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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition

Dyak

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | 2008 | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Dyak or Dayak , name applied to one of the groups of indigenous peoples of the island of Borneo , numbering about 2 million. The Dyaks have maintained their customs and mode of life largely uninfluenced by modern civilization. The group is generally divided into the Sea Dyaks, or Iban, who inhabit the coastal areas and rivers; the Land Dyaks of SW Borneo; the Bahau of central and E Borneo; and the Ngadju of S Borneo. In Dyak communities, a few enormous longhouses provide dwelling places for a whole village. Each longhouse has a chief. In clearings made in the jungle, rice, yams, sugarcane, and other crops are grown cooperatively by the people of the entire community. Fishing and hunting (with blowguns and poison darts) supplement the food supply. Dyaks have highly complex animistic and shamanistic religious cults. Intertribal warfare has persisted, with headhunting as an important feature. In the second half of the 20th cent, Indonesia encouraged immigration to Kalimantan (Indonesian Borneo) from other areas of Indonesia, especially Madura. Tensions between the immigrants and the indigenous Dyaks have led to recurrent violence by Dyak tribesmen.

Bibliography: See B. Sandin, The Sea Dayaks of Borneo before White Rajah Rule (1968); D. Freeman, Report on the Iban (2d ed. 1970); R. Pringle, Rajahs and Rebels (1970).

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Dayak

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | 2008 | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Dayak see Dyak .

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Free newspaper and magazine articles

Free Article Letter from Lundu: 26 December 2006.(BRIEF COMMUNICATIONS)(Letter to the editor)
Magazine article from: Borneo Research Bulletin; 1/1/2006
Free Article Travel PSA ... to Indonesia's islands. (Photographic Society of America's Travel Adventures program, planned for April 16-May 5, 1993)
Magazine article from: PSA Journal; 3/1/1993
Free Article Some Sarawak curiosities in the British Library.
Magazine article from: Borneo Research Bulletin; 1/1/2006

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Letter from Lundu: 26 December 2006.(BRIEF COMMUNICATIONS)(Letter to the editor)
Magazine article from: Borneo Research Bulletin; 1/1/2006; ; 700+ words ; Words surfaced, whose source I have searched for fruitlessly: The Dyak doesn't know how his people used to live 60 years ago, and doesn't care. This was written 100 years ago, and if it were true then... Read more
Travel PSA ... to Indonesia's islands. (Photographic Society of America's Travel Adventures program, planned for April 16-May 5, 1993)
Magazine article from: PSA Journal; 3/1/1993; ; 664 words ; ...panned slowly past, with scenes of clothes washing, preparing meals and fishing all at intimate eye level. The stops to visit Dyak tribes yielded warm richly colored scenes of every aspect of village life from religious rites to baby bathing. Photographs begged... Read more
Some Sarawak curiosities in the British Library.
Magazine article from: Borneo Research Bulletin; 1/1/2006; ; 700+ words ; ...very delightful time it was. Everybody in the Mission House enjoyed hearing these men and boys singing their hymns and chant in Dyak, before they went to bed at night. All wild people love music, and learn poetry much more readily than prose. Mr. Gomes, therefore... Read more
Sudbury couple meet on VSO mission to Africa.
Newspaper article from: Suffolk Free Press (Sudbury, England); 4/4/2008; 468 words ; ...schoolchildren were a complete ethnic mix of different groups and they all got along so well together. I also spent a week with one of the Dyak families in a traditional long house. When I went to university back home I found it hard to settle and made friends more easily... Read more
Flash point.(LABJ forum)
Magazine article from: Los Angeles Business Journal; 2/9/2004; 466 words ; ...taste for shock is being created, but it's not a conspiracy. People are going, Well, they're doing it, so we gotta do it. Brian Dyak President, Chief Executive Entertainment Industries Council Inc. I don't put the blame on the corporate media. It's what happened... Read more
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