Indonesia Emigration and Immigration: Difference between revisions

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Immigration to Indonesia was in practice since the ancient era. The early phase of Indonesia Immigration started when fishermen of Indonesia migrated to the neighboring islands. Immigration to Indonesia also took place at this time when huge populace from the Indian subcontinent visited the country and settled there. They also highly influenced the culture and society of the country considerably. Thus Indonesian culture is a blend of Indian and Chinese culture mostly.  
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=== Online Records ===
*{{FSC|339857|item|disp=Indisch Familie Archief : index van de aanvezige familiedossiers}} Genealogical collection of persons of European origin and nationality of the former Dutch East Indies (Indonesia). Includes 6,000 dossiers.
*{{FSC|762943|item|disp=Indische familiedossiers}} Genealogical collection of persons of European origin and nationality of the former Dutch East Indies (Indonesia). Includes 14,000 dossiers.
*[https://www.nationaalarchief.nl/onderzoeken/zoekhulpen/japanse-interneringskaarten-knil-en-marine Japanese internment cards KNIL and Navy] Dutch residents placed in Indonesian internment camps
*'''1811-1816''' {{FSC|1838747|item|disp=Personalia der periode van het Engelsch Bestuur oor Java 1811-1816}} The names listed include those of both Dutch and English extraction, both officials and merchants. Quite a bit of information is provided on the listed persons, including country of origin, position, when they arrived in and departed from Java, where they left to, the types of businesses they ran, etc.
*'''1824-828''' {{FSC|256082|item|disp=Admissie Paspoorten (Admission Passports), Jakarta, 1824-1828}}
*'''1878-1960''' [https://www.ancestry.co.uk/search/collections/1518/ UK and Ireland, Incoming Passenger Lists, 1878-1960] at Ancestry - index & images ($)
*'''1890-1960''' [https://search.findmypast.com/search-world-records/passenger-lists-leaving-uk-1890-1960 Passenger Lists Leaving UK 1890-1960] at Findmypast - index & images ($)
*'''1950-2006''' {{FSC|1496940|item|disp=Kewarganegaraan, Yogyakarta (Naturalization and citizenship records.), 1950-2006}}
*[https://theindoproject.org/bridging-the-gap-in-dutch-indonesian-genealogy-2/ Bridging the gap in Dutch-Indonesian Genealogy] (theindoproject.org)


The main immigration of Indonesia took place in the nineteenth century when people of Indonesia were sent to Australia for working in the pearl and sugarcane industries. Most of them had to return after the Second World War but few of them managed to stay back. The net migration rate of Indonesia is -1.27 migrants against thousand citizens. The outflow of refugees in Indonesia is nine thousand. For working in Indonesia the foreigners have to send their application to the immigration office. The local embassies of the country are not given the privilege of issuing Temporary Stay Visas. People who exceed their visa period are heavily penalized in Indonesia.  
===Naturalization Records===
*'''1960-2012''' {{RecordSearch|2040544|Indonesia, Jawa Tengah, Banjarnegara, Naturalization Records, 1960-2012}} at FamilySearch -  [[Indonesia, Jawa Tengah, Banjarnegara, Naturalization Records - FamilySearch Historical Records|How to Use this Collection]]; images only.  Court records relating to emigration.
*'''1954-2012''' {{RecordSearch|2135626|Indonesia, Jawa Tengah, Banyumas, Naturalization Records, 1954-2012}} at FamilySearch - [[Indonesia, Jawa Tengah, Banyumas, Naturalization Records - FamilySearch Historical Records|How to Use this Collection]]; images only.
*'''1960-2011''' {{RecordSearch|2019847|Indonesia, Jawa Tengah, Boyolali, Naturalization and Citizenship Records, 1960-2011}} at FamilySearch - [[Indonesia, Jawa Tengah, Boyolali, Naturalization and Citizenship Records - FamilySearch Historical Records|How to Use this Collection]]; images only.
*'''1951-2013''' {{RecordSearch|2144029|Indonesia, Jawa Tengah, Kebumen, Naturalization Records, 1951-2013}}} at FamilySearch - [[Indonesia, Jawa Tengah, Kebumen, Naturalization Records - FamilySearch Historical Records|How to Use this Collection]]; images only.
*'''1958-2013''' {{RecordSearch|2280561|Indonesia, Jawa Tengah, Kudus, District Court Naturalization Records, 1958-2013}} at FamilySearch - [[Indonesia, Jawa Tengah, Kudus, District Court Naturalization Records - FamilySearch Historical Records|How to Use this Collection]]; images only.
*'''1960-2013''' {{RecordSearch|2213089|Indonesia, Jawa Tengah, Pati, Naturalization Records, 1960-2013}} at FamilySearch - [[Indonesia, Jawa Tengah, Pati, Naturalization Records - FamilySearch Historical Records|How to Use this Collection]]; images only.
*'''1977-2003''' {{RecordSearch|2466197|Indonesia, Jawa Tengah, Pekalongan District Court Records, 1977-2003}} at FamilySearch - [[Indonesia, Jawa Tengah, Pekalongan District Court Records - FamilySearch Historical Records|How to Use this Collection]]; images only. Includes Naturalsasi (naturalizations).
*'''1961-2013''' {{RecordSearch|2345698|Indonesia, Jawa Tengah, Pemalang, District Court Records, 1961-2013}} at FamilySearch - [[Indonesia, Jawa Tengah, Pemalang District Court Records - FamilySearch Historical Records|How to Use this Collection]]; images only. These records include SBKRI (applications for Indonesian citizenship) and Berita Acara Sumpah (minutes of citizenship oaths)
*'''1960-2012''' {{RecordSearch|1937446|Indonesia, Jawa Tengah, Purwodadi, Citizenship Records, 1960-2012}} at FamilySearch - [[Indonesia, Jawa Tengah, Purwodadi, Citizenship Records - FamilySearch Historical Records|How to Use this Collection]]; images only. Naturalization and citizenship records from the district court of Purwodadi, Jawa Tengah, Indonesia. Includes Surat Bukti Kewarganegaraan Republik Indonesia (SBKRI) which documents Indonesian citizenship of ethnic Chinese living in Indonesia.
*'''1950-2012''' {{RecordSearch|2023944|Indonesia, Jawa Tengah, Purwokerto, Miscellaneous Government Records, 1950-2012}} at FamilySearch - [[Indonesia, Jawa Tengah, Purwokerto, Miscellaneous Government Records - FamilySearch Historical Records|How to Use this Collection]]; images only. Includes naturalization and citizenship records.
*'''1953-2013''' {{RecordSearch|2280559|Indonesia, Jawa Tengah, Rembang, District Court Naturalization Records, 1953-2013}} at FamilySearch - [[Indonesia, Jawa Tengah, Rembang, District Court Naturalization Records - FamilySearch Historical Records|How to Use this Collection]]; images only.
*'''1975-2014''' {{RecordSearch|2213350|Indonesia, Jawa Tengah, Ungaran, District Court Naturalization Records, 1975-2014}} at FamilySearch - [[Indonesia,  Jawa Tengah, Ungaran, District Court Naturalization Records - FamilySearch Historical Records|How to Use this Collection]]; images only.
*'''1925-2013''' {{RecordSearch|2156333|Indonesia, Jawa Tengah, Wonogiri, District Court Records, 1925-2013}} at FamilySearch - [[Indonesia, Jawa Tengah, Wonogiri District Court Records - FamilySearch Historical Records|How to Use this Collection]]; images only. Naturalization records from the Wonogiri District Court, Indonesia. These records include Permohonan SBKRI (Applications for Indonesian Citizenship), Surat Keterangan W.N.I. (Certificate of citizenship), and Permohonan Surat Keterangan W.N.I. (Applications for Indonesian Citizenship).
*'''1927-2011''' {{RecordSearch|1937409|Indonesia, Jawa Tengah, Wonosobo, Naturalization Records, 1927-2011}} at FamilySearch - [[Indonesia, Jawa Tengah, Wonosobo, Naturalization Records - FamilySearch Historical Records|How to Use this Collection]]; images only. Naturalization and citizenship-related records from the district court of Purwodadi, Jawa Tengah, Indonesia. Includes the following record types: Pewarganegaraan (naturalizations), and Surat Bukti Kewarganegaraan Republik Indonesia (SBKRI) which documents Indonesian citizenship of ethnic Chinese living in Indonesia.
*'''1946-1971''' [https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/61704/ Free Access: Africa, Asia and Europe, Passenger Lists of Displaced Persons, 1946-1971] Ancestry, free. Index and images. Passenger lists of immigrants leaving Germany and other European ports and airports between 1946-1971. The majority of the immigrants listed in this collection are displaced persons - Holocaust survivors, former concentration camp inmates and Nazi forced laborers, as well as refugees from Central and Eastern European countries and some non-European countries.


Before white settlement of Australia, Indonesian fishermen from Makasar established trading contact with indigenous communities in northern Australia. They constructed outdoor factories to process sea slug (''trepang'') for the Chinese market, but established no permanent settlements.  
==Finding the Town of Origin in Indonesia==
If you are using emigration/immigration records to find the name of your ancestors' town in Indonesia, see [[Indonesia Finding Town of Origin|'''Indonesia Finding Town of Origin''']] for additional research strategies.
==Indonesia Emigration and Immigration==
<span style="color:DarkViolet">'''"Emigration"''' means moving out of a country. '''"Immigration"''' means moving into a country. </span><br>
Emigration and immigration sources list the names of people leaving (emigrating) or arriving (immigrating) in the country. These sources may be passenger lists, permissions to emigrate, or records of passports issued. The information in these records may include the emigrants’ names, ages, occupations, destinations, and places of origin or birthplaces. Sometimes they also show family groups.
[[Category:Emigration and Immigration Records]]
== Immigration into Indonesia ==
*The first Europeans arrived in the archipelago in 1512, when '''Portuguese traders''', led by Francisco Serrão, sought to monopolize the sources of nutmeg, cloves, and cubeb pepper in the Maluku Islands.
*Dutch and British traders followed. In 1602, the Dutch established the '''Dutch East India Company''' and became the dominant European power for almost 200 years. The VOC was dissolved in 1800 following bankruptcy, and the Netherlands established the Dutch East Indies as a nationalized colony. For most of the colonial period, Dutch control over the archipelago was tenuous. In December 1949, the Dutch formally recognized Indonesian independence.
*In 1930, Dutch and other '''Europeans, Eurasians, and derivative people like the Indos''', numbered 240,000 or 0.4% of the total population. Historically, they constituted only a tiny fraction of the native population and remain so today. The Dutch colonial empire's primary purpose was commercial exchange as opposed to sovereignty over homogeneous landmasses.<ref>"Indonesia", in Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indonesia#Ethnic_groups_and_languages, accessed 7 July 2021.</ref>


From the 1870s Indonesians were recruited to work in the pearling and sugar cane industries in northern Australia. Around 1,000 Indonesians were living in Australia by Federation, almost all in Queensland and Western Australia. With the introduction of the White Australia Policy in 1901, most sugar workers returned to Indonesia, although some pearl divers remained. Few settled in Victoria, and those who did were probably Dutch Indonesians – the Netherlands had controlled the Indonesian archipelago since the 19th century.  
===Indos===
*The '''Indo people or Indos''', are '''Eurasian''' people living in or connected with Indonesia. In its narrowest sense, the term refers to people in the former Dutch East Indies who held European legal status but were of '''mixed Dutch and indigenous Indonesian descent''' as well as their descendants today. The European ancestry of these people was predominantly Dutch, but also included Portuguese, British, French, Belgian, German and others.<ref name="indo"/>
*In the Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia), the Dutch heavily interacted with the indigenous population, and as European women were almost non-existent, many Dutchmen married native women. This created a new group of people, the Dutch-Eurasians also known as 'Indos' or 'Indo-Europeans'.
*During the 1620s, Jan Pieterszoon Coen in particular insisted that '''families and orphans''' be sent from Holland to populate the colonies. As a result, a number of single women were sent and '''an orphanage was established in Batavia to raise Dutch orphan girls to become East India brides'''. There was a large number of women from the Netherlands recorded as marrying in the years around 1650. Almost half of them were single women from the Netherlands marrying for the first time. There were still considerable numbers of women sailing eastwards to the Indies at this time.  
*Few European women came to the Indies during the Dutch East India Company period. There is evidence of considerable care by officers of the Dutch East India Company for their illegitimate Eurasian children: boys were sometimes sent to the Netherlands to be educated, and sometimes never returned to Indonesia.
*In the 1890s, there were 62,000 civilian "Europeans" in the Dutch East Indies, most of them Eurasians, making up less than half of one per cent of the population. Indo influence waned following World War I and the opening of the Suez Canal, when there was a substantial influx of white Dutch families.
*During World War II the European colonies in South East Asia, including the Dutch East Indies, were invaded and annexed by the Japanese Empire. The Japanese sought to eradicate anything reminiscent of European government. Many of the Indies Dutch spent World War II in Japanese concentration camps. <ref name="indo">"Indo people", in Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indo_people, accessed 24 April 2021.</ref>


During World War II, many Indonesian nationalists were based in Melbourne, and in 1949 Indonesia’s struggle for independence succeeded. From the early 1950s Indonesian students became temporary residents under the Colombo Plan, and by 1961 the Indonesia-born community of Victoria numbered 1,279. A large number were Dutch Indonesians who had been forced out of Indonesia after World War II.  
== Emigration from Indonesia ==
'''"Indonesian diaspora"''' refers to any ethnic in Indonesia living outside of their homeland. The majority of Indonesian expatriates live in '''Malaysia, the U.S., Japan, the U.A.E., Australia, and the Netherlands''', esp. South '''Moluccans''', a predominantly Christian ethnic group found asylum and religious freedom by the thousands in the '''Netherlands''' since the 1950s.
*Over a million '''Minangkabau people''' live outside of Indonesia, mainly in '''Malaysia and Singapore''', but they recently joined the Indonesian emigration to '''Australia, China, Europe, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan and the Philippines'''.
*In the Dutch colonial era, vast numbers of '''Javanese''' were sent to other Dutch colonies as '''coulies'''. Most of them were sent to '''Suriname, New Caledonia, and East Sumatra'''.
*In the late 20th century, the '''Javanese''' were introduced to the island of '''New Guinea''' by Indonesian government endorsed '''settlement programs in Papua and West Papua provinces'''.
*Other Javanese live in '''Malaysia, Europe, North America, the Middle East, South Africa and Australia'''.
*During and after the Indonesian National Revolution, which followed the World War II, (1945–1965) around 300.000 people, pre-dominantly '''Indos''', left Indonesia to go to the '''Netherlands'''. This migration was called repatriation. The majority of this group had never set foot in the Netherlands before.<ref>"List of diasporas", in Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_diasporas#I, acessed 7 July 2021.</ref>
===Moluccan Diaspora===
*As the result of the end of its occupation over the Dutch East Indies in the 1950s, the Netherlands government decided to transport around 12,000 Moluccan soldiers of the Royal Netherlands East Indies Army and their families to Europe, as they had fought on the Dutch side during the Indonesian National Revolution. They were then discharged on arrival, not allowed to work, given pocket money, and 'temporarily' housed in camps.
*Moluccans are the predominantly Melanesian, Austronesian-speaking ethnic group indigenous to the Maluku Islands, also called the Moluccas and historically known as the Spice Islands.
*A small population of Moluccans still live in the Netherlands. This group mainly consists of the '''descendants of KNIL soldiers''' who were originally told to come the Netherlands only temporarily before being sent back to their own independent republic, but were eventually forced to stay due to the Dutch government giving up control of the islands. The remainder consists of Moluccans serving in the '''Dutch navy and their descendants''', as well as some who came to the Netherlands '''from western New Guinea''' after it too was handed over to Indonesia.\However, the vast majority of Moluccans still live in the Moluccas and the other surrounding regions such as '''Papua, East- and West Timor, North Sulawesi, Bali and Java'''.<ref>"Moluccans", in Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moluccans, accessed 13 July 2021.</ref>


The end of the White Australia Policy in the early 1970s saw increasing numbers of Indonesians arrive. Between 1986 and 1996, the community increased four-fold, to 12,128. Many of the new arrivals were students on temporary visas. Others came under family reunion or skilled migration programs. By 2001 the Indonesia-born population of Victoria was 10,976, a 10-percent decrease since 1996.
==Records of Indonesian Emigrants in Their Destination Nations==
{|
|-
|
|<span style="color:DarkViolet">One option is to look for records about the ancestor in the '''country of destination, the country they immigrated into'''. See links to Wiki articles about immigration records for '''major''' destination countries below. Additional Wiki articles for other destinations can be found at [https://www.familysearch.org/wiki/en/Category:Emigration_and_Immigration_Records '''Category:Emigration and Immigration Records'''.]  </span>
|}
{|
|-
|style="padding-right:75px"|
*[[United States Emigration and Immigration]]
*[[Malaysia Emigration and Immigration]]
*[[Japan Emigration and Immigration]]
*[[United Arab Emirates Emigration and Immigration]]
*[[Australia Emigration and Immigration]]
*[[Netherlands Emigration and Immigration]]
*[[Singapore Emigration and Immigration]]
*[[China Emigration and Immigration]]
| style="vertical-align:top"|
*[[South Korea Emigration and Immigration]]
*[[Philippines Emigration and Immigration]]
*[[Suriname Emigration and Immigration]]
*[[New Caledonia Emigration and Immigration]]
*[[Papua New Guinea Emigration and Immigration]]
*[[South Africa Emigration and Immigration]]
*[[Papua New Guinea Emigration and Immigration]]
|}


The religious diversity within the Indonesia-born community in Victoria was reflective of its multi-racial makeup: 58 percent were Christian, 16 percent were Muslim, 15 percent were Buddhist, and 2 percent were Hindu. Almost three-quarters spoke Indonesian at home. Those employed worked in a variety of areas, with over one-third in professional roles. Today, the community lives largely in Melbourne’s eastern and south-eastern suburbs, and is enriched by several community and cultural groups. Major community events include celebrations for Indonesian Independence Day on 17 August and the end of Ramadan, enjoyed by Muslims and non-Muslims alike.
==Types of Records==


=== External Links  ===
=== Immigration, naturalization and foreigner registration (Imigrasi, pewarganegaraan, kewarganegaraan) ===
These records are very valuable for making proper connections to place of origin in other countries, and for pinpointing place of residence in Indonesia. Many researchers do not know their ancestor's place of origin. They are generally available from the 1700s to the present. Records can be found at the National Archives, municipal archives, and Chinese community kapitans.


*http://jak-expat-services.com/
They generally include the immigrant’s name, age, occupation, birth date and place, former residence, destination; wife’s name, childrens’ given names and ages or number of children; religion, race, nationality, sometimes picture. Chinese immigration records give names and places in Chinese characters.  
*http://www.asiatour.com/indonesia/e-02trav/ei-tra10.htm
==References==
*http://www.indonesiamatters.com/1105/muslim-immigration/
<references/>
*http://www.nationmaster.com/country/id-indonesia/imm-immigration


'''Wiki articles describing online collections are found at:'''
[[Category:Indonesia_Emigration_and_Immigration]]
 
*[https://familysearch.org/learn/wiki/en/Indonesia,_Jawa_Tengah,_Purwodadi_Citizenship_Records_(FamilySearch_Historical_Records) Indonesia, Jawa Tengah Purwodadi Citizenship Reocrds (FamilySearch Historical Records)]
*[https://familysearch.org/learn/wiki/en/Indonesia,_Central_Java,_Wonosobo,_Naturalization_Records_(FamilySearch_Historical_Records) Indonesia, Central Java, Wonosobo, Naturalization Records (FamilySearch&nbsp;Historical Records)]
 
[[Category:Indonesia]]

Latest revision as of 21:04, 11 August 2025

Indonesia Wiki Topics
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Record Types
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Local Research Resources

Online Records

Naturalization Records

Finding the Town of Origin in Indonesia

If you are using emigration/immigration records to find the name of your ancestors' town in Indonesia, see Indonesia Finding Town of Origin for additional research strategies.

Indonesia Emigration and Immigration

"Emigration" means moving out of a country. "Immigration" means moving into a country.
Emigration and immigration sources list the names of people leaving (emigrating) or arriving (immigrating) in the country. These sources may be passenger lists, permissions to emigrate, or records of passports issued. The information in these records may include the emigrants’ names, ages, occupations, destinations, and places of origin or birthplaces. Sometimes they also show family groups.

Immigration into Indonesia

  • The first Europeans arrived in the archipelago in 1512, when Portuguese traders, led by Francisco Serrão, sought to monopolize the sources of nutmeg, cloves, and cubeb pepper in the Maluku Islands.
  • Dutch and British traders followed. In 1602, the Dutch established the Dutch East India Company and became the dominant European power for almost 200 years. The VOC was dissolved in 1800 following bankruptcy, and the Netherlands established the Dutch East Indies as a nationalized colony. For most of the colonial period, Dutch control over the archipelago was tenuous. In December 1949, the Dutch formally recognized Indonesian independence.
  • In 1930, Dutch and other Europeans, Eurasians, and derivative people like the Indos, numbered 240,000 or 0.4% of the total population. Historically, they constituted only a tiny fraction of the native population and remain so today. The Dutch colonial empire's primary purpose was commercial exchange as opposed to sovereignty over homogeneous landmasses.[1]

Indos

  • The Indo people or Indos, are Eurasian people living in or connected with Indonesia. In its narrowest sense, the term refers to people in the former Dutch East Indies who held European legal status but were of mixed Dutch and indigenous Indonesian descent as well as their descendants today. The European ancestry of these people was predominantly Dutch, but also included Portuguese, British, French, Belgian, German and others.[2]
  • In the Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia), the Dutch heavily interacted with the indigenous population, and as European women were almost non-existent, many Dutchmen married native women. This created a new group of people, the Dutch-Eurasians also known as 'Indos' or 'Indo-Europeans'.
  • During the 1620s, Jan Pieterszoon Coen in particular insisted that families and orphans be sent from Holland to populate the colonies. As a result, a number of single women were sent and an orphanage was established in Batavia to raise Dutch orphan girls to become East India brides. There was a large number of women from the Netherlands recorded as marrying in the years around 1650. Almost half of them were single women from the Netherlands marrying for the first time. There were still considerable numbers of women sailing eastwards to the Indies at this time.
  • Few European women came to the Indies during the Dutch East India Company period. There is evidence of considerable care by officers of the Dutch East India Company for their illegitimate Eurasian children: boys were sometimes sent to the Netherlands to be educated, and sometimes never returned to Indonesia.
  • In the 1890s, there were 62,000 civilian "Europeans" in the Dutch East Indies, most of them Eurasians, making up less than half of one per cent of the population. Indo influence waned following World War I and the opening of the Suez Canal, when there was a substantial influx of white Dutch families.
  • During World War II the European colonies in South East Asia, including the Dutch East Indies, were invaded and annexed by the Japanese Empire. The Japanese sought to eradicate anything reminiscent of European government. Many of the Indies Dutch spent World War II in Japanese concentration camps. [2]

Emigration from Indonesia

"Indonesian diaspora" refers to any ethnic in Indonesia living outside of their homeland. The majority of Indonesian expatriates live in Malaysia, the U.S., Japan, the U.A.E., Australia, and the Netherlands, esp. South Moluccans, a predominantly Christian ethnic group found asylum and religious freedom by the thousands in the Netherlands since the 1950s.

  • Over a million Minangkabau people live outside of Indonesia, mainly in Malaysia and Singapore, but they recently joined the Indonesian emigration to Australia, China, Europe, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan and the Philippines.
  • In the Dutch colonial era, vast numbers of Javanese were sent to other Dutch colonies as coulies. Most of them were sent to Suriname, New Caledonia, and East Sumatra.
  • In the late 20th century, the Javanese were introduced to the island of New Guinea by Indonesian government endorsed settlement programs in Papua and West Papua provinces.
  • Other Javanese live in Malaysia, Europe, North America, the Middle East, South Africa and Australia.
  • During and after the Indonesian National Revolution, which followed the World War II, (1945–1965) around 300.000 people, pre-dominantly Indos, left Indonesia to go to the Netherlands. This migration was called repatriation. The majority of this group had never set foot in the Netherlands before.[3]

Moluccan Diaspora

  • As the result of the end of its occupation over the Dutch East Indies in the 1950s, the Netherlands government decided to transport around 12,000 Moluccan soldiers of the Royal Netherlands East Indies Army and their families to Europe, as they had fought on the Dutch side during the Indonesian National Revolution. They were then discharged on arrival, not allowed to work, given pocket money, and 'temporarily' housed in camps.
  • Moluccans are the predominantly Melanesian, Austronesian-speaking ethnic group indigenous to the Maluku Islands, also called the Moluccas and historically known as the Spice Islands.
  • A small population of Moluccans still live in the Netherlands. This group mainly consists of the descendants of KNIL soldiers who were originally told to come the Netherlands only temporarily before being sent back to their own independent republic, but were eventually forced to stay due to the Dutch government giving up control of the islands. The remainder consists of Moluccans serving in the Dutch navy and their descendants, as well as some who came to the Netherlands from western New Guinea after it too was handed over to Indonesia.\However, the vast majority of Moluccans still live in the Moluccas and the other surrounding regions such as Papua, East- and West Timor, North Sulawesi, Bali and Java.[4]

Records of Indonesian Emigrants in Their Destination Nations

One option is to look for records about the ancestor in the country of destination, the country they immigrated into. See links to Wiki articles about immigration records for major destination countries below. Additional Wiki articles for other destinations can be found at Category:Emigration and Immigration Records.

Types of Records

Immigration, naturalization and foreigner registration (Imigrasi, pewarganegaraan, kewarganegaraan)

These records are very valuable for making proper connections to place of origin in other countries, and for pinpointing place of residence in Indonesia. Many researchers do not know their ancestor's place of origin. They are generally available from the 1700s to the present. Records can be found at the National Archives, municipal archives, and Chinese community kapitans.

They generally include the immigrant’s name, age, occupation, birth date and place, former residence, destination; wife’s name, childrens’ given names and ages or number of children; religion, race, nationality, sometimes picture. Chinese immigration records give names and places in Chinese characters.

References

  1. "Indonesia", in Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indonesia#Ethnic_groups_and_languages, accessed 7 July 2021.
  2. 2.0 2.1 "Indo people", in Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indo_people, accessed 24 April 2021.
  3. "List of diasporas", in Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_diasporas#I, acessed 7 July 2021.
  4. "Moluccans", in Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moluccans, accessed 13 July 2021.