Indonesian Australians
Total population | |
---|---|
(73,500 (2010, by country of birth) 50,000 (2011, by ancestry) ) |
|
Religion | |
Christians (59%), Muslims (17%), Atheists (13%) Buddhists (11%) |
|
Related ethnic groups | |
Indonesians, Overseas Indonesians, Cocos Malays |
Indonesian Australians are Australian citizens and residents of Indonesian origin. In the 2011 Australian Census, around 50,000 Australian residents stated their ancestry to be Indonesian.[1] In the 2010 Australian Census, 73,500 stated they were Indonesian-born residents in Australia.[2]
Contents
Migration history

As early as 1750, seamen from the Indonesian island of Makassar had settled on Australia's northern coast, spending about four months per year there collecting sea cucumbers and taking them back home to trade. By the late 19th century, the pearl hunting industry was recruiting workers from Kupang, while sugar plantations had hired migrant labourers from Java to work in Queensland; Dutch colonial authorities estimated they formed a total population of about 1,000. However, after the federation of Australia and the enactment of the Immigration Restriction Act 1901, the first part of a series of laws which collectively formed the White Australia policy, most of these migrants returned to Indonesia.[3] Beginning in 1942, thousands of Indonesians fled the Japanese occupation of Indonesia 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.[4] 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.[5][6] 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.[7]
Religion
Though Islam is the majority religion in Indonesia, Muslims are the minority among Indonesians in Australia.[8] In the 2006 Australian Census, only 8,656 out of 50,975 Indonesians in Australia, or 17%, identified as Muslim. They lack their own mosques, but instead typically attend mosques established by members of other ethnic groups.[8] In contrast, more than half of the Indonesian population in Australia follows Christianity, split evenly between the Roman Catholic Church and various Protestant denominations.[9]
Notable people

- Lee Lin Chin
- David Flint, Australian legal academic, known for his leadership of Australians for Constitutional Monarchy and for his tenure as head of the Australian Broadcasting Authority (Australian father and Indonesian-Dutch mother).
- Adam Hollioake, Australia cricketer (Australian father and Indonesian mother).
- Ben Hollioake, Australian cricketer (Australian father and Indonesian mother).
- Nadya Hutagalung, Singaporean-Indonesian-Australian MTV VJ (Indonesian father, Australian mother).[10]
- Massimo Luongo, Australian footballer with Swindon Town (Italian father, Indonesian mother).
- Dougy Mandagi, Australian singer, frontman of The Temper Trap.
- Jessica Mauboy, Australian singer, born to an immigrant father from Kefamenanu, West Timor and an indigenous Australian mother.[11]
See also
References
Notes
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Further reading
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External links
- Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. [CC-By-SA] (Indonesians in Sydney)
- ↑ http://www.dfat.gov.au/publications/asian-century/indonesia.html
- ↑ http://www.sr-indonesia.com/2011-08-09-22-09-10/commentaries/219-indonesian-diaspora-mapping-the-road-to-brain-gain
- ↑ Penny & Gunawan 2001, p. 439
- ↑ Lockwood 1970
- ↑ Willems 2001, pp. 263–329
- ↑ Coté & Westerbeek 2005, p. 289
- ↑ Ikegami 2005, pp. 21–23
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 Saeed 2003, p. 12
- ↑ Penny & Gunawan 2001, p. 441
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