----- Pesan yang Diteruskan ----- Dari: Artien Utrecht 
<artienutre...@gmail.com>Kepada: Andreas Sungkono <wisoges...@hotmail.com>; Lea 
Pamungkas <lea.pamung...@gmail.com>; ratna saptari <rsaptari2...@gmail.com>; 
Aminah Idris <aminah44.id...@gmail.com>; Chalik Hamid 
<chalik.ha...@yahoo.co.id>; Md Kartaprawira <mdkartapraw...@gmail.com>; 
Linawati Sidarto <linawatisida...@hotmail.com>; Henri Ismail 
<henri.ism...@gmail.com>; Koes Komo <laju_rocknr...@yahoo.com>; Gol 
<gogo...@gmail.com>; willy van rooijen <wmvrooi...@hotmail.com>; Helene van 
Klinken <helen...@gmail.com>; aboeprijadi santoso <toss...@yahoo.com>; Serat 
Tjenthini <tjenth...@gmail.com>; arif kurniawan <bangaip...@gmail.com>; WIN 
DJOYO <w.bahagi...@gmail.com>; Francisca Pattipilohy 
<francisca.pattipil...@gmail.com>; Agrar Sudrajat <sudrajat.ag...@gmail.com>; 
nico schulte nordholt (schultenordholtn...@gmail.com) 
<schultenordholtn...@gmail.com>; A Awind <estiaw...@gmail.com>; Frieda Amran 
<frieda.am...@yahoo.com>; Dwitri Amalia <dwi...@gmail.com>Terkirim: Jumat, 28 
September 2018 13.23.51 GMT+2Judul: Re Symposium 1965 Today, Living with The 
Indonesian Massacres, 2 October at IISG
 
Hallo teman-teman,
Bersama ini pemberitahuan tentang Symposium '1965 Today, Living with The 
Indonesian Massacres,' yang diadakan di IISG tanggal 2 Oktober yad.Ternyata 
symposium yang besar dengan banyak pembicara ternama. 
https://socialhistory.org/nl/events/symposium-1965-today-living-indonesian-massacres

Ini linknya di atas, tapi tekstnya saya copy-paste sekalian di bawah ini ya..
salam,Artien

Symposium '1965' Today. Living with the Indonesian Massacres
Datum: 2 oktober 2015Locatie: IISG, Amsterdam
Dit is een Engelstalige bijeenkomst

Register via NIOD.(externe link)

1965 marked a turning point in Indonesian history.  A failed putsch on 1 
October was followed swiftly by a violent backlash against the Left. About half 
a million were killed, perhaps another million and a half detained without 
trial. The violence paved the way for the military regime of General Suharto, 
the New Order. Millions of survivors and their relatives lost their civil 
rights. The nation was changed forever.

For half a century, serious discussion of this shocking violence has been taboo 
within Indonesia. However, the taboo has begun to lift in recent years..

This event will bring together scholars from Indonesia and around the world. 
They will develop new frameworks for understanding the violence and its 
legacies.

Programme

8.30 Registration
9.00 Opening by Leo Lucassen (IISG) and Gerry van Klinken (KITLV/UvA)

Competing Narratives in Historical Culture in and beyond Indonesia
Chair: Nanci Adler (NIOD)

9.30-10.00 John Roosa (UBC), Massacres as non-events: fifty years of denying a 
politicide
10.00-10.30 Farabi Fakih (UGM), The discourse of Guided Democracy in the 
post-New Order era
10.30-11.00 Geoffrey Robinson (UCLA), Indonesia’s anti-leftist violence in 
comparative perspective

11.00 Coffee

Historical Culture and Transitional Justice in and beyond Indonesia
Chair: Gerry van Klinken (KITLV/UvA)

11.20 -11.50 Christian Gerlach (UB), Indonesian narratives of survival and 
their relation to societal persecution
11.50-12.20 Asvi Warman Adam (LIPI), Reconciliation for some - why not for all? 
The Air Force, the Chinese, the communists
12.20-12.50 Robert Cribb (ANU), Modes of Denial: Indonesia and genocide in 
comparative perspective

12.50-13.50 Lunch (a warm Indosnesian lunch is included)

Roundtable 1: Institutional Legacies and Civil Society
Chair: Ugur Üngör (UU)

13.50-14.50        
Jessica Melvin (University of Melbourne), Agency and the Indonesian Genocide. 
Why does it matter today?
Abdul Wahid (UGM), Breaking the Silenced Past: The ‘Cleansing of Leftist 
Elements’ in Indonesian Public universities after the 1965 coup
Adriaan Bedner (UL), Macet Lagi or Dua Jalur: Getting  Rid of the 
Anti-Communist Legal Legacy

Roundtable 2: Transitional Justice – Communities
Chair: Ulbe Bosma

13.50-14.50 (parallel with roundtable 1)
Baskara T  Wardaya (USD), Transitional Justice at the grassroots level: the 
case of “Sekber ‘65”, Surakarta
Anett Keller, How to deal with the past?: Approaches, impact and challenges of 
locally driven civil society initiatives
Martijn Eickhoff (NIOD), Transnational memory and the meaning of mass violence 
against Chinese schools in Semarang

14.50-15.10 Tea / Coffee

Roundtable 3: Education Against Taboos
Chair: Saskia Wieringa (UvA)

15.10-16.10
Ayu Ratih (ISSI), How do we talk about “1965”?
Agus Suwignyo (UGM), Counting the uncounted: Indonesia’s 1965 and the changing 
trajectory of teacher-training policy
Annie Pohlman (UQ), Women’s testimonies of rape and torture as crimes against 
humanity in Indonesia

Roundtable 4: Transitional Justice – Reparations
Chair: Papang Hidayat (Amnesty International)         

15.10-16.10 (parallel with roundtable 3)
Katharine McGregor (University of Melbourne), ‘Memory and historical justice 
for the 1965 violence in Indonesia’
Sri Lestari (Ayu) Wahyuningroem (ANU), State reparation and challenges for 
truth and justice for 1965 mass violence
Vannessa Hearman (University of Sydney), Contesting victimhood and the place of 
‘incidental victims’ in the 1965 case

16.10-16.30 Closing Reflections

16.30-17.30 Drinks

Exhibition

>From 1 to 9 October, the International Institute of Social History (IISH) 
>organises a small exhibition about the mass violence that occurred in 
>Indonesia in 1965 and 1966. Hundreds of thousands perished in these events, 
>and they remain shrouded in taboos. The exhibition will display reports, books 
>and memoirs from the IISH collection. The exhibition opens as part of the 
>international symposium “1965” Today. Living With the Indonesian Massacres.

Organized by

NIOD, KITLV and UCLA.

Sponsored by

NIOD, KITLV, UCLA, IISG, Amnesty International, Leiden University and KNAW.
  

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