fbpx
Wikipedia

Kasman Singodimedjo

Kasman Singodimedjo (25 February 1904 – 25 October 1982) was an Indonesian nationalist, politician, and National Hero who served as the second Attorney General of Indonesia between November 1945 and May 1946, and as the first chairman of the Central Indonesian National Committee (KNIP) in 1945.

Kasman Singodimedjo
Kasman, c. 1952
1st Chairman of the Central Indonesian National Committee
In office
29 August 1945 – 17 October 1945
Preceded byPosition created
Succeeded bySutan Sjahrir
2nd Attorney General of Indonesia
In office
November 1945 – May 1946
Preceded byGatot Taroenamihardja
Succeeded byTirtawinata [id]
Junior Minister for Justice
In office
11 November 1947 – 23 January 1948
Prime MinisterAmir Sjarifuddin
Personal details
Born(1904-02-25)25 February 1904
Purworejo, Dutch East Indies
Died25 October 1982(1982-10-25) (aged 78)
Jakarta, Indonesia
Political partyMasyumi

Born near Purworejo to a Muslim family, Kasman was educated in colonial schools before enrolling at the STOVIA medical school and the Batavia Law School. Graduating from the latter, he worked as a teacher before joining the Japanese PETA militia during the Japanese occupation period. He then participated in the Preparatory Committee for Indonesian Independence, lobbying other Muslim leaders to compromise in favor of national unity. After the proclamation of Indonesian independence in August 1945, he served as chairman of KNIP for two months before joining Masyumi and being appointed attorney general in November. He then became a legislator and participated in the Constitutional Assembly of Indonesia where he endorsed Islam as the basis of the Indonesian state. He was then arrested for supporting Masyumi leaders involved in the Revolutionary Government of the Republic of Indonesia and imprisoned, with another imprisonment in 1963 under charges of conspiracy against the state. Shortly before his death in 1982, Kasman would take part in petitions criticizing Suharto's government. He was made a National Hero in 2018.

Early life and career

Kasman was born near the town of Purworejo, today in Central Java, on 25 February 1904.[1][2][a] He was the third of seven children, although three of his siblings died in infancy.[3] His father was a local Islamic functionary.[4] He was educated at a Hollandsch-Inlandsche School (Dutch school for natives), continuing to a Meer Uitgebreid Lager Onderwijs (MULO) middle school and then to the STOVIA medical school in Batavia.[1] During his time at STOVIA's preparatory school, Kasman was elected chairman of the Jong Islamieten Bond, the Muslim youth organization, and he held this position between 1930 and 1935.[5] He did not complete his studies at STOVIA and instead enrolled at the Rechtshogeschool te Batavia (Batavia Law School/RHS), graduating with a law degree in 1934. He continued his education at the RHS until he obtained a doctorate in sociology and economics in 1939.[6]

Kasman began to teach at various schools, both those affiliated with the colonial government and with Muhammadiyah, after his graduation from RHS.[6] For some time, he was imprisoned by Dutch authorities after he gave a public speech in 1940 calling for Indonesian independence.[7] In 1941, he worked as an agricultural consultant for the colonial government.[8][9] Following the Japanese invasion and takeover of the Dutch East Indies, Kasman was recruited into the occupational militia Pembela Tanah Air (PETA) and was appointed a battalion commander.[10] On the eve of the proclamation of Indonesian independence, Kasman was the commander of PETA in Jakarta, although he was in Bandung when nationalist leaders Sukarno and Mohammad Hatta were kidnapped by youths. Due to his absence, PETA in Jakarta did not take any action against or in aid of the youths.[11]

Political career

Following the proclamation of Indonesian independence, Kasman along with several Indonesian collaborationist leaders were invited to informally join the Preparatory Committee for Indonesian Independence (PPKI) on 18 August, where Kasman and the others' positions were attacked by nationalist youths who considered them too close to the Japanese.[12] On the same day, his lobbying of hardline Muslims such as Bagoes Hadikoesoemo [id] allowed the revocation of a clause implementing sharia law to Muslims in the country. Although Kasman supported the clause, he believed that it was more crucial at that time to create national unity, and intended to implement the clause back into law at a later time upon the formation of a national parliament which was expected to convene in six months.[13][14] The following day, the leaders formally requested the dissolution of PETA, although Kasman was appointed into a planning committee for an Indonesian national defence force.[15]

After PPKI's dissolution and the formation of the Central Indonesian National Committee (KNIP) on 29 August 1945, Kasman was appointed as its inaugural chairman.[14] In the KNIP's second plenary session on 16–17 October, however, Kasman was criticized for inaction by pemuda (youth) representatives.[16] He was also accused of allowing soldiers under his command to be disarmed by Japanese troops while he commanded PETA in Jakarta.[17] Kasman was removed from his chairmanship on 16 October, with Adam Malik temporarily taking his seat until Sutan Sjahrir was elected the following day.[16] In November 1945, following the formation of the Masyumi political party, Kasman was appointed as a deputy chairman in its inaugural leadership.[18]

Kasman was also briefly Attorney General of Indonesia, serving between November 1945 and May 1946. He was the second holder of the office after Gatot Taroenamihardja, and Kasman was in turn replaced by Tirtawinata [id].[8][19] During his brief tenure, he issued an announcement to regional leaders, attorneys and police officers calling for the implementation of the "rule of law through quick and fair trials".[20] Kasman also endorsed the call by Islamic guerilla leaders such as Kartosuwiryo for a jihad against the Dutch during his time in office.[21] In the aftermath of a Dutch military offensive in 1947, Masyumi which had previously been part of the opposition agreed to join a unity government under prime minister Amir Sjarifuddin, and Kasman was appointed as junior minister for justice on 11 November 1947. This arrangement did not last long, as the cabinet was disbanded on 23 January the following year due to general opposition to the Renville Agreement.[22] At one point during the revolution, he made a trip to Europe to study military tribunals there.[6][8]

During the liberal democracy period in the 1950s, Kasman became a member of the Provisional People's Representative Council[6] and the Constitutional Assembly of Indonesia.[8] Within the Assembly, Kasman chaired an ad hoc preparatory committee which put forward recommendations on a new constitution and state philosophy, but beyond this, the Assembly made little progress. This deadlock was at large due to disagreements between a nationalist faction and an Islamist faction on the basis of the state.[23] During debates in the Assembly, Kasman would quote and interpret the Quran, drawing his conclusion that the Indonesian Islamic community should be required to implement Islam as the basis of the state.[24]

In 1958, with many Masyumi leaders being involved in the subversive Revolutionary Government of the Republic of Indonesia, Masyumi split over the question of denouncing said leaders. Kasman himself supported the rebelling leaders such as Mohammad Natsir.[25] Shortly afterwards, Kasman gave a speech in Magelang which resulted in his arrest by authorities. Authorities claimed that his speech was in support of the rebels, although Kasman accused a journalist of misreporting his speech.[26] He was sentenced to three years' prison in 1960.[27] He was again arrested on 9 November 1963 under charges of conspiracy against the state and of plotting to assassinate Sukarno, and the following year was sentenced to another eight years in prison (reduced to two and a half years upon appeal).[28]

Later life and death

During Suharto's presidency, Kasman remained a critic of the government. In 1980, he signed two petitions – one (the Petition of Fifty) attacking the content of Suharto's speeches, and another criticizing the conduct of elections. Kasman was the first signatory of the latter petition, which was also known as the "Kasman Petition". He also remained active in politics, campaigning although not running for the 1977 Indonesian legislative election.[29]

Kasman died on the evening of 25 October 1982 after receiving nine months of treatment for prostate cancer at the Jakarta Islamic Hospital. His body was buried at the Tanah Kusir Cemetery.[30] In 1992, when the Suharto goverrnment distributed awards to former members of PPKI, Kasman was bypassed and did not receive an award.[b] Later on, after the fall of Suharto, Kasman was declared a National Hero of Indonesia in 2018 by president Joko Widodo.[31]

Personal life

Kasman married Soepinah Isti Kasiyati on 17 September 1928, and the couple has six children.[32]

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ Kasman's birth date is listed as 25 February 1908 in many official records. According to his parents, this was due to him entering school after his younger brother, and so he lied about his birth year to avoid embarrassment.[2]
  2. ^ Author Lukman Hakiem speculated that this was due to Kasman's prior involvement in the petitions criticizing Suharto.[29]

Citations

  1. ^ a b Anderson 2006, p. 424.
  2. ^ a b Madinier 2015, p. 47.
  3. ^ "Buku Terbuka Bernama Kasman Singodimedjo - Historia". Historia (in Indonesian). 10 November 2018. Retrieved 21 February 2023.
  4. ^ Latif 2008, p. 160.
  5. ^ Latif 2008, p. 206.
  6. ^ a b c d Kami perkenalkan (in Indonesian). Ministry of Information. 1952. p. 78.
  7. ^ Latif 2008, p. 241.
  8. ^ a b c d Hidayat, Syahrul; Fogg, Kevin W. (1 February 2018). "Profil Anggota: Mr. R. H. Kasman Singodimedjo". Konstituante.Net (in Indonesian). Retrieved 21 February 2023.
  9. ^ Madinier 2015, p. 29.
  10. ^ Anderson 2006, pp. 20–21.
  11. ^ Anderson 2006, pp. 77–78.
  12. ^ Anderson 2006, pp. 85–86.
  13. ^ Elson, R. E. (2009). "Another Look at the Jakarta Charter Controversy of 1945". Indonesia (88): 125–126. ISSN 0019-7289. JSTOR 40376487.
  14. ^ a b Latif 2008, p. 248.
  15. ^ Anderson 2006, p. 102.
  16. ^ a b Anderson 2006, p. 174.
  17. ^ Madinier 2015, p. 72.
  18. ^ Latif 2008, p. 318.
  19. ^ 20 tahun Indonesia merdeka (in Indonesian). Ministry of Information. 1966. p. 554.
  20. ^ Widiastuti, Rina (8 November 2018). "Pahlawan Nasional Kasman Singodimedjo Ikut Rumuskan Pembukaan UUD". Tempo (in Indonesian). Retrieved 21 February 2023.
  21. ^ Formichi, Chiara (2012). Islam and the Making of the Nation: Kartosuwiryo and Political Islam in 20th Century Indonesia. BRILL. pp. 105–107. ISBN 978-90-04-26046-7.
  22. ^ Madinier 2015, p. 100.
  23. ^ Madinier 2015, pp. 328–329.
  24. ^ Madinier 2015, pp. 338–340.
  25. ^ Madinier 2015, p. 263.
  26. ^ Madinier 2015, p. 270.
  27. ^ Madinier 2015, pp. 426–427.
  28. ^ "Kasman Singodimedjo, Mr". ikpni.or.id (in Indonesian). Retrieved 21 February 2023.
  29. ^ a b Hakiem, Lukman (2018). Jejak Perjuangan Para Tokoh Muslim Mengawal NKRI (in Indonesian). Pustaka Al-Kautsar. pp. 65–67.
  30. ^ "Meninggal Dunia". Tempo (in Indonesian). 6 November 1982. Retrieved 21 February 2023.
  31. ^ "Peran Kasman Singodimedjo dalam persatuan bangsa". Antara News (in Indonesian). 10 November 2018. Retrieved 9 September 2022.
  32. ^ Salam, Solichin (1990). Wajah-wajah nasional (in Indonesian). Pusat Studi Dan Penelitian Islam. p. 168.

Bibliography

kasman, singodimedjo, february, 1904, october, 1982, indonesian, nationalist, politician, national, hero, served, second, attorney, general, indonesia, between, november, 1945, 1946, first, chairman, central, indonesian, national, committee, knip, 1945, kasman. Kasman Singodimedjo 25 February 1904 25 October 1982 was an Indonesian nationalist politician and National Hero who served as the second Attorney General of Indonesia between November 1945 and May 1946 and as the first chairman of the Central Indonesian National Committee KNIP in 1945 Kasman SingodimedjoKasman c 19521st Chairman of the Central Indonesian National CommitteeIn office 29 August 1945 17 October 1945Preceded byPosition createdSucceeded bySutan Sjahrir2nd Attorney General of IndonesiaIn office November 1945 May 1946Preceded byGatot TaroenamihardjaSucceeded byTirtawinata id Junior Minister for JusticeIn office 11 November 1947 23 January 1948Prime MinisterAmir SjarifuddinPersonal detailsBorn 1904 02 25 25 February 1904Purworejo Dutch East IndiesDied25 October 1982 1982 10 25 aged 78 Jakarta IndonesiaPolitical partyMasyumiBorn near Purworejo to a Muslim family Kasman was educated in colonial schools before enrolling at the STOVIA medical school and the Batavia Law School Graduating from the latter he worked as a teacher before joining the Japanese PETA militia during the Japanese occupation period He then participated in the Preparatory Committee for Indonesian Independence lobbying other Muslim leaders to compromise in favor of national unity After the proclamation of Indonesian independence in August 1945 he served as chairman of KNIP for two months before joining Masyumi and being appointed attorney general in November He then became a legislator and participated in the Constitutional Assembly of Indonesia where he endorsed Islam as the basis of the Indonesian state He was then arrested for supporting Masyumi leaders involved in the Revolutionary Government of the Republic of Indonesia and imprisoned with another imprisonment in 1963 under charges of conspiracy against the state Shortly before his death in 1982 Kasman would take part in petitions criticizing Suharto s government He was made a National Hero in 2018 Contents 1 Early life and career 2 Political career 3 Later life and death 4 Personal life 5 References 5 1 Footnotes 5 2 Citations 5 3 BibliographyEarly life and career EditKasman was born near the town of Purworejo today in Central Java on 25 February 1904 1 2 a He was the third of seven children although three of his siblings died in infancy 3 His father was a local Islamic functionary 4 He was educated at a Hollandsch Inlandsche School Dutch school for natives continuing to a Meer Uitgebreid Lager Onderwijs MULO middle school and then to the STOVIA medical school in Batavia 1 During his time at STOVIA s preparatory school Kasman was elected chairman of the Jong Islamieten Bond the Muslim youth organization and he held this position between 1930 and 1935 5 He did not complete his studies at STOVIA and instead enrolled at the Rechtshogeschool te Batavia Batavia Law School RHS graduating with a law degree in 1934 He continued his education at the RHS until he obtained a doctorate in sociology and economics in 1939 6 Kasman began to teach at various schools both those affiliated with the colonial government and with Muhammadiyah after his graduation from RHS 6 For some time he was imprisoned by Dutch authorities after he gave a public speech in 1940 calling for Indonesian independence 7 In 1941 he worked as an agricultural consultant for the colonial government 8 9 Following the Japanese invasion and takeover of the Dutch East Indies Kasman was recruited into the occupational militia Pembela Tanah Air PETA and was appointed a battalion commander 10 On the eve of the proclamation of Indonesian independence Kasman was the commander of PETA in Jakarta although he was in Bandung when nationalist leaders Sukarno and Mohammad Hatta were kidnapped by youths Due to his absence PETA in Jakarta did not take any action against or in aid of the youths 11 Political career EditFollowing the proclamation of Indonesian independence Kasman along with several Indonesian collaborationist leaders were invited to informally join the Preparatory Committee for Indonesian Independence PPKI on 18 August where Kasman and the others positions were attacked by nationalist youths who considered them too close to the Japanese 12 On the same day his lobbying of hardline Muslims such as Bagoes Hadikoesoemo id allowed the revocation of a clause implementing sharia law to Muslims in the country Although Kasman supported the clause he believed that it was more crucial at that time to create national unity and intended to implement the clause back into law at a later time upon the formation of a national parliament which was expected to convene in six months 13 14 The following day the leaders formally requested the dissolution of PETA although Kasman was appointed into a planning committee for an Indonesian national defence force 15 After PPKI s dissolution and the formation of the Central Indonesian National Committee KNIP on 29 August 1945 Kasman was appointed as its inaugural chairman 14 In the KNIP s second plenary session on 16 17 October however Kasman was criticized for inaction by pemuda youth representatives 16 He was also accused of allowing soldiers under his command to be disarmed by Japanese troops while he commanded PETA in Jakarta 17 Kasman was removed from his chairmanship on 16 October with Adam Malik temporarily taking his seat until Sutan Sjahrir was elected the following day 16 In November 1945 following the formation of the Masyumi political party Kasman was appointed as a deputy chairman in its inaugural leadership 18 Kasman was also briefly Attorney General of Indonesia serving between November 1945 and May 1946 He was the second holder of the office after Gatot Taroenamihardja and Kasman was in turn replaced by Tirtawinata id 8 19 During his brief tenure he issued an announcement to regional leaders attorneys and police officers calling for the implementation of the rule of law through quick and fair trials 20 Kasman also endorsed the call by Islamic guerilla leaders such as Kartosuwiryo for a jihad against the Dutch during his time in office 21 In the aftermath of a Dutch military offensive in 1947 Masyumi which had previously been part of the opposition agreed to join a unity government under prime minister Amir Sjarifuddin and Kasman was appointed as junior minister for justice on 11 November 1947 This arrangement did not last long as the cabinet was disbanded on 23 January the following year due to general opposition to the Renville Agreement 22 At one point during the revolution he made a trip to Europe to study military tribunals there 6 8 During the liberal democracy period in the 1950s Kasman became a member of the Provisional People s Representative Council 6 and the Constitutional Assembly of Indonesia 8 Within the Assembly Kasman chaired an ad hoc preparatory committee which put forward recommendations on a new constitution and state philosophy but beyond this the Assembly made little progress This deadlock was at large due to disagreements between a nationalist faction and an Islamist faction on the basis of the state 23 During debates in the Assembly Kasman would quote and interpret the Quran drawing his conclusion that the Indonesian Islamic community should be required to implement Islam as the basis of the state 24 In 1958 with many Masyumi leaders being involved in the subversive Revolutionary Government of the Republic of Indonesia Masyumi split over the question of denouncing said leaders Kasman himself supported the rebelling leaders such as Mohammad Natsir 25 Shortly afterwards Kasman gave a speech in Magelang which resulted in his arrest by authorities Authorities claimed that his speech was in support of the rebels although Kasman accused a journalist of misreporting his speech 26 He was sentenced to three years prison in 1960 27 He was again arrested on 9 November 1963 under charges of conspiracy against the state and of plotting to assassinate Sukarno and the following year was sentenced to another eight years in prison reduced to two and a half years upon appeal 28 Later life and death EditDuring Suharto s presidency Kasman remained a critic of the government In 1980 he signed two petitions one the Petition of Fifty attacking the content of Suharto s speeches and another criticizing the conduct of elections Kasman was the first signatory of the latter petition which was also known as the Kasman Petition He also remained active in politics campaigning although not running for the 1977 Indonesian legislative election 29 Kasman died on the evening of 25 October 1982 after receiving nine months of treatment for prostate cancer at the Jakarta Islamic Hospital His body was buried at the Tanah Kusir Cemetery 30 In 1992 when the Suharto goverrnment distributed awards to former members of PPKI Kasman was bypassed and did not receive an award b Later on after the fall of Suharto Kasman was declared a National Hero of Indonesia in 2018 by president Joko Widodo 31 Personal life EditKasman married Soepinah Isti Kasiyati on 17 September 1928 and the couple has six children 32 References EditFootnotes Edit Kasman s birth date is listed as 25 February 1908 in many official records According to his parents this was due to him entering school after his younger brother and so he lied about his birth year to avoid embarrassment 2 Author Lukman Hakiem speculated that this was due to Kasman s prior involvement in the petitions criticizing Suharto 29 Citations Edit a b Anderson 2006 p 424 a b Madinier 2015 p 47 Buku Terbuka Bernama Kasman Singodimedjo Historia Historia in Indonesian 10 November 2018 Retrieved 21 February 2023 Latif 2008 p 160 Latif 2008 p 206 a b c d Kami perkenalkan in Indonesian Ministry of Information 1952 p 78 Latif 2008 p 241 a b c d Hidayat Syahrul Fogg Kevin W 1 February 2018 Profil Anggota Mr R H Kasman Singodimedjo Konstituante Net in Indonesian Retrieved 21 February 2023 Madinier 2015 p 29 Anderson 2006 pp 20 21 Anderson 2006 pp 77 78 Anderson 2006 pp 85 86 Elson R E 2009 Another Look at the Jakarta Charter Controversy of 1945 Indonesia 88 125 126 ISSN 0019 7289 JSTOR 40376487 a b Latif 2008 p 248 Anderson 2006 p 102 a b Anderson 2006 p 174 Madinier 2015 p 72 Latif 2008 p 318 20 tahun Indonesia merdeka in Indonesian Ministry of Information 1966 p 554 Widiastuti Rina 8 November 2018 Pahlawan Nasional Kasman Singodimedjo Ikut Rumuskan Pembukaan UUD Tempo in Indonesian Retrieved 21 February 2023 Formichi Chiara 2012 Islam and the Making of the Nation Kartosuwiryo and Political Islam in 20th Century Indonesia BRILL pp 105 107 ISBN 978 90 04 26046 7 Madinier 2015 p 100 Madinier 2015 pp 328 329 Madinier 2015 pp 338 340 Madinier 2015 p 263 Madinier 2015 p 270 Madinier 2015 pp 426 427 Kasman Singodimedjo Mr ikpni or id in Indonesian Retrieved 21 February 2023 a b Hakiem Lukman 2018 Jejak Perjuangan Para Tokoh Muslim Mengawal NKRI in Indonesian Pustaka Al Kautsar pp 65 67 Meninggal Dunia Tempo in Indonesian 6 November 1982 Retrieved 21 February 2023 Peran Kasman Singodimedjo dalam persatuan bangsa Antara News in Indonesian 10 November 2018 Retrieved 9 September 2022 Salam Solichin 1990 Wajah wajah nasional in Indonesian Pusat Studi Dan Penelitian Islam p 168 Bibliography Edit Anderson Benedict 2006 Java in a Time of Revolution Occupation and Resistance 1944 1946 Equinox Publishing ISBN 978 979 3780 14 6 Latif Yudi 2008 Indonesian Muslim Intelligentsia and Power Institute of Southeast Asian Studies ISBN 978 981 230 472 8 Madinier Remy 2015 Islam and Politics in Indonesia The Masyumi Party between Democracy and Integralism NUS Press ISBN 978 9971 69 843 0 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kasman Singodimedjo amp oldid 1147160007, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.