Refl: Netters yang budiman,
Apakah ada yang tahu sekolah mana di Indonesia untuk bisa belajar menjadi 
sexologist? Apakah lamaran untuk menjadi murid pada sekolah tsb masih terbuka?


http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/health/indonesian-sexologist-makes-international-headlines-with-podcast-launch/468477
Indonesian Sexologist Makes International Headlines With Podcast Launch


September 29, 2011

 Zoya Amirin, Indonesia’s most prominent female sex psychologist, said she is 
“very nervous” about the launch of her new video podcast “In Bed With Zoya,” 
which will be officially launched today. (AP Photo) 
Zoya Amirin, Indonesia’s most prominent female sex psychologist, said she is 
“very nervous” about today's launch of her new video podcast, “In Bed With 
Zoya.”

Even though the reactions to her Web site, which has been up and running since 
the beginning of this month, have been mainly positive, Zoya said she was 
anxious about how people will react to her podcasts — 15-minute video clips 
that tackle topics related to human sexuality.

To give the serious topic of sex education a more casual feel, Zoya has 
recruited the help of her friend and well-known TV personality Chantal Della 
Concetta.

“It will be like two friends having an intimate talk or discussion about a 
certain topic, rather than me giving a lecture,” Zoya said.

On Thursday, Chantal said she was very excited about the launch and added that 
it was a lot of fun for her to shoot the first couple of episodes together with 
Zoya.

“I think the whole crew really enjoyed shooting ‘In Bed With Zoya,’” Chantal 
said. “For the first episode, it took us more than hour, because we were still 
getting used to the flow of the program. Once we figured out how to do this, 
the rest of the episodes were shot in less than 20 minutes.”

The podcasts will be shown on a weekly basis, on both Zoya’s web site 
(www.zoyaamirin.com) and Indonesia’s first Internet television IniTv 
(www.initv.net) to registered users.

Speaking to the Associated Press, Zoya said she had come across every myth 
imaginable in her job as sex psychologist in Indonesia: An uncircumcised girl 
will become sex-crazed. Clove cigarettes increase virility. A gecko’s saliva 
can cure AIDS.

The story has been picked up by newspapers and Web sites around the world.

“People here really believe in myths ... that’s my biggest challenge,” Amirin 
said, adding she wanted to make her show as cool as possible so people will 
tune in without feeling they’re being talked down to.

“It’s time to embrace our sexuality in a healthy way,” she said, “and to be 
mature in our understanding.”

Her job illustrates some of the changes taking place in Indonesia, which 
toppled its longtime dictator Gen. Suharto in a wave of pro-democracy street 
protests just over a decade ago.

The nation of 240 million remains socially conservative in most areas, 
including relationships, something old-style politicians are desperate to 
maintain. Yet these customs are coming under pressure from a more freewheeling 
approach to sex, in part due to increased wealth and more females living and 
working alone before marriage.

Nearly 40 percent of teens have had sex, a new survey shows, and the Internet 
has opened the gates to a subject long considered off-limits in public schools.

Bringing up the word “condom” could cost a teacher his job.

That point was hammered home by Education Minister Muhammad Nuh himself, after 
a video of a much-loved pop star having sex with two girlfriends made its way 
to YouTube, putting the country of the verge of sexual hysteria.

Asked whether it might be time to add sex ed to the curriculum, he said “No! 
... I may be obsolete .... but I think this is something you should learn about 
naturally.”

Young people have even less luck at home.

For most, bringing up the subject of sex with their parents is inconceivable.

“That would just be too embarrassing,” said Dianita Permani, an 18-year-old 
high school student in the capital, Jakarta.

“I’d rather talk about it with my close friends ... look things up on the 
Internet, read vulgar novels,” she says with a giggle. “Personally, I don’t 
want to have sex until I get married. But it is everywhere. I’ll just have to 
follow my instincts, I guess, and figure out for myself what’s good or bad.”

Amirin hopes people like Permani will turn to her as a credible and easily 
accessible source of information.

Her podcast, which will be co-hosted by television personality Chantal Della 
Concetta, who has drawn some controversy herself for racy lingerie pictures in 
a popular magazine, will at first be a frank conversation between two friends.

The first subject: Debunking sexual myths.

They include that putting a bead beneath a boy’s foreskin will enhance his 
sexual pleasure, and that girls will be nymphomaniacs if they don’t get 
circumcisions, which continue despite a 2006 ban. Folklore that gecko saliva 
could cure AIDS, in a country grappling with the fastest growing endemic in 
Asia, unleashed a wave of gecko hunting and a surge in prices for the reptiles 
a couple of years ago.

Eventually, the Web site will include a free online chat service.

Both women are ready for criticism.

Though most of Indonesia’s 210 million Muslims are moderate, a hard-liner 
fringe has become more vocal and violent in recent years, attacking bars, 
transvestites and anything else deemed “blasphemous.”

The hard-liners also have succeeded in influencing politicians who — afraid of 
being labeled unIslamic — pushed through a controversial anti-porn law, used to 
imprison Nazril “Ariel” Irham, the pop star, even though it appears his 
sexcapades were never intended for public viewing.

Amirin defended him at his trial, saying he did not show any signs of being an 
exhibitionist.

More recently, Jakarta Gov. Fauzi Bowo captured the conservative mood of the 
country’s leaders when he responded to the gang-rape of two young women on a 
public minibus by blaming the victim. Wear a miniskirt, he said earlier this 
month, and you’re practically asking for it.

Aside from a small protest in the capital, Bowo’s comments barely made any 
waves.

Though Amirin’s website marks the latest attempt at online sex education, it’s 
certainly not the first.

Last year the National AIDS Commission launched an interactive Web page aimed 
at teens and young adults. Others have come and gone during the past decade.

Amirin hopes hers is here to stay,

“I want to change mindsets,” she said. “It’s about time everybody in Indonesia 
be more open-minded about sex.”

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Kirim email ke