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===Identity=== [[File:The Hong Eng, ethnic Chinese in Indonesia, ID card during Japanese occupation, 1943.jpg|thumb|upright|left|alt=An old document made of one sheet of paper showing two outlined boxes, one in the top half and one on the bottom. The top box has writing in Japanese with a translation and a small head shot of a woman with a thumbprint below it. There are several small square imprints in red ink from a stamp. The bottom box is split into two vertical halves, one in Japanese and the other in Indonesian.|Identity card of The Hong Eng, {{circa}} 1943, indicating her Chinese ethnicity during the occupation of the Dutch East Indies by Japan]] Ethnic Chinese in the 1930 Dutch East Indies census were categorized as foreign orientals, which led to separate registration.{{sfn|Ananta|Arifin|Bakhtiar|2008|p=20}} Citizenship was conferred upon the ethnic Chinese through a 1946 citizenship act after Indonesia became independent, and it was further reaffirmed in 1949 and 1958. However, they often encountered obstacles regarding the legality of their citizenship. Chinese Indonesians were required to produce an [[Proof of Citizenship of the Republic of Indonesia|Indonesian Citizenship Certificate]] (''{{lang|id|Surat Bukti Kewarganegaraan Republik Indonesia}}'', SBKRI) when conducting business with government officials.{{sfn|Tan|2005|p=805}} Without the SBKRI, they were not able to make passports and [[Indonesian identity card|identity cards]] (''{{lang|id|Kartu Tanda Penduduk}}'', KTP); register birth, death, and marriage certificates; or register a business license.{{sfn|Tan|2005|p=806}} The requirement for its use was abolished in 1996 through a presidential instruction which was reaffirmed in 1999, but media sources reported that local authorities were still demanding the SBKRI from Chinese Indonesians after the instructions went into effect.{{sfn|Purdey|2006|p=179}} Other terms used for identifying sectors of the community include ''{{lang|id|[[:wikt:peranakan|peranakan]]}}'' and ''{{lang|id|totok}}''. The former, traditionally used to describe those born locally, is derived from the root [[Indonesian language|Indonesian]] word ''{{lang|id|[[:wikt:anak|anak]]}}'' (lit., child) and thus means "child of the land". The latter is derived from [[Javanese language|Javanese]], meaning new or pure, and is used to describe the foreign born and new immigrants.{{sfn|Tan|2008|p=1}} A significant number of Chinese Indonesians also live in the People's Republic of China and Hong Kong; they are considered part of the population of "returned overseas Chinese" ({{lang|zh-Hant|[[:wikt:歸|歸]][[:wikt:國|國]][[:wikt:華僑|華僑]]}}).{{sfn|Coppel|2002|p=357}} To identify the varying sectors of Chinese Indonesian society, Tan contends they must be differentiated according to nationality into those who are citizens of the host country and those who are [[Alien (law)|resident aliens]], then further broken down according to their cultural orientation and social identification.{{sfn|Kahin|1991|p=119}} In her doctoral dissertation, Aimee Dawis notes that such definitions, based on cultural affinity and not nation of origin, have gained currency since the early 1990s, although the old definition is occasionally used.{{sfn|Dawis|2009|pp=78–82}} Sociologist [[Mely G. Tan]] asserts that scholars studying ethnic Chinese emigrants often refer to the group as a "monolithic entity": the [[overseas Chinese]].{{sfn|Kahin|1991|p=119}} Such treatment also persists in Indonesia; a majority of the population referred to them as ''{{lang|id|orang Cina}}'' or ''{{lang|id|orang Tionghoa}}'' (both meaning "Chinese people", {{lang|zh-Hant|[[:wikt:中華|中華]][[:wikt:人|人]]}}), or ''{{lang|id|hoakiau}}'' ({{lang|zh-Hant|[[:wikt:華僑|華僑]]}}).{{efn|The latter two terms are derived from the [[Hokkien]] Chinese. Sociologist [[Mely G. Tan]] argued that these terms "only apply to those who are alien, not of mixed ancestry, and who initially do not plan to stay in Indonesia permanently" {{Harv|Kahin|1991|p=119}}. She also noted that the terms ''{{lang|id|Cina}}'' (''{{lang|id|Tjina}}'' in older orthography) and ''{{lang|jv|Cino}}'' (''{{lang|id|Tjino}}'') carry a derogatory meaning to earlier generations of immigrants, especially those living on the island of Java. {{Harvtxt|Dawis|2009|p=75}} noted this connotation appears to have faded in later generations.}} They were previously described in [[Ethnography|ethnographic]] literature as the Indonesian Chinese, but there has been a shift in terminology as the old description emphasizes the group's Chinese origins, while the more recent one, its Indonesian integration.{{sfn|Suryadinata|2004|p=viii}} Aimee Dawis, citing prominent scholar [[Leo Suryadinata]], believes the shift is "necessary to debunk the stereotype that they are an exclusive group" and also "promotes a sense of nationalism" among them.{{sfn|Dawis|2009|p=xxii}}
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