http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2010/03/11/plurality-pluralism-and-modern-democracy.html

Sunday, March 14, 2010 4:36 AM


Plurality, pluralism and modern democracy
Budiono Kusumohamidjojo ,  Bandung   |  Thu, 03/11/2010 10:10 AM  |  Opinion 



The Indonesian public recently witnessed how the majority of members of their 
House of Representatives who voted against the 2008 Century Bank bailout 
celebrated their victory like a team of high school students cheering after 
having won a basketball match. 

As an anticlimax, the President delivered a "not guilty plea"-like speech that 
had the effect of proving the weak points in Indonesia's hard-won democracy. 

That is tragic enough. While the Indonesian people grabbed their political 
freedom from the authoritarian Soeharto regime 11 years ago with much 
suffering, we are still in limbo over how to make reasonable use of our 
painfully won freedom.

The fragmentary constellation of political forces crystallized in the House 
precisely reflects the "human condition" (Hannah Arendt, 1956) of an Indonesian 
pluralistic society that does not necessarily embrace pluralism. 

In fact, the other way around: Indonesia's political leadership, at the 
national as well as at the regional level, produced by the 11-year process of 
reformasi demonstrates that they are still trapped by an obsolete, 
pre-democratic, inward way of thinking. 

Deep in their hearts, most Indonesians are yet to liberate themselves from the 
authoritarian subconsciousness when dealing with "the other", which was a 
mentality prevalent during the era of Soeharto. 

As a result, after 11 years we have yet to learn much about how to practice 
modern democracy. Although the Indonesian people have learned a lot, and 
quickly, about conducting civilized general elections, most of our politicians 
are novices in listening to "the other" and exchanging qualified argument. 

Modern democracy requires us to know how to govern ourselves as a reasoning 
public, to differ in opinion constructively, and to conduct the uneasy and 
complex give-and-take practice of building fair consensus (John Shattuck, 
Testimony On Human Rights In Indonesia, 1998).

Indonesians, and particularly their elected political leadership, are yet to 
realize that the modern democracy that we are employing has its own stringent 
qualifications.

Let alone because it is being practiced by a society of more than 220 million 
people scattered in various geographical, sociological, religious and 
ideological spaces, with meager experience of self-government. 

The plurality of a society may become advantageous; however, it requires that 
its people have the 
capacity to respect pluralism, which in many respects implies accepting the 
coexistence of people with a variety of backgrounds and differing opinions. 

As a matter of logic, absolute majority domination is unlikely in a pluralistic 
society, save if subdued by a dictatorship. If the mainstream of a pluralistic 
society thinks and behaves the way of a homogeneous one, they will find it 
difficult to build consensus and will only end up in the perennial quandary of 
making dispersed rather than consistent decisions. 

We have left behind an authoritarian era that had produced a belying stability 
and ushered our people into a way of thinking that would not be commensurate to 
coping with the challenges we must face, nationally as well as globally. 

To date we believe that democracy is the best systemic option among the poorer 
performing systems, although we are still unclear about which democracy we 
should develop that is commensurate with Indonesia's specific requirements. 

The first of the challenges we must cope with is the fact that Indonesian 
society, like many others in the world, is becoming more complex in itself. 

Taking into account Indonesia's population of more than 220 million, we must 
master a rather sophisticated self-government in order to prevent our 
sociological complexity turning into social anomaly. 

The second challenge lies in our failure to realize how late we are in 
responding to the effects of the globalization process, already triggered in 
the mid-1970s. 

The way Indonesian politicians responded to the coming into force of the 
China-ASEAN Free Trade Area arrangement in January 2010 simply demonstrates 
that most of us are still day-dreaming amid the furor of rising cross-border 
regimes. 

We have been oblivious of the changing and challenging international 
constellation when we cannot afford such negligence, indeed because we are not 
an island in the world. 

Forget China or India; just think about Brazil which in the mid-1970s was at a 
similar stage to Indonesia in many respects. Both countries prevail over a vast 
territory with a large population and rich natural resources, the most 
significant difference being only in that Brazil is a continental, while 
Indonesia is a maritime, state.

The lesson from becoming aware of all the above lies in our obligation to 
listen to each other rather than closing our ears. 

We need to think in broader schemes and longer terms rather than desiring to 
establish new provinces or separate new districts. 

We must understand the coming of the metanational paradigm instead of bickering 
about primordial party interests. 

We need the courage to admit that we have been left way behind in terms of 
global competition rather than being self-complacent about a historical past 
that remains debatable.

Modern democracy requires us to know how to govern ourselves as a reasoning 
public, to differ in opinion constructively.

 
The writer is a professor at the School of Philosophy, Parahyangan Catholic 
University, Bandung.

Kirim email ke