http://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/19/world/asia/veil-of-silence-lifted-in-indonesia.html?_r=1&ref=world
Veil of Silence Lifted in Indonesia
By SARA SCHONHARDT
Published: January 18, 2012 
JAKARTA — As a solitary voice intoned a traditional Indonesian harvest song, 
dancers acted out the gathering of rice. Members of the audience joined in — 
most knew the words — until the song was overtaken by a vigorous hip-hop 
backbeat. 

Enlarge This Image
 
W. Sutarto/Foto Antara, via Lontar Foundation
Anti-Communist purges, spurred by symbolic acts like the burning of a hammer 
and sickle, killed at least 500,000 people in Indonesia from 1965 to 1966. 


Enlarge This Image
 
Associated Press
In 1967, President Sukarno, left, was replaced by General Suharto, right, who 
suppressed examinations of the events of that time. 

Women in military uniforms stormed the stage. A man in drag rapped while these 
“soldiers” assaulted the “farmers.” In the end, bodies of victims lay about. A 
sober audience broke into applause. 

The performance marked the release of “Breaking the Silence,” a collective 
memoir of 15 men and women who experienced the anti-Communist purges in 
1965-66, an event that left at least 500,000 people dead and ushered in the 
32-year rule of Suharto and his “New Order.” 

It is one of the darkest but seldom-discussed periods in modern Indonesian 
history. But the new book is only part of an emerging examination of this 
long-suppressed subject. In November, there was the release of “Sang Penari ,” 
a feature film that depicts the unfolding of a love story against the backdrop 
of that tumultuous time. The newsweekly Tempo recently published a special 
report on an army commander who had led efforts to wipe out the Indonesian 
Communist Party, or P.K.I. 

This week, members of the Indonesian human rights commission, Komnas HAM, met 
with dozens of victims of the 1965-66 abuses to discuss a continuing 
investigation of the mass killings. The commission’s vice chairman, Nur Kholis, 
said Komnas HAM had collected testimonies from 350 victims but was struggling 
to find stronger evidence, in the form of documents and photographs, before 
submitting its report to the attorney general. 

For decades the events of 1965-66 were shrouded in what Geoffrey Robinson, a 
historian at the University of California, Los Angeles, calls “enforced 
silence.” 

They began with a coup attempt against President Sukarno on Sept. 30, 1965, in 
which members of a group calling itself the Sept. 30 Movement, or G30S, killed 
six top generals. General Suharto, who helped put down the putsch and took 
control of the army, blamed the P.K.I. and led a campaign to purge the country 
of party members and other leftists. In the months that followed, security 
forces, local militias and vigilantes hunted down and killed thousands of 
people suspected of being Communists. 

After Mr. Suharto became president in 1967, government censors routinely 
screened books, films and other media for mentions of the killings, said Mr. 
Robinson, whose book “The Dark Side of Paradise” focused on the post-coup 
massacres in Bali. Even in the 13 years since a popular uprising helped oust 
Suharto in 1998, the topic has largely been avoided in schools and public 
forums. 

The official history in government-issued school textbooks describes a coup led 
by the “G30S/PKI” — linking the Sept. 30 Movement to the P.K.I. The subsequent 
mass killings are played down and cast as part of a patriotic campaign. The ban 
on Communist organizations enacted in 1966 remains in effect. 

Recently, however, the purges have been the focus of academic seminars, 
personal memoirs and other forums. 

In 2010, the Constitutional Court struck down a law that had been used to ban 
several books about the coup on the grounds of their “potential to disturb 
public order.” The attorney general can still ban some works for being 
provocative or misleading — and textbooks must still link the Sept. 30th 
Movement with the P.K.I. — but rights advocates and academics say the repeal 
has expanded the space for public discourse. 

Since 2009, Ultimus, a publisher in Central Java Province, has released more 
than a dozen accounts by survivors. 

“These books are something new,” said Baskara Wardaya, co-founder of the Center 
for History and Political Ethics at Sanata Dharma University, which holds 
seminars, history-writing workshops and book discussions to address past rights 
abuses. 

Publications like “Breaking the Silence” meet a rising demand by Indonesians 
eager to learn about their past, Mr. Baskara said. Still, Mr. Robinson said, 
decades of persecution of anyone associated with the banned P.K.I. have 
discouraged many survivors from speaking out. 

Usman Hamid, an adviser for theInternational Center for Transitional Justice , 
a legal aid group that has been collecting survivors’ testimonies, said many 
senior military officers and former members of Islamic groups that are alleged 
to have taken part in the killings resist efforts to bring this part of 
Indonesian history into the spotlight. 

The same holds true, Mr. Usman said, of some political parties that dominate 
Parliament, reflecting the influence still wielded by Golkar, which is the 
party founded by Mr. Suharto and has been part of the governing coalition since 
he was ousted. But Mr. Usman argued that uncovering the truth was necessary to 
hold political leaders formerly aligned with Mr. Suharto accountable. Putu Oka 
Sukanta, the editor of “Breaking the Silence,” said sharing accounts of the 
violence gave a voice to the victims and gave younger Indonesians access to a 
history they were not taught in school. 

“It’s an expression of fighting to become human again,” said Mr. Putu, 72, who 
in 1966 was detained for 10 years without trial for belonging to the Institute 
of People’s Culture, a literary and social movement associated with the P.K.I. 

Djoko Sri Moeljono, 73, was also among the hundreds of thousands of artists, 
academics and trade unionists jailed at that time as “leftists.” After his 
arrest in 1965, for being a trade union member and graduate of a 
Sukarno-supported metallurgy program in the Soviet Union, he spent six years in 
forced labor. He was then exiled to a remote island until 1978. 

Now he is among the survivors sharing their memories with young Indonesians in 
discussion groups organized by universities and nongovernmental organizations. 

The Commission for the Disappeared and Victims of Violence, or Kontras , 
recently produced a graphic detailing the nearly two dozen statutes that still 
bar former political prisoners from employment in fields like education and the 
military. 

To bring the purges into popular culture, dance troupes and puppet theaters 
have staged performances. The American filmmaker Robert Lemelson’s 2009 
documentary “40 Years of Silence: An Indonesian Tragedy,” examines the impact 
of the killings on four families from Central Java and Bali. 

In 2006, the independent National Commission on Violence Against Women 
sponsored a documentary in which high school students videotaped interviews 
with survivors. 

Ratna Hapsari, a high school teacher and head of the Indonesian History 
Teachers Association, is leading an effort to revise the country’s curriculum. 
The process has not run smoothly. 

In 2004, the Education Ministry removed passages linking the P.K.I. with the 
Sept. 30 Movement in textbooks. But in 2007, under pressure from the military 
and some leaders of Islamic-based parties in Parliament, the attorney general 
ordered the new books withdrawn for disturbing public order. In some places, 
they were publicly burned. 

“The curriculum is very restricted,” said Ms. Ratna, who uses alternative texts 
in her classes and promotes outside learning through other resources, including 
the Internet. 

Many older Indonesians see younger people’s interest in the purges as a 
positive sign of efforts to reclaim their country’s history. “We were taught 
that P.K.I. was really something evil,” said Lely Cabe, 30, a cultural officer 
at the Goethe Institute , the German cultural center, which hosted the event 
marking the release of “Breaking the Silence.” “Now the younger generation is 
asking why.” 

Taris Zakira Alam, 17, a great-niece of Itji Tarmizi, a painter who was accused 
of being a Communist sympathizer and spent much of his life in hiding, said it 
was important not only to discuss the purges but also to make amends to the 
victims. “As a young generation, we have to fight for this,” she said. 


A version of this article appeared in print on January 19, 2012, on page A9 of 
the New York edition with the headline: Indonesia Chips Away At the Enforced 
Silence Around a Dark History.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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