Enggano Island, a remote 680 km² island in the Indian Ocean off the coast of Bengkulu Province, is home to the indigenous Enggano people — approximately 2,650 speakers divided into five sub-ethnic groups who all share a single language isolate with no established relatives. Christian presence on the island dates to January 1902, when German missionary August Lett arrived alongside teacher Lumban Tobing under the Rheinische Missions-Gesellschaft. Yet for over a century, the Enggano people had no Scripture in their own language. On January 1, 2014 — exactly 112 years after the first mission contact — the Indonesian Bible Society (Lembaga Alkitab Indonesia, LAI) officially launched the Enggano New Testament translation project. The work, titled Eic Amak in the Enggano language, was completed and publicly launched on July 25, 2024, at a ceremony where the Word was read aloud in Enggano during a church service for the first time in history. The project noted that translation of the full Bible remains an ongoing goal, and LAI has called for continued support to bring the Old Testament to this small but spiritually eager island community.