Bunak

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Historical Photo of Bunak women from Bobonaro
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Historical Photo of Bunak women from Bobonaro

The Bunak (also known as Bunaq, Buna', Bunake) live in the mountainous region of central Timor, split between the political boundary between West Timor, Indonesia, particularly in Lamaknen District and East Timor. They are one of the ethnic groups on Timor which do not speak an Austronesian language, but rather a Papuan language like groups on New Guinea. It is usually put in the proposed language group Trans-New Guinea. They are surrounded by groups which speak Malayo-Polynesian languages, like the Atoni and the Tetum.

According to Languages of the World (Voegelin and Voegelin 1977), there were about 100,000 speakers, split evenly between the two nations.

[edit] Literature

  • Louis Berthe, Bei Gua: Itinéraire des ancêtres, Paris, 1972.
  • Claudine Friedberg, Boiled Woman and Broiled Man: Myths and Agricultural Rituals of the Bunaq of Central Timor, Edited James J. Fox, The Flow of Life. Essays on Eastern Indonesia, Harvard University Press, 1980.

[edit] External links


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