above Indonesian
dancers perform the
caci, a traditional
dance from Labuan
Bajo, Flores
left Two women from
Praing village fetch
water in pots
timeline
ȑProto-Malayo-
Polynesian spreads to
Southeast Asia via Taiwan
ȑResearchers estimate
west Borneo as the
birthplace of Proto-Malay
ȑPasar Malay proliferates
across the Sumatra-based
Srivijaya Empire
ȑIndonesian absorbs
loanwords from Dutch and
Javanese
ȑDutch is abolished and
Indonesian designated the
new country’s official tongue
20th century
bce
10th century 7th century
bce
18th century 20th century
“Unity in diversity” is how the archipelago
of Indonesia chooses to describe itself. The
motto of the world’s largest island country
acknowledges head-on the reality of its
people’s overwhelmingly disparate cultural
identities: a transcontinental republic of
citizens scattered across some 14,700 islands,
speaking over 700 indigenous language
variants of Austronesian and Papuan descent.
To Bahasa Indonesia, the country’s official
tongue, falls the delicate task of creating
civic unity between these wildly differing
neighbours. While fluency in Dutch was
once the height of sophistication, policies by
European colonialists to limit its spread meant
it never established a foothold in the region,
with Javanese remaining the most-spoken
native vernacular.
Unwilling to favour just one ethnic group,
however, nationalists selected the next
contender, Pasar (“marketplace”) Malay –
the ubiquitous second language for trade in
the archipelago – and transformed it into a
representation of national identity. Essentially
a Malay dialect, Indonesian shares nearly
80 percent of pronunciation, grammar, and
vocabulary with its root language.
By the time the country emerged
independent in 1945, use of the Indonesian
language enjoyed soaring popularity from the
policies of presidents Sukarno and Suharto.
Today, people still speak their mother
tongues – everything from Acehnese to
Javanese – at home and in rural areas, but the
national language dominates conversations
across school and urban settings. ag
DATA SOURCES: THOMAS MOORE DEVLIN/BABBEL, IRENE THOMPSON/A
BOUT WORLD LANGUAGES, WORLD ATLAS, GLOBAL INDONESIAN VOICES
IMAGES © SHUTTERSTOCK
LANGUAGE TIP
Indonesian has a
formal and informal
register. The formal
register is used for
writing and official
speech, while the
informal version
dominates everyday
conversations.
SIMPLE PHRASES
Good morning
Selamat pagi
How much is this?
Berapa harganya?
Help me
Tolong saya
Thank you!
Terima kasih
Sorry
Maaf
Where is the toilet?
Di manakah kamar kecil?
SPEAKERS
190
MILLION
speak Indonesian as a
first or second language