The Abangan are Javanese people who are Muslims and practice a much more syncretic version of Islam than the more orthodox santri. The term, apparently derived from the Javanese language word for red, abang, was first developed by Clifford Geertz, but the meaning has since shifted. Abangan are more inclined to follow a local system of beliefs called adat and Kebatinan than pure Sharia (Islamic law). Their belief system integrates Hinduism, Buddhism and animism. However, some scholars hold that what has classically been viewed as Indonesian variance from Islam is often a part of that faith in other countries. For example, Martin van Bruinessen notes similarity between adat and historical practice among Muslims in Egypt as described by Edward Lane.
Indonesian mass killings of 1965–66
Many Abangans were supporters of the Communist Party of Indonesia (PKI), and their interests were thus supported by the PKI. They subsequently made up most of the people who were slaughtered in the anti-Communist Indonesian mass killings of 1965–66. Abangans were targeted for attacks by Ansor, the youth wing of Nahdlatul Ulama and the Santri with help from the Indonesian Army. To avoid being classified as atheist and communists, Abangan Muslims were forced by the Indonesian government to convert to Hinduism and Christianity in the aftermath of the slaughter.
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Les priyayi étaient, dans la Java des Indes néerlandaises, ceux des indigènes qui travaillaient pour le gouvernement : cadres administratifs, enseignants, fonctionnaires en général. Certains auteurs voient dans les priyayi une noblesse de robe non héréditaire, dont les fonctions, titres et privilèges dépendaient du bon vouloir, réversible, du souverain à l'époque du royaume de Mataram, du gouvernement colonial après que celui-ci a imposé sa souveraineté à Mataram.
In Indonesia, santri is a term for someone who follows Islamic religious education in pesantren (Islamic boarding schools). Santri usually stay in the place until their education is complete. After completing their study period, some of them will serve the pesantren by becoming administrators. According to C.C. Berg, the term "santri" comes from Sanskrit shastri which means "one who learns Hindu scriptures"; it has the same root as the word shastra (literature).
thumb|300px|Bas-relief de la mosquée de Mantingan près de Jepara (côte nord de Java) représentant un éléphant à partir de motifs floraux L'islam est l'une des six religions officiellement reconnues par l'État indonésien, avec le bouddhisme, le catholicisme, le confucianisme, l'hindouisme et le protestantisme. Selon le recensement officiel de 2010, 87,5 % des Indonésiens sont musulmans, 7 % protestants, 2,8 % catholiques, 1,7 % hindouistes, 1 % autres ou sans réponse, ce qui inclut le bouddhisme, le judaïsme et le christianisme orthodoxe.