http://www.insideindonesia.org/edit58/women1.htm

-- 

  [Image]
               Women on the move
  No. 58
  April        After three decades of patriarchal conformity under the
  -            New Order, women are once more a force for change.
  June
  1999         Krishna Sen

               On December 15, 1998, 500 women from 26 provinces of
               Indonesia met to take stock of the legacy of the New Order
               and to chart future directions. As so often in the NGO
               movement during the last decade of the Suharto regime, the
               planning was done in Jakarta, the money was sought abroad,
               and the contradictions bred by 33 years of repressive rule
               surfaced to dampen the optimism with which the women had
               come to Yogyakarta. But that so many women came to talk
               and listen and assert themselves in all their differences
               was itself a triumph.

               When the Suharto regime came to power in 1965, it not only
               destroyed the communist mass organisation for women
               Gerwani (Gerakan Wanita Indonesia, Indonesian Women's
               Movement), but transformed the whole basis of women's
               participation in politics. New Order propaganda damned
               Gerwani as an organisation of whores and legitimised the
               brutal massacre of 1965-66 in large part by constructing a
               litany of crimes by women. In prisons across the country,
               women were molested, raped and tortured. These stories,
               long suppressed, began to emerge in the last years of the
               New Order. Old women in their 60s and 70s, released after
               years of imprisonment, became martyrs in the eyes of the
               new women's movement that emerged in the 1980s.

               What happened to the dozens of other women's organisations
               which once flourished in the political turmoil of the
               Sukarno years has yet to be documented. But in the early
               New Order autonomous women's organisations disappeared.
               Women's representative bodies became 'wives'
               organisations. Wives of civil servants were obliged to
               join Dharma Wanita (literally, Women's Duty), and
               duty-bound to support their husbands' work. The PKK, the
               village level institution through which many of the
               government's family welfare measures were implemented, was
               committed to the five duties of a woman, which started
               with her role as wife and mother. Women, politicised in
               the nationalist struggle and mobilised in Sukarno's
               populist politics, were domesticated in a state controlled
               by the military.

               While women were politically reduced to the status of
               men's appendages, economically they were pushed and pulled
               out of homes into the work place. As the Indonesian
               economy expanded, vast numbers of women joined the
               workforce, largely in the low-paid manufacturing sector,
               but also in white collar middle class professional jobs.
               The New Order's dependence on global financial
               institutions ensured that development policies,
               particularly from the early 1980s onwards, had to take
               gender issues into account. This created women bureaucrats
               with an interest in promoting the discourse of women's
               equality.

               The new women's non-government organisations (NGOs), which
               emerged from 1983 and grew rapidly in the 1990s, drew on
               all of these women who were not primarily wives and
               mothers. They were working class women, middle class
               professional women, and femocrats within government and
               semi-government institutions.



               Leaders

               Not just in Indonesia, but in Asia generally, women's
               movements are often seen as an urban middle class luxury.
               The earliest women's NGOs were established in Jakarta and
               other cities in Java. The first women's NGO was Yayasan
               Annisa Swasti (Yasanti), established in 1982 in
               Yogyakarta, followed in 1985 by Kalyanamitra in Jakarta.
               But in the 1990s the movement is no longer restricted to
               either Jakarta or the middle class.

               Many of the workers' strikes in the early 1990s were led
               by women. Two of the most prominent organisers of the
               recent Indonesian labour movement are women: Marsinah, who
               was raped and killed in 1993, and Dita Sari, still in
               prison for organising massive strikes in Surabaya in July
               1995. Marsinah's politics were born out of her experience
               as a working woman. Dita's activism was inspired by her
               reading of Leninism. Neither perhaps would see themselves
               as acting for women as such. But they represent the
               diverse paths of women's politicisation in the late New
               Order.

               Nor did the so-called urban middle class women's
               organisations pursue a middle class agenda. Kalyanamitra's
               earliest work was with domestic servants. Yasanti started
               its work among rural and working class women facing
               domestic violence. Solidaritas Perempuan (Women's
               Solidarity for Human Rights), one of the earliest of the
               new breed of women's associations, concentrated on the
               rights of migrant workers.

               Post-graduate student Yanti Muchtar argues in her thesis
               that the women's NGOs were by the 1990s not primarily led
               by urban middle class women. They were established and led
               by first-generation migrants to cities. These women had
               the intellectual capital of the middle classes, but not
               the access to consumer goods that defined Indonesia's new
               middle class. Some of these women were influenced by
               peoples movements overseas. Others were radicalised by
               their work among labourers, peasants and prostitutes.

               By the end of the New Order, the women's movement in
               Indonesia was a broad-based social movement. Its various
               factions were articulated across the breadth of
               Indonesia's socio-political spectrum.

               The Indonesian National Women's Coalition for Justice and
               Democracy was established the day before Suharto resigned.
               Forty one prominent women intellectuals, mainly from
               Jakarta, signed the declaration. It was sent out to
               women's groups throughout the country. The Women's
               Congress in Yogyakarta in December 1998 was the result of
               the commitment of this group of women to come together and
               to confirm the political power of women across the nation.
               Not surprisingly, the congress did not end in the creation
               of a singular women's movement speaking in a national
               monotone. It was a triumph of the diversity of Indonesia
               and of its women over 33 years of state-controlled
               uniformity.



               Krishna Sen teaches at Murdoch University, Perth,
               Australia.

                                                                    [Image]

To unsubscribe send a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with in the
message body the line:
unsubscribe demi-demokrasi

Kirim email ke