http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/IC03Ae01.html

Mar 3, 2007 


New year bonus for Indonesia's Chinese
By Kalinga Seneviratne 

JAKARTA - Indonesia has taken the symbolic step of reconciling with its 
minority ethnic-Chinese community by recognizing Chinese New Year as a 
full-blown national festival, a public celebration it had banned for nearly 30 
years. President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono attended the United National 
Indonesian Imlek (Chinese New Year) celebrations at the Jakarta fairground, 
where his visit was broadcast live on national television. 

Adding new fervor to the festivities spread over the past few weeks is the fact 
that many Chinese-Indonesians are celebrating as legal Indonesian citizens for 
the first time. A new citizenship act passed by the House of Representatives 
last July defines an Indonesian national as anyone born in the country. The 
legal distinction has allowed many Chinese-Indonesians, who belong to families 
that have resided in the country for generations but until now were legally 
considered stateless, to become full-fledged 
national-identification-card-carrying citizens. 

Ethnic Chinese are estimated to represent about 10 million of Indonesia's 210 
million people, or about 2% of the total population.  During the authoritarian 
regime of president Suharto (1967-98), public displays of Chinese culture were 
banned, and many Chinese were asked to change their names to Indonesian ones if 
they wished to be eventually considered for citizenship. "Suharto's government 
saw Chinese characters and culture as political. We were not even allowed to 
make candles," said Yu Le, a member of a Buddhist temple. 

He said he now prefers to use his Chinese name rather than his adopted 
Indonesian one of Suherman. "Around the temple there were always police and 
military. We could not celebrate Imlek here. People were afraid to come. We had 
to do it at home, hiding." 

Inside the same temple, an elderly Chinese-Indonesian man, who declined to 
reveal his name, pointed to the Chinese characters on the shrine's wall and 
said: "This was not allowed to be printed and we could not make these candles 
during Suharto's time." 

Indonesia's ethnic-Chinese minority had celebrated the Lunar New Year freely 
until the abortive 1965 coup against Suharto's military regime, which his 
supporters then claimed was encouraged by China's communist government. More 
than 500,000 people were subsequently killed in an orgy of violence, including 
thousands of ethnic Chinese, aimed at destroying the Indonesia Communist Party. 

After that, anything red, the color of prosperity for Chinese, or written in 
Chinese was seen as a threat to state power. 

"I and my Chinese friends shared a good time. We helped each other," recalled 
Mustafa Kamal Ridwan, senior fellow at the Habibie Center, an Islamic 
think-tank. "However, there was [racial] tension under Suharto. I felt I didn't 
have any Chinese friends after 1965. We suspected that Chinese people were 
members of the Indonesia Communist Party, and they became enemies for Muslim 
people." 

Outlawed expressions 
The Jakarta municipal government banned Chinese New Year celebrations in 1967, 
coincident with Indonesia and China breaking off official diplomatic relations. 
Restrictions covered the use of Chinese language in print and public discourse 
as well as public performances of cultural acts, such as the lion dance. 

Diplomatic relations with China were restored only in 1990, but the 
restrictions remained in force. During president Abdurrahman Wahid's 
short-lived tenure, these bans were in 2001 finally lifted. Wahid was notably 
also the chairman of Nahdlatul Ulama, Indonesia's largest grassroots Muslim 
organization, with an estimated 40 million members. 

His successor as president, Megawati Sukarnoputri, went a step further by 
declaring Imlek a national holiday. 

During Imlek celebrations this year, national newspapers carried colorful 
pictures of the festivities. At the same time, there were also critical 
commentaries in daily newspapers such as the Jakarta Post, which questioned the 
level of ethnic-Chinese integration into mainstream Indonesian society. 

Journalist and writer Sima Gunawan, who only recently publicly disclosed her 
Chinese name as Kho Djoen Siem, argued that few people in Indonesia knew that 
world badminton champion Rudy Hartono was actually an ethnic Chinese. The same 
goes for renowned film director Teguh Karya, physicist Yohanes Surya and 
pop-music star Agnes Monica, she noted. On the other hand, she carped, everyone 
seems to know the right ethnicity of Chinese-Indonesians who "commit serious 
crimes or do something wrong".

In an odd historical twist, while on one hand cracking down on public displays 
of Chinese culture, on the other, the dictator Suharto tapped several 
ethnic-Chinese businessmen to run crucial sections of the economy, allowing 
them to amass huge fortunes with the country's fast economic growth. 

The fact that the Chinese minority 30 years later still has a strong grip on 
the national economy is a cause for resentment among many indigenous 
Indonesians, known locally as pribumis. Those tensions boiled over in the wake 
the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis, when in May 1998 violence erupted against 
ethnic-Chinese interests across the archipelago, including in Jakarta, Solo and 
Medan. Many Chinese complained at the time that the government condoned the 
violence. 

Under threat, many Chinese-Indonesians fled Indonesia, including big 
businessmen who spirited hundreds of millions of dollars out of the country and 
into private accounts in neighboring Singapore. There are still widespread 
local perceptions among that Chinese-run family businesses favor their own kind 
in employment and that they tend to underpay their pribumi workers. 

"If we talk about economic advantage or how they control economic opportunity, 
[the ethnic Chinese] are better positioned than pribumis," said Marwan 
Batubara, a member of the Regional Representative Council representing Jakarta 
province. "It is time for the Chinese community to open up and mingle with the 
rest of the people more openly than before." 

The Habibie Center's Ridwan believes that events such as the national 
celebration of the Imlek festival show the government is trying to reach out to 
the Chinese community. He foresees the eventual formation of a race-based 
Chinese political party - similar perhaps to the ones in neighboring Malaysia 
that represent the larger Chinese minority community there. 

"It means there is now a willingness to integrate the Chinese [community] into 
Indonesia. [But] it doesn't mean they integrate with Islamic culture," he said. 
"They don't have to be Muslim to be Indonesian. Imlek is not a religious 
celebration." 

(Inter Press Service, with additional reporting by Asia Times Online) 



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