Five Facts about Indonesia to Know
There are many facts written about Indonesia but mostly related to “Bali” versus “the rest of Indonesia”. Despite common facts that have written around the internet, there are some facts that perhaps not commonly known and just recently become news. I included five facts following their explanations, I hope I will not bore you!
1. Indonesia is not a country based on specific religious law
Having 250 million population and 86% of them are Muslim, that makes Indonesia as the largest Muslim country in the world. But it doesn’t make Indonesia as an Islamic state because Indonesian constitutional law is not based on the Islamic Sharia Law. 
Indonesia has one province out of 34 provinces that allowed to enforce Islamic Sharia Law: Aceh Province. It was allowed following the Helsinki (peace) Agreement to end the separatist movement by the Acehnese.
The long history of struggle against the Japanese and the Dutch army have taught Indonesian founding fathers to build the archipelago nation by acknowledging the diversity of Indonesians; their beliefs, and ethnic’s traditions. National language was introduced to help the communication among the ethnic groups in which has its own languages and dialects. Indonesia has approximately 300 ethnic groups with its own traditions, cultures, and cuisines.
Majority Indonesians whom I know of are fond of the multicultural and multi-religions as Indonesia’s unique identity. Unity in Diversity is Indonesia’s National Motto. Following is an image that was taken in 1980-ish during children traditional fashion show. I was one of the participants if you wonder which one I was: I wore the Timorese traditional clothing.

Indonesian children wore traditional customs from various ethnic groups in Indonesia
2. Majority Indonesians do not have surname, most of them have only one name
It started by the Javanese ethnic group, that makes up to 95 million people, the largest ethnic group in Indonesia. Many Javanese have only one name or two names without a surname. When an Indonesian with one name joins a social media, then he has to improvise, just like my former colleague does:

Meanwhile, Javanese or Indonesians having famous parents or family tend to use their father or family name to maintain the fame and social status. An example is Megawati, who is a daughter of Indonesian founding father, “Sukarno”; her last name is Sukarnoputri (in English means a daughter of Sukarno). Another famous family in Indonesia is “Bakrie”, it is the last name of a conglomerate, Ahmad Bakrie. The name is existed until today at the third generation as his sons and grandchildren maintain his business kingdom. Maybe it will last until the fourth generation and so on.

There are ethnic groups in Indonesia with a surname that have lasted for centuries, such as Bataknese (North Sumatra), Minahasan (North Sulawesi), Toraja (South Sulawesi), Minangkabau (West Sumatra) and some more ethnic groups. The surname from these ethnic groups can be traced back to the Indonesia’s Kingdom Era.
3. The internet is slow, but Indonesians make up as one of the biggest populations to use social media
If you google “Indonesia internet speed”, this is what you get:
Average connection speeds in Indonesia at 2.4 megabits per second are among the lowest in Southeast Asia, according to a recent “State of the Internet” report from cloud services provider Akamai. Mobile connection speeds in the fourth quarter of the year were even lower, at 2.0Mbps. (Aug 13, 2014 – source: Indonesia’s Youth Frustrated by Slow Internet Connections)
The internet in Indonesia is depressingly slow that I just gave up with it when visiting my parents in Jakarta or traveling to Indonesian remote islands. Mr. Badfish, who is now in Bali, sharing this frustrating situation.
Surprisingly, despite slow internet speed, Indonesians still manage to put themselves as one of the biggest population to use social media. Imagine if the internet speed is improving and available in all islands!
4. Visa-free entry to 45 countries
In June 2015, Indonesia has officially granted visa-free entry to citizens of 45 countries for tourism visit. Out of the 45 countries listed, 15 have enjoyed visa-free entry before while 30 others are new. The list of the 45 countries are as following: Austria, Bahrain, Belgium, Brunei, Cambodia, Canada, Chile, China, Czech Republic, Denmark, Ecuador, Finland, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Hungary, Italy, Japan, Kuwait, Laos, Macau, Malaysia, Mexico, Morocco, Myanmar, New Zealand, Norway, Oman, Peru, Philippines, Poland, Qatar, Russia, Singapore, South Africa, South Korea, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Thailand, the Netherlands, United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom, United States, Vietnam.

I find it is weird that the Official Notice did not mention other International Airports in North Sulawesi and Makassar, that host direct flights from Malaysia, Philippines and Singapore. But I assume visa-free entry still applied when you are going to land in North Sulawesi or Makassar without stopping in Bali nor Jakarta.
5. The most beautiful nature in Indonesia is its ocean
Dutchie and I have been diving in several countries, and every time we dive, we keep discussing to return to Indonesia for scuba diving. Two places in Indonesia have blown our mind: Komodo and Raja Ampat. Indonesia has impressive volcanic mountains, unique cultures, delicious food from all over the islands, majestic rainforests with amazing habitats from tiger to the orangutan, but its ocean is the one that I endorse most. Padi shares my opinion and mentioned as follows:
Indonesia is an epicenter of biodiversity, hosting a greater variety of marine life than anywhere else on earth…….While place names such as Bali, Komodo, Java and Sumatra bring jungles and tigers and land-based adventure to mind, the underwater world here is simply in a class of its own.
How do you proof this? Do visit Indonesia and swim-snorkel-scuba its ocean!

It is a fascinating country. I had no idea how enamored I would become with Indonesia and the people. I wish sometimes I had discovered it earlier in my life. I agree, the underwater world is the best. I hope it can stay that way…beautiful post Indah!
I hope so too, it’s been worrying me for a while, ocean in Indonesia has been neglected and not many Indonesians are able to enjoy its beauty. Many Indonesians could not swim, (it’s not something that we learn from school unfortunately) and that affects their interaction to the ocean and any water activity 😦
awesome post, very informative
Thank you so much James 🙂
1. awal suami menginjakkan kaki di indonesia komen pertamanya *loh katanya negara muslim kok banyak yg gak pake jilbab* 😀
2. gak punya nama belakang ini masalah saya sejak menginjakan kaki di italia, semua orang sini pada heran kenapa namanya cuma satu suku kata, padahal di indonesia biasa aja ya
3. internet lelet selalu jadi keluhan suami saya kalo ke sana,hihihi
4. sayangnya daftar negara yang bebas visa gak ada negaa Romania, hiks
5. alam indonesia memang indah ya mbak seindah nama yg posting 😉
*gilingan komen saya udah kayak satu postingan aja* hehe maafkan mba
hahaha, ayo bikin post tentang unek-unek ini 🙂 Aku juga heran kenapa Romania gak masuk ya? Polandia aja bisa dapat free visa gitu..Uniknya Indonesia itu sebenarnya ya karena sebagai negara mayoritas muslim tapi toleransi keberagamaannya tinggi..di sini ada teman-teman dari negara Eropa lain yang suka memandanganya lain, kadang bikin gemes 😦
Seneng banet baca ini hehe… Iyah, aku juga ga pake family name terus internet di kantor aku pikir udah paling lumayan (karena IT based harus cepet) eh tapi, pas kalo di Singapur baru ngeh segitu leletnya internet kita hehe.. Apalagi diluar kota besar Mba Indah, sinyal lebih parah lagi 😂
memang internet Indonesia itu agak-agak parah..Kalau di kantor mungkin lebih mantap ya? Di hotel juga entah kenapa selalu susah dapat wi-fi yang lancar 😦 di rumah adik kebetulan ada wi-finya juga tapi cuman lancar di handphone 😀 😀
Oh iya, aku tadi masak nasi liwet dengan sambel resep-mu, minus teri sih (gak ada di sini 😀 ) enak banget tapi lumayan juga nunggu nya..udah kelaperan tadi 😀
Oh iya di hotel juga entah kenapa ya suka ngaco internetnya. Enak ya nasi liwet praktis hehe.. Next time bikin sebelum berangkat kerja jadi pas pulang udah tinggal nikmatin 🙂
Very helpful travel information. Thank you for the post, Indah! 🙂
My pleasure Amy 🙂 Thank you too ⭐
There was so many things I didn’t know about indonesia, especially with the lack of surname. On the other hand, I knew it’s a paradise for divers 🙂
The surname is the funny part for Indonesias who lives aboard. My first resident permit card in the Netherlands has surname column said “onbekend” (unknown) 😀 Now the Dutch took away the surname column, I guess it is to avoid confusion to possible immigrants without surname 😀
I’m sure you must have problem filling out some online forms where they required some mandatory fields ?
thanks indah sudah menulis tentang indonesia hehehehe
dengan senang hati Winny 🙂 sudah lama aku gak nulis tentang Indonesia 🙂
keep writing ya heheheh maksudnya tentang indonesia
Really interesting post Indah 🙂
Thank you so much Lynda 🙂