|
[an error occurred while processing this directive] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
OCTOBER 4, 1999 VOL. 154 NO. 13
But there is more to it than that. Many ordinary Indonesians feel genuine hostility toward Australia. For the most part, these people are more concerned with just getting by than with events in a distant province. Many were clearly offended, however, when televised reports showed Australians in Melbourne and other cities burning the Indonesian flag. I understand their feelings: Indonesians learn from a young age to respect the flag as a sacred symbol of nationhood. Having lived in Australia for more than two years, I realize that the act isn't as dire there. I've seen protests, for example, in which Australians burned their own flag. Nonetheless, I told my Australian friends that they were making unnecessary enemies by burning the Indonesian flag. Better, I advised them, to ignite photos of some of Indonesia's generals. As for Indonesia's intellectuals, a few have joined the anti-Australian assault, arguing that Indonesia--right or wrong--is their country, and an insult to the flag is an insult to them. The majority, however, appear to take a different view: when the country is wrong, it's everyone's duty to point it out. Moreover, this view holds, it's wrong to make Australia the scapegoat for a mess Indonesia created. That said, even these people chafe at the endless reports in the international media--especially the Australian press--of atrocities in East Timor. They are ashamed of what Indonesia's military has done in Timor, but they feel helpless to change the situation. Moreover, they get mad when foreigners talk as if all Indonesians are responsible for the atrocities, as they, too, have been victims of military oppression for years. Indonesians are living in a very frustrating time. They succeeded in toppling President Suharto, but the powerful instruments of state are still in the hands of his political cronies: Habibie, the military, the parliament. Moreover, the future leaders of the country are not very promising. The three most prominent--Megawati, Gus Dur and Amien Rais--have yet to prove that they are capable of changing things for the better. They seem more interested in their narrow political ambitions and have been insensitive to the human suffering in East Timor. For many Indonesians, the past was bitter, the present is dark, the future is uncertain. In this suffocating situation, it's perhaps understandable that many Indonesians vent their anger by lashing out at somebody, anybody. Alienating the Americans would be unwise, as it might stop the flow of badly needed economic aid. Australia, on the other hand, is a convenient target. Australians burned our flag, they are playing the lead role in the peacekeeping force, their media have continuously exposed the horrible things occurring in East Timor. For many Indonesians, including some intellectuals, it is all too much to bear. I have been told that the road of the intellectual is a lonely one. These days I feel very lonely. Arief Budiman is head of Melbourne University's Indonesian studies department and an editor of Reformasi, Crisis and Change in Indonesia TIME Asia home | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Back to the top |
© 2000 Time Inc. All Rights Reserved. Terms under which this service is provided to you. Read our privacy guidelines. |