JakartaPost-Feb 4

An Indonesian historian and two officials from a Dutch museum have been reported to the Dutch police over conflicting historical perspectives, which have forced the two nations to confront the violent end of Dutch colonialism in Indonesia. Historical grudges are a mainstay in the Dutch-Indonesian relationship, due in part to the Netherlands’ ongoing refusal to recognize Indonesia’s 1945 declaration of independence, which underpins legal efforts to demand accountability for descendants of victims of war crimes. On Jan. 21, the Committee of Dutch Honor Debts (KUKB), a group advocating compensation for Dutch war crimes, reported the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam, its director Taco Dibbits and curator Harms Stevens to the police for their insistence on using the racially charged term “bersiap” in an upcoming exhibition highlighting Indonesia’s post-colonial history. KUKB chairman Jeffry Pondaag stated that the term was “not only racist, it is also a form of historical falsification”. Indonesian guest curator Bonnie Triyana in an opinion piece earlier that month in Dutch media NRC on Jan. 10 said  that it was supposed to promote a Rijksmuseum exhibition called “Revolusi! Indonesia Independent”, which offers an “international perspective” on the history of the Indonesian post-independence movement in 1945-1950. Read more at:

https://www.thejakartapost.com/world/2022/02/03/bersiap-exposes-dutch-indonesian-historical-divide.html.