At first glance, Australia and Indonesia make curious
neighbors.
Cultural and
linguistic differences set us apart, yet we find ourselves living right next
door to each other and just like any neighborly relationship, ours certainly
has its ups and downs.
As Indonesia has celebrated 70 years of independence
this past week, there’s been a chance to recall the early days in the
Australia-Indonesia relationship. To reflect on a time when Australia reached
out a hand of friendship, blocked Dutch ships in the docks and welcomed the
newly independent nation into the region not only as a neighbor but also a
friend. In more recent times this friendship has been tested. Stories of
“boats, beef and Bali” abound. Rare is the story these days of these two
neighbors sitting down together to get to know each other a little better.
This weekend, the Australian Consortium for
“In-Country” Indonesian Studies (ACICIS) will celebrate its 20th anniversary.
What started back in Yogyakarta as a small group of academics sending students
to study the Indonesian language in Indonesia has grown into a group of 22
Australian universities and two international institutions. ACICIS now runs 13
study programs across five Indonesian cities. With the decline in recent years
in Indonesian studies in Australian universities, the consortium has since
developed English-language options for students as well in journalism,
business, development studies, law and education through Indonesian partner
universities such as Gadjah Mada University (UGM) in Yogyakarta, Parahyangan in
Bandung and Atma Jaya Catholic University in Jakarta, among others.
ACICIS has felt the highs and lows in the relationship
over 20 years. Amidst the Bali bombing, the phone tapping scandal and Timor
Leste’s independence, the consortium’s focus has remained on encouraging
students to immerse themselves in order to truly understand Indonesia and to go
beyond the political rhetoric and the headlines and really understand
Indonesian language, culture and life. Students take regular classes at
Indonesian universities. They live in kos (boarding houses) with local
students. They eat at warung (food stalls) and they share the annual Lebaran
(Eid) holidays with their classmates. Their research sees them interviewing
angkot (public transportation) drivers and chatting to local Puskesmas
(community health center) staff.
When students interact with their fellow students and
residents as friends, as members of a neighborhood, barriers break down. We
begin to see each other as real people, not just as “foreigners”. We begin to
see each other as friends. In 2013, at the time of the phone tapping issue, I
went to visit some of our students participating in UGM’s Community Service
(KKN) program in a village near Gunung Kidul, in Yogyakarta’s south. I asked
how they were going, whether there had been any tension in their village as a
result of all the recent media coverage and Indonesia recalling its ambassador
from Canberra. Before my students could answer, members of their host family
stepped in. “That’s just out there, between governments,” they said. “Here
we’re friends.”Similarly, at the time of the executions of the Bali Nine duo,
Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran, earlier this year, tensions raged between
Australia and Indonesia.
An Indonesian university colleague stopped me at the
time and said, “This is exactly why more students need to be coming over — they
need to see what’s really going on here on the ground and just how complex the
situation is. They don’t get that in Australia.”And it’s complex indeed.
Despite the recent tensions in the relationship, the past 18 months have seen
one of the most significant increases in the number of Australian students
studying in Indonesia, through the federal government’s New Colombo Plan.
Taking inspiration from the original Colombo Plan of the late 1950s, in which
thousands of Southeast Asian students undertook university study to return to
the region with new skills and a deeper understanding of Australia, this new
incarnation aims to increase students’ knowledge of the Indo-Pacific region and
become a “rite of passage” for young Australian undergraduates. Under the
initiative, ACICIS’ numbers have increased by 35 percent: This year alone we
have supported almost 200 students to study in Yogyakarta, Bandung and Jakarta,
around half of whom were funded through the New Colombo Plan. These are
students who come to study international relations from an Indonesian
perspective, to gain first-hand experience of the sharia banking system by
studying at Indonesian Islamic University (UII) in Yogyakarta and interning
with Bank Syariah Mandiri and to volunteer with NGOs and news outlets. They are
lucky enough to have the opportunity to study abroad and know Indonesia beyond
the negative headlines and the stereotypes back home. Importantly, many of them
will go on to work in government, journalism, development and business, as a
large number of almost 2,000 alumni have done, changing the narrative and fostering
friendship between our two countries. While confusion may reign in the public
sphere around how Australia and Indonesia see each other, deepening the
understanding Australian students have of our northern neighbor is not just a
step in the right direction, it is crucial. Here’s to the next 20 years!
The writer Elena Williams is the resident director for
the Australian Consortium for “In-Country” Indonesian Studies
(www.acicis.edu.au), based at Gadjah Mada University, Yogyakarta.
No comments:
Post a Comment