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Bali Island

Bali
is an Indonesian island located at 8°25′23″S, 115°14′55″E Coordinates: 8°25′23″S, 115°14′55″E, the
western most of the Lesser Sunda Islands, lying between Java to the
west and Lombok to the east. It is one of the country's 33 provinces
with the provincial capital at Denpasar towards the south of the
island. The island is home to the vast majority of Indonesia's small
Hindu minority. It is also the largest tourist destination in the
country and is renowned for its highly developed arts, including
dance, sculpture, painting, leather, metalworking and music.
Religion
Unlike
most
of Muslim-majority Indonesia, about 93.18% of Bali's population
adheres to Balinese Hinduism, formed as a combination of existing
local beliefs and Hindu influences from mainland Southeast Asia and
South Asia. Minority religions include Islam (4.79%), Christianity
(1.38%), and Buddhism (0.64%). These official statistical figures do
not include immigrants from other parts of Indonesia.
Bali consists of about three million people, nearly all of who
practice the Balinese Hindu religion, a heterogeneous amalgam in
which gods and demigods are worshipped together with Buddhist
heroes, with the spirits of ancestors and with indigenous deities
associated with agriculture and with places considered sacred.
Religion as it is practiced in Bali is a composite belief system
that embraces not only theology, philosophy, and mythology, but
ancestor worship, animism and magic. It pervades every aspect of
traditional life.
Bali Hinduism,
which has roots in Indian Hinduism and in Buddhism, adopted the
animistic traditions of the indigenes, which inhabited the island
around the first millennium BCE. This influence strengthened the
belief that the gods and goddesses are present in all things. Every
element of nature, therefore, possesses its own power, which
reflects the power of the gods. A rock, tree, dagger, or woven cloth
is a potential home for spirits whose energy can be directed for
good or evil. Balinese Hinduism is deeply interwoven with art and
ritual, and is less closely preoccupied with scripture, law, and
belief than Islam in Indonesia. Ritualizing states of self-control
are a notable feature of religious expression among the people, who
for this reason have become famous for their graceful and decorous
behavior.
Language
Balinese and Indonesian are the most widely spoken languages in
Bali, and like most Indonesians, the vast majority of Balinese
people are bilingual or trilingual. There are several indigenous
Balinese languages, but most Balinese can also use the most widely
spoken option: modern common Balinese. The usage of different
Balinese languages was traditionally determined by the Balinese
caste system and by clan membership, but this tradition is
diminishing.
English is a common third language (and the primary foreign
language) of many Balinese, owing to the requirements of the large
tourism industry. Staff working in Bali's tourist centres are often,
by necessity, multilingual to some degree, speaking as many as 8 or
9 different languages to an often surprising level of competence.
Culture
Bali is famous for many forms of art, including painting, sculpture,
woodcarving, handcrafts, and performing arts. Balinese gamelan music
is highly developed and varied. The dances portray stories from
Hindu epics such as the Ramayana. Famous Balinese dances include
pendet, legong, baris, topeng, barong, and kecak (the monkey dance).
National
education
programs, mass media and tourism continue to change Balinese
culture. Immigration from other parts of Indonesia,
especially Java,
is changing the ethnic composition of Bali's population.
The Hindu new year, Nyepi, is celebrated in the spring by a day of
silence. On this day everyone stays at home and tourists are
encouraged to remain in their hotels. On the preceding day large,
colorful sculptures of ogoh-ogoh monsters are paraded and finally
burned in the evening to drive away evil spirits. Other festivals
throughout the year are specified by the Balinese pawukon
calendrical system.
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