The revolution begun in 1945 must be completed
Pramoedya Ananta Toer
MERDEKA! FREEDOM!
17 August is not the occasion to
reduce things to shallowness through ceremony and ritual. This date is
pregnant with many different significances. First of all, of course, it
marks the liberation of 80 million people from hundreds of years of
conquest by the Dutch, a small country and nation from the other side
of the world. With the proclamation of independence on that date, the
various peoples of Nusantara merged themselves into the Indonesian
nation. This was a contribution to humanity itself, and not just a
political advance: this was something we were able to contribute to the
history of humankind.
For five years [after the proclamation]
(1945–1949), Indonesia had to suffer and overcome the intrigues of the
imperialists and their allies. And it was not only once, that Indonesia
was entrapped by their bait. Once, after the Dutch had launched their
first military action in 1947, Indonesia was entrapped into sending a
religious styled mission, the 1948 Hijrah (‘Migration’),
to wipe out the communists in East and central Java. The ‘pilgrimage’
of the Siliwangi [division of the Army] to East and Central Java paved
the way for the emergence of Kartosoewirjo who founded the Darul Islam
movement and the Indonesian Islamic Army which was quickly able to
spread its influence over one third of Indonesian territory.
And after this hijrah task was completed, did Indonesia
receive recognition and help from America, even though this event was
bestowed in the official histories with the title of the ‘[crushing of]
communist Madiun rebellion’? Wow, on the contrary. In 1948 also, the
Dutch launched their second military action. Yes, Indonesia was not
Vietnam. As a result of the second Dutch military action, almost the
whole of Indonesian territory fell into Dutch hands. Bung Karno and
Bung Hatta were even captured and sent into exile.
Indonesian military efforts had lost all strategic significance,
while the evolutionary Government had become an Emergency Republican
Government based in Sumatra. There followed a hard two years for the
republicans, in fact many spent this time in Dutch gaols. There
remained just a few Indonesian fighters outside the country mobilising
whatever resources were available to do whatever they could to help
lobby to get the Dutch out of Indonesia. And we cannot forget those
friendly states that lobbied to open the debate in international
forums. Finally, international pressure forced the Dutch to recognise
the Republic of Indonesia on conditions that Indonesia regarded as not
too burdensome.
The first chapter of the Indonesian Revolution could then be said to
have been completed. But, it could also be said that it was not yet
completed. America’s total defeat in Vietnam and consequent start of
the Vietnam War, meant that America started to shift its focus to
Indonesia in the context of what it called the war against communism,
alias the Cold War. The primary target was Bung Karno who openly
declared his opposition to imperialism, colonialism and capitalism.
Opposition to these three things was not just material used to carry
out agitation either before or behind the backs of the masses.
Opposition to these three things arose as a direct antithesis of 400
years of a history of exploitation, oppression and parasitism. We can
use as a firm year to mark the start of this as 1511, the year Portugal
occupied Malacca in its hunt for the spices of Indonesia.
Bung Karno declared that the revolution was not complete because not
all of the goals of the revolution had been achieved, but he also
elaborated new goals for the future of Indonesia. These he called: Trisakti,
a trio of ‘powers’. The first was: to achieve sovereignty in politics;
the second was to be able to stand on one’s own feet in economics; the
third was to develop character in culture. This Trisakti concept
was the answer to 400 years of exploitation, oppression and parasitism
of Western imperialism, an imperialism that had made the West rich and
strong, and which could use the interest accumulated from its capital
as ‘aid’ and turn the nations that had been its victims into its
debtors. It was Bung Karno himself who had condemned them mercilessly:
‘Go to hell with your aid’.
Also in the context of the struggle to complete the revolution, Bung
Karno called for ‘nation and character building’. The response of the
Western imperialists to the potential implementation of this call was a
policy of terror which reached its climax is the major rebellion of the
[1956–57 military led rebellions — ed] PRRI-PERMESTA, which was
supported from British military bases to the country’s north and from
US bases in the Philippines. From its Philippines bases, America made
several air attacks on Maluku. An American plane, piloted by Allan
Pope, was shot down after making several attacks. Indonesian courts did
not give him the death sentence but rather Bung Karno handed him over
to his wife to take back to America. That was the answer to President
Eisenhower who had already decided: Sukarno must be removed. But that
was just his decision. The reality was that Sukarno survived seven
assassination attempts.
During this period of the struggle to
complete the revolution, domestic opposition to Bung Karno’s policies
clearly aligned with the imperialists. They accused Bung Karno of being
anti-democratic, of making himself a dictator and of
self-aggrandisement. They never mentioned the Cold War, or the
imperialist encirclement of Indonesia. This is understandable as they
were mostly still in the grip of colonial education which glorified
Western democracy. And Bung Karno himself rejected Western democracy, a
form of democracy which limits its operations to its own country.
Outside of its home erritory it conquered, invaded, exploited,
oppressed and lived like a parasite off other countries. Bung Karno
himself had been several times imprisoned and exiled by a Western
democracy.
During the period of the unfinished revolution there
were many of acts of imperialist terror and other incidents aimed at
Indonesia. Even in these circumstances, Bung Karno still made time to
talk about culture. The third element in the Trisakti was: to
build character in culture. It is a pity there was never a chance to
elaborate more deeply on this theme. Bung Karno also raised the issue
of ‘character building’, another aspect of culture. But the attacks
from imperialism also meant that there was not the time or space to
develop this idea further.
We can say in short that ‘to build
character in the field of culture’ has been neglected. In fact,
however, it is through culture that a nation’s and people’s character
is manifest. This issue is also connected to our attitudes to history.
To
deal with this issue, we need to approach things rationally. Our
traditional approach to history is to see it as the record of the
victor’s road to the throne. There are Dutch sources that say that the
one exception to this is in the Bugis Makasar tradition. As in
the modern approach to history, they emphasise recording the facts and
the times things occurred. Right up to the period of the struggle to
complete the revolution (the period of the unfinished revolution), we
have never made a proper attempt to evaluate and correct our culture
and history. In fact, the older generation prefers to caress all that
has been left by our ancestors as if they were some kind of perfect
beings. With a rational approach, we will be able to throw off all that
we have inherited, everything that is an obstacle to our progress,
without sentimentality.
The view that history is simply the
record of the journey of the victors’ to the throne has meant that our
culture only recognises power, power alone. Humanity is not the driving
force in life or in the traditional arts and culture. Forgive me if I
am wrong here. We can at least say that in order to glorify and make a
cult of the victors, our traditional histories have turned into a
series of myths and legends. This is continued even today in what these
days is called sinetron (a current form of pop TV ‘drama’),
with even less rational contents. The concept of humanity only first
appeared with the birth of the Panca Sila, coming from Bung
Karno. And it is not surprising that Bung Karno said: humanity or
internationalism. Because the origin of the concept came from
developments among humankind internationally: 1. The Declaration of
Independence, which liberated the American people from British
colonialism; 2. The Communist Manifesto, which liberated the lower classes from structural oppression; 3. San Min Chui,
written by Sun Yat Sen, that formulated the nationalist framework for
the colonised peoples of Asia. We need not be embarrassed to admit that
we learned of the concept of humanity at the time of our independence.
We indeed need to know our own deficiencies.
It is a revolution
itself to start to think rationally freed from the shackles of a
history based on myths and legends. It is the same with understanding
imperialism. Viewed dialectically, we see that imperialism was not a
source only of evil for the conquered peoples of colour. If they had
done evil only, our peoples would have long been destroyed completely.
And on the island of Java, its conquered people instead multiplied
greatly so that Java is now the most densely populated island in the
world.
The reality is that every system that operates in our
homeland of Indonesia has come from the imperialists: the
administrative system; formal teaching; the police, the military even
right down to the traffic system. The systems operating in social life
also gave rise to new moral norms, to some extent or other. And the
national revolution which succeeded in expelling the Dutch, left our
territory with an operating administrative system, including a system
of main roads, and, especially on Java, of railway lines.
Nah, we have not finished the 1945 revolution. World imperialism
could not stand seeing Indonesia develop good relations with the
communist countries: Indonesia had to be destroyed. This was part of
the Cold War. According to one of the brains behind the ‘Thirtieth of
September Movement’ (G30S), British Ambassador Gilchrist, it would be
easy to change Indonesia: just one round of shooting and Indonesia
would change. Then they could move on to blacken China. In 1996 the
British archives were opened. From the available documents, the
regional role of Gilchrist in the revolt against (then President) Bung
Karno is exposed — although global leadership was still in the hands of
the USA and its CIA. And the phase of completing the revolution has not
reached its goal. Not yet at least.
G30S, the mass murder of
two million people, according to Admiral Domo, was the result of an
imperialist conspiracy aimed at replacing their lost, after their
defeat in Vietnam. The period of struggle to complete the national
revolution was brought to an end with the establishment of the fascist
regime that called itself the New Order or ORBA. Panca Sila was
raised up as an ideology and used as a weapon to strike out at elements
the regime did not like. The international press greeted joyfully the
mass killings that had taken place and were still taking place. This
was all followed by the theft of the rights of hundreds of thousands of
people; their property was seized without any legal process, and they
suffered detention without legal process either.
With the rise
of the New Order, the situation changed completely. The desire for
personal safety meant that the intellectual corps of Indonesia
preferred to lay down and shut up rather than face the fascist power.
There were some exceptions among them where, either consciously or
unconsciously, a few found themselves in opposition to the regime. And
when that opposition took place overseas the revenge taken against them
by the New Order was not so great. In any case, we remain grateful for
that opposition.
Once the New Order felt there was no more
opposition in the country, Suharto presented himself as a great general
and raised up A.H.Nasution also as a great general. Both of them were
ex-soldiers of the Royal Netherlands Indies Army (KNIL). Whether the
two of them ever formally resigned from the KNIL is not clear; at least
no official documents have ever been published. At the very least,
their military careers cannot be separated from their origins in the
KNIL. The task of the KNIL during the colonial period was to make sure
Indonesia remained a Dutch colony, during the time when the country’s
freedom fighters were being thrown into gaol or exiled. The rise of
these two generals, products of the KNIL, can be seen as symbols of the
essence of the New Order.
All my respect goes to those students
and youth who, motivated by their love for Indonesia, rose up and
resisted the New Order and its Suharto. All those who had been
surrounded and swamped in lies and the falsification of history created
to defend the power of the New Order, showed the resolve and courage to
rebel against it. Without a single rifle they faced the weapons of the
New Order, even though beaten up, kidnapped and killed. This was
different than the Peoples Power of the Philippines when the Armed
Forces sided with the people in overthrowing Marcos…
And this whole process had developed even further than that. Many
students and young people had gone down into the villages to awaken the
village masses to their rights; for centuries the peasants only knew
their duties, a result of the structure of traditional society. And
then something started to happen which had never happened in history
before: the peasants raised up their faces and seized back the lands
that had been stolen from them by the New Order and its cronies, many
of whom ended up owning scores or even hundreds of hectares, something
in contradiction to the laws passed during the stage when we were
struggling to complete the revolution.
This extraordinary movement of the students and youth now appears to have met a roadblock. What has been called reformasi was
not given birth to a widely accepted national leadership. And the
rising up of the peasants in the interior, something that could be
fairly identified as the beginnings of a social revolution, has also
not developed further, and has also not given birth to any national
leaders.
Why? In the 1920s the movement was able to give birth to leaders
that won wide acceptance, whether they were Javanists, Indonesianists,
or ethnic leaders. Why in this second year of the 21st century has this
not happened? At first I thought this was a result of some kind of
psychological problem, that there was something not quite right, not
quite fitting, off balance. I told this to many of the younger
generation who came to visit me. After thinking about this more, I have
come to another conclusion: that it is not a psychological issue.
The problem is that the starting point of the younger generation and students, and also the peasants in the interior has been reformasi:
a movement only to restructure and give new content to the New Order.
This not only involves avoiding but even negating our national history.
We nationally have been born through the national revolution and we
succeeded in defeating imperialism, we did that. The stage of the
national revolution was followed in 1950 by the stage of the struggle
to complete the revolution: now it has been extinguished completely.
Forget about things like ‘nation and character building’, instead now
there has been more and more actions murdering the nation, including
reviving the old colonial practice of sending Javanese soldiers to the
regions to subdue the regions outside Java.
Why is all this
continuing to happen? My conclusion is that the course of developments
since the New Order has turned its back on history as a source of
understanding the proper starting point, thereby losing direction, and
therefore does not know its destination, in other words, has lost the
plot.
Throughout modern Indonesian history since the beginning
of the last century, the youth has been the engine and provided the
leadership for change and renewal. And so from this history, the young
generation bears the responsibility for continuing the tradition of
winning renewal. This is the case today also. But with additional new
attitudes: using reason and courage. There can be no change without
courage. And without courage, as I have often said: the young
generation will be just like cattle — their presence here among the
living will be for no other purpose than to turn themselves into
cattle.
Reason and courage. Wipe away the New Order and its
parasite spirit. Return to the phase of completing the revolution and
complete it. And noting: completing the revolution does mean
necessarily carrying out violence.
The youth must rise up, put their nation in order!
Pramoedya Ananta Toer is Indonesia’s leading
novelist and author of ‘This Earth of Mankind’ tetrology of novels. He
presented this speech as a Cultural Oration on the occasion of
Indonesian Independence Day, 2002.
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