Endy Bayuni, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Commentary | Tue, February 26 2013, 9:50 AM
Paper Edition | Page: 2
Indonesia’s rise in prominence on the global stage has
unfortunately not been accompanied by its ability to tell its own
stories. The Indonesian story abroad is still largely told by
non-Indonesians. There is nothing wrong with this, except that it is
devoid of the perspectives and the aspirations of the Indonesians, the
people who are experiencing and making the dramatic changes that are
taking place in the fourth most populous nation in the world.
Now
with Indonesia’s international profile rising, there is a growing
international demand for the Indonesian story, or stories, to be told
preferably by Indonesians. The government’s decision to recognize the
role and potential contribution from the growing ranks of the Indonesian
diaspora abroad last year could not have come earlier. These
Indonesians, whether they retain their Indonesian citizenship or have
taken up new nationalities in their new homes, make the best tellers of
the Indonesian story.
I had the fortune to live and work in the
United States as a senior fellow at the East-West Center office in
Washington DC for almost one year in 2011. My specific assignment there
was to help the center explain Asia, most particularly of course
Indonesia, to the US crowd, particularly but not exclusively the policy
establishment.
The East-West Center, with headquarters in
Honolulu, Hawaii, runs a small office in the US capital to help explain
the importance of the Asia Pacific region to the US national interests. I
was privileged to help with that function, with a room in its office a
few blocks from the White House and Congress Building.
The time I
spent there qualified me to be a member of the Indonesian diaspora.
This is not the first time that I have spent a considerably long time
abroad, including my time as the son of a diplomat in my childhood and
later on as a college student and participant of various fellowship
programs. But I can definitely vouch that global interest about
Indonesia, and about the Indonesian story, has never been as high as it
is today.
Not without a reason, too.
In the past decade
or so, thanks to the democratization process and the accompanying
economic development, Indonesia has earned a positive labeling in
international media and literature: the third largest democracy in the
world, the largest democracy among Muslim-majority countries, the
largest and most important Southeast Asian economy. In compliance with
the constitutional mandate, Indonesia is playing a bigger role in
promoting global peace and prosperity. Its economy is now in the ranks
of the 20 largest in the world, and at the present rate of growth all
predictions say that Indonesia will be in the top 10 by 2025 and even
the top five by 2040.
China, and to a lesser extent India, have
obviously taken most of the spotlight when discussing the rise of Asia,
but many in the policy establishment in Washington are also looking at
other rising players in Asia, most notably Southeast Asia, including
Indonesia. But while there are enough Chinese and Indians to tell their
own stories, there aren’t enough Indonesians who are telling the
Indonesian story to the world.
Now that Indonesia is becoming an
important global player, the world wants to know a lot more about the
country, about its people, its cultures and traditions, its political
and economic systems and the aspirations of the people. For now, the
Indonesian story is still largely being told by non-Indonesians. The
major American media, for example, still focus too much on old familiar
issues such as terrorism, radical Islam, natural disasters and military
impunity, when reporting about Indonesia.
While these stories are
important, there are other stories about Indonesia that need to be
told: The struggle of an emerging democracy, the people’s aspirations
for all types of freedom, the challenges of peoples with diverse racial,
ethnical, cultural and religious backgrounds trying to live together as
one nation. There are stories about Islam in Indonesia (and Southeast
Asia) that defy negative stereotypes people in the West have about
Muslims.
In the absence of enough literature about Indonesia
written in English or any other foreign language (this merits a separate
discussion), the story of Indonesia for now will have to be narrated by
its own people wherever they are. All the Indonesian missions abroad
are doing their part and I know the Indonesian Embassy in Washington DC
is working very hard to tell the Indonesian story. But Indonesia needs a
lot more than that.
The best contribution that the Indonesian
diaspora abroad can give to their home country is to help tell the
Indonesian story to people wherever they have set up their home today. I
know some of them are already doing this in their own way and among
their circle of friends, often serving them Indonesian food.
But we need a lot more from them. And we need them to tell the story as it is, good or bad.
This
article is prepared for the seminar on “The Rising Impact of Diaspora
on Indonesia” organized by the Indonesia Diaspora Business Council to be
held in Jakarta on Feb. 26.
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