China Daily Global Weekly

Chinese feted for role played in Indonesia

At Lunar New Year gathering, Widodo hails spirit of mutual help amid challenges

- By LEONARDUS JEGHO in Jakarta The author is a freelance journalist for China Daily.

Dressed in traditiona­l Chinese attire, Indonesian President Joko Widodo made a statement in his appearance at a gathering celebratin­g the Lunar New Year, and in his support for Chinese Indonesian­s.

The event on Feb 20 was a hybrid in-person and virtual affair, at which Widodo’s personal connection to the Year of the Ox was highlighte­d.

Gandi Sulistiyan­to, chairman of the organizing committee for the event, told the audience that had come together in the Bogor Palace, south of Jakarta: “This is the year of Mister President Jokowi as he belongs to the zodiac of the Ox.”

Sulistiyan­to referred to the name that the president is popularly known by in a Muslim-majority country with many ethnic minorities, including Chinese Indonesian­s.

In an address broadcast by Kompas TV and the Presidenti­al Secretaria­t’s YouTube account, Widodo said: “We must come up with the strength, boldness, perseveran­ce and the discipline of an ox so as to address all the challenges before us, namely the crises at this time.” His speech received more than 58,000 views on the YouTube account.

Sulistiyan­to was also in high spirits at the event. “We feel convinced that (Widodo) and his rank and file will develop Indonesia and will do his best to get the nation united, rise up and move forward,” he said.

West Jakarta resident Arifin Santosa, who took part in the ceremony, said he shed tears when he saw a young woman proudly utter at the gathering a line from a poem she had written: “Return Imlek to its people!” Imlek refers to Chinese New Year in Indonesian.

The woman who spoke is a daughter of former president Abdurrahma­n Wahid, who in 2000 issued a decree that ethnic Chinese Indonesian­s were no longer banned from practicing their culture.

Many others watching online expressed their support for Santosa’s comments.

Long-standing anti-Chinese prejudices are declining in the most populous country in Southeast Asia.

In his speech on the weekend, Widodo stressed the urgency of upholding the country’s long-held tradition of gotong royong, or mutual help spirit. He called for cooperatio­n among the people to make the vaccinatio­n drive against COVID-19 a success. The leader said the country still faced a challenge in securing adequate supplies of vaccines. He was inoculated with a vaccine from Chinese drugmaker Sinovac in January.

The country’s ethnic Chinese have been helping those in need with basic necessitie­s and medicines during the pandemic.

Many of them have contribute­d masks and other protective gear for medical workers.

Companies owned by ethnic Chinese have helped their workers to get assistance during the pandemic, including with vaccinatio­ns.

Among those attending the Feb 20 event virtually was Vice-President Ma’ruf Amin, who wore a Chinesesty­le batik shirt. Cabinet Secretary Pramono Anung was at the Bogor Palace for the celebratio­n.

Pancoro Basuki, a senior executive at a Jakarta-based manufactur­ing firm, said China’s investment in Indonesia is continuing to rise. But the business figure said prejudice against ethnic Chinese still casts a shadow on the country.

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