Christianity, curly hair, and human dignity
Nico Schulte Nordholt
The two phenomena of ethnicity and
ethno-nationalism are not restricted to West Papua. All over the
archipelago they occur as a consequence of the present power vacuum in
the 'centre' after Suharto's 32 years of centralistic and oppressive
reign. Everywhere anti-Jakarta and, outside Java, anti-Javanese,
sentiments can be noticed. To those who are not Papuan (or Acehnese, or
any of the other ethnic groups now talking about seceding from
Indonesia), these sentiments often sound dreadfully exclusive. Does
this mean Indonesia is now inevitably headed away from earlier ideals
of tolerance and diversity, towards narrower concepts of nationhood
based on blood and religion?
The Dutch scholar Jan Nederveen Pieterse
pointed out that an ethnic discourse is profoundly affected by macro
processes such as post Cold War politics. For Indonesia, one can add to
this the impact of the Asian economic crisis since 1997, which has led
to the present Kristal(total
crisis). IMF and World Bank policies such as 'the retreat of the
central state', 'decentralisation', 'privatisation' and
'democratisation' are also driving politics in an ethnic direction.
The republic's national slogan of Diversity
in Unity (Bhinneka Tunggal Ika) was intended in 1945 to express a unity
(persatuan) based on a voluntary choice of belonging to the new
republic of Indonesia. At that time there was great appreciation for
the vast diversity of the republic. During Suharto's New Order,
however, this national slogan shifted towards unity imposed from above
(kesatuan). Ethnicity was reduced to folk customs, displayed on
well-orchestrated TV performances.
Today the pendulum of ethnic diversity is
shifting again, this time towards a kind of ethno-nationalism that
causes many observers in and outside Indonesia to fear a complete
falling-apart. I will show in a moment that I personally do not think
the situation is that bad, but two regions, Aceh and West Papua, may
indeed try to separate themselves from the republic.
'Being a christian'
When as a lecturer at a university in Java
in the 1970s I first came to know students from what was then still
called Irian Jaya, I discovered how diverse they really were. There
were tensions especially between coastal and mountain Papuans.
Moreover, individualism was deeply rooted. Even within one's own clan,
creating co-operation was an uphill battle. But a number of things
bound them together. They spoke Indonesian together. They all loved
soccer. And 'being a christian' was important to them, especially when
they experienced petty racism amidst their overwhelmingly Javanese and
Islamic environment. They named the hostel where they lived 'Mansinam',
after the small coastal village near Manokwari where the first
missionaries landed in the nineteenth century. These things amounted to
a Papuan ethnicity, which to them was not 'narrow' but broad and
protective.
In the 1980s I helped the main Protestant
church in Irian Jaya (GKI Irja) to develop some community development
programs. I saw once more how 'being a christian' offered Papuans a new
identity, lifting them above their own clan identity. Although
separated by many Christian denominations, 'being a christian' gave
them a self-respect that resisted the discrimination they experienced
from the Indonesian authorities and the armed forces in particular.
Even the distinction between Protestant and Catholic, elsewhere the
source of much tension, appeared to be of minor interest.
Arnold Ap symbolised the severe
discrimination most Papuans felt in the 1980s. This well-known Papuan
anthropologist was killed by intelligence agents just before Easter
1984, on orders from the Jakarta headquarters. They saw him as the
champion of a national liberation movement, and he therefore had to be
eliminated. In fact he had only given Papuans back their self-respect,
through church liturgy. He was a leader who bridged Papua's deep ethnic
diversity. While himself from the coastal area, he equally supported
the rights of the mountain people. The environment, and later in the
nineties (entirely in Arnold Ap's spirit) human rights, were issues
that rose above the ethnic divisions.
When the government announced in August
1983 that 750,000 households of transmigrants would be shipped to Irian
Jaya, Papuans soon said: 'We will be no more than servants on our own
soil', and: 'They wish to turn our curly hair into straight hair'.
To counter this widespread fear, the GKI
Irja church synod thought it important to provide some hope for the
future. Hence those plans for programs promising at least some kind of
'survival' as a group with their own identity. During the years that
followed not many of those plans were realised. Church organisations
did not have enough human capacity. Nevertheless, the churches did
offer a shelter in which Papuans could experience their identity.
The churches, alongside several relatively
small but influential NGOs, have similarly been vocal about the social
cost of mining and forestry from the mid-eighties until today.
Emancipation
After the end of the Suharto regime these
protests acquired a political meaning. The call for independence was
first expressed openly in 1998. In June 2000, thanks to the tolerant
attitude of the Wahid government at that time, a well-organised
people's congress officially put forward the demand for independence to
the government in Jakarta, although terms and conditions were
negotiable.
Does this amount to a Papuan declaration of
war on Indonesia, as Papuans dig in to fight for their own state,
moreover one that is based on a narrowly racial and religious concept
of Papuan ethnicity? I do not think so, at least not yet. Some leading
Papuans have told me that in fact their main purpose was to win
recognition of their human dignity, as well as full recognition from
'Jakarta' and the rest of the world of the grave injustice done to them
by 'the treason of 1969'. In other words, they seemed to imply, their
fight was for a better Indonesia rather than a separate Papua.
However, much will depend on how Jakarta
now responds. Today, in May 2001, President Wahid is hostage to the
Indonesian Armed Forces TNI, while the presidium of the people's
congress is in jail. Possibly the present intelligence officers, like
their predecessors who liquidated Arnold Ap in 1984, think that by
'decapitating' the leadership of a national movement they can enfeeble
it. Meanwhile Wahid's likely successor, Megawati Sukarnoputri, leads a
party that in all its statements about the regions beyond Java sounds
centralistic and nationalistic rather than sympathetic to diversity. A
government she leads may resort to increased repression in Papua.
Repression seemed to work in the eighties,
at least at first sight. But now, nearly twenty years later, resistance
against injustice is much more widespread. Besides the five leaders in
jail, there are many more younger leaders who, in the spirit of Arnold
Ap, are ready to stand up for the demands of the people. A policy of
repression will only fuel the call for independence. Both within and
beyond the church, these new leaders are at the same time rising above
the boundaries of their own ethnic and religious groups and presenting
themselves as representatives of a self-conscious Papuan nation in the
making.
Nevertheless, much about Papuan
self-consciousness remains fluid and open to different possibilities.
It would be premature to jump to the conclusion that it is becoming a
narrow and exclusive Papuan ethno-nationalism, completely rejecting
Jakarta and threatening non-Papuans living in Papua with expulsion.
Just as Papuan ethnicity has proved generous and inclusive towards
Papuans from all over this vast territory, it has the potential to
expand and embrace others too.
Nor is the concept of nationalism
necessarily exclusive. All over the world, nationalism is 'Janus-faced'
- it can be liberating and inclusive, or chauvinistic and exclusive.
When nearly all Papuans loudly express the call for 'merdeka', that in
itself is not sufficient to know what kind of freedom is envisaged.
Does it mean 'emancipation' and 'liberation from injustice' - that is,
to be accorded the same respect as all others within the one Indonesian
nation? Or does it rather mean 'chauvinism' and 'domination' - that is,
by Papuans against non-Papuan 'others', against 'Indonesians' and those
who represent them locally, in particular traders and transmigrants?
Papuans who are (aspiring) state officials
perhaps intend their call for 'merdeka' to be heard in a narrow
ethno-nationalistic sense, meaning they want a state of their own where
only Papuan Christians will be citizens. They say this in reaction
against a Jakarta they see as the colonial centre. Their history of
Dutch colonial rule, de facto, lasted only about fifteen years, but
they endured the New Order for more than thirty years. For them, Papua
must now coincide with the borders of the province of Irian Jaya as a
distinct administrative unit.
It may turn out, however, that provided
justice is done to the Papuan population the call for 'merdeka' will by
and large be meant as a call for 'emancipation', a call to acknowledge
the dignity of Papuan cultures in general, in line with the original
Unity in Diversity slogan of the Indonesian nation-state. In my
understanding, this interpretation is still the meaning and objective
of the new leadership within Papuan civil society. If this leadership
does eventually move towards the narrower meaning of 'ethnicity' held
today mainly by the Papuan elite, that is towards a sovereign state
based on an exclusive Papuan ethnicity, it will be because the
domineering and chauvinistic, nationalistic politics of the TNI and of
Megawati Sukarnoputri's PDI-P force them in that direction.
Nico Schulte Nordholt (n.g.schultenordholt@tdg.utwente.nl) teaches at the University of Twente, Enschede, in the Netherlands.
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