Indonesian Australians

Australian citizens and residents of Indonesian origin From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Indonesian Australians

Indonesian Australians (Indonesian: Orang Indonesia di Australia) are Australian citizens and residents of Indonesian origin. 48,836 Australian residents declared Indonesian ancestry on the 2011 Australian Census, while 63,160 stated they were born in Indonesia.

Quick Facts Orang Indonesia di Australia, Total population ...
Indonesian Australians
Orang Indonesia di Australia
Thumb
Total population
87,075 (born in Indonesia, 2021)[1]
Regions with significant populations
Sydney, Melbourne, Perth, Brisbane, Adelaide
Religion
Majority Christianity, with significant minorities of Muslim and Buddhism and small minorities of Hinduism
Related ethnic groups
Indonesians, Overseas Indonesians, Cocos Malays, Malaysian Australians
Close

Despite the proximity of the two countries (they share a maritime border), Australia’s Indonesian diaspora community is relatively small. According to the University of Melbourne, Australia is merely the 19th most popular destination for Indonesian migrants.[2]

Migration history

Summarize
Perspective
Thumb
The number of permanent settlers arriving in Australia from Indonesia since 1991 (monthly)
Thumb
People born in Indonesia as a percentage of the population in Sydney by postal area.

Pre-colonial era

As early as the 1750s, that is prior to European colonisation, seamen from eastern Indonesian ports such as Kupang and Makassar regularly visited Australia's northern coast, spending about four months per year there collecting trepang or sea cucumbers to trade with China.[3]

Colonial period migration

Beginning in the 1870s, Indonesian workers were recruited to work in colonial Australia, with almost 1,000 (primarily in Western Australia and Queensland) residing in Australia by federation.[4] The pearl hunting industry predominantly recruited workers from Kupang, and sugar plantations recruited migrant labourers from Java to work in Queensland.

Following federation and the enactment of the Immigration Restriction Act 1901, the first in a series of laws that collectively formed the White Australia policy, most of these migrants returned to Indonesia.[5]

1940s–1990s

Beginning in 1942, thousands of Indonesians fled the Japanese occupation of the Dutch East Indies and took refuge in Australia. Exact landing statistics were not kept due to the chaotic nature of their migration, but after the war, 3,768 repatriated to Indonesia on Australian government-provided ships.[6]

In the 1950s, roughly 10,000 people from the former Dutch colony of the Dutch East Indies (Indonesia), who held Dutch citizenship and previously settled in the Netherlands, migrated to Australia, bypassing the White Australia policy.[7][8] Large numbers of Chinese Indonesians began migrating to Australia in the late 1990s, fleeing the political and economic turmoil in the aftermath of the May 1998 riots and the subsequent fall of Suharto.[9]

Between 1986 and 1996, the Indonesian-Australian community increased to 12,128. According to the Immigration Museum (Melbourne), many migrants were either students on temporary visas. However, other migrants came under either family reunion or skilled migration programs.

21st century

In 2010, Scotts Head, New South Wales opened the first and only English-Indonesian bilingual school in Australia.[10] As of 2016, the Indonesian-born population of Victoria was estimated to be 17,806.[4] As of 2016, Australia is the single most popular destination for Indonesians seeking an undergraduate education abroad.[11]

Religion

Religion of Indonesian Australians (2021)[12]
  1. Christianity (52.6%)
  2. Islam (19.3%)
  3. No religion (11.2%)
  4. Buddhism (10.4%)
  5. Others (6.5%)
  6. 0.00%
  7. 0.00%

Though Islam is the majority religion in Indonesia, Muslims are the minority among Indonesians in Australia.[13] In the 2006 Australian Census, only 8,656 out of 50,975 Indonesians in Australia, or 17%, identified as Muslim.

However, in the 2011 census, that figure rose to 12,241 or 19.4%.[14] Indonesian communities in Australia generally lack their own mosques, but instead typically attend mosques established by members of other ethnic groups.[13] In contrast, more than half of the Indonesian population in Australia follows Christianity, split evenly between the Roman Catholic Church and various Protestant denominations.[15]

In 2016, 24.0% from Indonesian Australians population (73,217 people in 2016) identified as Catholic, 18.9% as Muslim, 10.0% as Buddhist, 9.2% as Atheist and 8.3% as Other Christian.[16]

In 2021, 23.4% from Indonesian Australian population (87,075 people in 2021) identified as Catholic, 19.3% as Muslim, 11.2% as Atheist, 10.4% as Buddhist and 9.4% as Other Christian.

Notable people

Thumb
Dougy Mandagi of The Temper Trap

Artists and entertainers

Thumb
Indonesian-born badminton player Setyana Mapasa represented Australia at the 2020 Summer Olympics

Sports

Academics

Other notable Indonesian Australians

  • Oodeen (later John O'Dean), 19th century Sydney Islamic community leader, interpreter at Northern Territory's Fort Wellington (1827–1829) and New South Wales court interpreter[20]
  • Annie O'Keefe (formerly Annie Maas Jacob), escaped from the Japanese on the Aru Islands to Australia in 1942. At the end of the Second World War, she successfully challenged the Australian Government in the High Court for her right to permanently reside in Australia bringing into question many aspects of the White Australia Policy.[21]

See also

References

Further reading

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.