Indo (Eurasian) Communities in Postcolonial Indonesia
Abstract
During the 1940s and 1950s, around 200,000 Eurasians (Indos) of
mixed European and Indonesian descent left Indonesia. In time,
they formed distinct communities in The Netherlands, the United
States, Australia and elsewhere. A smaller number of Indos who
had chosen Indonesian citizenship or had been unable to leave
remained in Indonesia. Until now, the fate of Indo communities
who remained in Indonesia was largely unstudied. This thesis
presents a transnational history of Indos in postcolonial
Indonesia, framing their history as part of both Indonesian
history and broader Indisch (Indies) Dutch history. It compares
their circumstances with those of Indonesia‟s largest 'foreign
minority', Chinese Indonesians. The thesis draws on Dutch
archives, newspaper accounts and oral history interviews carried
out in Java and North Sulawesi, Queensland and the Netherlands.
Indos comprised a significant component of the European community
in late colonial society, and many also held 'native' status.
Young Indonesian independence fighters killed and tortured Indo
and other families across Java in a loosely coordinated genocide
during the Bersiap period in 1945-47. At least ten thousand Indos
stayed in Indonesia after the transfer of sovereignty in 1949.
During the New Order period (1966-1998), they faced significant
pressures to assimilate, but were occasionally held up as a
'model minority' compared with Chinese Indonesians. Some took up
work as actors and models, paving the way for the predominance of
an 'Indo look' on Indonesian television in the 1990s. Younger
Indos, usually the children of expatriates, capitalised on the
tradition established by older generations, so that the term
'Indo' became synonymous with fame and stardom. From the
mid-2000s, in response to popular historical understandings about
ethnicity and race, Indos were more likely to be cast only as
wealthy characters in Sinetron. After the fall of Suharto, in
tandem with a rise in identity politics in the Netherlands, older
Indos in Java began to meet regularly with other Dutch speakers.
In the Minahasa region of North Sulawesi, these social gatherings
were regular even during the Suharto period. Indos there married
members of the local mestizo Borgo (formerly burger) community,
so that the term 'Indo' became a synonym for 'Borgo'.
This research reveals ways in which national contexts frame how
the colonial and postcolonial past are remembered and represented
in popular historical consciousness in a former colony and a
former metropole among members of a group considered to transcend
national boundaries. It also reveals how different Indo
communities in Indonesia have interacted with shifting concepts
of 'indigeneity' across historical periods, including 'native'
(inlander) status, boemipoetera, pribumi and adat. The memories
of Indonesian Indos diverge considerably from the memories of
Dutch Indos, who often recall the colonial Indies as a paradise
and postcolonial Indonesia as a violent and poverty stricken
nation. The absence of historical frameworks in Indonesia for
events like the Bersiap, along with the 'historical capital' that
comes with recalling involvement in certain key events in the
history of the nation, determine which memories are recalled and
which memories are not voiced in both postcolonial contexts.
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Keywords
Eurasian, Indonesia, Indonesian history, Chinese Indonesians, Dutch-Indonesians, Europeans Indonesia, Rosalind Hewett, Indo, Indos, Eurasians, Minahasa, Manado, Borgo, foreign minority Indonesia, foreign minorities Indonesia, transnational history, Netherlands Indies, mass violence Indonesia, mass violence, Bersiap, popular culture Indonesia, Indo-European, North Sulawesi, Sinetron, burger, burgher, memory Indonesia, indigeneity Indonesia, Indo (Eurasian) Communities in Postcolonial Indonesia, postcolonial Indonesia, oral history Indonesia
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