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Fascism in Indonesia, no big deal?
Aboeprijadi Santoso ,  Contributor ,  Jakarta   |  Sun, 07/20/2008 10:38
AM  |  Lifestyle

"Did the Nazi Party and its supporters give Indonesian nationalists a
chance to accelerate the process toward independence? Or did they have
to cooperate with the colonial power to evict the Nazi Party and its
supporters, thinking fascism was far more dangerous than colonialism?"

This quote comes from the back cover of historian Wilson's new book
Orang dan Partai Nazi di Indonesia: Kaum Pergerakan Menyambut Fasisme
(The Nazi Party and its supporters in Indonesia: How Indonesia's
national movements welcomed fascism), Komunitas Bambu, Jakarta, 2008).
It reflects the dilemma the independence movements faced from the 1920s
until independence.

Wilson has done a great service by describing fascist ideas and
movements as part of this nation's past, a little-known subject that
turns out to be part and parcel of our struggle toward independence.

How did it come about? Wilson traces people and organizations which
supported fascist ideas in the then Dutch East Indies by studying the
nature and development of Indonesia's political movements. He examines
Dutch capitalism, which brought about state structures that imposed
racial classifications as the colonial administration introduced modern
education. It gave rise to both the national awakening movement and a
broad spectrum of political movements.

The laws of the Dutch East Indies grew increasingly repressive as
popular movements, notably Sarekat Islam, became radicalized after the
early 1920s. The governor general acquired extraordinary rights enabling
him to expel political enemies and the administration was allowed to
arrest persons who distorted rust en orde (tranquility and order). In
the end, state control was most effectively exercised by the Dutch
intelligence agency, the Politieke Inlichtingen Dienst, or PID.

Indonesian fascism should be understood within the context of the global
impact of the Great Depression of the 1930s and its consequences, namely
the rise of fascism in Europe which provoked World War II. The
weaknesses of Indonesian political movements vis-*-vis the colonial
regime became evident once the communist rebellion of 1926-27 was
defeated. This, Wilson argues, led to some members of Indonesian popular
movements being impressed by national-socialist ideas as propagated by
the German Nazi Party (p. 67).

These new attitudes were soon visible. The Nazi Party's
national-socialist ideas were translated, published and advertised. Many
were impressed by Hitler's 1933 electoral victory. His spirited
propaganda for the hegemony of "Greater Germany" inspired similar ideas
of "Indonesia Mulia" (esteemed Indonesia) and "Indonesia Raya" (great
Indonesia) in Bandung. A fascist party was thus born: the Partai Fasis
Indonesia (PFI). Wilson chose for the book's front cover a unique photo
of people greeting Javanese dignitaries with the well-known Nazi salute.

Anti-fascist responses developed earlier when Partindo (1925) and
Gerindo (1937) arose and leaders like Tan Malaka became prominent. But
others, such as the newly established Indonesian National Party (PNI),
were confused: they considered fascism a danger that somehow could turn
into a "new hope".

On balance, however, popular movements with a clear anti-fascist stance
seemed weak.

Pramoedya Ananta Toer suggested in a 1997 interview only a few leaders
such as Tan Malaka, S.K. Trimurti and Amir Sjarifudin realized the
importance of the struggle against fascism. Historians Onghokham and
Anton Lucas concurred in a Radio Nederlands 1997 documentary. Onghokham
contrasted Indonesia's national struggle and other popular movements in
Burma, Vietnam and China. Led respectively by General Aung San, Ho Chi
Minh and Mao Zhe-dong, these movements were clearly inspired by
anti-fascist ideology.

Reluctance among Indonesian nationalists to cooperate with the Dutch in
order to fight the fascists (see the quote at the beginning of this
article) indicated the weakness of antifascism in Indonesia.

The discussion at the launching of Wilson's book (ironically held at the
former home of Prof. Soepomo, a freedom fighter whose ideas had inspired
Soeharto's New Order values) raised issues about potential neofascism.
Unfortunately, the discussion was clouded by a few taboos.

One suggestion during the discussion that Soekarno had fascist potential
prompted criticism and was set aside as if it were taboo. In fact,
Soekarno did admire Hitler's Third Reich and its vision of happiness for
all: "It's in the Dritte Reich that the Germans will see Germany at the
apex above other nations in this world," he said in 1963.

Soekarno was also charismatic and populist, two characteristics
associated with fascism. Crucially, he created the Sekber Golkar, the
joint secretariat of civil servants. Later transformed into the New
Order's Golkar, this entity became a partner to Soeharto and to the
military in building a hegemonic state with totalitarian and fascist
aspirations.

At the roots of this neofascism is a close but difficult relationship
between nationalism and fascism. It's a love-hate relationship since
irrational patriotism and irredentism, which idealize the nation's past
greatness, are aspects of fascist values. Only when manifested among
popular movements championing democracy could nationalism become the
antithesis of fascism.

In this sense, the wars in East Timor (1975-99) and Aceh (1976-2005) may
serve as examples of the state's fascist projects that clashed with
local nationalisms. For, contrary to the rhetoric of the unitary state,
neither conflict had anything to do with attempts to keep the nation
united; rather they were the state's attempt to exercise control over
people and territories through methods similar to those the Japanese
fascists applied in the 1940s when they established military structures
deep in both urban centers and the countryside. The Indonesian Military
did likewise by seizing the local heads and their constituents in East
Timor, and by controlling local chiefs, religious leaders and villages
in Aceh.

It is unfortunate that this militaristic concept of the unitary state --
like Soekarno's potentially problematic nationalist fascism -- were not
discussed at the book launch, since Wilson's book has, rightly, provoked
discussions that should heighten public awareness of neofascist
potential which could endanger our new democracy.

Fascist ideas once grew in our own soil. They were a marginal matter
once the national movements achieved their main aim of independence.
However, neofascist aspirations under certain circumstances could arise
again; indeed it succeeded in influencing state policies during the
three decades of Soeharto's New Order. That certainly is a big deal.



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