The May 1998 riots in Indonesia, sparked by economic
problems such food shortages, largely targted Indonesians of Chinese descent
This question originally appeared on Quora.
Answer by Hindra Martono:
I never told this story to anyone—not to my friends, not
even discussing it with my family.
I was 8 years old when it happened. My parents run a grocery
store, which is an easy target for the rioters, as the economic problems of
Indonesia in 1989 caused rising price for foods, prompting them to sack shops
like ours.
As a child, I didn't understand anything about the situation,
but I remember the date. It was May 14, 1998, around 2 p.m., I think, after
lunch. I remember I was watching the news about the riots that were happening
all around Jakarta from the day before. My family was clearly terrified and
discussing our options.
Then the mob came.
I remember they were banging on our doors. We couldn't get
outside for the fear that they'd just kill us. My father, running out of ideas,
brought us to the attic to hide. He thought that if the mob somehow got in,
they would just take all our belongings, and if they couldn't find us, they'd
just go away with our valuables.
I remember that my brother and sister were also there,
frightened. My sister cried so much. They were discussing what if they burned
us down along with the house. My mother asked me to pray to God. I was counting
a tasbih, the Islamic prayer beads. (It was our maid's tasbih;
our family is Christian.) I'm not sure why I was doing that, but I didn't feel
scared. Maybe I was not really understanding what was happening.
Then I remember I saw one of the mob climb up, break our
window, and open the door from the inside. The mob flooded in. They took
everything. Food, money, electronics, furniture—all of it. Among them, I saw my
father's employees, people who were happily playing with me as a kid, carrying
our belongings. I do remember that I really hated them at that time. I felt
like I was betrayed.
Eventually, they did find us hiding in the attic. I don't
remember how we got out from the house, but I remember my mother
shouted,"You can take it all! You can take it all!" Somehow, we
escaped from the house, and we got to my uncle's place—I don't remember how. We
should not have been able to use our car in that situation. Maybe we walked all
along.
After that, we moved from one relative's house to another,
too terrified to go back to our own home. I remember I was secretly happy
because I didn't need to go to school. When we actually got back, I saw my
father's shop and our home in devastating conditions. I can't imagine what my
father's feeling was, seeing the shop that he built from scratch for almost 20
years just destroyed like that.
I remember life after that was hard. Somehow, my father was
able to restart his business, but we got nothing and needed to live frugally. A
lot of hostility was shown to Chinese Indonesians at that time. I identified
myself as Indonesian, but my hatred to people who destroyed my father's hard
work made me unsure about that. One day in PPKn (Pancasila and Civics
Education) class, my teacher asked, "Who among you feel that you are an
Indonesian?" I was not raising my hand. She really scolded me at that
time.
Things are getting better now. The Chinese New Year is a
national holiday, thanks to Gus Dur. We can display our unique culture as
Chinese Indonesian. The racial discrimination that we experienced before is
still there, but the situation has much improved since. I managed to get a
scholarship to study abroad, and I feel this opportunity made me think a lot
about my identity. I met with mainland Chinese, but I identify myself more as
an Indonesian. I can't choose my birthplace and my ancestors, but I can
certainly choose the country that I care for, and that is Indonesia.
Until now, I still don't really understand why Chinese
Indonesians were targeted. I know that there is financial and political crises,
but I don't know why and how the riot happened, who started it, and why there
is a need to divide between Chinese Indonesian and Pribumi.
Oh, and some journalist came to our house after the riot and
interviewed our family. He wrote an article describing how much fear the Chinese
Indonesians experienced at that time.
More questions on Indonesia:
- Why is Indonesia so often ignored in the Western media?
- Why do Chinese still live in Indonesia after the 1998 riot?
- Why did Indonesia become democracy in 1998?
·
‘The Fifth Season (Pancaroba) by Kerry B. Collison
·
In the aftermath of Indonesia's economic collapse, Chinese women are
targeted by the President's son-in-law's reckless, and brutal Special Forces.
In an evolving Islamic climate, anti-Chinese sentiment drives the country to
the brink of collapse as international interest is heightened by factual,
photojournalist accounts, of true stories of survival.
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