‘Cina’
or ‘Tionghoa’? Why it matters, and why now?
Dewi Anggraeni ; The author of Tragedi Mei 1998 dan Lahirnya Komnas
Perempuan (The May 1998 Tragedy and the birth of the National Commission of
Violence against Women), a book forthcoming in April, published by Penerbit
Buku Kompas
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JAKARTA
POST, 25 Maret 2014
Take it
from me, if you think something sounds trivial, but it hurts a large number
of people, then it is not. Chances are, it sounds or looks trivial because
you only see it from your own perspective, or you have never really
experienced the hurt or something comparable to the hurt.
This is
an issue idiosyncratically Indonesian. In other countries in the region where
Malay is used, ethnic Chinese have always been referred to as Cina or China
(pronounced the same).
The
words Tionghoa and Tiongkok only began to be used at the turn of the 20th
century in this country. Since then, though the terms Tionghoa and Tiongkok
were preferred by many people of Chinese descent, to Cina, it was not such a
serious issue until 47 years ago.
Presidential
letter No. SE-06/Pred.Kab/6/1967 of 28 June 1967 was issued during Soeharto’s
New Order regime, which specified that all things Chinese be called Cina
instead of Tionghoa. Thus the People’s Republic of China was from then on
officially translated in Indonesian as Republik Rakyat Cina, no longer
Republik Rakyat Tiongkok.
Following
the implementation of that presidential letter, a stream of policies were
conceived and executed that effectively boxed Indonesia’s ethnic Chinese into
an ever more limited space in terms of means of earning a living, as well as
culture and expression.
Yet a
relatively small number were also accorded patronage in a very public manner,
for all — including those struggling to make a living — to see.
By
choice and by default, ethnic Chinese became the business or enterprise class
of Indonesian society, an inchoate group which transcended divisions of social
class, as they inhabited the whole continuum, from the struggling to the very
wealthy.
However,
because the wealthier they were, the easier they were to tell apart, the
lasting impression of the ethnic Chinese in the collective psyche of the
general population was that they were all rich, and that they were rich
because of their collusion with the elites in power.
The
ethnic Chinese thus became vulnerable to being made political and social
scapegoats. Though not an everyday occurrence, victimization on different
scales did happen, and often.
And when
they were attacked, bullied or met with verbal insults, they were told that
they were fielding all this because they were Cina.
So
ethnic Chinese had to live with the awareness that on occasions when they
were attacked, they had no effective recourse apart from fleeing. And when
those who could afford to, did flee, they were further accused of taking
their money (obtained through collusion with someone powerful) out of the
country.
They
became a pathetic class of society, always cowering, often obsequious, to
those in power, because they themselves had no political power.
In
brief, this is the kind of memory the ethnic Chinese have of being named,
called and dismissed, as Cina. It was far from trivial. So when on March 14
President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono officially revoked the offending
presidential letter of 1967, and thus reversed the use of the word Cina to
Tionghoa, it was welcomed by the country’s ethnic-Chinese community.
In
reality, after the terrible May riots of 1998 when ethnic Chinese were
largely victimized, along with the summary sacrifice of many of the urban
poor, most Indonesians, not only those of Chinese descent, began replacing
Cina with Tionghoa when referring to ethnic Chinese.
This was
done following the public acknowledgement accorded to Chinese culture by
then-president Abdurrahman Wahid, and later on, then-president Megawati
Soekarnoputri.
The May
riots indeed jolted many people into pondering the state of affairs with
regards to the country’s ethnic Chinese, among other issues.
So why
the fuss about an official name change? What’s in a name? A great deal.
Ethnic Chinese can now feel they have regained their self-respect vis-à-vis
the authorities and the community.
The
reversal represents a symbolic gesture on the part of the government that by
shedding the name Cina they are no longer held in contempt, that they can
hitherto shed the extraordinarily negative image attributed to them by the
New Order government.
Are you,
however, curious as to why President Yudhoyono took this step, and why now?
Was it one of his last gestures for his ethnic-Chinese friends? Did he
suddenly receive a kind of epiphany?
I have discovered that it was the fruit of sustained lobbying by
Murdaya Poo, a former legislator, and Eddie Lembong, the founder of the Nabil
Foundation, who persuaded the President to get rid of the last major
impediment in the restoration of the country’s ethnic Chinese’s sense of
self-worth in order for them to participate fully in the endeavors of
nation-building. On the other hand, it may very well have been the
President’s own initiative, merely spurred on by Murdaya Poo and Eddie
Lembong. Who knows? ●
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