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Herb Feith, who began it all 50 years ago, inspires a new volunteer
Rachael Diprose
My first memory of Herb Feith is of him
peddling along on his trusty bicycle several years ago near the Gadjah
Mada University campus in Yogyakarta. The sun was softly falling on his
thinning hair, his glasses perched on the tip of his nose, as he sat
straight-backed in a faded batik shirt, negotiating the potholes.
I thought, 'so this is the infamous Herb
Feith', popular amongst Indonesian and Australian students alike,
respected academic and Indonesianist, and exactly the picture of
eccentricity I had envisaged. He was working as an Australian volunteer
in Indonesia, teaching politics. I am now lamenting the fact that when
I was an Australian student on exchange in Indonesia I considered my
Indonesian language skills inadequate to attend one of his very popular
classes. Missed opportunities.
Several years later, working as an
Australian volunteer in Jakarta, I was lucky enough to meet with Pak
Herb. He was the guest speaker at the opening of a photo exhibition
held in Jakarta in November 2001, celebrating 50 Years of Australian
volunteering. Pak Herb pioneered the Volunteer Graduate Scheme in 1951
when he came by boat to Indonesia to serve as an interpreter in the
Sukarno government administration. At the time he received a small,
local salary, working alongside the Indonesian staff under local
conditions, with the objective of promoting cross-cultural
understanding.
Several things stand out about what Pak
Herb said that evening. He spoke of 'curiosity' and 'solidarity'. The
curiosity that arises when one becomes a volunteer and moves to a
foreign country, and the solidarity one feels with those who are
suffering and who don't have the basic rights others take for granted.
Pak Herb described the fascination of those first volunteers with the
Indonesian community, their way of life, political system, and open
friendliness. This same curiosity and solidarity has led many
volunteers to become respected academics in Indonesian studies, human
rights campaigners, researchers and policy makers back home.
Being there
In light of the September 11 tragedy, Pak
Herb highlighted the dangerous and saddening divide developing between
what some call Muslim and non-Muslim countries. He spoke for many
Australian volunteers currently living in Indonesia, who believe that
now is the most important moment to be in-country. In times of
uncertainty, simply being in Indonesia is a significant contribution we
can make to our workplaces or the communities in which we live, despite
the pressure from some families and friends to return home. This makes
a stronger statement about Australians and our personal commitment to
Indonesia than any foreign news report.
Volunteers may be placed in large cities,
or very remote communities, depending on where their skills are
required. When a volunteer moves to their placement country, they are
given some preliminary language training. But they still have to
overcome the communication barriers, learn to understand the culture,
adapt to the food and climate, and simply learn a new way of living.
However, lifetime friendships and extraordinary personal growth are the
rewards that volunteers take with them when they return to Australia.
Employed as a translator and English editor
with an Indonesian research institute, I could communicate to some
extent upon arrival. However, learning to speak another language and
live in another culture is a constant process, no matter how long a
volunteer has been living in-country. And it is a joint learning
process. My friends and colleagues seem to delight in my Australian
mannerisms and question me constantly about customs at home.
As an independent, somewhat assertive,
unmarried female, I feel at times like something of an enigma. While
this is not unheard of in Indonesia, at present I still fall into the
minority. Taxi and bajaj (automated
pedicabs) drivers are amazed that I have not had children. Learning to
eat with my hands at the office, without rice ending up all over my
face and clothes, took months of perseverance! Living in a densely
populated city has been challenging for me after the wide, open spaces
of Australia.
Yet, when I go home at the end of each day
I am constantly amazed at the new experiences I have shared. In what
once seemed so foreign, I now find peace and tranquility in the call to
prayer. I have learnt to order my day around the monsoon rains. I can
see lifelong friendships forming, and imagine my relationship with
Indonesia continuing long into the future. I only hope that I can give
back a fraction of the wonderful experience that my friends have given
me, and carry on the legacy of Pak Herb.
Rachael Diprose (rdiprose@smeru.or.id) is an Australian Volunteer (www.ozvol.org.au) working at the Smeru Research Institute in Jakarta.
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