeh). The term was adopted by Dutch and German authors as an umbrella term for any non-Muslim natives of Borneo. Thus, historically, the difference between Dayak and non-Dayak natives could be understood as a religious distinction. English writers disapproved of the classification made by the Dutch and Germans, with James Brooke preferring to use the term Dayak for only two distinct groups, the Land (Bidayuh) and Sea Dayaks (Iban).

The Dutch classification from the 19th century has since continued in Indonesia as a catch-all term for indigenous, often non-Muslim tribes on the island until today. The term gained traction in the early 1900s among rising middle class and intellectual figures (such as Hausman Baboe) from those tribes and being used as a unifying term for Dayaks in Kalimantan. In Malaysia, the term Dayak generally reserves as an almost exclusively reference to the natives of Sarawak, namely Iban (previously referred as Sea Dayaks) and Bidayuh (known as Land Dayak in the past). However, some modern interpretations of the term also include the Orang Ulu groups in Sarawak.

Ethnicity and languages

Dayaks do not speak just one language. Their indigenous languages belong to different subgroups of the Malayo-Polynesian languages, such as Land Dayak, Malayic, Sabahan, and Barito languages. Nowadays most Dayaks are bilingual, in addition to their native language, are well-versed in Indonesian and Malay, depending on their country of origin. Many of Borneo's languages are endemic (which means they are spoken nowhere else). This cultural and linguistic diversity parallels the high biodiversity and related traditional knowledge of Borneo.

It is estimated that around 170 languages and dialects are spoken on the island and some by just a few hundred people, thus posing a serious risk to the future of those languages and related heritage.

In 1954, Tjilik Riwut classified the various Dayak groups into 18 tribes throughout the island of Borneo, with 403 sub-tribes according to their respective native languages, customs, and cultures. However, he did not specify the name of the sub-tribes in his publication:

Cluster Tribe Number of sub-tribes Regions with significant population
I. Ngaju

Ngaju
Ma'anyan
Lawangan
Dusun

53
8
21
8

Central-Southern Borneo
II. Apukayan

Kenyah
Kayan
Bahau

24
10
26

Eastern Borneo
III. Iban/Sea Dayaks

Iban

11

Northwestern inland and coastal Borneo
IV. Klemantan/Land Dayaks

Klemantan
Ketungau

47
40

Northwestern outback Borneo
V. Punan

Basap
Punan
Ot

20
24
5

Central-East Borneo
VI. Murut

Idaan/Dusun
Murut
Tidung

6
10
28

Northern Borneo
VII. Ot Danum

Ot Danum

61

Central-Southern Borneo

Religion

Religion of Dayak People in Indonesia

  Roman Catholic (32.1%)  Sunni Muslim (31.6%)  Protestant (30.6%)  Hinduism/Kaharingan (4.8%)  Others, mostly Animism (0.9%)

Kaharingan

Panaturan scripture from 1992 edition.

In Indonesia, the Dayak indigenous religion has been given the name Kaharingan and may be said to be a form of animism. In 1945, during the Japanese occupation, the Japanese referred to Kaharingan as the religion of the Dayak people. During the New Order in the Suharto regime in 1980, the Kaharingan is registered as a form of Hinduism in Indonesia, as the Indonesian state only recognises 6 forms of religion i.e. Islam, Protestantism, Roman Catholicism, Hinduism, Buddhism, and Confucianism respectively. The integration of Kaharingan with Hinduism is not due to the similarities in the theological system, but because Kaharingan is the oldest belief in Kalimantan. Unlike the development in Indonesian Kalimantan, Kaharingan is not used as a religious designation in Malaysia, Brunei and Singapore, thus the traditional Dayak belief system is categorized as a form of folk animism or paganism outside of the Indonesian border.

The practice of Kaharingan differs from group to group, but shamans, specialists in ecstatic flight to other spheres, are central to Dayak religion and serve to bring together the various realms of Heaven (Upper-world) and earth, and even Under-world, for example healing the sick by retrieving their souls which are journeying on their way to the Upper-world land of the dead, accompanying and protecting the soul of a dead person on the way to their proper place in the Upper-world, presiding over annual renewal and agricultural regeneration festivals, etc. Death rituals are most elaborate when a noble (kamang) dies. Due to the institutionalization of Kaharingan beliefs in Indonesia, Kaharingan practices in Kalimantan have been recently codified and remolded into more organized religion, such as with codification of Panaturan as scripture of Kaharingan in 1971, creation of official Kaharingan body Hindu Kaharingan Religion Council (Majelis Agama Hindu Kaharingan) in 1980, and standarization of its house of worship buildings called Balai Basarah .

Christianity

Over the last two centuries, many Dayaks have converted to Christianity, making them the majority of Christians in Borneo, abandoning certain cultural rites and traditional practices in the process. Christianity was introduced by European missionaries in Borneo by Rheinische Missionsgesellschaft (later followed up by the Basler Mission). Religious differences between Muslim and Christian natives of Borneo have led, at various times, to communal tensions. Relations, however between all religious groups are generally good.

Islam

Traditionally, in many parts of Borneo, embracing the Muslim faith is equated with Malayisation (Indonesian/Malay: masuk Melayu), i.e. assimilation into the broader Malay ethnicity. There are, however, several Dayak sub-ethnicities (mainly in Central Kalimantan) that predominantly adhere to Islam, but self-identify as Dayaks. These include e.g. the Bakumpai people, who converted to Islam in the 19th century, but still have strong linguistic and cultural ties to the Ngaju people. They have adopted a positive attitude towards the label "Dayak" and self-identify as Muslim Dayaks.

Society and customs

See also: Dayak in politics
Hudoq dance, a Bahau performance before the land clearing ceremony

Economic activities

Historically, most of the Dayak people are swidden cultivators who supplement their incomes by seeking forest products, both for subsistence (ferns, medicinal plants, fibers, and timber) and for sale; by fishing and hunting and by periodic wage labor. Presently, many modern-day Dayaks are also actively engaged in many contemporary economic activities, especially in the urban areas of Borneo.

Toplessness

In the Indonesian archipelago, toplessness was the norm among the Dayak people, Javanese, and Balinese people of Indonesia before the introduction of Islam and contact with Western cultures. In Javanese and Balinese societies, women worked or rested comfortably topless. Among the Dayak, only big-breasted women or married women with sagging breasts covered their breasts because they interfered with their work. With the availability of shirts, toplessness was abandoned.

Tattoo

A Dayak tattoo design in Kalimantan, c. 1880.

In many Dayak societies, a tattoo is regarded as a sacred creation that consolidates together the images of humans, flora, and fauna into a single body art. The tattoo is used as a spiritual expression of life, to unify the living, the spiritual powers, and the universe.

Traditionally, there are various reasons why a Dayak man or woman would choose body art. For some, it was used to mark a person's ethnic origin and rank the society. For others, the tattoo served as an act of devotion, as a demonstration of skills, to commemorate a special occasion in life, or as a symbol for the rite of passage.

Elongated earlobes

Amongst several Dayak groups in the past, long female earlobes are regarded as a symbol of beauty. The elongation process usually begins when the child is about 4 years old. During the initial stage, her ears will be pierced by an earring, so that the hisang (a special heavy silver or bronze earring) can be worn on her ears.

A new hisang will gradually be added with age. After a woman is married, her hisang will potentially be up to 20 pieces per-ear. As the hisang was sourced from precious and expansive metals like silver and bronze, it can signify her status, wealth, and social standing within the society. Thus, the longer her earlobes, the more important she is to the community. Presently, the practice of having stretched earlobes is almost limited to the elderly, as the practice of applying hisang amongst newborn babies has been rare since the 1960s.

Longhouses

The gallery of a Kayan Dayak longhouse with skulls and weapons along the wall, exhibiting their headhunter culture

In the traditional Dayak society, the long house or Lamin House, is regarded as the heart of the community, it functions as the village, as well as the societal architectural expression. This large building, sometimes exceeding 200 meters in length, may be divided into independent household apartments. The building is also equipped with communal areas for cooking, ceremonies, socializing, and blacksmithing.

The superstructure is not solely about architecture and design. It is a part of the Dayak traditional political entity and administrative system. Thus, culturally the people residing in the longhouse are governed by the customs and traditions of the longhouse.

Beadworks

A traditional Dayak beaded baby carrier

Based on the archeological records in Borneo, it was discovered that the early inhabitants of the island had used organic materials to make simple beads. The beads were originally sourced from stones, bones, teeth, and shells. When the foreign traders arrived between the 8th-9th century, they further enhanced the ancient bead cultures of Borneo with the introduction of colourful glass beads. These early beads are usually small, in basic colours of red, yellow, white, turquoise, and black. These were followed by multicolored beads around the 1500s-1600s.

Traditional beadworks have occupied a pivotal status in various Dayak communities. In many Dayak cultures, beads are not solely regarded as ornamental objects, but they are a major cultural influence. Some of the beads only being used for ritualistic practices and are worn during such ceremonies. While heirloom beads (known as pesaka) are regarded as an important family heirloom and oftentimes being inherited from one generation to another.

Metal-working

Metalworking is elaborately developed in making mandaus (machetes – parang in Malay and Indonesian). The blade is made of softer iron, to prevent breakage, with a narrow strip of a harder iron wedged into a slot in the cutting edge for sharpness in a process called ngamboh (iron-smithing).

In headhunting, it was necessary to be able to draw the parang quickly. For this purpose, the mandau is fairly short, which also better serves the purpose of trail cutting in dense forests. It is holstered with the cutting edge facing upwards and at that side, there is an upward protrusion on the handle, so it can be drawn very quickly with the side of the hand without having to reach over and grasp the handle first. The hand can then grasp the handle while it is being drawn. The combination of these three factors (short, cutting edge up, and protrusion) makes for an extremely fast drawing-action.

Headhunting and peacemaking

The Dayak longhouses along the Kahayan River taken in Tumbang Anoi village (c. 1894).

In the past, the Dayaks were feared for their ancient tradition of headhunting practices (the ritual is also known as Ngayau by the Dayaks).

Among the most prominent legacies during the colonial rule in the Dutch Borneo (present-day Kalimantan) is the Tumbang Anoi Agreement held in 1894 in Damang Batu, Central Kalimantan (the seat of the Kahayan Dayaks). It is a formal meeting that gathered all the Dayak tribes in Kalimantan for a peace resolution. In the meeting that is reputed to take several months, the Dayak people throughout the Kalimantan agreed to end the headhunting tradition as it believed the tradition caused conflict and tension between various Dayak groups. The meeting ended with a peace resolution by the Dayak people.

Subsequently, the headhunting began to surface again in the mid-1940s, when the Allied powers encouraged the practice against the Japanese occupation of Borneo. It also slightly surged in the late 1960s when the Indonesian government encouraged Dayaks to purge the Chinese from interior Kalimantan who were suspected of supporting communism in mainland China, and in a period of high tension between Madurese emigrants and Dayak during the Sambas and Sampit conflicts around the turn of the century.

Military

The Dayak soldiers or trackers are regarded as equivalent in bravery to the Royal Scots or the Gurkha soldiers. The Sarawak Rangers were absorbed into the British Army as the Far East Land Forces which could be deployed anywhere in the world but upon the formation of Malaysia in 1963, it formed the basis of the present-day Royal Ranger Regiment.

While in Indonesia, Tjilik Riwut was remembered as he led the first airborne operation by the Indonesian National Armed Forces on 17 October 1947. The team was known as MN 1001, with 17 October celebrated annually as the anniversary date for the Indonesian Air Force Paskhas, which traces its origins to that pioneer paratroop operation in Borneo.

Gallery

  • Ma'anyan women during Keang Ethnic Festival Ma'anyan women during Keang Ethnic Festival
  • Colorful wall art by the Kenyah people Colorful wall art by the Kenyah people
  • An Iban (Sea Dayak) man from Sarawak in his warrior costume An Iban (Sea Dayak) man from Sarawak in his warrior costume
  • A Baluk in Jagoi Babang, West Kalimantan, the ceremonial hall for Bidayuh (Land Dayak) people A Baluk in Jagoi Babang, West Kalimantan, the ceremonial hall for Bidayuh (Land Dayak) people
  • A Punan girl, some Dayak tribes are known for their elongated earlobes formed by iron earrings (1931-1932) A Punan girl, some Dayak tribes are known for their elongated earlobes formed by iron earrings (1931-1932)
  • Lansaran, a Murut traditional trampoline game Lansaran, a Murut traditional trampoline game
  • A tattooed Dayak man from Central Borneo, possibly of Ot Danum origin (1880-1920) A tattooed Dayak man from Central Borneo, possibly of Ot Danum origin (1880-1920)

See also

References

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  4. "Report for ISO 639 code: day". Ethnologue: Countries of the World. Archived from the original on 1 October 2007.
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  6. Lindblad, J. Thomas (1988). Between the Dayak and the Dutch: The Economic History of Southeast Kalimantan 1880-1942. Dordrecht: Foris Publications. p. 2.
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  9. van Klinken, Gerry (15 November 2007). "Dayak Ethnogenesis and Conservative Politics in Indonesia's Outer Islands". Rochester, NY. SSRN 1030241. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
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  11. "Indigenous peoples and ethnic minorities in Sarawak in Malaysia". Minority Rights Group. Retrieved 14 January 2025.
  12. Avé, J. B. (1972). "Kalimantan Dyaks". In LeBar, Frank M. (ed.). Ethnic Groups of Insular Southeast Asia, Volume 1: Indonesia, Andaman Islands, and Madagascar. New Haven: Human Relations Area Files Press. pp. 185–187. ISBN 978-0-87536-403-2.
  13. Adelaar, K. Alexander (1995). Bellwood, Peter; Fox. James J.; Tryon, Darrell (eds.). "Borneo as a cross-roads for comparative Austronesian linguistics" (PDF). The Austronesians: Historical and Comparative Perspectives (online ed.). Canberra, Australia: Department of Anthropology, The Australian National University: 81–102. ISBN 978-1-920942-85-4. Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 June 2014. Retrieved 29 June 2014.
  14. See the language list at "Borneo Languages: Languages of Kalimantan, Indonesia and East Malaysia". Royal Netherlands Institute of Southeast Asian and Caribbean Studies, Koninklijk Instituut voor Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde (KITLV). Archived from the original on 9 February 2012.
  15. Masri Singarimbun (1991). "Beberapa aspek kehidupan masyarakat Dayak". Humaniora. 3: 139–151. Retrieved 3 May 2022.
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  17. Baier, Martin (2007). "The Development of the Hindu Kaharingan Religion: A New Dayak Religion in Central Kalimantan". Anthropos. 102 (2): 566–570. doi:10.5771/0257-9774-2007-2-566. JSTOR 40389742.
  18. The most detailed study of the shamanistic ritual at funerals is by Waldemar Stöhr, Der Totenkult der Ngadju Dajak in Süd-Borneo. Mythen zum Totenkult und die Texte zum Tantolak Matei (Den Haag: Martinus Nijhoff, 1966).
  19. Dowling, Nancy (1992). "The Javanization of Indian Art". Indonesia. 54 (54): 117–138. doi:10.2307/3351167. hdl:1813/53986. JSTOR 3351167.
  20. Etika, Tiwi; Schiller, Anne (1 May 2022). "Kaharingan or Hindu KaharinganWhat's in a Name in Indonesian Borneo?". Nova Religio. 25 (4): 64–87. doi:10.1525/nr.2022.25.4.64. ISSN 1092-6690. S2CID 248711574.
  21. Sutama, Putu; Arina Luardini, Maria; Asi, Natalina (19 February 2020). "The Religious Text 'Panaturan' of the Dayak Ngaju Community". KnE Social Sciences. doi:10.18502/kss.v4i4.6489. ISSN 2518-668X. S2CID 212716036.
  22. Baier, Martin (2007). "The Development of the Hindu Kaharingan Religion. A New Dayak Religion in Central Kalimanta". Anthropos. 102 (2): 566–570. doi:10.5771/0257-9774-2007-2-566. ISSN 0257-9774.
  23. Baier, Martin (January 2007). "The Development of a New Religion in Kalimantan, Central Borneo". Asian Anthropology. 6 (1): 169–182. doi:10.1080/1683478x.2007.10552574. ISSN 1683-478X. S2CID 129770494.
  24. Rahman Hakim, Arif (2003). Sejarah kota Palangka Raya. Palangka Raya: Palangka Raya : Pemerintah Kota Palangka Raya. pp. 18–20. ISBN 979-97978-0-2.
  25. Avé, Jan B.; King, Victor T. (1986). The People of the Weeping Forest: Tradition and Change in Borneo. Leiden, Netherlands: National Museum of Ethnology. ISBN 978-9-07131-028-7.
  26. Chalmers, Ian (2006). "The Dynamics of Conversion: the Islamisation of the Dayak peoples of Central Kalimantan". In Vickers, A.; Hanlon, M. (eds.). Asia Reconstructed: Proceedings of the 16th Biennial Conference of the ASAA. Wollongong, NSW: Australian National University. hdl:20.500.11937/35283. ISBN 9780958083737.
  27. Colfer, Carol J. Pierce; Byron, Yvonne (2001). People Managing Forests: The Links Between Human Well-Being and Sustainability. Washington, DC: Resources for the Future. ISBN 1-891853-05-8.
  28. Boulanger (2010). "Inventing Tradition, Inventing Modernity: Dayak Identity in Urban Sarawak". Asian Ethnicity. 3 (2). Taylor & Francis: 221–231. doi:10.1080/14631360220132745. S2CID 144515877. Retrieved 3 June 2022.
  29. Duerr, Hans Peter (1997). Der Mythos vom Zivilisationsprozeß (in German). Vol. 4: Der Erotische Leib. Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp.
  30. Tattmag Team (16 December 2019). "40 DAYAK TATTOOS: ORIGINS, MEANINGS & MORE". tattmag.com/. Retrieved 6 December 2023.
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  32. Tattmag Team (16 December 2019). "40 DAYAK TATTOOS: ORIGINS, MEANINGS & MORE". tattmag.com/. Retrieved 6 December 2023.
  33. Tattmag Team (27 November 2023). "40The Last Long Earlobes". panda.org. Retrieved 6 December 2023.
  34. "Dayak Architecture and Art: The Use of Longhouse". Kaltimber. 20 July 2020. Retrieved 16 May 2022.
  35. "Beads Culture". Borneo Talk. Retrieved 16 May 2022.
  36. Terry Justin Dit, Eileen Paya Foong. "The Importance Of Preserving Memories: A Story Of A Long Apu Family's Pesaka Beads" (PDF). Curtin.edu. Retrieved 16 May 2022.
  37. Robert Kenneth (26 July 2019). "Dayaks Gather to Mark Peace Treaty". New Sarawak Tribune. Retrieved 18 January 2020.
  38. Heimannov, Judith M. (9 November 2007). "'Guests' can succeed where occupiers fail". The New York Times. Retrieved 3 December 2016.
  39. "The Sampit conflict – Chronology of violence in Central Kalimantan". Discover Indonesia Online. Retrieved 3 December 2016.
  40. Robert Rizal Abdullah (2019). The Iban Trackers and Sarawak Rangers: 1948–1963. Available at https://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/25997/1/The%20Iban%20Trackers%20and%20Sarawak%20Rangers.pdf Archived 28 November 2021 at the Wayback Machine. (Accessed on 18/01/2020)
  41. Rizky, R.; Wibisono, T. (2012). Mengenal Seni dan Budaya Indonesia (in Indonesian). Penebar CIF. p. 74. ISBN 978-9797883102.

Further reading

  • Benedict Sandin (1967). The Sea Dayaks of Borneo Before White Rajah Rule. Macmillan.
  • Derek Freeman (1955). Iban Agriculture: A Report on the Shifting Cultivation of Hill Rice by the Iban of Sarawak. H.M. Stationery Office.
  • Derek Freeman (1970). Report on the Iban. Bloomsbury Academic.
  • Eric Hansen (1988). Stranger in the Forest: On Foot Across Borneo. Vintage Books. ISBN 9780375724954.
  • Hans Schärer (2013). Ngaju Religion: The Conception of God among a South Borneo People. Springer Science & Business Media. ISBN 9789401193467.
  • Jean Yves Domalain (1973). Panjamon: I was a Headhunter. William Morrow. ISBN 9780688000288.
  • Judith M. Heimann (2009). The Airmen and the Headhunters: A True Story of Lost Soldiers, Heroic Tribesmen and the Unlikeliest Rescue of World War II. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. ISBN 9780547416069.
  • Norma R. Youngberg (2000). The Queen's Gold. TEACH Services. ISBN 9781572581555.
  • Peter Goullart (1965). River of the White Lily: Life in Sarawak. John Murray. ISBN 0-7195-0542-9.
  • Raymond Corbey (2016). Of Jars and Gongs: Two Keys to Ot Danum Dayak Cosmology. C. Zwartenkot Art Books. ISBN 9789054500162.
  • St. John, Sir Spenser (1879). The life of Sir James Brooke: Rajah of Sarawak: From His Personal Papers and Correspondence. Edinburgh & London.
  • Syamsuddin Haris (2005). Desentralisasi dan Otonomi Daerah: Desentralisasi, Demokratisasi & Akuntabilitas Pemerintahan Daerah. Yayasan Obor Indonesia. ISBN 9789799801418.
  • Victor T King (1978). Essays on Borneo Societies. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780197134344.

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