This is a
very nice book on a forgotten colonial war that the Netherlands
started without good reason and only ended with the arrival of a new colonial
power, Japan ,
in 1942.*
From the
first unsuccessful invasion in 1873, through the bitter decades of guerilla
warfare to the anticlimax in 1942, Dutch colonial administrators and military
struggled to bring an end to the costly occupation of a region that just would
not submit, even when all hope seemed gone.
As the
Dutch brought more power to bear, the resistance dwindled from a full fledged
army defending the sultanate to desperate attacks on individual soldiers and
bureaucrats. And as the Dutch sent their columns deeper into the hinterland,
all of Aceh was marked with destroyed villages and hasty graves for freedom
fighters and their pursuers.
The coming
of the Japanese didn’t improve the lives of the inhabitants of Aceh, nor did
their struggle end with Indonesian independence. And even though peace has
reigned since almost a decade, Aceh is still a poor and neglected part of Indonesia .
Stolwijk,
who lived in Aceh for 18 months between 2009 and 2015, gives a sympathetic view
of a society trying to overcome the painful present, while keeping alive the
ghosts from the past. His anecdotes of interactions with former guerillas and
collaborators, students and officials (who seem genuinely pleased that somebody
takes an interest in the history of their building or train line) both provide
comic relief and perspective.
*full
disclosure: I’ve played a few games of football with the author and I think he’s
a nice guy.
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