SourceTargetCommunity Atlas
We are Burke

We are Burke.

Home to one of the larger Tagalog-speaking communities in Queensland, and 3 other language communities besides.

Our population
415
Speak another language
101
Languages at home
4+
Growth since last census
-40.0%
4 languages are spoken at home in Burke. Tagalog leads (4 speakers), with German close behind (4). 24 per cent of us speak a language other than English at home. That is the measure of a community that has not left its languages behind.
speak Tagalog at home
4
Our largest community language, Tagalog, is spoken by 1.0% of Burke residents at home.
What makes our community ours
Tagalog
4 speakers

4 speakers, 1.0% of Burke.

German
4 speakers

4 speakers, 1.0% of Burke.

Bengali
4 speakers

4 speakers, 1.0% of Burke.

The languages of Burke

4 languages carry the conversation at home. Every one of them is spoken here.

Each block below is scaled to the number of people who speak that language at home, and tinted by how fast that community has grown since the last census.

Tagalog
4 · 0.0%
German
4 · 0.0%
Bengali
4 · 0.0%
Garrwa
3 · -40.0%
GROWTH ≥ 50%
≥ 20%
≥ 5%
≥ 0%
≥ -10%
DECLINING
  1. 01
    Tagalog4 · 1.0%
    0.0%
  2. 02
    German4 · 1.0%
    0.0%
  3. 03
    Bengali4 · 1.0%
    0.0%
  4. 04
    Garrwa3 · 0.7%
    40.0%
Fastest-growing among us
Tagalog
0.0% since last census

We publish this so our residents can see themselves counted, and so the agencies, funders and neighbours who serve us can see who we actually serve. Language access is not a translation line-item in our budget. It is how an emergency notice reaches a grandparent, how an enrolment form is understood, and how a health campaign actually lands in the suburbs that make up our council.

Our suburbs

Our linguistic character changes street by street. Click through to any suburb for its own portrait: the languages spoken there, the communities calling it home.

Where we are
In context
Burke
24.3%
Queensland
15.8%
Australia
27.3%

24.3% of Burke residents speak a language other than English at home, against 15.8% for Queensland and 27.3% nationally. Drawn from the 2021 census.