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The Malays are the dominant race which live in Malaysia,
Indonesia, Brunei and the Philippines which, together with Singapore, make up what is called the Malay
archipelago. The Malays are traditionally classified as a member of the Mongoloid race, along with other Asiatic peoples,
including Chinese, Mongols,
Japanese, Koreans,
Thais, Vietnamese and Burmese.
The term "Malay" is both generic and specific.
Three-quarter scale bronze sculptures 19th C. Malay people, Indonesia, Borneo. The men are readying their roosters for
a cockfight. A boy, eating a fruit, is watching them. The central figure, a
woman, balances a load of fruit atop her head. Until the 1960s, it was not uncommon for
women in Bali, for example, to dress bare-breasted. Antonio Pigafetta's journal 1521 records this custom in the Philippines as
well. The sculptures can be seen in the Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago
Generally, the name "Malay" is used to describe all the numerous related groups including the Acehnese, Minangs, Bataks and
Mandailings who live in Sumatra ; Javanese and Sundanese in Java ; Banjars, Ibans, Kadazans and Melanaus in Borneo ; Bugis and Torajans in Sulawesi; and the various dominant
ethnic groups in the Philippines such as the Tagalogs, the Maguindanaoans,
the Tausug, the Ilocanos, and the Visayans.
Specifically, this name is also the proper name of the subgroup which is native to the eastern part of Sumatra but migrated to
the Malay Peninsula and the Riau Archipelago over the past thousand years or so. Sometimes, but very rarely, this subgroup is
called "Riau Malays" to distinguish it as a specific group.
Other groups classified as Malays which live outside what is called the Malay archipelago include the Cham who live in Cambodia and Vietnam and the Utsuls who live on the island of Hainan. Descendants of the Malays could be
found today in Sri Lanka, South
Africa (the "Cape
Malays") and Madagascar. In the latter, they are known as the Merina and one of the dominant ethnic groups in that
country.
The languages spoken by the Malays were classified in the Malayo-Polynesian family of languages which is now known as Austronesian family of languages which includes the language spoken by the Merinas
in Madagascar, the Maori language in New Zealand and the Polynesian languages such as Samoan and Hawaiian.
In terms of religion, most of the Malays are Muslims; they form the dominant
religious group in Indonesia, Malaysia and Brunei. Their conversion to Islam from
Hinduism and Theravada Buddhism began in the 1400s. Most Malays in
Singapore and Thailand are also Muslims. Most Malays in the Philippines have been Christians since the colonization by Spain. Hinduism is the dominant religion in the island of Bali while small
groups in other parts of the archipelago practice animism and Buddhism.
See also: Bumiputra, Hinduism in Southeast Asia
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