Indonesian Papuans
{{short description|Eastern Indonesians of Papua-origin}}
{{Infobox ethnic group
| group = Native Papuans
| image = Inbound1851092886955975148.jpg
| image_caption =
| pop =
| region1 = Western New Guinea
| pop1 = ± 2,693,630 (2010){{Cite web|url=http://demografi.bps.go.id/phpfiletree/bahan/kumpulan_tugas_mobilitas_pak_chotib/Kelompok_1/Referensi/BPS_kewarganegaraan_sukubangsa_agama_bahasa_2010.pdf|title=Kewarganegaraan Suku Bangsa, Agama, Bahasa 2010|website=demografi.bps.go.id|publisher=Badan Pusat Statistik|year=2010|accessdate=2022-02-22|pages=23, 36–41|archive-date=2017-07-12|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170712140438/http://demografi.bps.go.id/phpfiletree/bahan/kumpulan_tugas_mobilitas_pak_chotib/Kelompok_1/Referensi/BPS_kewarganegaraan_sukubangsa_agama_bahasa_2010.pdf}}
| langs = Native:{{hlist|Papuan (non-Austronesian)|Austronesian}}Also:{{hlist|Indonesian (Papuan Malay)}}
| rels = Predominantly: {{hlist|Christianity}} Also: {{hlist|Tribal Animism|Melanesian folk religion|Islam}}
| native_name = {{hlist|Orang Asli Papua}}
| native_name_lang =
| related_groups = {{hlist|Melanesians|Oceanians|Aboriginal Australians}}
}}
According to the official Indonesian law,{{cite web|title=House: Papua Special Autonomy Law Gives More Authority to Papuans|language=en|url=https://en.mkri.id/news/details/2021-12-13/House:_Papua_Special_Autonomy_Law_Gives_More_Authority_to_Papuans|publisher=Constitutional Court of the Republic of Indonesia|year=2021}} Papuans more specifically indigenous Papuans or native Papuans (Indonesian: {{lang|id|Orang Asli Papua}}) are the common native-derived internationalized endonym in Indonesian English for the Native Eastern Indonesians of Papua-origin (as opposed to “New Guineans” term coined by the British colonizers). They are members of Melanesians and Austronesian, related to Oceanians (and to some extent, the Australian Aboriginals), who natively inhabited the Eastern Indonesian provinces of Central Papua, Highland Papua, Southwest Papua, West Papua, South Papua, and Papua in Indonesia (which historically part of the larger Sahul palaeocontinent). The Papuans natively speak numerous languages belonging to Austronesian languages or Papuan languages, each with its distinctive and unique linguistic features that can only be found on the island.
The Papuans are one of the peoples of Indonesia that are protected under the national law by the government of Indonesia, to ensure their stability in economic and development.
Etymology
There are several theories on the origin of the term Papua. One theory is that the name comes from the word Papo Ua shortened from Papo Ua Gam Sio, a Tidorese term which means 'the nine sio (negeri) not being united/joined together', referring to the region under Sultanate of Tidore influence which has competing settlements.{{cite thesis |last=Wanggai |first=Tony V.M. |date=2008 |title=Rekonstruksi Sejarah Islam di Tanah Papua |publisher=UIN Syarif Hidayatullah|url=https://repository.uinjkt.ac.id/dspace/bitstream/123456789/7292/1/Toni%20Victor%20M.%20Wanggai_Rekonstruksi%20Sejarah%20Umat%20Islam%20di%20Tanah%20Papua.pdf|access-date=2022-01-30|page=65|language=id}} The other theory is the term originated from Biak sup i babwa {{lit|the land below}} the sunset, referring to the Raja Ampat Islands as Biak people historically migrated west to these islands from their homeland in the Biak Islands. They claimed themselves to be kawasa ori sar {{lit|people from the sunrise}}. Babwa in Raja Ampat dialects became Papwa and then Papua. These two theories may be related, as the term can also means 'the subjected land' according to the Ma'ya (non-Biak) Salawati King, one of the four kings, whose ancestor Gurabesi migrated from Biak and conquered these islands under the name of Tidore Sultan and became the intermediaries between settlements on New Guinea coast and Tidore in collecting tributes and trades.{{cite journal | last=Sollewijn Gelpke | first=J.H.F. | title=On the origin of the name Papua | journal=Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde / Journal of the Humanities and Social Sciences of Southeast Asia | publisher=Brill | volume=149 | issue=2 | year=1993 | issn=0006-2294 | doi=10.1163/22134379-90003129 | pages=318–332}}{{cite book |last=Remijsen |first=Albert C.L. |author-link= |date=2001 |title=Word-prosodic systems of Raja Ampat languages |url= |location=Utrecht|publisher=LOT 2001 |pages=171–183|isbn=90-76864-09-8}}
Terminology
=Papuan, Melanesian, and OAP=
Multiple terms have been proposed to describe the native inhabitants of Eastern Indonesia. “Papuans” ({{langx|id|Orang Papua}}) is the preferred term (especially in Indonesian and English) for inhabitants of New Guinea, since it is based on actual native nomenclature used by as recorded in several ancient native evidences. Its usage in Indonesia most often exclude Papuans from Papua New Guinea, as they would be identified with the term "Papua New Guinean" ({{langx|id|Orang Papua Nugini}}). Other terms, such as "Melanesians" (and less so Oceanians), are also used but include many inhabitants of Eastern Indonesia outside of New Guinea.{{cn|date=January 2025}}
After the passing of the Special Autonomy Law in 2001, the term "Native Papuan" ({{lang|id|Orang Asli Papua}}, shortened to "OAP") was legally introduced to refer to specifically indigenous tribes from Western New Guinea,{{cite web|url=https://www.walhi.or.id/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/uu-otonomi-khusus-papua.pdf|title=UU Otonomi Khusus Papua|date=2001-11-21|website=www.walhi.or.id|accessdate=2022-02-22}} as the term Orang Papua has expanded to include migrants and their intermarried descendants who were born in Papua but don't belong to any indigenous tribes from New Guinea. Most Papuan tribes, with exceptions, are patrilineal and do not recognise matrilineal descents as members, as they do not carry the clan names.{{cite web|url=https://beritapapua.id/mengetahui-orang-asli-papua/|title=Mengetahui Orang Asli Papua|date=2022-07-13|website=beritapapua.id|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230410195847/https://beritapapua.id/mengetahui-orang-asli-papua/ |accessdate=2022-02-22|archive-date=10 April 2023 }} Though contentious, recognition by a tribal adat council can accommodate female descents and confers OAP status.{{cite web | last=Nugroho | first=Bagus Prihantoro | title=Raja Kaimana: Pigai Tahu Ngabalin Asli Papua, Jangan Politisir! | website=detiknews | date=2018-07-24 | url=https://news.detik.com/berita/d-4130581/raja-kaimana-pigai-tahu-ngabalin-asli-papua-jangan-politisir | language=id | access-date=2022-05-07}}
Ethnic groups
The Papuans grouped into numerous ethnicities, they possess various cultures and traditions. They are originally tribal community, shared different customs to one another, living in different isolated areas within the region.{{cn|date=January 2025}}
Languages
{{main|Papuan languages}}
According to the official Indonesian national linguistic data, there are at least 428 living languages (and 37 Papua-based isolate languages) natively spoken by the Papuans in Indonesia alone,{{cite web|title=Risiko Kepunahan Bahasa Daerah Papua Meningkat, Kemendikbudristek Dorong Revitalisasi|language=id|trans-title=The Risk of Papuan Languages Extinction is Rising, the Indonesian Ministry of Education-Research-and Technology Supports the Revitalization |url=https://www.kemdikbud.go.id/main/blog/2022/07/risiko-kepunahan-bahasa-daerah-papua-meningkat-kemendikbudristek-dorong-revitalisasi|publisher=Ministry of Education, Research and Technology of Indonesia|year=2022}} making it the most linguistically diverse community in Indonesia. Many of these languages are non-Austronesian hence called Papuan languages by linguists. The Papuan (non-Austronesian) languages are also spoken beyond New Guinea, such as the now extinct Tambora language, members of the Timor–Alor–Pantar languages,{{Cite journal|last=Donohue|first=Mark|date=2008-01-03|title=The Papuan Language of Tambora|url=https://muse.jhu.edu/article/228921|journal=Oceanic Linguistics|volume=46|issue=2|pages=520–537|doi=10.1353/ol.2008.0014|s2cid=26310439|issn=1527-9421}} and North Halmahera languages family{{cite book |last1=Pawley |first1=Andrew |last2=Hammarström |first2=Harald |editor1-last=Palmer |editor1-first=Bill |date=2018 |title=The Languages and Linguistics of the New Guinea Area: A Comprehensive Guide |chapter=The Trans New Guinea family |series=The World of Linguistics |volume=4 |location=Berlin |publisher=De Gruyter Mouton |pages=21–195 |isbn=978-3-11-028642-7}} which includes Ternate and Tidore.{{cite book |editor-first=Gunter |editor-last = Senft |date=2008 |title=Serial verb constructions in Austronesian and Papuan languages |series = Pacific Linguistics 594 |publisher = Pacific Linguistics, Research School Of Pacific and Asian Studies, Australian National University |location = Canberra |chapter = Serial verb constructions in a linguistic area |first1 = Miriam |last1 = van Staden |first2 = Ger |last2 = Reesink |pages = 17–54 |oclc = 271765117 |isbn = 978-0-85883-591-7 }}{{Rp|20}}
Notable people
{{div col|colwidth=30em}}
=A=
- Abdul Hakim Achmad Aituarauw, member of Indonesian People's Representative Council
=B=
- Boaz Solossa, Indonesian footballer
=E=
- Elie Aiboy, former Indonesian footballer
=F=
- Frans Kaisiepo, 4th Governor of Papua and National Hero of Indonesia
- Freddy Numberi, Indonesian politician and former Minister of Transportation
=M=
- Machmud Singgirei Rumagesan, King of Sekar and National Hero of Indonesia
- Marlina Flassy, Indonesian anthropologist and the first woman to be appointed Dean of Cenderawasih University
=N=
- Nitya Krishinda Maheswari, Indonesian badminton player and 2014 Asian Games women's doubles gold medalist
- Nowela Auparay, professional singer and Indonesian Idol winner
=R=
- Raema Lisa Rumbewas, Indonesian weightlifter and silver medallist at the 2000 and 2004 Summer Olympics
- Ricky Kambuaya, Indonesian footballer
=S=
- Saiful Islam Al-Payage, Indonesian Islamic preacher
=T=
- Titus Bonai, Indonesian footballer
{{div end}}