The Dayak, traditionally a nature-based, communal society, value mutual respect and specific adat (customary law). The Madurese, known for their fierce work ethic, religious orthodoxy (Islam), and a cultural concept of carok (a fierce defense of honor, often leading to violence), clashed repeatedly. Dayak viewed Madurese as arrogant and aggressive; Madurese viewed Dayak as "backward" pagans.
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The Madurese, outnumbered and often isolated, fought back with farming tools and homemade weapons. But their real defense was fleeing. Thousands of Madurese families hid in the forests, swamps, or rushed to the port of Sampit.
Local police arrested the perpetrator, but the Dayak community felt the legal process was too slow. They demanded oknum (the perpetrator) be handed over for traditional justice. The refusal led to the formation of Dayak vigilante armies, many using traditional mandau (machetes). The violence erupted in earnest on February 17, 2001. Thousands of Dayak warriors from dozens of sub-tribes converged on Sampit.
The roots of the conflict lie in the Dutch colonial transmigrasi (transmigration) program, continued and expanded by President Suharto. The government moved landless farmers from densely populated islands like Java and Madura to the outer islands (Kalimantan, Sumatra, Papua). To the Dayak—who are indigenous to Kalimantan’s jungles—these newcomers were not just guests but invaders occupying ancestral lands.
For two weeks in February 2001, the otherwise quiet river town of Sampit in Central Kalimantan became the epicenter of one of the most brutal and horrifying communal conflicts in modern Indonesian history. The violence between the indigenous Dayak people and the migrant Madurese community left over 500 dead, thousands wounded, and nearly 80,000 Madurese displaced.