August 2009 Archive

The value of Bhinneka Tunggal Ika in Indonesia

by Aimee Dawis

One hundred bare-chested men in sarong (traditional cloth featuring batik prints) burst into the scene, chanting ancient Balinese songs.  In a matter of minutes, they were sitting in a large circle, their bodies and hands moving rhythmically to the chants, which sounded more like mantras to call forth the heavenly spirits.

A beautiful couple emerged and danced blissfully in the middle of the chanting men.  They were in full regalia, which indicated that they belonged to the royal family. Alas! A monster came and took the beautiful lady away with him, to the anguish of the prince.  A mystical white monkey, hanuman, came to the aid of the prince, who had to fight the monster’s barong, a frightening creature.  The spectacular performance reached its climax as the prince defeated the monster and rescued his princess.

This was the Balinese ketjak dance performance – one of the most stunning cultural performances in the world that is uniquely Indonesian.   The first time I watched a live ketjak performance was not at Bali or at the Indonesian National Theater.  It was at the tenth anniversary celebration of Perhimpunan INTI (The Chinese-Indonesian Association) at Istora Senayan, Jakarta, on June 23, 2009. More >


Indonesian independence and the sacrifice of women

by Soe Tjen Marching

It was merely two years before the Indonesian independence was announced that Inggit had to witness her husband taking another much younger woman.  Soekarno, who had been married to Inggit for about two decades, decided to take another wife, Fatmah or Fatmawati.

Although Inggit refused to stay with Soekarno and his Fatmah in a polygamous relationship, Inggit had to leave without creating any conflict, as was portrayed by the autobiographical book of Inggit, Kuantar ke Gerbang which was written by Ramadhan KH.  Her son in law then said:

Ini jalan satu-satunya, Bu.  Negeri kita memerlukan Bapak.  Dia kepunyaan kita semua.  Rakyat memerlukan Bapak sebagai pemimpinnya, tidak yang lain.  Dan apa yang akan terjadi dengan Indonesia, kalau Bapak hancur?

[This is the only way, Mother.  Our country needs Father.  He belongs to all of us.  The people need Father as their leader, not anyone else.  And what will happen to Indonesia, if Father is destroyed?] (Ganarsih, 1988; 291).

For the sake of the people, a man’s ego must be supported with a woman’s sacrifice. It was Soekarno who could do something for the nation.  It was Soekarno who was important for the nation, not Inggit.  Although she was the one who accompanied Sukarno and had even funded his activism, when facing the conflict between the two, Inggit’s merits were not to be regarded seriously.  As a woman, she had to keep making self-sacrifices for the benefit of the country. More >


Indonesia’s human rights in 21st century

by Patrick Guntensperger

Indonesia’s history is one of the struggle for freedom from oppression. From its ancient feudal origins, characterised by hereditary rule of small fiefdoms and conquest as the result of rivalries among warlords, the road to democracy in the archipelago once called Nusantara has been a rocky one.

After they were stumbled upon by European explorers, the islands were quickly colonised by traders in the spices that grew so abundantly in the lush tropical climate. First the English and then the Dutch exercised their power with varying degrees of brutality as they exploited the people, the islands, and the spices they coveted. Right up to the 20th Century, the Dutch continued to rule the islands as the “Dutch East Indies”, until the Japanese wrested control as part of their empire building in Southeast Asia in the early years of World War II. The Japanese conquerors were known neither for their benevolent gentleness nor their adherence to principles of human rights.

Indonesia’s post-war history starts with Soekarno, her first home-grown dictator, who was later deposed by a cartel of his generals led by Soeharto, as part of a vicious and bloody “anti-communist” purge that saw as many as 1,000,000 Indonesian citizens slaughtered, with more imprisoned in concentration camps, ostensibly for their communist leanings.

Soeharto himself, once his power was consolidated, ruled the country for thirty years with any serious opposition tending to disappear in the night after visits from his military forces. With the Asian economic crisis of the late 1990’s Soeharto’s power base began to crumble; in the midst of the instability, riots racked Jakarta, with the police and military standing by observing as gang rapes of ethnic Chinese Indonesian women, beatings, looting, and brutal atrocities were committed. More >


To have children or not

by Dédé Oetomo

I was driving with my eighty-year-old mother to our monthly family gathering at my cousin’s the other Sunday when I related to her how Former U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney’s stand on same-sex marriage had surpassed President Obama’s. She responded by saying that she could understand Cheney’s stand because his second daughter, Mary, is lesbian. We then discussed Mary’s pregnancy, whether it was by artificial insemination (who could be the sperm donor?) or by actual sexual intercourse with a friend.

Then all of a sudden my mother asked me, “Don’t you want to have children?” It threw me off balance for a moment, but then I gave my usual retort when people ask me the question. “Come on, I’m so busy, who’d take care of the kids?” Well, the truth is, I’ve never really liked children, so perhaps even if I were not gay, I would not care to have any.

I’ve been reflecting on that little conversation, and realize that on the surface the question is one that grandparents often ask, but in our case the question is posed in a completely different context, one that would have been unthinkable one hundred years ago. My parents have always accepted my sexual orientation, had good relations with my partners, and I’ve been an out gay person and an activist since I came out in the early 1980s. This is certainly a new phenomenon in any human society. More >


Indonesian cultures can curb trans-national Islamist bigotry

by Bramantyo Prijosusilo

With the image of Islam being a bearded bomber who seeks to destroy the USA while he is not indulging in the honor killings of the wayward female members of his family, it is widely believed that Islam does not respect basic human rights. Islamophobes like the Dutchman Geert Wilders scan through the Qur’an and find verses that order the killing of apostates and infidels and the covering up of women to support their views. However a closer examination of the Qur’an and also a wider perspective of Islamic traditions would reveal that although some patriarchal and tribal expressions of Islam disregard human rights this situation is by no means the rule. For many Indonesian Muslims who have for generations experienced the fact that some members of their families might choose other religions, the notion that Islam should be expressed through the curtailing women’s rights and executing apostates is absolutely horrifying.

The valiant Cut Nya’ Dien of the Aceh wars at the end of the 19th century is a famous national heroine and leader of men who was inspired by Islam. The formidable Eni Rukmini Sekarningrat, is a devout Muslim lady who was a frontline fighter in the independence wars against the Dutch in the late 1940s. Currently she is the Grand Mistress of the Panglipur pencak silat martial arts school, with students all over the world. At her 94 years of age she can still throw a young male fighter down with ease. Millions of other Muslim women in Indonesia are the main economic pillars of their families who have the final say in family decisions. These Muslim women are in no way anomalies, nor do they find inspiration from obscure sections of Islamic traditions, for they can look directly to the first mother of Muslims, who was the Prophet Muhammad’s Boss and later beloved wife and confidant, Khadijah.

The tradition of tolerance and gender equality in Indonesian Islam has in the recent years been systematically eroded by puritan and trans-national, well funded, propaganda. However, Islamism is not the only reason why we are seeing a rise in bigotry. Sudden and drastic changes in the economic rhythm of villages, caused by the introduction of genetically modified seeds and agricultural chemicals in fertilizers and pesticides, did not only created widespread unemployment in villages but also killed off many communal ceremonies related to the cycles of life, which traditionally were the vehicles of communal wisdom. More >


Human rights and the Chinese in Indonesia

by Aimee Dawis

The 14-year-old girl cowered in fear as terror erupted outside of her family’s Chinese medicine shop.  Screams of people fleeing for their lives could be heard clearly as angry mobs hunted down the Chinese, burning and looting their shops and houses.  She wanted to help those people outside but she was afraid to leave the shop.  She knew that the pandemonium outside was a horrible sight to behold.  She took a peek out of the window while her mother was not looking and saw countless bodies, many without heads, cluttered all over the sidewalk.

The girl’s parents had taken in many of their relatives seeking refuge; their shops and houses set on fire just hours before they ran to her family’s medicine shop.  It was as if they knew that her parents’ medicine shop would not be disturbed.  The girl wondered if it was because her father prayed to Kuan Kung (the warrior god) every 15 minutes, asking him to ward off evil and to protect their family during this time of crisis.

The year was 1965 and the city was Medan in North Sumatra, Indonesia.  The ethnic Chinese were the targets in the aftermath of a failed attempted coup that was allegedly masterminded by the PKI (Indonesian Communist Party). Because China was suspected of backing the PKI, the political instability that occurred between 1965 and 1966 caused the masses to unleash their animosity toward the ethnic Chinese. More >


Between God and women

by Soe Tjen Marching


Darwin under Scrutiny

Once when I was in Indonesia, I was trying to defend Darwin’s theory in front of several people who rejected it completely because of their religious views.  One of them asked me: “But as a feminist, shouldn’t you be against Darwin as well?  Doesn’t Darwin discriminate women, whereas all (male and female) are equal in God’s eye?”.

Indeed, Darwin’s theory generally has been viewed to be quite problematic by religious fundamentalists as well as feminists.  The argument of humans deriving from monkeys does not seem to make sense for people who are strongly convinced that the human was uniquely created by God and in God’s image.  In the USA, Darwin’s theory of evolution has even been banned by several schools.

As Darwin’s theory states the importance of survival of the fittest in nature, this also induces the idea that men are considered to be evolutionary advanced because in general, they are bigger and stronger. In The Origin of Species, Darwin states that because males are always in competition to get their females, they are required to get better and better, whereas the weaker males are eliminated by not producing as many offspring because of their lack of ability to get a partner.  In other words, inequalities of the sexes are considered natural, and can even be justified.  Male aggressiveness and domination over females are often understood in this light. More >


Is there a place for us across the Golden Bridge?

by Dédé Oetomo

When we read about the Indonesian national independence movement, whether in the official historiography of the State or that of Indonesianists, there is a total silence on homosexual women and men and transgendered people. We do not know if among the pemuda (youths) who kidnapped Soekarno and Hatta and forced them to proclaim independence on 17 August 1945, and the millions of others who had been active in the nationalist movement before them and took part in the independence war afterwards, those studied and adulated by the likes of Benedict Anderson, there were pemuda who loved one another or who were transgendered.

We do get glimpses of gender bending in Soekarno: An Autobiography, As Told to Cindy Adams (1965), of the nationalist leader as a young man cross-dressing in a ludruk theatre performance typical of East Java, in which he took part as a female character. But almost in the same breath we read about his disgust and condescension towards Dutch gay men who would go to such performances accompanied by young Indonesian men. This aversion to transgendered people and homosexuals was also found amongst communist leaders by James L. Peacock in his study of ludruk in the 1960s (Rites of Modernization: Symbolic and Social Aspects of Indonesian Proletarian Drama, 1968). They urged cross-dressing ludruk actors to consult a psychiatrist to be cured. Later we learned from the work of Saskia E. Wieringa (Politicization of Gender Relations in Indonesia: The Indonesian Women’s Movement and Gerwani Until the New Order State, 1995) that the leftist women’s organization, Gerwani, purged its chairwoman in the 1950s because she was a lesbian.

The only obscure piece of good news we hear from Benedict Anderson, in his foreword to my collected writings, Memberi Suara pada Yang Bisu (Giving Voice to the Mute, 2001), is about the nationalist leader, Arnold Mononutu, who later became a minister in many of the early administrations of the republic. Apparently many of his comrades knew about Uncle Arnold’s homosexuality, and yet they respected and accepted him. More >


Indonesia’s unique expressions of Islam

by Bramantyo Prijosusilo

Ever since our founding fathers decided to drop the “seven words” from the Jakarta Charter, there have been Islamist groups who have been struggling to get them back into the Constitution. These “seven words” were originally part of the Pancasila State philosophy, namely the first point; “Belief in One God”. The seven words that were dropped translate as … “and Muslims are obliged to implement Sharia.”  The reason for dropping these words in 1945 was to accommodate the feelings of the non-Muslim people of Eastern Indonesia.  After the “Reformasi” in 1998, Islamist groups tried to but could not gain enough support in Parliament to bring back the “seven words” in to the Constitution.  Amongst Islamic circles there were also discussions and debates on what really constitutes as Sharia. The problem with the State implementing Sharia is that there are as many interpretations of Sharia as there are interpretations of Islam.

After the “Reformasi” numerous Islamist groups that hitherto had been underground surfaced and began to openly, and eventually successfully, challenge the law that stipulated that every political party and mass-organization had to acknowledge the State philosophy, Pancasila, as their basic philosophy.  The most vicious attack on the Pancasila philosophy was probably the attacks carried out by the Islamic Defenders Front (FPI) on the peaceful, pro-pluralism demonstration on the birthday of Pancasila last year. Although many people were seriously injured, the perpetrators of the attacks were given lenient sentences by judges, and had ministers and celebrities visiting them in their jail cells, where television crews followed them as if they were pop-stars.  Although the political efforts to have Sharia enshrined as the law of the land have subsided, the dream to make Indonesia a Sharia state has not been, and probably will never be, vanquished. More >


Power and abuse of language in politics

by Jennie S. Bev

Language is a powerful tool in politics and politicians are its most superfluous users, both for good and bad purposes. As George Orwell once wrote in his short piece “Politics and the English Language,” within a masterpiece Why I Write, “Political language is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable, and to give an appearance of solidity to pure wind.”

At the apex of such usage, the politics of amnesia, a term coined by Terry Eagleton, transpires. When it does occur, benevolent conscience is no longer apparent, nor mindful understanding of what truly has happened in front of our eyes. Because when such amnesia occurs, the language of politics has reached its most gruesome function: to kill and to win in totality without any recollection. The perfect crime.

Indonesia is no exception. Language has been used in an ad nauseam manner to create an environment of fear and insecurity since the beginning. While such manipulative usage is understandable to a certain degree, it is not acceptable when power-oriented intentions are palpable. After all, regardless of one’s ideology, a true politician is a statesman, whose interests revolve around his or her constituents’ well-being and welfare instead of obtaining as much power as possible. In an ideal world, the people must be protected, not periclitated. More >