The Tokuni, also known as a dialect subgroup of the Kopkaka speakers, are a small indigenous Papuan ethnic group native to the lowland riverine forests and swampy headwaters of the upper Sirac River in Jayawijaya Regency, Papua Province, Indonesia, primarily residing in the villages of Siradala and Burungmakok within Kurima Subdistrict, south of the central highland ranges.
Their name "Tokuni" designates the specific dialect of the Kopkaka language. As part of New Guinea's ancient Melanesian heritage, the Tokuni trace their origins to proto-Papuan settlers arriving over 40,000 years ago via Sahul land bridges, establishing isolated clans. Pre-colonial life centered on autonomous longhouse communities bound by reciprocity pacts against inland raids.
Dutch colonial mapping in the early 20th century introduced nominal administration but preserved isolation until the 1962 New York Agreement ceded Papua to Indonesia, followed by the contested 1969 Act of Free Choice that integrated the region without consultation, exposing Tokuni hamlets to transmigration and resource surveys.
Post-annexation, the Tokunis endured waves of Javanese settlers and gold mining that fragmented adat lands yet sustained cultural continuity through linguistic ties and border kinships with PNG groups.
Today, the Tokuni represent Papua's linguistic diversity, with their endangered dialect embodying resilience on Indonesia's eastern frontier.
The Tokuni pursue a fluid existence in stilted sago-thatched hamlets hugging the Sirac's tannin-dark tributaries. Work unfolds in communal rhythms, with men paddling dugouts to spear prawns in shallow lagoons. Women grate pith into flour and raise transient gardens of taro, yams, and bananas on mound plots against inundations. People barter smoked fish and shell amulets at markets, and youth increasingly seek casual labor in Jayawijaya's nascent mining camps.
Family dynamics are anchored in bilateral clans in clustered longhouses, where elders convene under woven eaves for consensus. Marriages consolidate pacts through bride-service. Child-rearing enfolds infants in bark slings, with grandparents reciting epics to teach the next generation.
About two-thirds of the Tokunis identify as Christian, though there are often animistic practices blended with biblical teachings.
Tokunis need easily available medical care.
Ask God to strengthen those who are sharing the gospel so they can do it with love and wisdom.
Pray for Tokuni hearts to be open and for whole families to experience peace and hope in Christ.
Pray for revival fire to spread uncontrollably from family to family.
Pray for their leaders to listen to the Lord, hear him, and obey him.
Scripture Prayers for the Tokuni in Indonesia.
Wikipedia. "Indigenous people of New Guinea." https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indigenous_people_of_New_Guinea
Ethnologue. "Kopkaka."
https://www.ethnologue.com/language/opk
PeopleGroups.org. "Tokuni of Indonesia." https://www.peoplegroups.org/explore/GroupDetails.aspx?peid=22959
The Life. "Papuan Privilege."
https://thelife.com/devotionals/papuan-privilege
Calvary Gospel Church. "Outreach."
https://calvarygospel.ca/outreach
ResearchGate. "Papua People and Its Culture." https://www.researchgate.net/publication/363518754_Papua_People_and_Its_Culture
| Profile Source: Joshua Project |




