Symbolism.
        
      
       The national motto,
      
         Bhinneka Tunggal Ika
      
      , is an old Javanese expression usually translated as "unity in
      diversity." The nation's official ideology, first formulated
      by President Sukarno in 1945, is the Pancasila, or Five Principles: belief
      in one supreme God; just and civilized humanitarianism; Indonesian unity;
      popular sovereignty governed by wise policies arrived at through
      deliberation and representation; and social justice for all Indonesian
      people.
Indonesia was defined from the beginning as the inheritor of the
      Netherlands East Indies. Though West Papua remained under the Dutch until
      1962, Indonesia conducted a successful international campaign to secure
      it. Indonesia's occupation of the former Portuguese East Timor in
      1975, never recognized by the United Nations, conflicted with this
      founding notion of the nation. After two decades of bitter struggle there,
      Indonesia withdrew. 
      Since 1950 the national anthem and other songs have been sung by children
      throughout the country to begin the school day; by civil servants at
      flag-raising ceremonies; over the radio to begin and close broadcasting;
      in cinemas and on television; 
       and at national day celebrations. Radio and television, government owned
      and controlled for much of the second half of the twentieth century,
      produced nationalizing programs as diverse as Indonesian language lessons,
      regional and ethnic dances and songs, and plays on national themes.
      Officially recognized "national heroes" from diverse regions
      are honored in school texts, and biographies and with statues for their
      struggles against the Dutch; some regions monumentalize local heros of
      their own. 
      
        
          Emergence of the Nation.
        
      
       Though the Republic of Indonesia is only fifty years old, Indonesian
      societies have a long history during which local and wider cultures were
      formed. About 200 
      
        C.E.
      
      , small states that were deeply influenced by Indian civilization began to
      develop in Southeast Asia, primarily at estuaries of major rivers. The
      next five hundred to one thousand years saw great states arise with
      magnificent architecture. Hinduism and Buddhism, writing systems, notions
      of divine kingship, and legal systems from India were adapted to local
      scenes. Sanskrit terms entered many of the languages of Indonesia.
      Hinduism influenced cultures throughout Southeast Asia, but only one
      people are Hindu, the Balinese. 
      Indianized states declined about 1400 
      
        C.E.
      
       with the arrival of Muslim traders and teachers from India, Yemen, and
      Persia, and then Europeans from Portugal, Spain, Holland, and Britain. All
      came to join the great trade with India and China. Over the next two
      centuries local princedoms traded, allied, and fought with Europeans, and
      the Dutch East India Company became a small state engaging in local
      battles and alliances to secure trade. The Dutch East India Company was
      powerful until 1799 when the company went bankrupt. In the nineteenth
      century the Dutch formed the Netherlands Indies government, which
      developed alliances with rulers in the archipelago. Only at the beginning
      of the twentieth century did the Netherlands Indies government extend its
      authority by military means to all of present Indonesia. 
      Sporadic nineteenth century revolts against Dutch practices occurred
      mainly in Java, but it was in the early twentieth century that Indonesian
      intellectual and religious leaders began to seek national independence. In
      1942 the Japanese occupied the Indies, defeating the colonial army and
      imprisoning the Dutch under harsh conditions. 
      On 17 August 1945, following Japan's defeat in World War II,
      Indonesian nationalists led by Sukarno and Mohammad Hatta declared
      Indonesian independence. The Dutch did not accept and for five years
      fought the new republic, mainly in Java. Indonesian independence was
      established in 1950. 
      
        
          National Identity.
        
      
       Indonesia's size and ethnic diversity has made national identity
      problematic and debated. Identity is defined at many levels: by Indonesian
      citizenship; by recognition of the flag, national anthem, and certain
      other songs; by recognition of national holidays; and by education about
      Indonesia's history and the Five Principles on which the nation is
      based. Much of this is instilled through the schools and the media, both
      of which have been closely regulated by the government during most of the
      years of independence. The nation's history has been focused upon
      resistance to colonialism and communism by national heroes and leaders who
      are enshrined in street names. Glories of past civilizations are
      recognized, though archaeological remains are mainly of Javanese
      principalities. 
      
        
          Ethnic Relations.
        
      
       Ethnic relations in the archipelago have long been a concern. Indonesian
      leaders recognized the possibility of ethnic and regional separatism from
      the beginning of the republic. War was waged by the central government
      against separatism in Aceh, other parts of Sumatra, and Sulawesi in the
      1950s and early 1960s, and the nation was held together by military force. 
      The relationships between native Indonesians and overseas Chinese have
      been greatly influenced by Dutch and Indonesian government policies. The
      Chinese number about four to six million, or 3 percent of the population,
      but are said to control as much as 60 percent of the nation's
      wealth. The Chinese traded and resided in the islands for centuries, but
      in the nineteenth century the Dutch brought in many more of them to work
      on plantations or in mines. The Dutch also established a social, economic,
      and legal stratification system that separated Europeans, foreign Asiatics
      and Indo-Europeans, and Native Indonesians, partly to protect native
      Indonesians so that their land could not be lost to outsiders. The Chinese
      had little incentive to assimilate to local societies, which in turn had
      no interest in accepting them. 
      Even naturalized Chinese citizens faced restrictive regulations, despite
      cozy business relationships between Chinese leaders and Indonesian
      officers and bureaucrats. Periodic violence directed toward Chinese
      persons and property also occurred. In the colonial social system, mixed
      marriages between 
       Chinese men and indigenous women produced half-castes (
      
        peranakan
      
      ), who had their own organizations, dress, and art forms, and even
      newspapers. The same was true for people of mixed Indonesian-European
      descent (called Indos, for short). 
      Ethnolinguistic groups reside mainly in defined areas where most people
      share much of the same culture and language, especially in rural areas.
      Exceptions are found along borders between groups, in places where other
      groups have moved in voluntarily or as part of transmigration programs,
      and in cities. Such areas are few in Java, for example, but more common in
      parts of Sumatra. 
      Religious and ethnic differences may be related. Indonesia has the largest
      Muslim population of any country in the world, and many ethnic groups are
      exclusively Muslim. Dutch policy allowed proselytization by Protestants
      and Catholics among separate groups who followed traditional religions;
      thus today many ethnic groups are exclusively Protestant or Roman
      Catholic. They are heavily represented among upriver or upland peoples in
      North Sumatra, Kalimantan, Sulawesi, Maluku, and the eastern Lesser
      Sundas, though many Christians are also found in Java and among the
      Chinese. Tensions arise when groups of one religion migrate to a place
      with a different established religion. Political and economic power
      becomes linked to both ethnicity and religion as groups favor their own
      kinsmen and ethnic mates for jobs and other benefits.
    

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