
| Mon,
05/19/2008 11:50 AM
| Opinion
Indonesian
awakening still in the making
Anand Krishna, Jakarta
"Indonesia is
still in the process of becoming," said a rector of a reputable
national university in Jakarta last month. Hundreds of students
from several universities in and around Jakarta sat mesmerized
by his fine oratory and body movements, hearing him speaking
without understanding just what he meant.
The meeting
facilitated by an NGO took place just 5 weeks before the 100th
celebration of National Awakening Day on May 20.
I tried to
understand his meaning; but which Indone-sia was he referring
to? Was he referring to the Indone-sian state proclaimed on Aug.
17, 1945?
Or the Indonesian
nation envisioned by a handful of our youth, led by Dr. Wahidin
Sudirohusodo and supported by Dr. Soetomo, Gunawan and Suradji,
who jointly declared the formation of "Boedi Oetomo" on May 20,
1908?
Or perhaps he was
referring to the termwhich was suggested in the 4th volume of
the Journal of the Indian Archipelago and Eastern Asia
(Singapore, 1850) by the Scottish lawyer James Richardson Logan
(1819-1869).
The term
"Indonesia" for our nation is less than two centuries old. The
Republic of Indonesia is a little more than 60 years old. If the
making of our nation is stretched back to the "national
awakening" in 1908, then we are just a century old.
If that is the
case, then perhaps the scholar quoted above is correct.
Indonesia is still in the process of becoming; it is not yet
final.
Interestingly,
many of our politicians today think along the same lines. No
wonder they and their parties, backed by NGOs and religious
institutions, are even trying to change our constitution.
Some discreetly,
others openly, not only promote but work zealously to introduce
a different system of government based on religious doctrines.
A nation that is
still in the process of becoming is an unripe nation. And such
an unripe nation can be taken advantage of by anybody. It can be
exploited, even destroyed. The question is, are we really unripe
as a nation? The answer is "yes, if we are just a century old".
The fact is,
however, we are not a century old.
National
Awakening Day is not the birthday of our nation. The word
kebangkitan in Indonesian, which is now attached to Boedi
Oetomo, can have several meanings. It can be translated as
"resurgence","resurrection", andI prefer to use the word
"reawakening".
After the decline
and subsequent fall of Majapahit around 1578, Boedi Oetomo was
the first movement tothe spirit of this nation - the spirit that
had gone to sleep for almost 330 years.
There had been
movements before Boedi Oetomosuch as the one led by Prince
Diponegoro of Java - but they remained regional. They could not
grow into national movements. Boedi Oetomo did.
As such, one of our founding
fathers, Bung Karno was not wrong in connecting the movement
with the awakening, or rather "re"-awakening, of the nation.
Bung Karno, as
did Historians Muhammad Yamin and Sanoesi Pane, firmly believed
we were already a nation long before the Boedi Oetomo. We were a
nation in the times of the Srivijayan Empire; we were a nation
in the times of the Majapahit Dynasty. But we lost that spirit
of nationhood, when we succumbed to groups of traders and
merchants who used religion and religious sentiment to cut us
off from our cultural roots.
We disintegrated as a nation, and
the rest is history.
In the second
volume of his monumental trilogy on Indonesia, From Majapahit
and Sukuh to Megawati Soekarnoputri, Canadian Scholar Victor M.
Fic advises us that "the best guide to the future of the
Indonesian people would be their past experience."
He further wrote
that as long as our "government, political parties, religious
groups, other organizations and individuals respect the seven
principles of continuity and change in multifaceted pluralism,
avoid religious and political extremism and keep the country's
political system open to adoption and adaptation of new ideas
and innovations, the country will be in a good position to meet
the challenges and uncertainties of the first decade" of the
21st century.
"Jangan lupa
sejarah" (do not forget history), said Bung Karno. I do not know
how many of our politicians and people's representatives realize
that currently we are being pushed by outside forces to make the
very same mistakes we made in the past.
We are giving in
to the demands made by the very same merchants and traders from
the foreign lands, using religion as their masks, and supported
by our ignorant brethrens.
The Boedi Oetomo
movement in the past and subsequent developments in the fields
of education initiated by Ki Hajar Dewantara and in the field of
economy by Muhammad Hatta "woke" us up to our past mistakes. We
realized our shortcomings; we stood up and saidmore".
Hence, we did not select a
religious platform to rebuild our nation, we selected a cultural
platform. Interestingly, the platform we chose was even
appreciated by member states of the United Nations.
Bung Karno was
appla-uded by one and all when he spoke of building the world
anew based on those principles.
Alas, lately we
have been slumbering again. The 100th celebration of National
Awakening Day this year, therefore, calls for a national
"reawakening". This is no time for sleep. This is the time to
work.
We all must work
together to strengthen the platform this nation has built its
modern state upon. Let us learn from our past mistakes, as
Victor M. Fic reminds us, if we do not learn from them, we shall
be condemned to repeat them.
Actually, there
are not too many rules to follow. First and foremost is, "unity
in diversity". Second:we stand, divided we fall." Third:
"Promoting a value-based education system". Fourth:
"Cooperation, not corporation". Fifth: "Peace, prosperity and
justice for all".
Let us all commit
ourselves to the reawakening of the spirit of our nation, our
nationhood. Let us take pride in the belief of our forefathers
that our past has been glorious, but our future shall be
brighter!
The writer is a spiritual
activist (anandkrishna.org, californiabali.org, aumkar.org)