http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2012/07/06/exploring-ramos-horta-s-home.html

Exploring Ramos-Horta’s home
by Aboeprijadi Santoso on Friday, July 6, 2012 at 12:50pm ·
http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2012/07/06/exploring-ramos-horta-s-home.html
Aboeprijadi Santoso, Contributor, Dili | Feature | Fri, July 06 2012, 6:52 AM

JP July 6
Paper Edition | Page: 21
The man looked fresh and happy even though he had just lost the presidential 
election.
He had one good reason for his appearance: Few could compete with him in the 
frequency of his trips abroad, jet-setting between world capitals to campaign 
for his country’s right to self-determination.
After independence, the man continued to travel a lot, first as senior minister 
for foreign affairs and, until the recent election, as president of Timor Leste.

The Garden

Now, Jose Manuel Ramos-Horta — friends call him Jose but he refers to himself 
as JRH — will stay home. “I am not going to go away for another 24 years,” he 
said in his last speech as president. But not because he wants to get some 
rest. 
In fact, he said he is open to any job that could help advance his country, 
eventually even to take a seat in a new cabinet after Timor Leste’s 
parliamentary elections on July 7, “depending on who and what kind of 
government”.
The one good reason for Ramos-Horta, 62, to stay at home is simple: he wants to 
enjoy his beautiful house. Located on Robert Kennedy Blvd. on the outskirts of 
the capital of Dili on the lower part of the hill, the house has a beautiful 
view toward the coast.
The place is not particularly luxurious, because it’s supposed to be 100 
percent environment-friendly with at least a four- to five-meter-high roof, 
which allows air to move and circulate freely so the house doesn’t need 
air-conditioning.

Recycled timber
 
Guesthouse
The site consists of three compounds: the main house, the security personnel 
house attached to the garage, and a guesthouse — all surrounded by a large yard 
and garden totaling about 500 acres.
What is more: the roof stands on recycled wood that is connected —like a 
traditional Indonesian house — without nails.
“I had no specific inspiration,” Ramos-Horta explained. “It’s totally my 
creation, my imagination; I wanted an open space and local materials. Except 
for some structures, I used a lot of bamboo, recycled timber that people threw 
away.” 
Construction went in stages starting in 2000.
“When I came here there was not a single tree. Three years ago, I planted some. 
An Indonesian friend helped me to design the garden. He went to Bali and the 
islands nearby and brought hundreds of plants like mangos, etc. Thus there has 
been a bit of inspiration from Bali,” said Ramos-Horta proudly.
The result is an interesting mix: a traditional house with a typical 
Timorese-styled roof with lovely palm trees and fruit gardens, an open living 
room with classic Asian-inspired chairs, tables and ornaments, and Western 
photos and posters on the walls here and there.
The home has three bedrooms, a study, dining room and two living rooms. The 
latter are cozy, with wooden chairs and artworks strewn about, including a 
unique yellow cart from Yogyakarta.

JRH's parent

In his living room, Ramos-Horta showed off an old, little-known photograph of 
his late Portuguese father and Timorese mother (who now stays at her own house 
in Dili, but sometimes also at Ramos-Horta’s) on the wall and a photograph of 
himself and his brother marching together as Fretilin activists in the mid-70s. 
His brother and other siblings were killed during the war and these 
remembrances of the past are most dear to him. 

With brother-fighter
 
Lost siblings

Godfather

The open living room reflects his favorite figures from film, music and the 
political world. There are famous portraits of Marilyn Monroe, Che Guevara, 
John F. Kennedy, Ella Fitzgerald, and Marlon Brando and Al Pacino in a 
celebrated scene from Francis Ford Coppola’s epic crime film The Godfather. 

Favourite celebrities

US President Bill Clinton and UNTAET chief, the late Sergio Vieira de Mello, 
are among those honored on the walls. Myanmarese hero Aung San Suu Kyi’s photo 
has a special place in the library. There is also a picture of Ramos-Horta 
dressed as a Catholic priest. “That’s just joking,” he said, laughing. 
He also uses his home to help friends in trouble or accommodate the poor who 
need help. The backyard was the site where an attempted assassination almost 
killed him
in early 2008.

Personalized 3-seat-car

Most conspicuous perhaps are Ramos-Horta’s three cars, each uniquely associated 
with him because they are no longer available or were specifically designed for 
him: an old Volkswagen, a blue two-seater, and a luxurious sports car of which 
the seats and the front and back — perhaps a tad narcissistically — are marked 
with JRH and “Nobel Peace Laureate 1996, President of Republic of Timor Leste”. 
ends

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