Indonesia, with over 190 million people, has the fifth largest population
in the world. The country is an ethnological goldmine, with 336 ethnic groups joined together by a unifying language and through
intermarriage. Indonesia can be considered a spectrum of all the Asian cultures, races and religions. Of the 190 million people
in the country, 87% are Moslem. The Indonesian Constitution recognizes freedom of religion.
Many parts of Indonesia have remained isolated because of the archipelago's size,
jungles, highlands and complex customs. A journey through the country is a journey through time. You will find ways of life
that are 5,000 years removed from the world we know. While some Indonesians wear rings and rats' ribs in their noses, yet
others read "The Asian Wall Street Journal". If mingling among Indonesia's diverse populations has occurred at all, it has
taken place near the sea.
Among Indonesia's diverse peoples, the Balinese are extraordinarily creative with
a highly theatrical culture. They are lavish in their colors and decorations and less restrained in their music and dance.
The Balinese believe that all natural phenomena have souls. Spirits dominate everything they do, and their lives revolve around
offering fruits and flowers to appease the angry gods. Dayak is the collective name for the more than 200 different tribes
that comprise Kalimantan's native people. The Javanese (the largest group) originally belonged to the Mongoloid race.
Indonesians in general are friendly, fun-loving people. They are artistic by nature
and express themselves in canvas, wood, metals, clay and stone and in their dance and dramas.