Jakarta war cemetery part 1
WW2 Indian Army War Grave in Jakarta, Indonesia
Menteng pulo war grave
Taman Prasasti Dutch Cemetery, Jakarta
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Taman Prasasti Museum is an open air museum in Central Jakarta, Indonesia. It was formerly a cemetery built by the Dutch East Indies colonial government in 1795 to bury noble Dutch residents, believed to be one of the oldest cemeteries in the world. Many colonial figures were buried there; one of them was Peter Eberveld, who was convicted of conspiracy against the government and was put to death by having his hands and legs tied to four horses that ran to four separate directions, causing his body being torn apart. Others include Olivia Raffles, wife of Sir Stamford Raffles the founder of Singapore, J. L. A. Brandes who translated ancient Javanese texts Nagarakretagama and Pararaton, and Maj. Gen. Johan H. R. Kohler who died in the First Aceh War in 1873.
Tanah Abang cemetery Jakarta
Batavia, Jakarta-1946- The Unveiling of a War Cemetary in North Jakarta- Tempo Doeloe
In 1946, Indonesia was fighting a war of independence, whilst the British Commenwealth army, along with some units of the surrending Japanese army tried to control country. During this time, in Batavia, which was Indonesia's capital, the thousands who died in WWII, were finally put t war dead were finally put to rest in cemeteries across Indonesia.
Watch the Series- Indonesia, the Independence War
Here is rare footage of the unveiling of one of the biggest war cenetaries in Indonesia, with many of the fallen still remembered today.
PM Modi begins #Indonesia visit by laying wreath at iconic military cemetery
PM Narendra Modi pays tribute at Kalibata National Heroes' Cemetery in Jakarta, #Indonesia-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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'I can't remember how many I killed... aged 10' - BBC News
A Muslim and a Christian bond as they work together to build peace on the Indonesian island of Ambon.
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[4K] Walking Alone ~ Museum Taman Prasasti ~ Museum Kesejarahan Jakarta - Kerkhof
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Museum Taman Prasasti (Indonesian for Museum of Memorial Stone Park or Inscription Museum[1]) is a museum located in Jakarta, Indonesia. The museum was formerly a cemetery, built by the Dutch colonial government in 1795 as a final resting place for noble Dutchmen. Several important person that was buried in the cemetery area are Olivia Mariamne Raffles - the first wife of British governor general Thomas Stamford Raffles - and Indonesian youth activist Soe Hok Gie.[2]
Colour lithograph from an original watercolor by Rappard. The European cemetery Kerkhof Laan in Tanah Abang with the monument of the priest Van der Grinten in 1881-1889
The cemetery area is the oldest of its kind in Jakarta and may have been the oldest modern cemetery in the world by comparison with the Fort Canning Park (1926) in Singapore, Gore Hill cemetery (1868) in Sydney, Père Lachaise Cemetery (1803) in Paris, and Mount Auburn Cemetery (1831) in Cambridge, Massachusetts.[3]
History
The cemetery was officially opened on September 28, 1797, although people had been buried here as early as 1795. The cemetery was known as Kebon Jahe Kober (recorded under this name since December 14, 1798). It was located in Kerkhoflaan and has a total area of 5.9 ha. The cemetery was built to accommodate the increasing number of death that was caused by an outbreak of disease in Batavia. Because of this outbreak, the cemetery area of the New Dutch Church (Dutch Nieuwe Hollandsche Kerk, now the Wayang Museum), Binnenkerk (an inner city Portuguese Church), and Sion Church (an outer city Portuguese Church) was full. Because of this, some of the gravestones from these cemeteries were transferred into Keboh Jahe Kober cemetery.[2]
Kebon Jahe Kober cemetery is located close to the river Kali Krukut. This river was once used as a transportation mode for carrying the dead to the cemetery via boat.
After Indonesia's declaration of independence, the park was used as a Christian cemetery. Within the first two years it was managed by the Verberg Foundation and for the next twenty years it was handled by the Palang Hitam Foundation.[2]
From 1967 to 1975 the cemetery was managed by the Jakarta burials agency. In 1975, the cemetery was closed to make way for the construction of the Central Jakarta mayoralty office. At a request from the local government, some corpses were removed by relatives while others were taken to Tanah Kusir cemetery in South Jakarta. Many tombstones, sculptures and statues were removed and damaged during the construction of the office and now only 32 tombstones remain in their original positions. The size of the cemetery is also reduced from the original 5.9 hectare plot to 1.3 hectares. Only 1,372 of about 4,200 stones were selected to be kept in the cemetery.[2]
The cemetery was officially inaugurated as Taman Prasasti Museum on July 9, 1977 by Ali Sadikin, former governor of Jakarta.
Since 2003, the museum is administered by the Jakarta History Museum management.
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Museum Taman Prasasti adalah sebuah museum cagar budaya peninggalan masa kolonial Belanda yang berada di Jalan Tanah Abang No. 1, Jakarta Pusat. Museum ini memiliki koleksi prasasti nisan kuno serta miniatur makam khas dari 27 provinsi di Indonesia, beserta koleksi kereta jenazah antik. Museum seluas 1,2 ha ini merupakan museum terbuka yang menampilkan karya seni dari masa lampau tentang kecanggihan para pematung, pemahat, kaligrafer dan sastrawan yang menyatu.
Pekuburan orang Eropa di Tanah Abang (litografi oleh Josias Cornelis Rappard, 1881-1889)
Semula Museum Taman Prasasti yang terletak di Jl. Tanah Abang I ini adalah pemakaman umum bernama Kebon Jahe Kober seluas 5,5 ha dan dibangun tahun 1795 untuk menggantikan kuburan lain di samping gereja Nieuw Hollandsche Kerk, sekarang Museum Wayang, yang sudah penuh. Makam baru ini menyimpan koleksi nisan dari tahun sebelumnya karena sebagian besar dipindahkan dari pemakaman Nieuw Hollandse Kerk pada awal abad 19. Nisan yang dipindahkan ini ditandai dengan tulisan HK, Hollandsche Kerk.
Pada tanggal 9 Juli 1977, pemakaman Kebon Jahe Kober dijadikan museum dan dibuka untuk umum dengan koleksi prasasti, nisan, dan makam sebanyak 1.372 yang terbuat dari batu alam, marmer, dan perunggu. Karena perkembangan kota, luas museum ini kini menyusut tinggal hanya 1,3 ha saja.
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Jakata - Graves hold secrets of Indonesia's mass killings | Editor's Pick | 5 Oct 16
It's been 51 years since an abortive coup in 1965 which Indonesia's military blamed on the country's powerful Communist Party.
The coup brought to a head a long-simmering rivalry and ignited a months-long bloodbath that historians estimate killed half a million people.
The Pancasila Sakti museum on the outskirts of the capital Jakarta shows how six generals and an adjutant were killed in the coup and their bodies thrown into a well.
But as the military's version of history, it doesn't address the killings that were orchestrated by the military and often carried out by militias and Islamic groups.
Half a century later, those who survived and the descendants of Communist Party members, have many unanswered questions.
One of the most pressing is where their friends and relatives were buried.
One of the mass graves is believed to be located in lush forest at Plumbon village in Central Java.
Villagers say the bodies are buried there.
Eight names were listed on a monument erected in 2015 - Moetiah, Soesatjo, Darsono, Sachroni, Joesoef, Soekandar, Doelkhamid and Soerono.
And it adds the site may contain as many as 24 bodies.
Erected after activists persuaded villagers, religious leaders and local officials, it is a rare acknowledgement of the victims of Indonesia's anti-communist massacres and an even rarer act of compromise.
Supar, who was 17-years-old in 1965, is one of the few living witnesses to events in Plumbon.
Now toothless and aged beyond his 68 years, he said naive curiosity got him entangled in the massacre of 12 people accused of being communists.
Supar, who goes by one name, said he has stayed away from Plumbon ever since the massacre.
It was dark, after 11 pm, Supar said, and raining heavily when the military jeep and a truck transporting the alleged members of the Partai Komunis Indonesia, or PKI, arrived at the site near Plumbon - two holes had been dug.
The executions usually happened after midnight but because of the rain, the two soldiers didn't wait.
They were told to sit down on the ground side by side. They prayed or recited whatever verse they knew from the Quran, he said.
After the execution I was told to shine the torch.
I couldn't look so I turned my face away but the soldier yelled at me: don't look away. Those still moving, the soldiers shot them again and again.
In the decades of the Suharto New Order era that followed, the events of 1965-66 were depicted as a heroic uprising against communism.
The scale and ferocity of the killings by the military, militias and Islamic groups was expunged from the national consciousness.
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INDONESIA: JAKARTA: JAPANESE PM RYUTARO HASHIMOTO VISIT
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In Jakarta for the third leg of his eight-day, five-nation tour of Southeast Asia, Japanese Prime Minister Ryutaro Hashimoto has visited a cemetery to commemorate those who died fighting for Indonesia's independence.
Hashimoto offered a minute of silence and laid a wreath at the Kalibata Heroes' Cemetery in honour of those who contributed to Indonesia's independence from the Netherlands.
Hashimoto also paid a 30-minute courtesy call on Indonesian President Suharto after arriving Thursday afternoon.
Japanese officials said the leaders agreed to exchange information on terrorism in the wake of the hostage crisis in Peru.
During a state visit to Indonesia as part of his five-nation swing through Southeast Asia, Japanese President Hashimoto paid tribute to those who fought during Indonesia's bid for freedom.
Hashimoto laid a wreath of purple-and-white orchids at a cenotaph in the Kalibata hero's cemetery on his first day on his state visit to the country on Thursday.
The Hero's cemetery is home to the thousands of dead from the independence struggle against the Japanese, Dutch and British.
A minute of silence in tribute to their fallen heroes of Indonesia's war of independence .
Hashimoto placed red orchid petals on the grave of a former Japanese soldier who had settled in Indonesia and fought for the nation's independence.
Relations between the two countries have warmed dramatically in the last few years - in 1974 an official Japanese visit sparked off anti-Japanese riots.
But Japan is now Indonesia's biggest trade partner with trade between the two standing at around 18 billion dollars.
Japan hopes that the main accomplishment of the trip will be support from Indonesia and other Asian nations, for Japan's inclusion as a permanent member of the UN Security Council.
The two leaders will hold bilateral talks today before Hashimoto continues his eight-day trip in Southeast Asia, visiting Vietnam Saturday and then going on to Singapore where he's to give a major policy speech.
In the wake of the on-going hostage crisis in Peru, the Japanese Prime Minister and Indonesian President Suharto also agreed to exchange information on terrorism.
Meeting Suharto at Merdeka Palace, Hashimoto said the Japanese government will respond to the hostage crisis by respecting the hostages lives' without yielding to terrorism.
It's expected Hashimoto will also bring up his concern over Indonesia's national car policy, which Japan argues violates the rules of the World Trade Organisation.
Hashimoto is also to propose holding a regular summit meeting among leaders of Japan and the seven ASEAN countries.
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PM Modi Begins Indonesia Visit By Paying Homage At Kalibata Military Cemetery | ABP News
Prime Minister Narendra Modi today began his Indonesia visit by paying homage to martyrs of Indonesian independence struggle as he laid a wreath at the Kalibata National Heroes' Cemetery here. Prime Minister Modi, who is here on his first-ever official visit to Indonesia, will meet President Joko Widodo today and discuss bilateral cooperation in a broad range of areas, including maritime, trade and investment. Kalibata Heroes' Cemetery in South Jakarta is a military cemetery in Indonesia. It was built in 1953 and opened in November 1954 when the first burial took place.
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[Indonesia] The Padri War
The Padri War (1803 - 1837) was caused by religious Indonesian muslims (Padris) that returned from their hadj to Mekka. Back in Sumatra they wanted to spread their beliefs. The locals rulers (the Adats) feared for their positions and they sought help with the Dutch colonizer who was willing to help but wanted something in return...
Check out my recent video about Dutch colonial rule in Indonesia:
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Recorded on the 18th of May 2016 in Bukittinggi, Indonesië.
Images from commons.wikimedia.org.
Crusade Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
a wave demonstant force jakarta to be a war zone
After late night of 21st May clash, thounsand demonstrant were fighting with police in jakarta, making this country in state of caos
#indonesia
#indonesiaelection
#war
PM Modi receives a ceremonial welcome in Jakarta, Indonesia welcome at Merdeka Palace in Jakarta
PM Modi receives a ceremonial welcome in Jakarta, Indonesia welcome at Merdeka Palace in Jakarta, by Indonesian President Joko Widodo. He later inspected the guard of honor and also interacted with children who gathered to welcome him, Modi paid tribute at Kalibata National Heroes Cemetery.
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Graves hold secrets of Indonesia's mass killings
(5 Oct 2016) It's been 51 years since an abortive coup in 1965 which Indonesia's military blamed on the country's powerful Communist Party.
The coup brought to a head a long-simmering rivalry and ignited a months-long bloodbath that historians estimate killed half a million people.
The Pancasila Sakti museum on the outskirts of the capital Jakarta shows how six generals and an adjutant were killed in the coup and their bodies thrown into a well.
But as the military's version of history, it doesn't address the killings that were orchestrated by the military and often carried out by militias and Islamic groups.
Half a century later, those who survived and the descendants of Communist Party members, have many unanswered questions.
One of the most pressing is where their friends and relatives were buried.
One of the mass graves is believed to be located in lush forest at Plumbon village in Central Java.
Villagers say the bodies are buried there.
Eight names were listed on a monument erected in 2015 - Moetiah, Soesatjo, Darsono, Sachroni, Joesoef, Soekandar, Doelkhamid and Soerono.
And it adds the site may contain as many as 24 bodies.
Erected after activists persuaded villagers, religious leaders and local officials, it is a rare acknowledgement of the victims of Indonesia's anti-communist massacres and an even rarer act of compromise.
Supar, who was 17-years-old in 1965, is one of the few living witnesses to events in Plumbon.
Now toothless and aged beyond his 68 years, he said naive curiosity got him entangled in the massacre of 12 people accused of being communists.
Supar, who goes by one name, said he has stayed away from Plumbon ever since the massacre.
It was dark, after 11 pm, Supar said, and raining heavily when the military jeep and a truck transporting the alleged members of the Partai Komunis Indonesia, or PKI, arrived at the site near Plumbon - two holes had been dug.
The executions usually happened after midnight but because of the rain, the two soldiers didn't wait.
They were told to sit down on the ground side by side. They prayed or recited whatever verse they knew from the Quran, he said.
After the execution I was told to shine the torch.
I couldn't look so I turned my face away but the soldier yelled at me: don't look away. Those still moving, the soldiers shot them again and again.
In the decades of the Suharto New Order era that followed, the events of 1965-66 were depicted as a heroic uprising against communism.
The scale and ferocity of the killings by the military, militias and Islamic groups was expunged from the national consciousness.
Even today, tens of thousands of descendants of communists face discrimination that bars them from government jobs.
Suharto's ouster in 1998 allowed another narrative about 1965 to begin seeping into the national conversation.
Earlier this year, the government permitted an unprecedented symposium that brought together survivors and anti-communists such as the military and Islamic groups.
Agus Widjojo, the governor of the National Resilience Institute representing the Indonesian government as well as the symposium organiser and son of a general killed in the abortive coup, hoped they could pave the way for truth-seeking and reconciliation.
But progress was brought to a halt by a fierce backlash from conservatives and apparent disinterest from President Joko Jokowi Widodo.
A cabinet reshuffle that installed a former military chief with a checkered human rights record to the ministry overseeing a tentative effort to locate mass graves seemed to be a death blow.
When Sukar and three other men went to the location, one of them sank to the ground and another had to support himself against a tree, Sukar said.
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[Indonesia] The Indonesian War of Independence
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The Police Actions and the Indonesian War of Independence. Two different names for the same conflict. After the Japanese surrendered there was a brief period of great turmoil where Indonesian nationalists terrorized the country, also known as the Bersiap. Now the Dutch were back, planning to restore colonial order. In 1949 the Netherlands agreed with the transfer of sovereignty and recognized an independent Indonesia. This period is one of the dark chapters of my country's history. Feel free to leave a comment down below.
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Recorded on the 23rd of May 2016 in Jakarta, Indonesia.
Images from commons.wikimedia.org.
Exciting Trailer Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
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Queen's Birthday 1941 Batavia [Jakarta]
QUEEN'S BIRTHDAY 31 AUGUST 1941 - From 1891 till 1948 the Dutch Queen's Birthday was celebrated annually on the 31st of August. Also in Batavia/Jakarta, except of course in 1942, 1943 and 1944 during World War II. From 1945 till 1948 there were festivities but of a more sober character. Until 1941 the celebration of Queen Wilhelmina's birthday coincided with the annual Pasar Gambir on Koningsplein, now Medan Merdeka. Queen's Birthday 1941 was the last during the colonial era which was celebrated with lavish flag display, although with a strong focus on military display due to World War II in Europe, and the threatening Japanese aggression in Southeast Asia. In 1941, the Netherlands was occupied by Germany and Queen Wilhelmina lived in exile in London upon invitation of British King George VI. The video shows footage of the Queen's Birthday festivities in Batavia/Jakarta, with as a backdrop some lovely buildings which still exist in today's Jakarta. Turn on the sound to hear the commentary. [source: Institute of Sound and Vision, the Netherlands]
Helicopter douses Jakarta street fires
(22 May 2019) A helicopter dropped water onto fires in Jakarta on Wednesday after protests by supporters of losing Indonesian presidential candidate Prabowo Subianto.
Pro-Subianto demonstrators had taken to the streets of Indonesia's capital after the announcement of official election results.
Clashes between protesters and police first erupted late on Tuesday and authorities said six people have been killed in the rioting.
National Police chief Tito Karnavian said the people who died were hit by gunshots or blunt devices.
Indonesia's Election Commission on Tuesday said President Joko Widodo had won a second term with 55.5% of the vote in the April 17 election.
Subianto, an ultra-nationalist former special forces general, has refused to accept the results and declared himself the winner.
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Dutch War Graves worldwide
Dutch war graves worldwide
To the devoted care of wargraves every nation is in honour bound
On September 13th, 1946, this thought led to the establishment of the Netherlands War Graves Foundation (Oorlogsgravenstichting). The aim was to organize and see to the continuous upkeep of the graves of Dutch war victims, as well as the commemoration of those with no known grave. Since 1956 the Foundation also maintains more than 8.000 allied war graves situated all over the Netherlands. Thanks to intense research, an extensive database (Slachtofferregister) has been built up over the years, and about 180.000 names appear therein.
Thousands of Dutch war graves are scattered all over the world. Most of these are concentrated in war cemeteries, which are under the supervision of the Foundation. For example: The Military War Cemetery Grebbeberg at Rhenen and the Field of Honour Loenen, both in The Netherlands; war cemeteries in West-Germany, Austria, Norway, France, England, Indonesia, Thailand and Myanmar (Burma). The sister organization of the Netherlands Foundation, the Commonwealth War Graves Commission in England, sees to the upkeep - on a mutual basis - of those graves situated in commonwealth cemeteries. Many other Dutch war graves are to be found in cemeteries widely spread at home and abroad. The Foundation also keeps an eye on these.
To commemorate the 130.000 victims whose earthly remains have not been found and for whom therefore no last resting place could be established, such as concentration camp victims, Jews, seamen and many others reported missing, their names have been entered in a series of 42 books.
The tasks of the Netherlands War Graves Foundation are carried out by a staff of devoted assistants under the direction of a Managing Committee composed of prominent Dutch people. It is supported financially by a State subsidy. Voluntary donations from fund givers are also received.
The Netherlands War Graves Foundation will continue to tend the war graves in its care in accordance with its motto:
THAT THEY MAY REST IN HONOUR
______________________________________________________________________________
The Foundation publishes a series of free information sheets illustrating aspects of its work and major cemeteries.
For more information about the Netherlands War Graves Foundation please contact us by mail, telephone or email:
PO Box 85981
2508 CR The Hague
THE NETHERLANDS
Phone: 00 31 70 31 31 080
Fax: 00 31 70 36 21 546
E-mail: info@ogs.nl
Top 25 Things To Do In Jakarta, Indonesia
Cheapest Hotels To Stay In Jakarta -
Best Tours To Enjoy Jakarta -
Cheap Airline Tickets -
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Here are top 25 things to do in Jakarta, Indonesia
All photos belong to their rightful owners. Credit next to name.
1. Visit the National Museum - Shutterstock
2. Explore Indonesia at Taman Mini Indonesia Indah - Shutterstock
3. Make a splash at Atlantis Water Adventure -
4. Admire Istana Merdeka -
5. Admire the National Gallery of Indonesia -
6. Visit Museum Bank Indonesia - Shutterstock
7. Check out Monas Tower - Shutterstock
8. Stroll around Taman Anggrek Mall -
9. Walk around Taman Suropati - Shutterstock
10. Go shopping in Menteng - Shutterstock
11. Have fun at Dunia Fantasi -
12. Marvel at Istiqlal Mosque - Shutterstock
13. Relax on Ancol Beach -
14. Enjoy Kota Tua - Shutterstock
15. Take a day trip to the Thousand Islands - Shutterstock
16. Take in the views at Awan Lounge -
17. Visit Ragunan Zoo -
18. Visit Jin De Yuan -
19. Visit Museum Tekstil -
20. Watch a Music Festival -
21. Dine at Seribu Rasa Menteng -
22. Visit Museum Wayang -
23. Check out the sailboats at Sunda Kelapa Port -
24. Visit Jakarta War Cemetery -
25. Walk around Glodok -
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