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=Culture=

The culture of East Timor reflects numerous cultural influences, including Portuguese, Roman Catholic, and Malay, on the indigenous Austronesian cultures in East Timor.

Traditional land management includes the Tara Bandu customary laws (literally: "hanging law", referring to a symbol hung from a wooden stake where the law is in force), which govern the use of natural resources. It is managed by local communities, and was adopted following independence as the Indonesian system of laws and law enforcement capacity disappeared.

Policy
National Policy for Culture established in 2009, which seeks to establish a cultural centre in each municipality. These are if possible to be located in buildings from the Portuguese era. A municipal market in Lautém Municipality was converted into a cultural space and opened in 2014. Other buildings slated for adaptation are a former government building in Oecusse and the former Residence of the Administrator in Liquiçá. Other Portuguese buildings slated for restoration are Baguia Fort and Ai Pelo Prison.

A Cultural Heritage Decree was planned for 2015.

UNESCO activities
Timor-Leste become a state party to the UNESCO World Heritage Convention on 31 January 2017,ref> following approval by the Council of Ministers and forwarding to the National Parliament before the end of 2015. East Timor is currently finalising its dossiers needed for nominations in the UNESCO World Heritage List, UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage Lists, UNESCO Creative Cities Network, UNESCO Global Geoparks Network, and UNESCO Biosphere Reserve Network. Major contenders for the country includes Atauro Island, which Conservation International has cited as having the most biodiverse waters in the world, Cultural Landscape of the Fataluku, and Historic Monuments of Dili. The country currently has one document in the UNESCO Memory of the World Register, namely, On the Birth of a Nation: Turning points.

Architecture
East Timorese architecture and landscaping is a combination of both Portuguese and indigenous Timorese. Many heritage districts, heritage towns, and heritage structures have been retained in Timor-Leste, unlike its Southeast Asian neighbors whose architectural styles have been dreadfully replaced by modern and shanty structures that have destroyed cultural domains. Timor-Leste does not yet have a policy to conserve its architecture and landscapes, but is still one of the few nations in Asia to possess well-preserved indigenous architecture and colonial architecture. A proposal is also being made by some locals for the establishment of a law which mandates all villages to have a single architectural and landscaping style to preserve their village/town aesthetics and culture.

Architecturally, buildings are often Portuguese style along with the traditional totem houses of the eastern region. These are known as uma lulik ("sacred houses") in Tetum and lee teinu ("legged houses") in Fataluku.

Art
An extensive collection of Timorese audiovisual material is held at the National Film and Sound Archive of Australia. These holdings have been identified in a document titled The NFSA Timor-Leste Collection Profile, which features catalogue entries and essays for a total of 795 NFSA-held moving images, recorded sound and documentation works that have captured the history and culture of East Timor since the early twentieth century. The NFSA is working with the East Timorese government to ensure that all of this material can be used and accessed by the people of that country.

In 2009 and 2010, East Timor was the setting for the Australian film Balibo and the South Korean film A Barefoot Dream. In 2013, the first East Timorese feature film, Beatriz's War, was released. Two further feature-length films, Abdul & José and Ema Nudar Umanu, were respectively released on 30 July 2017 through the television network of RTTL and on 16 August 2018 at the Melbourne International Film Festival.

Literature
East Timorese culture is heavily influenced by Austronesian legends. For example, East Timorese creation myth has it that an ageing crocodile transformed into the island of Timor as part of debt repayment to a young boy who had helped the crocodile when it was sick. As a result, the island is shaped like a crocodile and the boy's descendants are the native East Timorese who inhabit it. The phrase "leaving the crocodile" refers to the pained exile of East Timorese from their island. Different tribes have different origin stories, split between the stories of originating on the island, or migrating from overseas.

Easily the most famous East Timorese author is Xanana Gusmão, the leader of the Timorese resistance organization Fretilin, and former Prime Minister of independent East Timor. He wrote two books during the struggle for independence. Also a poet and painter, he produced works describing the culture, values, and skills of the Timorese people.

Other important writers of Timor include: Luís Cardoso, Fernando Sylvan, Ponte Pedrinha, Jorge Barros Duarte, Crisódio Araujo, Jorge Lauten, Francisco Borja da Costa, Afonso Busa Metan and Fitun Fuik.

Religion
East Timor has been nominally Catholic since early in the Portuguese colonial period. The Catholic faith became a central part of East Timorese culture during the Indonesian occupation between 1975 and 1999. While under Portuguese rule, the East Timorese had mostly been animist, sometimes integrated with minimal Catholic ritual, the number of Catholics dramatically increased under Indonesian rule. This was for several reasons: Indonesia was predominantly Muslim; the Indonesian state required adherence to one of six officially recognised religions and recognise traditional beliefs; and because the Catholic Church, which remained directly responsible to the Vatican throughout Indonesian rule, became a refuge for East Timorese seeking sanctuary from persecution.

The 'Apostolic Administrator' (de facto Bishop) of the Diocese of Dili, Monsignor Martinho da Costa Lopes, began speaking out against human rights abuses by the Indonesian security forces, including rape, torture, murder, and disappearances. Following pressure from Jakarta, he stepped down in 1983 and was replaced by the younger priest, Monsignor Carlos Filipe Ximenes Belo, who Indonesia thought would be more loyal. However, he too began speaking out, not only against human rights abuses, but the issue of self-determination, writing an open letter to the Secretary General of the United Nations, calling for a referendum. In 1996 he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, along with exiled leader José Ramos-Horta, now the country's President.

However, in spite of the majority of the country's people now being Catholics, there is freedom of religion in the new secular republic, and the former prime minister Marí Alkatiri, is a Muslim of Yemeni descent.

Identity
The three eastern districts are known as Lorosae (land of the rising sun), and people from there are collectively referred to as Firaku. The western area of the country are known as Loromonu (land of the setting sun), and people from the west are collectively referred to as Kaladi. The two areas met in Manatuto Municipality, with Manatuto sometimes being grouped with Loromonu, and sometimes being treated as neither or both.

The origin of the collective names is unclear. A well-known theory is that Firaku is derived from the Portuguese term vira o cu (to turn their backs to a speaker), while Kaladi is possibly derived from the Portuguese calado (quiet). The stereotypes expressed by the Portuguese names may have been common in 1940s Dili, partially encouraged by the Portuguese to ferment division, leading to the later communal labels. An alternative theory is that Firaku comes from the Makasae words fi (we) and raku (relatives), while Kaladi derives from the Malay and Tetum keladi (a kind of taro). If this is the case, then it is likely that they were used as derogatory terms, and were adopted by the Portuguese. This second theory may link to the Portuguese use of the term callades in the 1720s for a group of rebellious kingdoms, who due to being from upland areas may have been associated with taro. The term re-emereged in writing during the 1860s, alongside firaco. While firaco may have derived from Makasae, it may also have derived from the Portuguese fraco (weak). While in use in writings by Portuguese and other foreigners in Dili as terms of convenience, both were likely not in use by the people they referred to. Whatever the origin, both terms were around during the decolonisation process from 1974-1975, with Fretilin noting them as potential dividing lines among the wider population. Fretilin sought to promote a maubere identity for all East Timorese. The identities were used by pro-Indonesia militias during the 1999 East Timorese crisis, with suggestions that the 10 Loromonu districts might remain part of Indonesia. Some tensions emerged during the transition to independence among national political leaders and within neighbourhoods of Dili, although in some cases the tensions may have been raised as a justification for violence and crime that had other origins.

Post independence, the police force was seen as dominated by Kaladi, while the defence forces because associated with the Firaku. Communities in Dili became associated with the Firaku and Kalladi identies. During the violence of 2006, Firaku were referred to as terrorists and sometimes received the similar sounding name "Iraq", referencing both terrorism and the Islamic religion of then-prime minister Mari Alkatiri. ("Amerika" was adopted as a self-referential term by Kaladi at the same time.) In May 2007 Francisco Xavier do Amaral, leader of the Timorese Social Democratic Association, suggested making the terms Firaku and Kaladi illegal.

Sports


East Timor has joined many international sport associations, including the International Olympic Committee (IOC). The IOC board has granted full recognition to the East Timorese Olympic Committee (COTL). The IOC had allowed a mainly symbolic four-member team to take part in the 2000 Sydney Games under the Olympic flag as "Independent Olympic Athletes." The Federação de Timor-Leste de Atletismo has joined the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF). The Federação de Badminton de Timor-Leste joined the International Badminton Federation (IBF) in April 2003. The East Timor Cycling Federation has joined the Union Cycliste Internationale. The Confederação do Desporto de Timor Leste has joined the International Weightlifting Federation. East Timor is also a full member of the International Table Tennis Federation (ITTF).

East Timor has taken part in several sporting events. Although the athletes came back with no medals, East Timorese athletes had the opportunity to compete with other Southeast Asian athletes in the 2003 Southeast Asian Games held in Vietnam in 2003. In the 2003 ASEAN Paralympics Games, also held in Vietnam, East Timor won a bronze medal. In the Athens 2004 Olympic Games, six athletes participated in three sports: athletics, weightlifting and boxing. East Timor won three medals in Arnis at the 2005 Southeast Asian Games. East Timor was also one of the competing nations in the first Lusophony Games, winning a bronze medal in the women's volleyball competition (finishing third out of three teams), despite the fact the team had lost all its three games. On October 30, 2008, East Timor earned their first international points in a FIFA match with a 2–2 draw against Cambodia.

Sports organizations joined by East Timor include the International Olympic Committee (IOC), the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF), the Badminton World Federation (BWF), the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI), the International Weightlifting Federation (IWF), the International Table Tennis Federation (ITTF), the International Basketball Federation (FIBA), and East Timor's national football team joined FIFA. East Timorese athletes competed in the 2003 Southeast Asian Games held 2003. In the 2003 ASEAN Paralympics Games, East Timor won the bronze medal in men's 48 kg weightlifting. After being recognized by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) in 2003, East Timorese athletes participated in the Athens 2004 Olympic Games under athletics, weightlifting and boxing. East Timor won three medals in Arnis at the 2005 Southeast Asian Games. East Timor competed in the first Lusophony Games and, in October 2008, the country earned its first international points in a FIFA football match with a 2–2 draw against Cambodia. East Timor competed at the 2014 Winter Olympics.

Thomas Americo was the first East Timorese fighter to fight for a world boxing title. He was murdered in 1999, shortly before the Indonesian occupation of East Timor ended.

Horse racing
Horse Racing is a popular sport in Timor Leste. Although less than 14 hands high, the Timor pony is used. It is renowned for its agility and strength. Regional race meets are held throughout Timor-Leste.

Film
An extensive collection of Timorese audiovisual material is held at the National Film and Sound Archive of Australia. These holdings have been identified in a document titled The NFSA Timor-Leste Collection Profile, which features catalogue entries and essays for a total of 795 NFSA-held moving image, recorded sound and documentation works that have captured the history and culture of Timor-Leste since the early 20th century. The NFSA is working with the Timor-Leste government to ensure that all of this material can be used and accessed by the people of that country.

The extensive audiovisual material in the Max Stahl archive on the independence of Timor-Leste have been inscribed in UNESCO's Memory of the World Register in 2013 as "Birth of a nation: turning points."

Cuisine
The cuisine of East Timor consists of regional popular foods such as pork, fish, basil, tamarind, legumes, corn, rice, root vegetables, and tropical fruit. East Timorese cuisine has influences from Southeast Asian foods and from Portuguese dishes from its colonisation by Portugal. Flavours and ingredients from other former Portuguese colonies can be found due to the presence of Portuguese soldiers from other colonies in East Timor.

Public holidays
East Timor now has public holidays that commemorate historic events in the liberation struggle, as well as those associated with Catholicism and Islam. They are defined in (16.7 KB).