Soekarno (6 June 1901 – 21 June 1970) was the first
President of Indonesia. He helped the country win its independence from the
Netherlands. He was President from 1945 to 1967, presiding with mixed success
over the country's rough switch to independence. Sukarno was forced to resign
by one of his generals, Suharto. Suharto formally became President in March
1967.
The spelling "Sukarno" has been official in
Indonesia since 1947. It is still common to see the older spelling Soekarno,
mainly because he signed his name with the old spelling. Official Indonesian
presidential decrees from 1947-1968, however, printed his name using the 1947
spelling.
Indonesians also remember him as Bung Karno or Pak
Karno. Like many Javanese people, he had only one name; in religious contexts,
he was occasionally referred to as 'Achmad Sukarno'.
Early Life and Education
Sukarno was the only son of a poor
Javanese schoolteacher, Raden Sukemi Sosrodihardjo, and his Balinese wife, Ida
Njoman Rai. Originally named Kusnasosro, he was given a new and, it was hoped,
more auspicious name, Sukarno, after a series of illnesses. Known to his
childhood playmates as Djago (Cock, Champion) for his looks, spirits, and
prowess, he was as an adult best known as Bung Karno (bung, “brother” or “comrade”),
the revolutionary hero and architect of merdeka (“independence”).
Sukarno spent long periods of his childhood with his
grandparents in the village of Tulungagung, where he was exposed to the animism
and mysticism of serene rural Java. There he became a lifelong devotee of
wayang, the puppet shadow plays based on the Hindu epics, as animated and
narrated by a master puppeteer, who could hold an audience spellbound through
an entire night. As a youth of 15, Sukarno was sent to secondary school in
Surabaya and to lodgings in the home of Omar Said Tjokroaminoto, a prominent
civic and religious figure. Tjokroaminoto treated him as a cherished foster son
and protégé, financed his further education, and eventually married him off at
age 20 to his own 16-year-old daughter, Siti Utari.
As a student, Sukarno chose to excel mainly in
languages. He mastered Javanese, Sundanese, Balinese, and modern Indonesian,
which, in fact, he did much to create. He also acquired Arabic, which, as a
Muslim, he learned by study of the Qurʾān; Dutch, the language of his
education; German; French; English; and, later, Japanese. In Tjokroaminoto’s
home he came to meet emerging leaders who spanned the rapidly widening national
political spectrum, from feudal princelings to fugitive communist conspirators.
The eclectic syncretism of the Tjokroaminoto ménage, like the romance and
mysticism of wayang, imprinted itself indelibly upon Sukarno’s mind and
personality. He was later to treat nation-making as a heroic theatrical, in
which the clash of irreconcilable men and ideas could be harmonized through
sheer poetic magic—his own.
Endowed with commanding presence, radiant personality,
mellifluous voice, vivid style, a photographic memory, and supreme
self-confidence, Sukarno was obviously destined for greatness. In 1927 in
Bandung, where he had just acquired a degree in civil engineering, he found his
true calling in oratory and politics. He soon revealed himself as a man of
charisma and destiny.
Sukarno’s amours were almost as renowned as his oratory.
He divorced Siti in 1923 and married Inggit Garnisih, divorcing her in 1943 and
marrying Fatmawati, with whom he had five children, including his eldest son,
Guntur Sukarnaputra (b. 1944). As a Muslim, Sukarno was entitled to four wives,
so he took several more wives in the following decades.
Indonesian Independence
For his challenge to colonialism Sukarno spent two
years in a Dutch jail (1929–31) in Bandung and more than eight years in exile
(1933–42) on Flores and Sumatra. When the Japanese invaded the Indies in March
1942, he welcomed them as personal and national liberators. During World War II
the Japanese made Sukarno their chief adviser and propagandist and their
recruiter for labourers, soldiers, and prostitutes. Sukarno pressured the
Japanese to grant Indonesia its independence and, on June 1, 1945, made the
most famous of many celebrated speeches. In it he defined the Pantjasila
(Pancasila), or Five Principles (nationalism, internationalism, democracy,
social prosperity, and belief in God), still the sacrosanct state doctrine.
When the collapse of Japan became imminent, Sukarno at first wavered. Then,
after being kidnapped, intimidated, and persuaded by activist youths, he
declared Indonesia’s independence (August 17, 1945). As president of the shaky
new republic, he fueled a successful defiance of the Dutch, who, after two
abortive “police actions” to regain control, formally transferred sovereignty
on December 27, 1949.
From his revolutionary capital in Yogyakarta (formerly
Jogjakarta), Sukarno returned in triumph to Jakarta on December 28, 1949. There
he established himself, his collection of paintings, and his numerous retinue
in the splendid palace of the Dutch governors-general. He proceeded to preside
urbanely over a spectacle that was at once diverting and disturbing. His
increasingly numerous and outspoken critics maintained that Sukarno inspired no
coherent programs of national organization and administration, rehabilitation,
and development, such as were quite clearly necessary. He seemed instead to
conduct a continuous series of formal and informal audiences and a nightly
soiree of receptions, banquets, music, dancing, movies, and wayang. Indonesian
politics became increasingly frenzied, with Sukarno himself engaged in devious
maneuvers that made stabilization impossible. The Indonesian economy foundered
while Sukarno encouraged the wildest of extravagances. To be sure, the nation
scored impressive gains in health, education, and cultural self-awareness and
self-expression. It achieved, in fact, what Sukarno himself most joyously
sought and acclaimed as “national identity,” an exhilarating sense of pride in
being Indonesian. But this achievement came at a ruinous cost.
After “dreaming” in late 1956 of “burying” the feuding
political parties in Indonesia and thus achieving national consensus and
prosperity, Sukarno dismantled parliamentary democracy and destroyed free
enterprise. He ordained “Guided Democracy” and “Guided Economy” for the
achievement of Manipol-Usdek and Resopim-Nasakom—arcane acronyms symbolizing
policies but signifying dictatorship.
Sukarno’s personal and political excesses, as
epitomized eventually by his neo-Marxist, crypto-communist ideology and his
infamous cabinet of 100 corrupt and cynical ministers, induced a continuous
state of national crisis. Sukarno narrowly escaped recurrent attempts at
assassination, the first in 1957. Regional insurrections broke out in Sumatra
and Sulawesi in 1958. Inflation escalated the cost-of-living index from 100 in
1958 to 18,000 in 1965 and on up wildly to 600,000 in 1967. In 1963, after
shouting repeatedly “To hell with your aid” (1950–65 total: U.S.
$1,000,000,000), Sukarno all but broke with the United States. After having
exacted U.S. $1,000,000,000 in Soviet armaments and other items, he next
affronted Moscow.
On January 20, 1965, Indonesia formally withdrew from
the United Nations because the latter supported Malaysia, which Sukarno had
vowed to “crush” as “an imperialist plot of encirclement.” Yet, until 1965,
Sukarno was still able to stir the Indonesian masses to near-hysterical
belligerency. Millions of Indonesians sang and shouted his slogans and
acclaimed Sukarno as “Great Leader of the Revolution,” “Lifetime President”
(his official title), and oracle and warrior of the Nefo—his acronym for the
“New Emerging Forces”—in violent conflict with Nekolim—the neocolonialism,
capitalism, and imperialism of the “doomed” Western powers.
The Coup of 1965
The nation was shocked and shaken out of its trance by
an abortive coup on September 30, 1965. A clique of military conspirators
calling itself the September 30th Movement kidnapped and killed six top army
generals, seized a few key urban points, and proclaimed a new revolutionary
regime. General Suharto, the commander of the Jakarta garrison, swiftly
reversed the coup.
Suharto and the military generally believed the
Indonesian Communist Party (Partai Komunis Indonesia; PKI)—which to some
measure had been supported and protected by Sukarno—to be behind the attempted
coup. The PKI, by contrast, understood the plot to be entirely a military
matter. There ensued an oblique contest for power between Suharto and Sukarno,
during which thousands of communists and alleged communists were slaughtered by
the military; estimates of the number of people killed during the purge range
from 80,000 to more than 1,000,000. As the country recoiled in horror, activist
youths demanded the political demise of Sukarno, the Sukarnoists, and
Sukarnoism and the total reform and reorganization of the state. On March 11,
1966, Sukarno was obliged to delegate wide powers to Suharto, who subsequently
became acting president (March 1967) and then president (March 1968), as
Sukarno sank into disgrace and dotage.
Sukarno died at the age of 69 of a chronic kidney
ailment and numerous complications. Suharto decreed a quick and quiet funeral.
Nevertheless, at least 500,000 persons, including virtually all of Jakarta’s
important personages, turned out to pay their last ambivalent respects. The
next day another 200,000 assembled in Blitar, near Surabaya, for the official
service followed by burial in a simple grave alongside that of his mother. The
cult and ideology of Sukarnoism were proscribed until the late 1970s, when the
government undertook a rehabilitation of Sukarno’s name. His autobiography,
Sukarno, was published in 1965.
source :
https://en.wikisource.org/.../Sukarno%27s_Proclamation_of_...
https://www.thoughtco.com › ... › Major Figures & Events
https://www.britannica.com/biography/Sukarno
https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sukarno
source :
https://en.wikisource.org/.../Sukarno%27s_Proclamation_of_...
https://www.thoughtco.com › ... › Major Figures & Events
https://www.britannica.com/biography/Sukarno
https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sukarno
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