The Portuguese language is spoken in Asia by small communities either in regions which formerly served as colonies to Portugal, notably
Macau and
East Timor where the language is official albeit not widely spoken,
Lusophone immigrants, notably the
Brazilians in Japan or by some
Afro-Asians and
Luso-Asians. In
Larantuka, Indonesia and
Daman and Diu, India, Portuguese has a religious connotation, according to Damanese Portuguese-Indian Association, there are 10 – 12,000 Portuguese speakers in the territory.[1]
India: The state of
Goa was a part of the
Portuguese Empire until 1961. India participated in the
Jogos da Lusofonia in 2006 and 2014. Goa is awaiting the permission of the Indian Government to join the CPLP as an observer.[3] In Goa, most of the relatively few speakers of Portuguese are older people. The Union Territory of
Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu was also part of
Portuguese India. As in Goa, the dwindling number of Portuguese speakers are also older people. Daman and Diu are also home to
Indo-Portuguese Creoles. It is estimated that there are 3% – 5% of fluent speakers of Portuguese in Goa, Daman and Diu. The language is still spoken by about 10,000 people, in 2014, an estimated 1,500 students were learning Portuguese in Goa.[4]
Malaysia and Singapore: The Malaysian state of
Malacca and city-state of Singapore are homes to the
Gente Kristang a community of Eurasians who claim Portuguese descent and speak
Papia Kristang, a Portuguese-lexified Creole. The
Portuguese settlement at Malacca is a source of tourism for the state and the Lusophone heritage is visible in cuisine, architecture and folklore of the Kristang people. Pending approval from the Malaysian Government, Malacca may join the CPLP as an associate observer.
Macau: Portuguese is a co-official language alongside Chinese in the Chinese
special administrative region of
Macau. It has become the centre for Portuguese learning in Asia and has become the focus through which China relates diplomatically to the member states of CPLP. Macau was the host city for the first Lusophone games in 2006. While the
Macanese Language is by now critically endangered with less than a hundred speakers, the number of speakers of Portuguese has also decreased since the handover in 1999. But enrollments for private Portuguese classes have tripled, to 1,000, since 2002; that prompted public schools here to offer Portuguese, drawing more than 5,000 students.[5] It is now estimated that about 3% of the population speak Portuguese as their first language, while 7% professes fluency.[6]
East Timor: The Southeast Asian country added Portuguese as an official language as it gained independence from Indonesia in 2002. According to a 2004 census, 36 percent of respondents said they had "a capability in Portuguese".[7] The inter-ethnic lingua franca,
Tetum has a large number of loanwords derived from Portuguese making the latter relatively easy to learn for speakers of the former.
Various regions in
Asia have expressed interest in participating in the Community of Portuguese-speaking Countries (the
CPLP). The Malaysian state of Malacca, Macau, and the Indian state of Goa have all applied for observer or associate member status and are awaiting the permission of the Malaysian, Chinese, and Indian governments, respectively. East Timor joined the CPLP shortly after its independence at the turn of the 21st century.
Indonesia,
South Korea and
Taiwan has also expressed interest in joining the CPLP.
Instituto Camões
The
Instituto Camões maintains language centres in Macau, Goa,
Busan, Tokyo and Dili.
Local norms and phonology
In Asia, Standard
European Portuguese (português-padrão) forms the basis for the written and spoken norm, exclusively to East Timor and Macau.[9][10][11]