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Moluccan separatism

Richard Chauvel, Nationalists, soldiers and separatists: The Ambonese
Islands from
colonialism to revolt, 1880-1950, Leiden: KITLV Press, 1990. 432pp. Rrp:
AU$45.95.

Reviewed by RON WITTON

Richard Chauvel has written what must be the definitive study of the
colonial history of Ambon. The
book concludes with the event that concluded that period, the ill-fated
and short-lived 1950
separatist movement known as the Republik Maluku Selatan (RMS) or the
Republic of the South
Moluccas. He begins his final chapter by stating: 'The RMS and its
suppression was a tragedy for
Ambonese society. It was the worst possible way in which Ambon could have
become part of
independent Indonesia' (p.393).

A study such as this reminds us how much of Indonesia's regional history
still needs to be
researched, analysed and understood if the totality of the nation's
history is to be approached.

Ambon, the present capital of the province of the Moluccas Islands, or
Maluku to give them their
Indonesian name, is of particular interest to Australia for several
reasons. Australian soldiers fought
valiantly there before being overwhelmed by the Japanese who took Ambon
in January 1942. More
recently, as part of eastern Indonesia, it is a region of Indonesia in
which Australia is playing an
increasing role as aid provider, investor and neighbour. The annual
Darwin-Ambon sailing race
appropriately symbolises the growing links between Australia's 'Top End'
and Indonesia's 'Bagian
Timur'.

So what is Chauvel's story? It is the tale of European contact with, and
transformation of, this
'homeland' of the fabled Spice Islands. Nearly five hundred years ago
these islands attracted Spanish
and Portuguese explorers and traders to the 'Far East'. They made
fabulous profits from selling
cloves and other spices to Europe, where the better-off desperately
needed such commodities to
mask the taste of meat which, prior to refrigeration, was often less than
fresh. Hence we already find
St. Francis Xavier there in 1546. A desperate race followed between Islam
and Christianity for the
souls and wealth of the region. This competition saw the communities of
Maluku split early on
between these two great world religions, a split that has haunted Maluku
society ever since. The
local raja became compromised by their close association with the Dutch
rulers, having turned to
Christianity to safeguard their feudal position. From now on Christian
Ambonese became an
important element of the Dutch civil service and of the Dutch colonial
military throughout the
archipelago.

Against this background Chauvel meticulously examines the rise of the
nationalist movement earlier
this century, particularly among Muslims in the region who had been
effectively excluded from the
benefits of colonial society. The sudden and complete collapse of the
Dutch before the Japanese
onslaught in World War II laid the basis for a complete transformation of
Ambonese society.

By the time the Japanese had been defeated, there were sufficient
nationalists throughout Indonesia,
including Maluku, to rise and oppose the Dutch-sponsored Republic of the
United States of
Indonesia (RUSI), which was created to counter the threat posed by the
nationalist Republic of
Indonesia to a continued Dutch presence.

How southern Maluku, and particular Ambon, was hastened into declaring
its independence from
the Republic of Indonesia when the puppet state of RUSI collapsed, makes
very sad reading indeed.
The many Dutch-educated and 'loyalist' Moluccan soldiers and civil
servants, who had devoted their
lives to running the former Dutch East Indies, could see no future in a
Republic dominated by what
they perceived as a Muslim majority hostile to them and to their former
role as colonial servants.
Their administrative and military skills, and their large numbers, could
only have been effectively put
to use if they had been absorbed into the sprawling and newly independent
Republic. There was no
real future for them in the small society of Maluku, whether independent
or not. Moreover, this poor
backwater had become dependent on the wages they had regularly remitted
to their families and
villages.

With the suppression of the RMS, many thousands of these Christian
Ambonese were repatriated to
Holland where, ever since, they have remained in a barrack-like society
on the fringes of Dutch
society, dreaming of an eventual return to their homeland which they had
hoped one day to 'liberate'.
Encouraged by the Dutch for many years as a weapon against Indonesia,
particularly for the many
years during which Indonesia and Holland fought over the sovereignty of
Irian Jaya, they have now
been completely abandoned by the Dutch as Holland and Indonesia seek to
forge a close
partnership in the modern world. The last time they gained world
attention was in the mid- seventies,
when in desperation they hijacked a Dutch train and held the passengers
at gunpoint to publicise their
plight.

The story of Ambon and Maluku is one that shows in microcosm the
exploitation and social divisions
that resulted from colonialism. It also shows the way such historical
processes can impinge on a
society long after independence.

Dr Ron Witton is a sessional lecturer in Indonesian at the University of
Western Sydney and
the University of Wollongong.

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