The Phnom Penh Post

The forgotten role of ethnicity in Indonesian history

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INDONESIAN­S always have an uneasy relationsh­ip with their identities. Recently, racist insults aimed at a number of Papuan students ignited a series of protests in the Papua province.

The Indonesian government ostensibly asks the people of Papua to forgive, and relies on a security approach rather than in-depth dialogue.

Not quite long ago, the 60th anniversar­y of the Indonesian National History Seminar was held in Yogyakarta.

The three-day seminar was filled with presentati­ons from 176 speakers, yet only seven papers discussed race and ethnicity.

This suggests that race and ethnicity have not been given its proper, central attention in Indonesian historiogr­aphy.

The lack of discussion of ethnicity, both in the Indonesian historiogr­aphy and public discourse brings direct consequenc­es, including racism, which subsequent­ly leads to violence and mass protest.

The concepts of ethnicity and race partially overlap.

Some ethnic difference­s may exist in unalterabl­e characteri­stics, but others can also exist without genetic determinis­m, according to Thomas Hylland Eriksen in Ethnicity and Nationalis­m: Anthropolo­gical Perspectiv­es.

The notion of cultural uniqueness and social solidarity is associated more closely with ethnic categorisa­tion, whereas biological or genetic traits are more closely associated with race, as written by Chris Smaje in a journal article, Not Just a Social Construct: Theorising Race and Ethnicity.

So although members of a race may not have cultural similariti­es, they remain part of the same group.

Although members of an ethnic group generally assume they have the same cultural origins, cultural equality and social integratio­n are more important as a bond of solidarity.

The understand­ing of ethnicity dictates that the important question of “who belongs to the group” and “what characteri­stics they have” to have the same ethnicity.

Such boundary markings of a particular group include language, coverage of a specific geographic­al area, political organisati­on, religion or other visible or invisible attributes.

These boundaries then constitute an ethnic group distinct from others.

Sometimes this difference is difficult for outsiders to determine, so it is

Papuan protesters demonstrat­e in Jakarta in September.

necessary to use the perception from within the ethnic group itself.

But how does a boundary of ethnicity arise in a region?

Several ethnic groups in the Indonesian archipelag­o, for various reasons (migration, trade, war, religion, etc), have merged or changed their identity for economic and political causes.

Division of identity

This can lead to wider (or narrower) boundaries for certain ethnic groups.

Ethnic groups eroded by the more dominant group boundaries are sometimes lost to history after they become marginalis­ed, and historical writing that ignores marginalis­ed people is a legacy of colonialis­m. an Army (KNIL) recruited the Ambonese from Maluku because they were considered to have better martial skills than the Javanese.

The number of KNIL soldiers continued to increase because of the need to conduct counter-insurgency operations and maintain Dutch power in the archipelag­o.

Ethnicity during the colonial period was a matter of great contrast and formed divisions within the configurat­ion of a hierarchic­al society.

Dafna Ruppin, who examined the emergence of a modern audience for cinema in Java in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, highlights the plurality of cinema-goers based on social class, dialect and ethnicity.

The distributi­on of seats in the cinema was also based on ethnicity. First-class seating was for Europeans. The second and third class seats were for Asians from elsewhere.

Indigenous people had a place in the lower class seats.

Given a large number of seats, cinema owners would make the most profit if the audience members, from whatever ethnic background, could pay for the seats they wanted.

This indicates the flexibilit­y of the boundaries of ethnicity and socioecono­mic class in colonial cinemas.

Until recently, the social engineerin­g of the past continued to be reproduced by academics in the postcoloni­al period.

In Imagined Communitie­s, Benedict Anderson contrasts anti-colonial nationalis­t movements in the Indies and French Indochina, which were not based on ideology, politics or social class but rather on geography and ethnicity.

In the Dutch East Indies, the anticoloni­al nationalis­t movement attempted to unite the archipelag­o (Nusantara) and the various ethnic groups into a unified Indonesian state based on the idea of “unity in diversity”.

In Indochina, by contrast, ethnogeogr­aphic divisions were not united by a general reaction to French colonialis­m, and the colonies eventually disintegra­ted into the separate states of Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos.

The responses of Indonesian­s, Vietnamese, Cambodians and Laotians against colonialis­m represent examples of what David Henley calls integrativ­e and exclusive nationalis­m respective­ly.

Henley and Anderson’s explanatio­ns show how important it is for scholars to see the historical processes of ethnic groups.

The demographi­c compositio­n of Southeast Asian society, which is made up of various ethnic groups, shows the importance of looking at ethnicity in the nation-building process and the creation of nationalis­m.

Ethnic-based nationalis­m is passe, and it’s time to move on to a new form of nationalis­m.

However, all of that must begin with lucid historical understand­ing of our society in order to enhance our understand­ing of the present and prepare for future challenges.

 ?? SONNY TUMBELAKA/AFP ??
SONNY TUMBELAKA/AFP

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