The politics of amnesia
Olle Törnquist ;
Professor of political science and development research,
University of Oslo
|
JAKARTA
POST, 29 September 2015
Wednesday night, 50
years ago, history changed in such a way that few want to talk about it. In
Indonesia, radical officers supported by the leader of the Communist Party
(but not the party), attempted to arrest prominent pro-US generals to account
for their conspiracy against anti-imperialist president Sukarno.
Had they succeeded,
the left would have gained the upper hand. For although Sukarno’s people
dominated politics, and the Communist Party — the world’s third largest — had
succeeded in initiating progressive reforms in exchange for “guided
democracy”, the price was high.
But this night
everything was lost. One general escaped and the others were murdered.
This allowed the
notoriously corrupt and unremarkable general, Soeharto, to take the opportunity
to build broad unity behind disproportionate and senseless acts of revenge on
Communists and leftist nationalists who knew absolutely nothing about the
conspiracies.
According to The Times
magazine, this was “the West’s best news for years in Asia.” And before long,
president Sukarno was disposed of in favor of Soeharto’s decades-long
dictatorship.
Genocide is a
contested concept, but between 500,000 and 1 million people were murdered
because they had modern leftist ideas in common. Innumerable people were
detained, and persecution continued for decades.
The military managed
much of the pogroms on its own but mobilized religious and political militias
too. The survivors and relatives suffer still.
That ill-fated night
in Jakarta changed history elsewhere too. Indonesia became a model for the
West’s struggle against the left in the global South. The argument was that
in spite of modernization, the liberal middle class had not proved able to
win elections, create stable institutions and resist the left.
Hence it was necessary
to add “politics of order” with military backing. This was the rationale for
the support of, for example, the regimes in South Vietnam and the “middle
class coups” in Latin America; Gustavo Pinochet’s plan to overthrow Salvador
Allende in Chile was even named “Operation Jakarta”.
All this is well
known, for those who want to know. Latin America has come to terms with its
past. But in Indonesia, in spite of 15 years of liberal democracy, nothing
significant has been done to uncover the truth and take legal action against
the perpetrators who remain honored for their crimes.
The standing argument
is that such processes would only create new conflicts, and that it is
necessary instead to move on. Indonesia’s allies are also reluctant to speak
up about their previous support for repressive politics.
But is it possible to
“move on”? What happens when a country and its allies repress their history?
The victims are of course denied their human rights. And the principle of
legal certainty is also at stake, for the next time it maybe others that the
law fails to protect.
Then there is the
cultural legacy. The lies and hushing-up leave deep traces in people and
society. Even most of those who know what happened feel they must be pragmatic.
Indonesia has become a
stronghold of postmodernist relativism where factual knowledge is
subordinated to everyone’s right to their own interpretation, as long as they
have money and good contacts.
Extremist groups are
free to terrorize both victims and principled intellectuals. Adi Rukun, for
example, who in the second of Joshua Oppenheimer’s exceptional films about
the genocide (The Look of Silence) seeks out the local gangsters who killed
his brother not for revenge but just to understand what took place, has been
forced to go into hiding.
Meanwhile, the West
suppresses its own role in the repressive politics and focuses instead on
teaching others about relatively uncontroversial aspects of human rights.
But the political
amnesia is worst. Consider Germany today without having come to terms with
Nazism; or South Africa with apartheid. Although Soeharto’s version of
Indonesian history has faded, there is no clear alternative narrative. On the
contrary, the absence of an unflinching understanding of the causes and
consequences of the genocide means that vital knowledge needed to build the
world’s largest new democracy is disregarded.
It is even neglected
that the system behind mass murder and persecution has not disappeared with
either the end of the Cold War or democratization.
The old use of the
security forces as well as the mobilization and legitimization of militias,
security companies and religious and political organizations to murder and
oppress still applies.
It is also conveniently
forgotten that broad popular organization was not “premature” as a basis for
modern democracy in Indonesia.
In the early 1950s it
was even possible to build the world’s largest modern, peaceful and
democratically oriented leftist movement. The disposal thereafter of
democracy was only due to the political fashion of elitist leaders and
experts at the time on both the left and the right.
In the same way, it is
often ignored that the easiest way to gain power and enrich oneself was not
to develop capitalism or socialism but to claim allegiance to Sukarno’s
nationalism and use state and politics to control the nationalized companies
and other public properties and claim a share of the surplus produced by
others.
Therefore, the
military grew stronger while the country’s economy deteriorated and the left
was undermined. It is also overlooked that the middle class and the Western
powers that criticized this supported instead Soeharto’s repression and his
alliance of technocrats, financiers and military personnel — and that their
extractive pattern of economic growth degenerated in more corruption and
oppression.
Finally, the absence
of close examination into the consequences of the genocide prevents wide
discussions about why democratization has been limited by elitism, continued
corruption and the fragmentation of civil organizations and social movements.
But how can the
political amnesia continue? The bitter truth is that almost no one with
influence wants to remember. Consider this: Conservative forces that wish to
discourage criticism but can’t always rely on the police and military, need
militias, security companies and extreme organizations. Donors and others who
say that democratization must be based on the elite, or even that stable
state institutions must come first, avoid the history of popular-based
democratization.
Few of the politically
dependent businessmen and populists around President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo
consider the roots of exploitation and repression in the abuse of
nationalization and political regulation. The critics among the growing
middle class and its international supporters neglect instead that their
predecessors contributed to the genocide and dictatorship; and that their own
contempt for “corrupt democracies” resemble these old positions.
The new pro-democrats
in fragmented citizen organizations who invest in populist leaders forget
that their own inability to form broad organizations is largely because the
ideals and knowledge of democratic popular movements were crushed by the
genocide.
In short, Indonesia’s
dilemma is its negation of history. But herein also lies hope for change. The
potentially most revolutionary and democratic forces today are the endangered
critical historians and the teachers who can disseminate critical knowledge.
They must become more and get full support! ●
|
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar