[INDONESIA-L] INDEX - I Can Only Op

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Date: Thu May 15 1997 - 15:27:00 EDT


From: John MacDougall <apakabar@clark.net>
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Subject: [INDONESIA-L] INDEX - I Can Only Oppose with Words

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INDONESIA-L

From: Alex G Bardsley <bardsley@access.digex.net>
Subject: IN: I can only oppose with words (IoC)
To: apakabar@access.digex.net (John MacDougall)
Date: Thu, 15 May 1997 04:40:03 -0400 (EDT)
X-URL: http://www.oneworld.org/index_oc/toer.htm

   Country File
   
                             Pramoedya Ananta Toer
                                       
'I can only oppose with words'

   The name of Indonesia's most frequently banned writer, Pramoedya
   Ananta Toer, crops up in the media each year in the run-up to Hari
   Kesaktian Pancasila (Pancasila Victory Day) on 1 October, the national
   celebration of the defeat of Communism in 1965. So too does the
   accusation that he was involved in the censorship and oppression of
   writers by the PKI in the early 1960s. Pramoedya is held up as a
   warning that the Communist threat lives on, as a scapegoat that people
   can denigrate and condemn with impunity. He has recently been
   interrogated in the subversion cases brought against members of the
   People's Democratic Party (PRD) in connection with the Jakarta riots
   
   When a book of mine is banned it's like getting a badge of honour
   pinned on my chest, because each banning gets wide publicity in the
   international community. The more they are banned, the more response
   there is from the democratic world, so the banning of books is not a
   problem for me.
   
   The powers that be are truly frightened to grow up. If the reasons
   they give for banning books are just, then why don't they ban them
   openly through the courts? It's easy enough, much more so than banning
   without due process and then being criticised throughout the world.
   The real problem is that the legal system in Indonesia doesn't work.
   If the authorities were adult about things then they would try to
   understand the situation. But they don't. They just want to show how
   powerful they are, even if that means killing people. What can we
   expect from a government like that? That's why I urge all my friends
   to uphold human rights themselves. The authorities here don't
   guarantee respect for human rights.
   
   Bannings make no contribution to Indonesia's development. Whereas
   writing a book can take years, banning one takes a mere five minutes.
   Books by their very nature are the property of the public, not of the
   people who ban them. If a writer feels that what he is doing is right,
   he should go ahead and write.
   
   When I was in prison on Buru Island I only had two practical problems:
   coping with prison officials and with friends who liked to disturb me.
   That's all. On Buru I had to fend for myself to get food to eat. But
   fortunately I had several friends there who were happy to work in my
   place, which gave me the opportunity to write almost full time, except
   for the mornings when I had to cut wood for the kitchen stove.
   
   For reference material I had to rely entirely on memory. As it
   happened, when I was young I had often read Babad Tanah Jawa [the
   Chronicle of Java] in various versions, including that of my parents.
   And as a teenager I read a lot of western books. So that helped.
   
   Nowadays in Indonesia there are writers who are in the pocket of the
   authorities and there are those who are outside of that world. Those
   who are in the pockets of the authorities mainly busy themselves with
   producing light material aimed at helping people forget the reality
   around them. The more repressive the situation, the more entertainment
   will develop to provide an escape from reality. I don't concern myself
   with those who are in the pockets of the power-holders. As far as I'm
   concerned they don't exist. Their work is simply to glorify their
   masters.
   
   The awards I have won confirm that all this time I have been in the
   right. Of course they make me very happy. Especially since I've been
   denigrated over and over again throughout the New Order period. These
   awards give me strength, especially the one I got last year from the
   PRD.
   
   From the moment I was called for interrogation as a witness in the PRD
   cases I knew what was going to happen. Right from the beginning,
   before any arrests had been made, everyone, even the president
   himself, was bad-mouthing the PRD. This young people's organisation
   was regarded as having been responsible for the 27 July riots. The
   prosecutor said that I was pro-PRD. If the president declares the PRD
   to have done wrong before the trials even start, what can the trial
   officials do? I cannot fathom how any Indonesian can behave like this.
   
   I still want to write. But I can't work somewhere as noisy as this. I
   really need to go to the countryside, but the problem is that my
   security cannot be guaranteed there. If I go out of town, I have to do
   so quietly, without anyone being aware of the fact. That's the only
   way I feel safe. After all, I can only oppose with words. Basically,
   if I am harassed, I respond. I'm old, what else can I do?
   
   Interviewed by Stanley