http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2008/11/04/aceh039s-tiro-still-has-a-cause-democracy.html

Tuesday, November 4, 2008 8:22 PM


Aceh's Tiro still has a cause: Democracy
Aboeprijadi Santoso ,  Banda Aceh   |  Tue, 11/04/2008 10:36 AM  |  Opinion 

The top leader of former rebel group the Free Aceh Movement (GAM), Teungku Chik 
Hasan Muhammad di Tiro, may be the founder of Indonesia's longest proactive 
separatist movement, but when he came home it was not as a rebel, but still 
with a cause. 

The first time I met him 19 years ago in The Hague, the Netherlands, he was a 
proud man; he showed me photos of young Acehnese joining military training in 
Libya; the second time we met, six years later, he was an angry man, explaining 
why he thought Aceh had the right to independence; and during his recent trip 
to Aceh, I watched an old man, still proud of his beloved homeland, calling on 
his compatriots to learn the history of the country and to maintain peace. 

Aceh, he said, "has been victimized by Javanese aggressors, using a masquerade 
named Indonesia. The Acehnese should maintain their freedom or seize it. Every 
struggle will strive for a victory to be achieved sooner or later. I pin much 
hope on myself, on the Acehnese nation and on other nations. We have the right, 
on a legal basis, to independence." 

How do you think you will achieve it? I asked. "Jalan apa saja (By any means)," 
he replied. 

Hasan Tiro is a man of strong opinion. Now, 13 years later, we know his former 
enemy, the central government -- in particular the Army -- also took jalan apa 
saja to achieve victory. Hence, the dirty war, misery and the deaths of tens of 
thousands, especially among local civilians. 

In the late 1950s Hasan was a nationalist who dreamed of Indonesian federation. 
However, he later changed his view and attempted to build new patriotism by 
transforming his patron Daud Beureueh's idea of Darul Islam (DI) of the late 
1950s into a vision of Acehnese nationalism, thus redefining the 
politico-religious desire into a modern nation-state idea. 

For, "to continue the DI would result in a civil war", not freedom, said 
Suheluddin D. Batubara, a former aide to Beureueh, in 2003. 

It was this redefinition into Acehnese nationalism that implied a challenge and 
demanded a redefinition of Indonesian nationhood. But we also know that this 
patriotism, which Hasan over time introduced into Acehnese consciousness, has 
in effect been strengthened and widened by Jakarta's broken promises and 
violence and the suffering that the war caused. 

Now, as he traveled from one mausoleum to another, praying before Aceh's endatu 
or ancestors (Sultan Iskandar Muda, Sjech Abdul Rauf al Sangkili), Acehnese 
heroes (his great-grandfather Tgku. Chik di Tiro, who is also a national hero) 
and comrades (Tgku. M. Usman Lampoh Awe, GAM commander Abdullah Syafei'i), we 
saw him paying tribute, expressing pride and demonstrating his loyalty to Aceh. 

His trip thus suggested that Hasan remains loyal to his cause even though his 
homeland -- contrary to his promise not to return home before Aceh becomes free 
-- remains within the republic. 

Similarly, although his idea of a "successor state", which was supposed to 
succeed the Dutch, never materialized, he might have noticed that Aceh has 
become a significant part of the consciousness of Indonesia's nationhood. 

If Aceh means in the first place a point of identity to the Acehnese, and at 
the same time an important element of Indonesia's nationhood, there is, 
however, a third factor that could bind the two: democracy. 

After all, wasn't it greater democracy for Aceh that Hasan Tiro and GAM said 
they wanted to realize? Hasan surely remembers that West-Java DI leader 
Kartosuwirjo resisted Beureueh's idea of a federal Islamic state in the 1950s 
and recalls that former president Soeharto flatly rejected his federal idea 
when he met with him in the early 1970s; instead, Soeharto used violence to 
break any opposition. These were indeed among the reasons that he chose to 
rebel. 

It's important, therefore, that in addition to paying tribute to his Acehnese 
ancestors, Hasan during his trip stressed a second theme -- peace -- by calling 
on the Acehnese people to respect the Helsinki pact of 2005 and thanked the 
world, the mediator Martti Ahtisaari and the European Union for their 
contributions to peace and post-tsunami aid. 

By praising the Helsinki pact, he indeed accepted not only the republic of 
which Aceh is part, but also democracy for both Aceh and Indonesia. A salient 
detail was the irony that it is now the GAM leaders, not Jakarta, that ban the 
term "separatism". "Peace is now forever," said Malik Mahmud representing 
Hasan. 

What role Hasan Tiro should now play is a matter for the Acehnese to decide. 
That people celebrated his homecoming with heart and tears suggests that the 
decades of conflict and suffering changed not only Aceh, but also Hasan's role 
and image. 

To many Acehnese until the early 1980s he was just an anonymous self-exiled 
rebel leader. But the enthusiasm with which the Acehnese welcomed him last week 
as a "fighter for the nation" (pejuang bangsa) means that the concept of Wali 
Nanggroe, a title Hasan claimed and used throughout his rebel years, has 
changed from its original meaning -- the Guardian of the State -- into a 
unifier, a penyatu bangsa Aceh, as one local put it. 

Since the Wali is not a sultan and there is no wish to restore the sultanate, 
to do so would be artificial. Instead, as former GAM negotiator Nur Djuli 
argued, the Acehnese "should look forward and the Wali (Hasan) should return 
his mandate to the people, leaving the historic institution of Wali Nanggroe as 
a symbol to unite the people of Aceh". And with it, Djuli added, "GAM will fade 
away". 

While Hasan Tiro's homecoming may be too late to enable him, at 83, to exercise 
any political function, his trip has performed an important symbolic role to 
unite Aceh -- in addition to enabling Partai Aceh, the party founded by GAM, 
who organized the events, to gain momentum going into the 2009 elections. 

Now that Hasan the Wali is no longer a famous-but-faceless figure who was far 
away for decades, he will be just an ordinary human being. With it, the myths 
surrounding his person will fade away. 

The writer is journalist. He can be reached at [EMAIL PROTECTED] 

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