Indonesia Early Political Movements
Home of the Dutch Resident, Surabaya, Jawa Timur, 1854
Courtesy Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress
Centuries of Dutch cooptation made the highest ranking
priyayi on Java and their counterparts on other
islands
politically conservative. But lower ranking members of the
elite--
petty officials, impoverished aristocrats, school
teachers, native
doctors, and others--were less content with the status
quo. In 1908
students of the School for Training Native Doctors in
Batavia
established an association, Budi Utomo (Noble Endeavor),
which is
considered by many historians to be the first modern
political
organization in Indonesia. Java-centered and confined
largely to
students and the lower priyayi, Budi Utomo had
little
influence on other classes or non-Javanese. Because of its
limited
appeal and the suspicion of many members of the
high-ranking
priyayi, the organization did not thrive. Similar
eliteoriented groups, however, were established during the
1910s both
inside and outside Java.
Significantly, Budi Utomo adopted Malay rather than
Javanese as
its official language. Malay, the lingua franca of the
archipelago,
became a symbol of its unity and the basis for the
national
language of independent Indonesia,
Bahasa Indonesia (see Glossary).
Unlike Javanese, which was laden with honorific language
emphasizing status differences, Malay was linguistically
democratic
as well as free of Java-centeredness, although Bahasa
Indonesia
itself does not abandon status-conscious forms altogether
(see The Emerging National Culture
, ch. 2).
A more assertive political movement than Budi Utomo
appeared
with the establishment in 1910 of the Indies Party
(Indische
Partij) by E.F.E. Douwes Dekker (known after 1946 as
Danudirja
Setyabuddhi), a Eurasian and descendant of the author of
Max
Havelaar. A veteran of the Boer War (1899-1902)
fighting on the
Afrikaaner side and a journalist, Douwes Dekker criticized
the
Ethical Policy as excessively conservative and advocated
selfgovernment for the islands and a kind of "Indies
nationalism" that
encompassed all the islands' permanent residents but not
the
racially exclusive trekkers. In July 1913, close
associates
of Douwes Dekker, including physicians Tjipto Mangunkusumo
and R.M.
Suwardi Surjaningrat (known also as Ki Hadjar Dewantara,
later
founder of the Taman Siswa or Garden of Pupils school
movement),
established the Native Committee in Bandung. The committee
planned
to petition the Dutch crown for an Indies parliament. In
1913 it
also published a pamphlet written by Suwardi, "If I were
to be a
Dutchman," that gained almost instant notoriety. Regarded
as
subversive by the colonial government and impudent by
Dutchmen in
general, the pamphlet, which was translated into Malay,
led to the
exile to the Netherlands of Douwes Dekker and his two
Javanese
associates. In exile, they worked with liberal Dutchmen
and
compatriot students. It is believed that the term
Indonesia
was first used in the name of an organization, the
Indonesian
Alliance of Students, with which they were associated
during the
early 1920s.
The responses of Islamic communities to the new
political
environment reflected their diversity. Hard-pressed by
ethnic
Chinese competition, especially in the batik trade, Muslim
merchants formed the Islamic Traders' Association in 1909.
In 1912
this group became Sarekat Islam (Islamic Union) under the
leadership of a former government official, Haji Umar Said
Cokroaminoto. Sarekat Islam became the first association
to gain
wide membership among the common people. By early 1914,
its
membership numbered 360,000. Committed in part to
promoting Islamic
teaching and community economic prosperity (anti-Chinese
sentiment
was a major appeal), the organization also drew on
traditional
Javanese beliefs about the return of the "Just King," and
Cokroaminoto went so far as to cast himself in the role of
a
charismatic, if not divine, figure. Cokroaminoto's
advocacy of
Indies self-government caused the Dutch some anxiety. By
1916
Sarekat Islam had some eighty branches both on Java and in
the
Outer Islands.
The modernist or reformist trend in Islam was
represented by
Muhammadiyah (Followers of Muhammad), a group established
at
Yogyakarta in 1912. It was particularly strong among the
Sumatran
Minangkabau, and a number of modernist schools were
established
there. Its importance is reflected in the fact that
Minangkabau,
such as Mohammad Hatta, were surpassed in numbers only by
Javanese
among the leadership of the Indonesian revolution. In 1926
the
Nahdatul Ulama (Revival of the Religious Scholars and
sometimes
known as the Muslim Scholars' League) was organized as a
conservative counterweight to the growing influence of
Cokroaminoto's syncretism and modernist ideas among
believers.
In May 1914, Hendricus Sneevliet (alias Maring)
established the
Indies Social-Democratic Association (ISDV), which became
the
Communist Association of the Indies (Perserikatan Komunisi
di
Hindia) in May 1920 and the Indonesian Communist Party
(PKI) in
1924. Backed by the Communist International (Cominterm) in
Moscow,
the PKI became active among trade unionists and rural
villagers. In
1926 and 1927, despite advice by Tan Malaka, a Comintern
agent from
Sumatra, to the contrary, local leaders instigated rural
insurrections in western Java and Sumatra. The government
moved
decisively to crush the insurrections and imprison
communist
leaders. Some, like Tan Malaka, fled into exile. But 1,300
communists were exiled to the grim Boven Digul penal
colony in West
New Guinea. The PKI all but disappeared, not to be an
important
actor on the political stage until after independence.
Data as of November 1992
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