
Last modified: 2023-06-03 by  zachary harden
 zachary harden
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![[Dayaks, Indonesia]](../images/i/id-dayak.gif) image by António Martins-Tuválkin, 14 April 2009
See also:
 
image by António Martins-Tuválkin, 14 April 2009
See also:
At 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dayak_people it is written:
The 
Indonesian Dayak homeland has no official status. The majority of the Indonesian 
Dayaks is concentrated in the Province of West Kalimantan (formerly Borneo) 
where they are the largest ethnic group constituting 44 % of the total 
population. The "capital" of the Dayaks is Pontianak. Other major town is 
Singkawang. The Dayaks had an autonomous state (1946-50) called Dayak Besar 
(Groote Dayak - Great Dayak) within the United States of Indonesia (Negara 
Indonesia Serikat) but after that the autonomy for them was denied, which led to 
rebellions and sporadic unrest. The Indonesian authorities were long refusing to 
recognize the Dayaks' native religion - Kahanrigan and classified them as 
atheists, which in 1965 brought heavy persecution to them, as they were 
suspected to be a Communist sympathizers. Later, the Dayaks resisted violently 
the Indonesian efforts to resettle a large numbers of Javanese and Madurese 
immigrants in Kalimantan and the policy of uncontrolled logging causing the 
deforestation of Dayak homeland and fueling the nationalistic sentiments among 
the Dayaks of Indonesian part of Kalimantan.
James B. Minahan 
(Encyclopedia of the Stateless Nations - Ethnic and National Groups Around the 
World - volume II) presents:
"The Dayak national flag, the flag of the 
national movement in Indonesia, is a horizontal tricolor of red, yellow and 
blue."
There is no other evidence (known to me) corroborating this claim. 
Could this flag be based on on the earlier, eventual, flag of Dayak Besar state 
of 1946-50? 
Chrystian Kretowicz, 13 April 2009