In Javanese, gotong means to carry and royong means together.
Gotong royong is a Javanese term meaning "to carry a burden together." The word gotong means to carry, specifically by using the shoulder, and royong means communally or together. The compound describes an institutionalized practice of communal labor, from building houses and clearing fields to organizing celebrations and responding to disasters.1
The Indonesian anthropologist Koentjaraningrat, working in Central Java in the 1960s, identified two forms. Spontaneous help occurs in collective activities, agriculture, house building, public works, and emergencies. Mutual assistance operates on the principle of individual reciprocity, where help given today is returned when needed.2
Indonesia’s first president, Sukarno, elevated gotong royong from a village practice to a national principle. In a 1945 speech laying out the philosophical foundations of the new republic, he compressed five principles into one, saying that the state of Indonesia should be a gotong royong state.3
M. Nasroen, writing in 1967, described gotong royong as one of the core tenets of Indonesian philosophy, a principle on which the uniqueness of Indonesian thought was grounded.4 In practice, it governed village life across an archipelago of more than seventeen thousand islands and hundreds of distinct ethnic groups.
Anthropologist Clifford Geertz, writing in 1983, identified gotong royong as part of a system of culturally charged concepts, alongside rukun (social harmony) and tolong-menolong (reciprocal assistance), that governed social interaction in Indonesia with sovereign force.5
The Green Revolution disrupted village gotong royong in Java by replacing communal harvesting rights with cash transactions and employer-employee relationships. The practice has survived in modified form, particularly visible during disaster relief, when collective mobilization across the country follows patterns that predate any government directive.6