Malay kids playing Tarik Upih Pinang, a traditional game that involves dragging the Palm frond.
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Total population | |
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15,695,541 50.8% of the Malaysian Population (2015) |
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Languages | |
Malaysian Malay (Varieties of Malay), English | |
Religion | |
Shafi'i Sunni Islam | |
Related ethnic groups | |
Malay Singaporeans, Ethnic Malays Native Indonesians, other Austronesian peoples |
Malaysian Malays (Malaysian: Melayu Malaysia, Jawi: ملايو مليسيا) are ethnic Malays domiciled throughout Malaysia and native to the modern state. The Malaysian Malays form the largest ethnic group in the country with 50.8% of the population or 15.7 million people. They are broadly defined into Melayu Anak Jati ('Malays proper') and Melayu Anak Dagang ('trading Malays' or 'foreign Malays').
The Malays proper consist of those individuals who adhere to the Malay culture that native to the coastal areas of Malay peninsula and Borneo. Among notable groups include the Bruneians, Kedahans, Kelantanese, Pahang, Perakians and Terengganuans. On the other hand, the foreign Malays consist of descendants of immigrants from other part of Malay archipelago who became the citizens of the Malay sultanates and were absorbed and assimilated into Malay culture at different times, aided by similarity in lifestyle and common religion (Islam). Among notable groups are the Acehnese, Bugis, Javanese and Minangkabau Malays. There are also a minority of Malays who are partially descended from more recent immigrants from many other countries who have assimilated into Malay Muslim culture.
The centuries-old concept of Malayness that closely associated Malays with Islam, became the basis of a Malay identity defined in Article 160 of the Constitution of Malaysia. A great majority of Malays in Malaysia are the adherents of the Shafi'i branch of Sunni Islam while very small and low-profiled minority follows Twelver Shia Islam and Christianity.