🇮🇩 INFORMATIVE🔴 First Time React to INDONESIA Geography Now REACTION

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  • čas přidán 8. 09. 2023
  • Original video: • Geography Now! Indonesia
    Outro: • Valence - Infinite | F...
    Copyright Disclaimer : Copyright Disclaimer under section 107 of the Copyright act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use.
    Indonesia reaction. jakarta city reaction. bali reaction. Wonderful Indonesia reaction
    #wonderfulindonesia #indonesiareaction #jakartareaction
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Komentáře • 12

  • @yudistirarosadi9959
    @yudistirarosadi9959 Před 9 měsíci

    Mantap bahasa indonesianya sudah bagud.terima kasih kawan

  • @BY-ip6ld
    @BY-ip6ld Před 10 měsíci

    Berliburlah ke bali, labuan bajo dan flores utk mendapatkan petualangan berbeda dan unik di setiap pulau.

  • @masadibbb
    @masadibbb Před 10 měsíci

    Welcome to Indonesian dude pleas next react wonderful Indonesia emerlad of the equator😍❤🇮🇩

    • @BY-ip6ld
      @BY-ip6ld Před 10 měsíci

      Mereka berdua sdh pernah membuat reaksi wonderful of Indonesia emerald of the equator terlebih dahulu, sblm video ini.

  • @Muhammadfatih-hm3km1xh6d
    @Muhammadfatih-hm3km1xh6d Před 10 měsíci

    💪💪💪

  • @barrymaramis
    @barrymaramis Před 10 měsíci

    Gereja Ayam, a giant, chicken-shaped church in Java
    A giant, chicken-shaped church, known as Gereja Ayam, is perched on a hill in a forest on the Indonesian island of Java. It’s less than a 20-minute drive from Borobudur.
    Gereja Ayam, also known as the 'Chicken Church', is a huge hen-shaped abandoned structure in the heart of the thick forest of Java - the main island of the Indonesian archipelago. It is a gigantic building, a place of worship designed to welcome pilgrims of all religions - Buddhists, Muslims, Christians etc.
    But the chicken church isn’t a Dutch remnant, and it’s not haunted by ghosts, either. It was built by a man named Daniel Alamsjah, who’s now 75.
    Alamsjah, a Christian, says that in 1988, after his nightly prayers, he received a vision of a dove with snow-white wings, resting at the top of a hill. (An interview with Alamsjah was conducted in a mix of Indonesian, Javanese, and English.) A disembodied voice asked him to build a house of worship for all people. When he awoke, he tried to dismiss the vision as a mere hallucination.
    In his telling, Alamsjah started taking the dream more seriously when one of his employees failed to show up in Jakarta after Ramadan, the mid-year fasting season. Then a manager for the German chemical company BASF, he was in charge of making sure his team ran smoothly. He went to Magelang, the man’s hometown, to track him down. Alamsjah found his employee, who asked for one more day at home and invited his boss to Bukit Rhema (Rhema Hill) to see the sunrise, before returning to Jakarta.
    “I was amazed!” Alamsjah says. “It was the same hill and the same view that I saw in my vision.” He prayed all night and read his Bible for guidance. One verse kept popping up. The verse in question, Isaiah 2:2, reads: “In the last days, the mountain of the Lord’s temple will be established as the highest of the mountains; it will be exalted above the hills, and all nations will stream to it.”
    Before returning home to the city, Alamsjah left his contact information in Magelang with the local head of Karangrejo. Two weeks later, someone who owned part of the land on Bukit Rhema came to Jakarta to offer Alamsjah his share. After several negotiations, Alamsjah paid Rp. 3,500,000 (around $2,000 at the time) for 5,000 square meters (a little over an acre) of land.
    Despite his lack of architectural experience, Alamsjah says he designed the church himself, trying to stay faithful to the dove he’d seen in his vision. Wasno, the head of the nearby village of Gombong and a member of Alamsjah’s 30-person construction crew, says, “Actually, it did look like a dove-in the beginning. But then we added the crown. Daniel wanted it to symbolize holiness, but people thought it was a rooster crest. So they started calling it a chicken instead of a dove.”
    Construction began in 1992-the process of getting legal permission ate up four years-and the team used handmade cement, bricks, local sand, and scrap metal to build and fill in the dove’s frame. But the project was plagued by problems from the start. In 2000, a lack of funds forced Alamsjah to quit the project in the middle of construction.
    Fifteen years after the project was halted, however, the chicken church suddenly went viral on international media. The Daily Mail and the Huffington Post both released features about it on July 13, 2015, and a year later, it served as a shooting site for the sequel of the Indonesian cult classic film, Ada Apa Dengan Cinta (What’s the Deal With Love).
    The recognition spurred the arrival of a flock of tourists: up to 2,000 a week, according to Alamsjah’s ticket records. The proceeds from the nominal entrance fee (Rp. 10,000, or less than USD $1 per person) gave Alamsjah enough money to resume construction.
    These days, the chicken church is no longer abandoned. The renovations made in the last two years include jeweled tiles; paneled windows; a small, paved access road; and work on the underground prayer rooms, which are nearly finished. Displays in the main hall (the body of the chicken) document the project’s growth from a divine dream to a full-fledged poultry temple. So many tourists come each year that Alamsjah even built a small cafe inside the chicken’s rear (it sells traditional Indonesian snacks and coffee).
    “You know, everyone said I was crazy,” Alamsjah says. “In the 90s, I kept rereading that [Bible] verse, trying to find the courage to continue. My children were very angry at me. I had to keep telling them, this isn’t my plan. This is God’s plan. It’s been 30 years, and I’m glad I continued-thousands of visitors come each year to pray or to reflect on their lives, and my children finally respect what I’ve accomplished.”

  • @barrymaramis
    @barrymaramis Před 10 měsíci

    Indonesian National Food Dishes
    Nasi Goreng (“fried rice“) made with kecap manis, shrimp paste, garlic, shallots, tamarind, and chil
    Sate Ayam (chicken) seasoned, skewered, and grilled chicken meat served with a sauce. Best is Madura variation
    Sate Padang is a beef satay served with a thick yellow-brown sauce
    ALSO Sate Kambing (lamb) and other meat based Sate
    Ayam Goreng (fried/grilled chicken) isrubbed in a spice mixture made from a multitude of ingredients like garlic, shallots, turmeric, lemongrass, bay leaves, and galangal before being deep-fried. Ayam goreng Menado (north sulawesi island town) was once named as best ever fried chicken by top world chefs many years ago.
    Gado-Gado = salad made with slightly boiled, blanched, or steamed vegetables served with a peanut sauce dressing and with hard-boiled eggs, potatoes, bean sprouts, tofu, tempeh (cooked fermented soybean caklet) and krupuk ( cracker made from starch or animal skin)
    Soto soups made with meat and vegetables, each region with own variation
    Sop buntut is a delicious and hearty oxtail soup
    Rujak is a traditional Javanese fruit and vegetable salad dish y made with sliced fresh fruits and vegetables served with a spicy sugar palm dressing. Rujak tastes tangy, sweet, and spicy thanks to the dressing made from ground chilli, palm sugar, shrimp paste, and peanuts.
    Rendang, a meat dish made with beef or others which is slow-cooked for several hours in coconut milk and spices until it becomes tender.
    Bakso - Indonesian springier meatball made from finely ground beef mixed with a small amount of tapioca flour and salt.
    Siomay fish dumplings served with a peanut sauce, a derivative of Chinese shumai
    Tumpeng is a Javanese cone-shaped rice dish served with a multitude of sides on a banana-leaf
    and many others

  • @funnyvideostroll
    @funnyvideostroll Před 10 měsíci +1

    where u from guys?

  • @marufjamar6473
    @marufjamar6473 Před 10 měsíci

    Semoga Afganistan lebih baik. Lagi dan maju ekonomi nya

  • @barrymaramis
    @barrymaramis Před 10 měsíci

    The Indonesian language has many words from other languages as Portuguese, Chinese, Arab, Sanskrit, even french. But so has many countries using French as simple as restaurant. Portuguese words in Indonesian = Meja - mesa, Kameja - camisa. Dadu - Dados (dice), Sabtu - sábado (Saturday), Jendela - Janela (window), Serdadu - Soldado (sordier), Mentega - manteiga (butter). For all the Dutch words now in Indonesian, a WHOLE BUNCH from A to Y, check en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Dutch_loanwords_in_Indonesian