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President Soekarno with Japanese Royalty

Original caption:

President Soekarno Guest of Japanese Emperor. Tokyo, Japan: President Soekarno (center) of Indonesia with Emperor Hirohito of Japan (left) and Crown Prince Akihito when Soekarno was guest of the emperor at luncheon in the Imperial Palace in Tokyo.
The Indonesian president is on a tour of "rest" from his presidential duties. He is being given the red carpet treatment in Japan amid rumors that he is an unofficial link for Afro-Asian leaders who want the US and Russia to get together in another summit conference. February 3, 1958.

Image: © Bettmann/CORBIS
Photographer: Ichiro Fujimura
Date Photographed: February 3, 1958

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Indonesian President and Ministers

Original caption:
General views of Indonesia President President Soekarno with other ministers.

Image: © Bettmann/CORBIS
Date Photographed: April 15, 1966

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President Soekarno Shaking Hands with Dag Hammarskjold

Image: © Bettmann/CORBIS
Date Photographed: May 24, 1956

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Original caption: 4/24/1961 - Andres Air Force Base, MD.

Soekarno Here For Talks: President Kenendy and Indonesian President Soekarno are shown in back of limousine following the latter's arrival here today. Soekarno is here for talks which may provide a gauge of U.S. prestige in the wake of the Cuban incident.

Image: © Bettmann/CORBIS
Date Photographed: April 24, 1961

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President and Mrs. Eisenhower and Achmed Soekarno

Original caption: 5/19/1956-Washingto n, D.C.- President and Mrs. Eisenhower are greeted by President Achmed Soekarno of Indonesia as they arrived at the Mayflower Hotel for a dinner given by President Soekarno in their honor.
Speaking at the dinner, President Eisenhower said that Dr. Soekarno has given the US a "new thought, feeling and conception of freedom."

In a toast to Mr. Eisenhower, President Soekarno said: "From what I have seen, this is a country of democracy and freedom."
Image: © Bettmann/CORBIS
Date Photographed: May 19, 1956

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Soekarno with Nikita Khrushchev

Original caption: 10/6/1960-New York, NY-

Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev (L) stands silently by, as President Soekarno of Indonesia speaks to newsmen outside the Soviet U.N. delegation headquarters. Soekarno spoke to reporters after a 40-minute meeting with the Soviet Premier.
Before his departure from the U.S., Soekarno issued a gloomy statement saying the session had accomplished very little.
Image: © Bettmann/CORBIS
Date Photographed: October 6, 1960

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Soekarno Chats With Mao Tse-Tung

Original caption: 11/24/1956-Peiping, China:

President Soekarno of Indonesia, left, is seen chatting with Chairman Mao Tse-Tung of the People's Republic of China (Communist) during a banquet here given by the chairman of the Red China in honor of the Indonesian President.
Image: © Bettmann/CORBIS
Date Photographed: November 24, 1956

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"Militer tidak boleh ikut-ikut politik" Demikian adalah kutipan pidato yang disampaikan Soekarno. Segera miliki MP3-nya dengan Download di bawah ini.
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President of Indonesia, Achmad Soekarno, in 1949.
Image: © Hulton-Deutsch Collection/CORBIS
Photographer: Bert Hardy
Date Photographed: April 1949

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Original caption: 7/6/1965-Cairo, Egypt-
Cruising up the Nile River,

Communist China's Premier Chou En-Lai (l) looks at the sights while his companion, President Soekarno of Indonesia checks the time. Both men were in Egypt awaiting the opening of the Afro-Asian Conference, which was to be held in Algiers.
Chou stayed on in the Egyptian capital after the conference was postponed.
Image: © Bettmann/CORBIS
Date Photographed: July 6, 1965

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Tan Malaka - Parlemen or Soviet 1921, Download in here
Tan Malaka - Komunisme and Pan-Islamisme 1922, Download here
Tan Malaka - GERPOLEK 1948, Download in here

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Kennedy and Johnson with Indonesia's Soekarno 1961
Image: © Bettmann/CORBIS
Date Photographed: April 25, 1961

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President Soekarno of Indonesia is shown here delivering his speech to the United Nations.
Image: © Bettmann/CORBIS
Date Photographed: October 2, 1960

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Soekarno's Orations, title Makna Tauhid
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Tan Malaka (1894 - February 21, 1949) was an Indonesian nationalist activist and communist leader. A staunch critic of both the colonial Dutch East Indies government and the republican Sukarno administration that governed the country after the Indonesian National Revolution, he was also frequently in conflict with the leadership of the Communist Party of Indonesia (PKI), Indonesia's primary radical political party in the 1920s and again in the 1940s.

A political outsider for most of his life, Tan Malaka spent a large part of his life in exile from Indonesia, and was constantly threatened with arrest by the Dutch authorities and their allies. Despite this apparent marginalization, however, he played a key intellectual role in linking the international communist movement to Southeast Asia's anti-colonial movements. He was declared a National Hero of Indonesia by the People's Consultative Assembly in 1963.

A member of the Minangkabau ethnic group, Tan Malaka was born in Suliki, West Sumatra in 1894. His given name was Datuk Ibrahim gelar Sutan Malaka, but he was known both as a child and as an adult as Tan Malaka, an honorary name inherited from his mother's aristocratic background.

From 1908 to 1913 he attended a teacher training school established by the Dutch colonial government in Bukittinggi, the intellectual center of Minangkabau culture. Here he began to learn the Dutch language, which he was to teach to Indonesian students. In 1913 he received a loan from the elders of his home village to pursue further education in the Netherlands, and from then until 1919 he studied at the Government Teachers Training School (Rijkskweekschool) in Haarlem.

It was during this stay in Europe that he began to study communist and socialist theory, and through interaction with both Dutch and Indonesian students became convinced that Indonesia must be freed from Dutch rule through revolution. In his autobiography Tan Malaka cited the Russian Revolution of 1917 as a political awakening, increasing his understanding of links between capitalism, imperialism, and class oppression.

He became seriously ill with tuberculosis in the Netherlands, which he attributed to the cold climate and unfamiliar diet. This was the beginning of lifelong health problems that frequently interfered with his work.

In response to the Persatuan Perjuangan's continued opposition, the Sukarno government arrested most of the coalition's leadership, including Tan Malaka, in March 1946. He remained in jail until September 1948.

During his detention, the PKI emerged as the strongest critic of the government's diplomatic stance. The translator of his autobiography, Helen Jarvis, has argued that Tan Malaka and the rest of the Persatuan Perjuangan leaders were released to provide a less threatening opposition than the PKI. By now, Tan Malaka and the PKI were thoroughly estranged; he was hated within the party for his harsh criticisms of the 1920s, and he distrusted the strategic judgement of the current PKI leaders.

Upon his release, he spent late 1948 in Yogyakarta, working to form a new political party, called the Partai Murba (Proletarian Party), but was unable to repeat his previous success at attracting a popular following. When the Dutch captured the national government in December 1948, he fled the city for rural East Java, where he hoped he would be protected by anti-republican guerrilla forces. He established his head quarter in Blimbing, a village surrounded by rice fields. He connected himself to major Sabarudin, leader of the Bataljon 38. In Malaka's opinion Sabarudin's was the only armed group that was really fighting the Dutch. Sabarudin however was in conflict with all other armed groups. On February 17, the TNI leaders in East Java decided that Sabarudin and his companions were to be captured and convicted following military law. On the 19th they captured Tan Malaka in Blimbing. On February 20 the infamous Dutch Korps Speciale Troepen (KST) happened to start the so called 'operation Tiger' from the East Javanese town of Nganjuk. They advanced quickly and brutally. Poeze (2007) describes in detail how the TNI soldiers fled into the mountains and how Tan Malaka, already injured, walked into a TNI-post and was promptly executed on February 21, 1949. No report was made and Malaka was buried in the woods.

Indonesian Version
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From: Kompas, Friday August 9, 2002

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President Soekarno, the first leader of Indonesia after it became a republic in 1945, inspects his troops.

Image: © Hulton-Deutsch Collection/CORBIS
Date Photographed: October 1965

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Indonesia Version:

“Pada satu waktu saya sampai kepada suatu saat memerlukan satu nama umum bagi semua yang kecil-kecil ini. Ya buruh, ya tani, ya pegawai, ya nelayan dan lain-lainnya, semuanya tidak ada yang besar, melainkan kecil-kecil s...emuanya. Lantas saya beri nama kepada semuanya itu Marhaen!".

Marhaenisme berarti: faham nasionalisme Indonesia yang memihak kepada Marhaen. Siapa saja nasionalis Indonesia yang berpihak pada Marhaen, adalah seorang Marhaenis. Baik orang Marhaen sendiri maupun intelektual, yang memihak pada Marhaen adalah Marhaenis.

(Fikiran Ra’jat, 1 July 1932)

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This in archives about Syahrir from New York Times (1945).
Archives contain:
  1. Syahrir - Java Truce Talks Halted Abruptly
  2. Syahrir - WOULD LET DUTCH TROOP STAY
  3. Syahrir - Moslem Fanatics Fight in Surabaya
  4. Syahrir - Trouble in the east

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Arsip sejarah, Bung Karno original 1926 in Soeloeh Indonesia Muda : Nationalism, Islam and Marxism after transleted Ruth McVey.

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Sutan Sjahrir (5 March 1909 — 9 April 1966) was the first prime minister of Indonesia, after a career as a key Indonesian nationalist organizer in the 1930s and 1940s.
Sjahrir was born in 1909 in Padang Panjang, West Sumatra. His father was an advisor to the Sultan of Deli. He studied in Medan and Bandung, and then studied law at Leiden University, The Netherlands around 1929. In Holland he gained an appreciation for socialist principles, and was a part of several labor unions as he worked to support himself. He was briefly the secretary of the Indonesian Association (Perhimpunan Indonesia), an organization of Indonesian students in the Netherlands.

He returned to Indonesia in 1931 without finishing a law degree. He helped set up the Indonesian National Party (PNI), and became a close associate of future vice president Mohammad Hatta. He was imprisoned by the Dutch for nationalist activities in November 1934, first in Boven Digul, then on Banda, and then in 1941, just before the Indies fell to the Japanese, to Sukabumi. During the Japanese occupation of Indonesia he had little public role, apparently sick with tuberculosis.
He was appointed Prime Minister by President Sukarno in November 1945 and served until June 1947. Sjahrir founded the Indonesian Socialist Party in 1948, which, although small, was very influential in the early post-independence years, because of the expertise and high education levels of its leaders. But the party performed poorly in the 1955 elections and was banned by President Sukarno in 1960. Sjahrir was jailed in the early 1960s, and died in exile in Zürich, Switzerland in 1966.

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