Kenyah people

Kenyah people
Dayak Kenyah
A young Kenyah family in North Kalimantan, pre-1944.
Total population
69,256 (year 2000 - Malaysia and Indonesia)[1] 72,000 (year 2023 - Malaysia and Indonesia ) [2]
Regions with significant populations
Borneo:
 Malaysia (Sarawak)56 600 (2023)[3]
 Indonesia (East Kalimantan)44,000 (2020)[3]
Languages
Kenyah languages (Mainstream Kenyah), Sarawak Malay, Standard Malay, English and Indonesian
Religion
Christianity (Majority 94,27%), Bungan (Folk religion),[4] Islam
Related ethnic groups
Bagai people, Kayan people, Penan people

The Kenyah people are an indigenous, Austronesian-speaking people of Borneo, living in interior North and East Kalimantan, Indonesia and Sarawak, Malaysia.

  1. ^ William W. Bevis (1995). Borneo Log: The Struggle For Sarawak's Forests. University of Washington Press. ISBN 9780295974163.
  2. ^ Kenyah, Mainstream language resources | Joshua Project
  3. ^ a b Wil de Jong, Denyse Snelder & Noboru Ishikawa (2012). Transborder Governance of Forests, Rivers and Seas. Routledge. p. 54. ISBN 978-11-365-3809-4.
  4. ^ Paul C. Y. Chen, ed. (1990). Penans: The Nomads of Sarawak. Pelanduk Publications. p. 35. ISBN 96-797-8310-3.