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Amir Sjarifuddin

Amir Sjarifuddin Harahap (EVO: Amir Sjarifoeddin Harahap; 27 April 1907 – 19 December 1948) was an Indonesian politician and journalist who served as the second prime minister of Indonesia from 1947 until 1948. A major leader of the left-wing during the Indonesian National Revolution, he previously served as Minister of Information from 1945 until 1946 and Minister of Defense from 1945 until 1948. Amir was born into the Sumatran aristocracy, and was educated at Leiden University. At Leiden, he became a member of the board of the Gymnasium student association in Haarlem, and was involved in the Batak student organization Jong Batak. He returned to Indonesia due to family troubles, but continued his education at the Rechts Hogeschool in Batavia.

Amir Sjarifuddin
Amir Sjarifuddin, c. 1940s
2nd Prime Minister of Indonesia
In office
3 July 1947 – 29 January 1948
Preceded bySutan Sjahrir
Succeeded byMohammad Hatta
Ministerial offices
2nd Minister of Defense
In office
14 November 1945 – 29 January 1948
Preceded bySupriyadi (died)
Succeeded byHamengkubuwono IX
1sr Minister of Information
In office
2 September 1945 – 12 March 1946
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byMohammad Natsir
Personal details
Born(1907-04-27)27 April 1907
Medan, Sultanate of Deli, Dutch East Indies
Died19 December 1948(1948-12-19) (aged 41)
Surakarta, Indonesia
Resting placeNgaliyan Public Cemetery
Political party
Spouse
Djaenah Harahap
(m. 1935)
Children6
Alma materRechts Hogeschool (Mr.)
Occupation

After graduating, he became active in literary and journalist circles, joining the editorial board of the newspaper Panorama. He also became involved with left-wing politics, and led a group of younger Marxists in the establishment of the Indonesian People's Movement (Gerindo). In 1933, due to his political activities, Amir was imprisoned, and almost exiled to the Boven-Digoel concentration camp, had it not for the efforts of his cousin and teacher. During the Japanese occupation of the Dutch East Indies, Amir was one of a few prominent Indonesian politicians who actively fought against the Japanese, together with fellow future-Prime Minister Sutan Sjahrir. Following the Proclamation of Indonesian Independence, he was appointed Minister of Information in President Sukarno's Presidential Cabinet. Later, he was appointed the Minister of Defense following the absence of Supriyadi.

After the fall of Sjahrir's cabinet, Amir was chosen to head the new cabinet, with the backing of a broad coalition. He faced a backlash over the cabinet's decision to ratify the Renville Agreement, and he resigned from the prime ministership, being succeeded by Vice President Mohammad Hatta as prime minister. After his ousting, he became involved in the People's Democratic Front (FDR). Following the beginning of the Madiun Affair, Amir and other FDR leaders rushed to assume control of the newly formed "National Front" government. In the following weeks, pro-government forces, led by the Siliwangi Division, began pushing the leftists forces back. During the fighting, Amir was captured, and imprisoned in Yogyakarta. After the withdrawal of Republican forces after Operation Kraai, he was executed, along with fifty other leftist prisoners.

Early life

Amir Sjarifuddin Harahap was born in Medan, Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia), on 27 April 1907.[1] He was born into the Sumatran aristocracy. His grandfather, Mangaraja Monang, was a Batak nobleman – who had been baptized into Christianity and named Ephraim – with the title of Sutan Gunung Tua.[2] Amir's father, Djamin, was also a noblemen, with the title of Sultan Soripada Harahap, however he later left the religion and became a Muslim, after marrying Amir's mother, Basunu Siregar,[1] a devout Muslim woman who came from a well-respected family from the Malay-Islamic community.[2][3] Amir was the eldest child of seven children, and was given the title of Sutan Gunung Sualoon. He came from a family of prosecutors, with both his grandfather and father practicing the profession.[1] Amir began his education in 1914, when he attended the Europeesche Lagere School (ELS) in Medan. However, in 1916, he was forced to attend a different ELS in Sibolga, as his father was transferred there.[4][5] In August 1921, he and his older cousin, Todung Sutan Gunung Mulia, left for the Netherlands. There, he resided with the Smink family in Haarlem, 29 kilometers north of Leiden. He continued his education to the Gymnasium in Haarlem, though Mulia returned to Indonesia, as he had completed his schooling already.[6] After only a year at the Haarlem Gymnasium, he moved to the State Gymnasium of Leiden.[4]

In Leiden, Amir stayed at the house of Mrs. Antonie Aris van de Losdrecht–Sizzo, a widow of the evangelist and missionary Antonie Aris van de Loosdrecht, who was killed in Tana Toraja in 1913.[6] He became involved in the Batak student organization Jong Batak, and was becoming increasingly interested in Christianity and the Bible.[6] As a student, he would become a member of the Perhimpoenan Indonesia ("Indonesian Association"), under the leadership of future-Indonesian vice president Mohammad Hatta.[7] During his time in Leiden, he began to be admire and be influenced by the Count of Mirebeau, Honoré Gabriel Riqueti, and Maximillien Robespierre, both of whom would influence Amir in his later career.[8] He returned to Indonesia following family troubles, as his father had lost his job as Chief Prosecutor because he punched a prisoner.[4] He would continue his education at the Rechts Hogeschool, and later converted from Islam to Christianity in 1931, being baptized in the Huria Church, in Batavia. He would go on to give sermons at the church.[9]

Journalism and World War II

 
Amir Sjarifuddin with a smoking pipe, date unknown

Throughout the 1930s, Amir was active in literary and journalistic circles, joining the editorial board of the newspaper Panorama, together with Liem Koen Hian, Sanusi Pane and Mohammad Yamin.[10] In 1933, Amir was imprisoned by the Dutch for his Aksi Massa ("Mass Action") essay, an essay published in the Banteng Partindo magazine which encouraged the public to drive out the colonial invaders. Though in actuality, the essay was written by Mohammad Yamin, with Amir only stated as the author in the published version.[11] Amir was imprisoned for two years, being released on 5 June 1935.[12] In mid-1936, together with his colleagues Liem, Pane and Yamin, Amir started another newspaper, Kebangoenan, which – as with Panorama – was published by Phoa Liong Gie's Siang Po Printing Press.[10] In 1937, towards the end of the Dutch rule, Amir led a group of younger Marxists in the establishment of Indonesian People's Movement (Gerindo).[13][14] Under Amir's leadership, the party was considered a radical leftist anti-fascist political party, influenced by the ideology of Communism.[15] The Soviet Union's Dimitrov doctrine, had called for a common front against fascism which helped swell the number of Indonesians taking a cooperative approach with regards to the Dutch colonial administration in an attempt to secure Indonesian independence.[14]

Gerindo was one of the more significant cooperative parties in the years leading to World War II whose objectives included a fully Indonesian legislature; It had modest goals in comparison to the Dutch-suppressed radical nationalists led by the likes of Sukarno and Mohammad Hatta, who Sjarifuddin had met before the War. By 1940, Dutch intelligence suspected him of being involved with the Communist underground.[14] Having watched the increased strength and influence of Imperial Japan, he was one of a number of Indonesian leaders who warned against the danger of fascism before the war.[3] Prior to the German invasion of the Netherlands, Amir himself led and promoted boycotts against trade with Japan. When the colony was invaded by Japan, his prominent role in these campaigns prompted the head of Dutch intelligence to provide Amir with 25,000 guilders to organize an underground resistance movement.[16][17] Upon Japan's occupation of the East Indies, the Japanese enforced total suppression of any opposition to their rule. Most Indonesian leaders obliged either by becoming 'neutral observers' or by actively cooperating. Amir was one of a few prominent Indonesian politicians who actively fought against the Japanese, together with fellow future-Prime Minister Sutan Sjahrir. The Japanese arrested Sjarifuddin in 1943, and he escaped execution only due to intervention from Sukarno, whose popularity in Indonesia – and hence importance to the war effort – was recognized by the Japanese.[18][19]

By 1945, Amir had become known and respected as a politician. And although he had been in contact with the 'illegal' Communist Party of Indonesia (PKI), he had nothing but disdain for the 'unsophisticated' and unknown Marxists who re-established the party in 1935. His closest colleagues were from the 'illegal PKI' underground and the pre-war Indonesian People's Movement (Gerindo). Together, they formed the Socialist Party of Indonesia (Parsi) on 1 November 1945.[20][17] At a two-party conference on 16 – 17 December it was announced that Amir's Parsi would merge with Sjahrir's political grouping, the Socialist People's Party (Paras), forming the Socialist Party (PS). With Sjahrir serving as chairman, and Amir serving as vice chairman.[20][21] The Socialist Party quickly became the strongest pro-government party, especially in Yogyakarta and East Java. The party accepted the argument of Amir and its other leaders that the time was not ripe to implement socialism, rather that international support necessary for independence be sought, and that unruly constituents had to be opposed. The party's westernized leaders showed more faith in Netherlands left-wing forces, than in the revolutionary fervor of the Indonesian people, which became a source of discontent among the party's opponents.[20]

National Revolution

Cabinet Minister

 
From left to right: Adnan Kapau Gani, Amir, Oerip Soemohardjo, and Mohamad Isa in a mass meeting in the Grand Mosque of Palembang, c. 1946

Following the Japanese surrender on 15 August 1945 and the proclamation of Indonesian independence two days later, the Republic announced its first ministry on 4 September. The seventeen-member cabinet was composed mostly of 'collaborating' nationalists;[a] Amir was appointed Information Minister under the new cabinet, though at the time his fate was unknown, as he was then imprisoned by the Japanese.[23][22] He was eventually released on 1 October 1945, and took office shortly after. Amir's appointment as minister of information was likely due to his background in journalism prior to World War II.[24] Early in the Revolution, Amir worked closely with the country's first Prime Minister Sutan Sjahrir; the two played the major role in shaping the arrangements linking the new government of Indonesia with its people remarkably effectively.[25] On 30 October Amir, along with Sukarno and Hatta, were flown into the East Javan city of Surabaya by the desperate British caretaker administration.[26] The three were seen as the only Indonesian leaders likely able to quell fighting between Republican and British Indian forces in which the British Brigade were hopelessly outnumbered and facing annihilation.[26] A ceasefire was immediately adhered to, but fighting resumed after confused communications and mistrust between the two sides, leading to the Battle of Surabaya.[26]

On 16 October 1945, Sjahrir and Amir took control of the Central Indonesian National Committee, and following the 11 November transition to parliamentary government, Amir was appointed to a new cabinet with Sjahrir as Prime Minister.[24] President Sukarno accepted a proposal for cabinet to answer to the Central Indonesian National Committee (KNIP) acting as Parliament rather than to the President.[27] This watershed event ushered in the so-called 'liberal' or parliamentary form of government, which prevailed against the Sukarnoist-proposed constitution for twelve years. Leadership was thus handed to a 'modernizing' Western-minded intellectual, who at the time were thought to be the coming leaders of Asia and more palatable to Western ideas of government. When considered against previous forms of government — indigenous Indonesian, Dutch, Japanese and even the first brief Republican government — this was the most revolutionary political change at a national level during the National Revolution.[28] Amir left the position of Information Minister on 4 January 1946, and was replaced by Mohammad Natsir.[29] Instead, he became the Minister of Defense. His main task as minister was to make the army an "effective and responsible tool of government policy". His position as minister, however, was a source of friction with the People's Security Force (TKR) and its new commander, Sudirman, who had nominated their own candidate, Sultan Hamengkubuwono IX of Yogyakarta. However, the Sultan was not eager to contest the position.[30]

Amir was a central figure in the government's 'anti-fascist' programme with the army a key target, which caused further frictions. Sjahrir attacked PETA-trained army officers as 'traitors', 'fascists', and 'running dogs' who had cooperated with the Japanese. Amir promoted the Red Army as a model of a citizens' army loyal to the government and holding socialist ideals.[31] On 19 February 1946, Amir inaugurated a socialist and Masyumi politician-dominated 'education staff' for the army. The body appointed fifty-five 'political officers' at the end of May without consulting the army command. These new officers were to educate each TRI unit in the goals of the revolution.[31] He was not, however, able to effectively impose such ideals on unit commanders, particularly as Sudirman and other PETA-trained resented the 'fascist' slur cast on them. The Marxist's overtones of Amir's new military academies conflicted with the popular army view of being above politics and the need to play a unifying role in the national struggle; the army leadership consequently rejected attempts to introduce partisan ideology and alignments.[32] This antagonism between the government and PETA-trained officers, forced Amir to find an armed support base elsewhere. He aligned himself with sympathetic Dutch-educated officers in certain divisions, such as the West Java 'Siliwangi' Division the command of which had been assumed by KNIL Lieutenant A.H. Nasution in May 1946. Another source of support for the new cabinet was the more educated armed pemuda sympathetic to the cabinet's 'anti-fascist' approach. With an engaging personality and persuasive oratory skills, Amir had more time and aptitude than Sjahrir for party building, and he played the main part in wooing these pemuda.[33]

Prime Minister

 
Amir Sjarifuddin, c. 1947
Premiership of
Amir Sjarifuddin Harahap

3 July 1947 – 29 January 1948
President
Cabinet
PartySocialist (PS)

A split between Amir's and Prime Minister Sjahrir's supporters rapidly deepened in 1947. There had long been mutual suspicion between Sjahrir and the communists who had returned from the Netherlands in 1946; the fading of the 'anti-fascist' cause made these suspicions more obvious. Sjahrir's preoccupation with diplomacy, his physical isolation in Jakarta from revolution-infused Central Java, and his dislike of mass rallies allowed the more Moscow-inclined Marxists to assume more control in both the Socialist Party and the Left-wing as a whole. By June 1946, Sjahrir's increasing isolation from the coalition encouraged the opposing factions to depose him. This group put their support behind Amir, the alternative Socialist leader.[34] On 26 June 1947, Amir, along with two other Moscow-inclined Ministers Abdulmadjid Djojoadiningrat, and Wikana, backed by a majority of the left, withdrew their support for Sjahrir. Their argument was that Sjahrir had compromised the Republic in his pursuit of diplomacy – the same charge that deposed every revolutionary government – and that in the face of Dutch belligerence, such conciliation seemed futile.[34]

Following the resignation of Sjahrir as prime minister, a new government needed to be formed. On 30 June 1947, President Sukarno appointed Amir, Adnan Kapau Gani, Soekiman Wirjosandjojo, and Setyadjit Soegondo to form a new cabinet.[35] During these negotiations, Amir courted a broad coalition but hostility from Muslim Masyumi prevented its leader, Soekiman, as well many pro-Sjahrir 'religious socialists' from previous cabinets from joining the new cabinet.[36] Other influential Masyumi factions, such as that of Wondoamiseno, provided support. Although Amir's communist allies controlled about 10% of the thirty-four with Amir's Defence Ministry their sole key one, this cabinet was the highest point of orthodox communist influence in the Revolution.[37]

On 3 July 1947, Amir was inaugurated as prime minister, alongside his cabinet, which would be known as the First Amir Sjarifuddin Cabinet. He would also continue to serve as minister concurrently.[13] There were rumors about Amir's appointment as prime minister, based on the consideration that he would be needed in negotiations with the Dutch. In running the government, he appointed Adnan Kapau Gani as his de facto confidant in dealing with foreign affairs.[38] Following a backlash over the Renville Agreement, for which Amir received much of the blame, PNI and Masyumi cabinet members resigned in early January 1948. On 23 January, with his support base disappearing, Amir resigned from the prime ministership.[39]

Madiun affair and death

 
Amir Sjarifuddin (wearing glasses), after being detained by the Indonesian military, c. 1948

Following the fall of his second cabinet, on 26 January 1948, a new cabinet was formed, which was headed by Vice President Mohammad Hatta. Opposition to the Hatta Cabinet coalesced into a new organization, known as the People's Democratic Front,[40] which began holding demonstrations, demanding the return of Amir in the Cabinet and as Minister of Defense. Amir joined the fold, and heavily criticized Hatta and his cabinet, labelling it as the "Masyumi Cabinet", as it was dominated by members of the Islamic Masyumi Party.[41] Meanwhile, other leftist parties and organizations supporting the government joined in an opposing organization, known as the People's Revolutionary Movement (GGR).[40]

However, Amir's efforts to overthrow the Hatta Cabinet were in vain, as the Hatta Cabinet continued along with its four main programs.[40] Over the following months, the political situation remained tense, while the economic situation increasingly deteriorated, and relations with the Dutch, after the Renville Agreement did not appear to be getting better.[42] In August 1948, Musso, the 1920s leader of the PKI, arrived in Yogyakarta from his exile in the Soviet Union. Amir and the leadership of the People's Democratic Front immediately accepted his authority, and Amir admitted membership of the underground PKI since 1935. Adhering to Musso's Stalinist thinking of a single party of the working class, the major leftist parties in the Front dissolved themselves into the PKI.[43]

Meanwhile, worker strikes were held in Delanggu, Surakarta. The strikes escalated into demonstrations, between communist and pro-government forces, before increasing rapidly into full on open warfare. On 18 September 1948, a group of PKI supporters took over strategic points in the Madiun area in what would come to be known as the Madiun Affair. They killed pro-government officers, and announced over radio the formation of a new "National Front" government. Caught by surprise by the premature coup attempt, Communist leaders, including Amir, rushed to Madiun to take charge of the government. The following day, about 200 pro-PKI and other leftist leaders who remained in Yogyakarta were arrested by the Republican government, with Sukarno denouncing the Madiun rebels over radio, and calling upon Indonesians to rally against Musso and his plans for a Soviet-style government. Musso replied on radio that he would fight to the finish, while, the People's Democratic Front branches in Banten and Sumatra announced they had nothing to do with the rebellion.[44]

In the following weeks, pro-government forces, led by the Siliwangi Division, marched on Madiun where there were an estimated 5,000-10,000 pro-PKI soldiers. As the rebels retreated they killed Masyumi and PNI leaders and officials, and in the villages killings took place along santri-abangan lines. On 30 September, the rebels abandoned Madiun, and were pursued by pro-government troops through the countryside. Musso was killed on 31 October trying to escape custody.[44] Amir and 300 rebel soldiers were captured by Siliwangi troops on 1 December. Some 35,000 people were later arrested. It is thought perhaps 8,000 people were killed in the affair. As part of a second major military offensive against the Republic, on 19 December Dutch troops occupied Yogyakarta city and the Republican government was captured, including Sukarno, Hatta, Agus Salim, and Sjahrir. Republican forces withdraw to the countryside beginning full-scale guerrilla war on either side of the van Mook line. Rather than risk their release, the army killed Amir and fifty other leftist prisoners as it withdrew from Yogyakarta that evening.[45]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Most Indonesian nationalist leaders saw the Japanese Occupation of Indonesia as an opportunity to take advantage of in their pursuit of independence. Their consequent cooperation with the Japanese saw the returning Dutch brand them 'collaborators', and thus illegitimate leaders, in an attempt to undermine support for the newly proclaimed Republic.[22]

References

Citations

  1. ^ a b c Purba 2013, p. 2.
  2. ^ a b Leclerc 1982, pp. 54–59.
  3. ^ a b Vickers 2005, p. 86.
  4. ^ a b c Purba 2013, p. 3.
  5. ^ Leclerc 1982, p. 60 – 66.
  6. ^ a b c Leclerc 1982, p. 66 – 76.
  7. ^ Van Klinken 2010, pp. 171–172.
  8. ^ Van Klinken 2010, p. 174.
  9. ^ Van Klinken 2010, p. 178.
  10. ^ a b Van Klinken 2003, p. 129.
  11. ^ Leclerc 1982, p. 38.
  12. ^ Purba 2013, p. 10.
  13. ^ a b Vickers 2005, p. 226.
  14. ^ a b c Reid 1974, p. 9.
  15. ^ Purba 2013, p. 34.
  16. ^ Vickers 2005, p. 106.
  17. ^ a b Purba 2013, p. 40.
  18. ^ Purba 2013, p. 45.
  19. ^ Reid 1974, p. 12.
  20. ^ a b c Reid 1974, p. 83.
  21. ^ Purba 2013, p. 41.
  22. ^ a b Reid 1974, p. 32.
  23. ^ Purba 2013, p. 46.
  24. ^ a b Purba 2013, p. 47.
  25. ^ Reid 1974, p. 69.
  26. ^ a b c Reid 1974, p. 52.
  27. ^ Ricklefs 2008, p. 352.
  28. ^ Reid 1974, p. 17.
  29. ^ Purba 2013, p. 49.
  30. ^ Cribb 2008, p. 93 – 94.
  31. ^ a b Reid 1974, pp. 93–94.
  32. ^ Reid 1974, p. 79.
  33. ^ Reid 1974, pp. 78–79.
  34. ^ a b Ricklefs 2008, pp. 360–364.
  35. ^ Toer 1947, p. 202.
  36. ^ Ricklefs 2008, p. 362.
  37. ^ Reid 1974, p. 100.
  38. ^ Purba 2013, p. 53.
  39. ^ Ricklefs 2008, p. 364.
  40. ^ a b c Indonesian Army 1968, p. 126.
  41. ^ Dimyati 1951, p. 161.
  42. ^ Indonesian Army 1968, pp. 140–141.
  43. ^ Ricklefs 2008, p. 367.
  44. ^ a b Ricklefs 2008, p. 368.
  45. ^ Reid 1974, p. 156.

Sources

  • Purba, Yema Siska (September 2013) [2012]. Michellia, Dewi Kharisma (ed.). Amir Sjarifoeddin: Nasionalis yang Tersisih [Amir Sjarifoeddin: The Outcast Nationalist] (PDF) (in Indonesian). PolGov. ISBN 978-602-7636-25-5.
  • Leclerc, Jacques (December 1982). "Amir Sjarifuddin 75 Tahun" [Amir Sjarifuddin 75 Years]. Prima (in Indonesian). Retrieved 3 December 2021.
  • Van Klinken, Gerry (2010). 5 penggerak bangsa yang terlupa : nasionalisme minoritas Kristen [5 forgotten nationalists: The nationalism of the Christian minority] (in Indonesian). Yogyakarta: LKiS. ISBN 978-979-1283-09-0. Retrieved 3 December 2021.
  • Vickers, Adrian (2005). A History of Modern Indonesia. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-54262-6. Retrieved 2 December 2021.
  • Dimyati, Muhammad (1951). Sejarah Perjuangan Indonesia [History of Indonesian Struggle] (in Indonesian). Jakarta: Widjaya. ISBN 0-521-54262-6. Retrieved 3 December 2021.
  • Indonesian Army (1968). Sedjarah TNI-AD Kodam VII/Diponegoro [History of TNI-AD Kodam VII/Diponegoro] (in Indonesian). Semarang: Diponegoro Publishing Service. Retrieved 3 December 2021.
  • Ricklefs, M. C. (2008) [1981]. A History of Modern Indonesia Since c.1300. London: Macmillan. ISBN 9780333243787. Retrieved 3 December 2021.
  • Toer, Pramoedya Ananta (1947). Kamil, Ediati (ed.). Kronik Revolusi Indonesia Jilid III [Chronicle of the Indonesian Revolution Volume III] (in Indonesian). Vol. III. Jakarta: Gramedia. ISBN 9780333243787. Retrieved 3 December 2021.
  • Reid, Anthony (1974). The Indonesian National Revolution 1945 – 1950. Longman. ISBN 9780582710474. Retrieved 3 December 2021.
  • Van Klinken, Geert (2003). Minorities, Modernity and the Emerging Nation: Christians in Indonesia, a Biographical Approach. Leiden: KITLV Press. ISBN 9789067181518. Retrieved 3 December 2021.
  • Cribb, Robert (2008). Gangsters and Revolutionaries: The Jakarta People's Militia and the Indonesian Revolution, 1945-1949. Equinox Publishing. ISBN 9789793780719. Retrieved 3 December 2021.
Political offices
Preceded by Prime Minister of Indonesia
3 July 1947 – 29 January 1948
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister of Defense
14 November 1945 – 29 January 1948
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Office established
Minister of Information
2 September 1945 – 12 March 1946
Succeeded by

amir, sjarifuddin, this, indonesian, name, there, family, name, patronymic, person, should, referred, given, name, amir, harahap, amir, sjarifoeddin, harahap, april, 1907, december, 1948, indonesian, politician, journalist, served, second, prime, minister, ind. In this Indonesian name there is no family name nor a patronymic and the person should be referred to by the given name Amir Amir Sjarifuddin Harahap EVO Amir Sjarifoeddin Harahap 27 April 1907 19 December 1948 was an Indonesian politician and journalist who served as the second prime minister of Indonesia from 1947 until 1948 A major leader of the left wing during the Indonesian National Revolution he previously served as Minister of Information from 1945 until 1946 and Minister of Defense from 1945 until 1948 Amir was born into the Sumatran aristocracy and was educated at Leiden University At Leiden he became a member of the board of the Gymnasium student association in Haarlem and was involved in the Batak student organization Jong Batak He returned to Indonesia due to family troubles but continued his education at the Rechts Hogeschool in Batavia Amir SjarifuddinAmir Sjarifuddin c 1940s2nd Prime Minister of IndonesiaIn office 3 July 1947 29 January 1948Preceded bySutan SjahrirSucceeded byMohammad HattaMinisterial offices2nd Minister of DefenseIn office 14 November 1945 29 January 1948Preceded bySupriyadi died Succeeded byHamengkubuwono IX1sr Minister of InformationIn office 2 September 1945 12 March 1946Preceded byOffice establishedSucceeded byMohammad NatsirPersonal detailsBorn 1907 04 27 27 April 1907Medan Sultanate of Deli Dutch East IndiesDied19 December 1948 1948 12 19 aged 41 Surakarta IndonesiaResting placeNgaliyan Public CemeteryPolitical partyCommunist 1935 1948 Gerindo 1937 1942 Socialist 1945 1948 SpouseDjaenah Harahap m 1935 wbr Children6Alma materRechts Hogeschool Mr OccupationPoliticianjournalistAfter graduating he became active in literary and journalist circles joining the editorial board of the newspaper Panorama He also became involved with left wing politics and led a group of younger Marxists in the establishment of the Indonesian People s Movement Gerindo In 1933 due to his political activities Amir was imprisoned and almost exiled to the Boven Digoel concentration camp had it not for the efforts of his cousin and teacher During the Japanese occupation of the Dutch East Indies Amir was one of a few prominent Indonesian politicians who actively fought against the Japanese together with fellow future Prime Minister Sutan Sjahrir Following the Proclamation of Indonesian Independence he was appointed Minister of Information in President Sukarno s Presidential Cabinet Later he was appointed the Minister of Defense following the absence of Supriyadi After the fall of Sjahrir s cabinet Amir was chosen to head the new cabinet with the backing of a broad coalition He faced a backlash over the cabinet s decision to ratify the Renville Agreement and he resigned from the prime ministership being succeeded by Vice President Mohammad Hatta as prime minister After his ousting he became involved in the People s Democratic Front FDR Following the beginning of the Madiun Affair Amir and other FDR leaders rushed to assume control of the newly formed National Front government In the following weeks pro government forces led by the Siliwangi Division began pushing the leftists forces back During the fighting Amir was captured and imprisoned in Yogyakarta After the withdrawal of Republican forces after Operation Kraai he was executed along with fifty other leftist prisoners Contents 1 Early life 2 Journalism and World War II 3 National Revolution 3 1 Cabinet Minister 3 2 Prime Minister 4 Madiun affair and death 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 SourcesEarly life EditAmir Sjarifuddin Harahap was born in Medan Dutch East Indies now Indonesia on 27 April 1907 1 He was born into the Sumatran aristocracy His grandfather Mangaraja Monang was a Batak nobleman who had been baptized into Christianity and named Ephraim with the title of Sutan Gunung Tua 2 Amir s father Djamin was also a noblemen with the title of Sultan Soripada Harahap however he later left the religion and became a Muslim after marrying Amir s mother Basunu Siregar 1 a devout Muslim woman who came from a well respected family from the Malay Islamic community 2 3 Amir was the eldest child of seven children and was given the title of Sutan Gunung Sualoon He came from a family of prosecutors with both his grandfather and father practicing the profession 1 Amir began his education in 1914 when he attended the Europeesche Lagere School ELS in Medan However in 1916 he was forced to attend a different ELS in Sibolga as his father was transferred there 4 5 In August 1921 he and his older cousin Todung Sutan Gunung Mulia left for the Netherlands There he resided with the Smink family in Haarlem 29 kilometers north of Leiden He continued his education to the Gymnasium in Haarlem though Mulia returned to Indonesia as he had completed his schooling already 6 After only a year at the Haarlem Gymnasium he moved to the State Gymnasium of Leiden 4 In Leiden Amir stayed at the house of Mrs Antonie Aris van de Losdrecht Sizzo a widow of the evangelist and missionary Antonie Aris van de Loosdrecht who was killed in Tana Toraja in 1913 6 He became involved in the Batak student organization Jong Batak and was becoming increasingly interested in Christianity and the Bible 6 As a student he would become a member of the Perhimpoenan Indonesia Indonesian Association under the leadership of future Indonesian vice president Mohammad Hatta 7 During his time in Leiden he began to be admire and be influenced by the Count of Mirebeau Honore Gabriel Riqueti and Maximillien Robespierre both of whom would influence Amir in his later career 8 He returned to Indonesia following family troubles as his father had lost his job as Chief Prosecutor because he punched a prisoner 4 He would continue his education at the Rechts Hogeschool and later converted from Islam to Christianity in 1931 being baptized in the Huria Church in Batavia He would go on to give sermons at the church 9 Journalism and World War II EditSee also Gerindo and Japanese occupation of the Dutch East Indies Amir Sjarifuddin with a smoking pipe date unknown Throughout the 1930s Amir was active in literary and journalistic circles joining the editorial board of the newspaper Panorama together with Liem Koen Hian Sanusi Pane and Mohammad Yamin 10 In 1933 Amir was imprisoned by the Dutch for his Aksi Massa Mass Action essay an essay published in the Banteng Partindo magazine which encouraged the public to drive out the colonial invaders Though in actuality the essay was written by Mohammad Yamin with Amir only stated as the author in the published version 11 Amir was imprisoned for two years being released on 5 June 1935 12 In mid 1936 together with his colleagues Liem Pane and Yamin Amir started another newspaper Kebangoenan which as with Panorama was published by Phoa Liong Gie s Siang Po Printing Press 10 In 1937 towards the end of the Dutch rule Amir led a group of younger Marxists in the establishment of Indonesian People s Movement Gerindo 13 14 Under Amir s leadership the party was considered a radical leftist anti fascist political party influenced by the ideology of Communism 15 The Soviet Union s Dimitrov doctrine had called for a common front against fascism which helped swell the number of Indonesians taking a cooperative approach with regards to the Dutch colonial administration in an attempt to secure Indonesian independence 14 Gerindo was one of the more significant cooperative parties in the years leading to World War II whose objectives included a fully Indonesian legislature It had modest goals in comparison to the Dutch suppressed radical nationalists led by the likes of Sukarno and Mohammad Hatta who Sjarifuddin had met before the War By 1940 Dutch intelligence suspected him of being involved with the Communist underground 14 Having watched the increased strength and influence of Imperial Japan he was one of a number of Indonesian leaders who warned against the danger of fascism before the war 3 Prior to the German invasion of the Netherlands Amir himself led and promoted boycotts against trade with Japan When the colony was invaded by Japan his prominent role in these campaigns prompted the head of Dutch intelligence to provide Amir with 25 000 guilders to organize an underground resistance movement 16 17 Upon Japan s occupation of the East Indies the Japanese enforced total suppression of any opposition to their rule Most Indonesian leaders obliged either by becoming neutral observers or by actively cooperating Amir was one of a few prominent Indonesian politicians who actively fought against the Japanese together with fellow future Prime Minister Sutan Sjahrir The Japanese arrested Sjarifuddin in 1943 and he escaped execution only due to intervention from Sukarno whose popularity in Indonesia and hence importance to the war effort was recognized by the Japanese 18 19 By 1945 Amir had become known and respected as a politician And although he had been in contact with the illegal Communist Party of Indonesia PKI he had nothing but disdain for the unsophisticated and unknown Marxists who re established the party in 1935 His closest colleagues were from the illegal PKI underground and the pre war Indonesian People s Movement Gerindo Together they formed the Socialist Party of Indonesia Parsi on 1 November 1945 20 17 At a two party conference on 16 17 December it was announced that Amir s Parsi would merge with Sjahrir s political grouping the Socialist People s Party Paras forming the Socialist Party PS With Sjahrir serving as chairman and Amir serving as vice chairman 20 21 The Socialist Party quickly became the strongest pro government party especially in Yogyakarta and East Java The party accepted the argument of Amir and its other leaders that the time was not ripe to implement socialism rather that international support necessary for independence be sought and that unruly constituents had to be opposed The party s westernized leaders showed more faith in Netherlands left wing forces than in the revolutionary fervor of the Indonesian people which became a source of discontent among the party s opponents 20 National Revolution EditMain article Indonesian National Revolution Cabinet Minister Edit From left to right Adnan Kapau Gani Amir Oerip Soemohardjo and Mohamad Isa in a mass meeting in the Grand Mosque of Palembang c 1946 Following the Japanese surrender on 15 August 1945 and the proclamation of Indonesian independence two days later the Republic announced its first ministry on 4 September The seventeen member cabinet was composed mostly of collaborating nationalists a Amir was appointed Information Minister under the new cabinet though at the time his fate was unknown as he was then imprisoned by the Japanese 23 22 He was eventually released on 1 October 1945 and took office shortly after Amir s appointment as minister of information was likely due to his background in journalism prior to World War II 24 Early in the Revolution Amir worked closely with the country s first Prime Minister Sutan Sjahrir the two played the major role in shaping the arrangements linking the new government of Indonesia with its people remarkably effectively 25 On 30 October Amir along with Sukarno and Hatta were flown into the East Javan city of Surabaya by the desperate British caretaker administration 26 The three were seen as the only Indonesian leaders likely able to quell fighting between Republican and British Indian forces in which the British Brigade were hopelessly outnumbered and facing annihilation 26 A ceasefire was immediately adhered to but fighting resumed after confused communications and mistrust between the two sides leading to the Battle of Surabaya 26 On 16 October 1945 Sjahrir and Amir took control of the Central Indonesian National Committee and following the 11 November transition to parliamentary government Amir was appointed to a new cabinet with Sjahrir as Prime Minister 24 President Sukarno accepted a proposal for cabinet to answer to the Central Indonesian National Committee KNIP acting as Parliament rather than to the President 27 This watershed event ushered in the so called liberal or parliamentary form of government which prevailed against the Sukarnoist proposed constitution for twelve years Leadership was thus handed to a modernizing Western minded intellectual who at the time were thought to be the coming leaders of Asia and more palatable to Western ideas of government When considered against previous forms of government indigenous Indonesian Dutch Japanese and even the first brief Republican government this was the most revolutionary political change at a national level during the National Revolution 28 Amir left the position of Information Minister on 4 January 1946 and was replaced by Mohammad Natsir 29 Instead he became the Minister of Defense His main task as minister was to make the army an effective and responsible tool of government policy His position as minister however was a source of friction with the People s Security Force TKR and its new commander Sudirman who had nominated their own candidate Sultan Hamengkubuwono IX of Yogyakarta However the Sultan was not eager to contest the position 30 Amir was a central figure in the government s anti fascist programme with the army a key target which caused further frictions Sjahrir attacked PETA trained army officers as traitors fascists and running dogs who had cooperated with the Japanese Amir promoted the Red Army as a model of a citizens army loyal to the government and holding socialist ideals 31 On 19 February 1946 Amir inaugurated a socialist and Masyumi politician dominated education staff for the army The body appointed fifty five political officers at the end of May without consulting the army command These new officers were to educate each TRI unit in the goals of the revolution 31 He was not however able to effectively impose such ideals on unit commanders particularly as Sudirman and other PETA trained resented the fascist slur cast on them The Marxist s overtones of Amir s new military academies conflicted with the popular army view of being above politics and the need to play a unifying role in the national struggle the army leadership consequently rejected attempts to introduce partisan ideology and alignments 32 This antagonism between the government and PETA trained officers forced Amir to find an armed support base elsewhere He aligned himself with sympathetic Dutch educated officers in certain divisions such as the West Java Siliwangi Division the command of which had been assumed by KNIL Lieutenant A H Nasution in May 1946 Another source of support for the new cabinet was the more educated armed pemuda sympathetic to the cabinet s anti fascist approach With an engaging personality and persuasive oratory skills Amir had more time and aptitude than Sjahrir for party building and he played the main part in wooing these pemuda 33 Prime Minister Edit See also First Amir Sjarifuddin Cabinet and Second Amir Sjarifuddin Cabinet Amir Sjarifuddin c 1947Premiership ofAmir Sjarifuddin Harahap 3 July 1947 29 January 1948PresidentSukarnoCabinet1st2ndPartySocialist PS Sutan SjahrirMohammad Hatta A split between Amir s and Prime Minister Sjahrir s supporters rapidly deepened in 1947 There had long been mutual suspicion between Sjahrir and the communists who had returned from the Netherlands in 1946 the fading of the anti fascist cause made these suspicions more obvious Sjahrir s preoccupation with diplomacy his physical isolation in Jakarta from revolution infused Central Java and his dislike of mass rallies allowed the more Moscow inclined Marxists to assume more control in both the Socialist Party and the Left wing as a whole By June 1946 Sjahrir s increasing isolation from the coalition encouraged the opposing factions to depose him This group put their support behind Amir the alternative Socialist leader 34 On 26 June 1947 Amir along with two other Moscow inclined Ministers Abdulmadjid Djojoadiningrat and Wikana backed by a majority of the left withdrew their support for Sjahrir Their argument was that Sjahrir had compromised the Republic in his pursuit of diplomacy the same charge that deposed every revolutionary government and that in the face of Dutch belligerence such conciliation seemed futile 34 Following the resignation of Sjahrir as prime minister a new government needed to be formed On 30 June 1947 President Sukarno appointed Amir Adnan Kapau Gani Soekiman Wirjosandjojo and Setyadjit Soegondo to form a new cabinet 35 During these negotiations Amir courted a broad coalition but hostility from Muslim Masyumi prevented its leader Soekiman as well many pro Sjahrir religious socialists from previous cabinets from joining the new cabinet 36 Other influential Masyumi factions such as that of Wondoamiseno provided support Although Amir s communist allies controlled about 10 of the thirty four with Amir s Defence Ministry their sole key one this cabinet was the highest point of orthodox communist influence in the Revolution 37 On 3 July 1947 Amir was inaugurated as prime minister alongside his cabinet which would be known as the First Amir Sjarifuddin Cabinet He would also continue to serve as minister concurrently 13 There were rumors about Amir s appointment as prime minister based on the consideration that he would be needed in negotiations with the Dutch In running the government he appointed Adnan Kapau Gani as his de facto confidant in dealing with foreign affairs 38 Following a backlash over the Renville Agreement for which Amir received much of the blame PNI and Masyumi cabinet members resigned in early January 1948 On 23 January with his support base disappearing Amir resigned from the prime ministership 39 Madiun affair and death EditMain article Madiun Affair Amir Sjarifuddin wearing glasses after being detained by the Indonesian military c 1948 Following the fall of his second cabinet on 26 January 1948 a new cabinet was formed which was headed by Vice President Mohammad Hatta Opposition to the Hatta Cabinet coalesced into a new organization known as the People s Democratic Front 40 which began holding demonstrations demanding the return of Amir in the Cabinet and as Minister of Defense Amir joined the fold and heavily criticized Hatta and his cabinet labelling it as the Masyumi Cabinet as it was dominated by members of the Islamic Masyumi Party 41 Meanwhile other leftist parties and organizations supporting the government joined in an opposing organization known as the People s Revolutionary Movement GGR 40 However Amir s efforts to overthrow the Hatta Cabinet were in vain as the Hatta Cabinet continued along with its four main programs 40 Over the following months the political situation remained tense while the economic situation increasingly deteriorated and relations with the Dutch after the Renville Agreement did not appear to be getting better 42 In August 1948 Musso the 1920s leader of the PKI arrived in Yogyakarta from his exile in the Soviet Union Amir and the leadership of the People s Democratic Front immediately accepted his authority and Amir admitted membership of the underground PKI since 1935 Adhering to Musso s Stalinist thinking of a single party of the working class the major leftist parties in the Front dissolved themselves into the PKI 43 Meanwhile worker strikes were held in Delanggu Surakarta The strikes escalated into demonstrations between communist and pro government forces before increasing rapidly into full on open warfare On 18 September 1948 a group of PKI supporters took over strategic points in the Madiun area in what would come to be known as the Madiun Affair They killed pro government officers and announced over radio the formation of a new National Front government Caught by surprise by the premature coup attempt Communist leaders including Amir rushed to Madiun to take charge of the government The following day about 200 pro PKI and other leftist leaders who remained in Yogyakarta were arrested by the Republican government with Sukarno denouncing the Madiun rebels over radio and calling upon Indonesians to rally against Musso and his plans for a Soviet style government Musso replied on radio that he would fight to the finish while the People s Democratic Front branches in Banten and Sumatra announced they had nothing to do with the rebellion 44 In the following weeks pro government forces led by the Siliwangi Division marched on Madiun where there were an estimated 5 000 10 000 pro PKI soldiers As the rebels retreated they killed Masyumi and PNI leaders and officials and in the villages killings took place along santri abangan lines On 30 September the rebels abandoned Madiun and were pursued by pro government troops through the countryside Musso was killed on 31 October trying to escape custody 44 Amir and 300 rebel soldiers were captured by Siliwangi troops on 1 December Some 35 000 people were later arrested It is thought perhaps 8 000 people were killed in the affair As part of a second major military offensive against the Republic on 19 December Dutch troops occupied Yogyakarta city and the Republican government was captured including Sukarno Hatta Agus Salim and Sjahrir Republican forces withdraw to the countryside beginning full scale guerrilla war on either side of the van Mook line Rather than risk their release the army killed Amir and fifty other leftist prisoners as it withdrew from Yogyakarta that evening 45 See also EditFirst Amir Sjarifuddin Cabinet Second Amir Sjarifuddin Cabinet Madiun AffairNotes Edit Most Indonesian nationalist leaders saw the Japanese Occupation of Indonesia as an opportunity to take advantage of in their pursuit of independence Their consequent cooperation with the Japanese saw the returning Dutch brand them collaborators and thus illegitimate leaders in an attempt to undermine support for the newly proclaimed Republic 22 References EditCitations Edit a b c Purba 2013 p 2 a b Leclerc 1982 pp 54 59 a b Vickers 2005 p 86 a b c Purba 2013 p 3 Leclerc 1982 p 60 66 a b c Leclerc 1982 p 66 76 Van Klinken 2010 pp 171 172 Van Klinken 2010 p 174 Van Klinken 2010 p 178 a b Van Klinken 2003 p 129 Leclerc 1982 p 38 Purba 2013 p 10 a b Vickers 2005 p 226 a b c Reid 1974 p 9 Purba 2013 p 34 Vickers 2005 p 106 a b Purba 2013 p 40 Purba 2013 p 45 Reid 1974 p 12 a b c Reid 1974 p 83 Purba 2013 p 41 a b Reid 1974 p 32 Purba 2013 p 46 a b Purba 2013 p 47 Reid 1974 p 69 a b c Reid 1974 p 52 Ricklefs 2008 p 352 Reid 1974 p 17 Purba 2013 p 49 Cribb 2008 p 93 94 a b Reid 1974 pp 93 94 Reid 1974 p 79 Reid 1974 pp 78 79 a b Ricklefs 2008 pp 360 364 Toer 1947 p 202 Ricklefs 2008 p 362 Reid 1974 p 100 Purba 2013 p 53 Ricklefs 2008 p 364 a b c Indonesian Army 1968 p 126 Dimyati 1951 p 161 Indonesian Army 1968 pp 140 141 Ricklefs 2008 p 367 a b Ricklefs 2008 p 368 Reid 1974 p 156 Sources Edit Purba Yema Siska September 2013 2012 Michellia Dewi Kharisma ed Amir Sjarifoeddin Nasionalis yang Tersisih Amir Sjarifoeddin The Outcast Nationalist PDF in Indonesian PolGov ISBN 978 602 7636 25 5 Leclerc Jacques December 1982 Amir Sjarifuddin 75 Tahun Amir Sjarifuddin 75 Years Prima in Indonesian Retrieved 3 December 2021 Van Klinken Gerry 2010 5 penggerak bangsa yang terlupa nasionalisme minoritas Kristen 5 forgotten nationalists The nationalism of the Christian minority in Indonesian Yogyakarta LKiS ISBN 978 979 1283 09 0 Retrieved 3 December 2021 Vickers Adrian 2005 A History of Modern Indonesia Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 54262 6 Retrieved 2 December 2021 Dimyati Muhammad 1951 Sejarah Perjuangan Indonesia History of Indonesian Struggle in Indonesian Jakarta Widjaya ISBN 0 521 54262 6 Retrieved 3 December 2021 Indonesian Army 1968 Sedjarah TNI AD Kodam VII Diponegoro History of TNI AD Kodam VII Diponegoro in Indonesian Semarang Diponegoro Publishing Service Retrieved 3 December 2021 Ricklefs M C 2008 1981 A History of Modern Indonesia Since c 1300 London Macmillan ISBN 9780333243787 Retrieved 3 December 2021 Toer Pramoedya Ananta 1947 Kamil Ediati ed Kronik Revolusi Indonesia Jilid III Chronicle of the Indonesian Revolution Volume III in Indonesian Vol III Jakarta Gramedia ISBN 9780333243787 Retrieved 3 December 2021 Reid Anthony 1974 The Indonesian National Revolution 1945 1950 Longman ISBN 9780582710474 Retrieved 3 December 2021 Van Klinken Geert 2003 Minorities Modernity and the Emerging Nation Christians in Indonesia a Biographical Approach Leiden KITLV Press ISBN 9789067181518 Retrieved 3 December 2021 Cribb Robert 2008 Gangsters and Revolutionaries The Jakarta People s Militia and the Indonesian Revolution 1945 1949 Equinox Publishing ISBN 9789793780719 Retrieved 3 December 2021 Wikimedia Commons has media related to Amir Sjarifuddin Political officesPreceded bySutan Sjahrir Prime Minister of Indonesia3 July 1947 29 January 1948 Succeeded byMohammad HattaPreceded bySupriyadi Minister of Defense14 November 1945 29 January 1948 Succeeded byHamengkubuwono IX acting Preceded byOffice established Minister of Information2 September 1945 12 March 1946 Succeeded byMohammad Natsir Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Amir Sjarifuddin amp oldid 1125708704, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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