Wednesday, July 7, 2010

PROPOSAL

Task: To develop an Interactive Application


Topic: Orang Asli Settlement



Objective:
Would be an attempt to provide understanding to the audience about the 'Orang Asli' in Malaysia based on my experience and information that I'll collect during the trip to Belum Rainforest.

Target Audience: Adults.

Content:

Home

followed by,

PAGE 1 : General information about the native.

PAGE2: Information that I've collected during the trip.

PAGE 3: Q&A - interview session.

PAGE 4: Gallery of images.

CREDITS.

RESEARCH : ORANG ASLI


THE ORANG ASLI OF PENINSULAR MALAYSIA






The Orang Asli are the indigenous minority peoples of Peninsular Malaysia. The name is a Malay term which transliterates as 'original peoples' or 'first peoples.' It is a collective term introduced by anthropologists and administrators for the 18 sub-ethnic groups generally classified for official purposes under Negrito, Senoi and Proto-Malay. They numbered 105,000 in 1997 representing a mere 0.5 per cent of the national population.







The Orang Asli, nevertheless, are not a homogeneous group. Each has its own language and culture, and perceives itself as different from the others. Linguistically, some of the northern Orang Asli groups (especially the Senoi and Negrito groups) speak languages - now termed Aslian languages - that suggest a historical link with the indigenous peoples in Burma, Thailand and Indo-China.







The members of the Proto-Malay tribes, whose ancestors were believed to have migrated from the Indonesian islands to the south of the peninsula, speak dialects which belong to the same Austronesian family of languages as Malay, with the exceptions of the Semelai and Temoq dialects (which are Austroasiatic).



The Orang Asli have equally varied occupations and ways of life. The Orang Laut, Orang Seletar and Mah Meri, for example, live close to the coast and are mainly fishermen. Some Temuan, Jakun and Semai people have taken to permanent agriculture and now manage their own rubber, oil palm or cocoa farms.