Multatuli is
pseudonym of Eduard Douwes Dekker, a Dutch civil servant of The Netherlands
during its colonialism in Indonesia (then Dutch Indies) on 19th
century. He was an assistance resident in Lebak (the Bantam residency of
Java—now Banten) when he began to see—and growingly disgusted by—the abuses of
Dutch colonial system. Dekker began to openly criticize (and later oppose) his
government, which ended with his resignation. But far from ending his
opposition, Dekker began to publish his writings exposing the scandals he had
witnessed. Not having enough exposure with the newspaper and pamphlet, he wrote
a satire novel under pseudonym of Multatuli: Max Havelaar: Or the Coffee Auctions of the Dutch Trading Company.
If you think
this is a dull historical journal about coffee auctions and colonialism by a
boring ex-civil servant, you are wrong! I have thought so in the past—hence have
never considered reading it. But when I started reading, I found that Multatuli
is really a talented and witty writer. Though implied by the title, this book
is NOT about coffee trading; it is a satire about the injustice suffered by
Indonesian people because of the colonial policy.
As an
Indonesian myself, I was interested in how the colonialism have ever started,
and why it took so long before the whole nation started to revolt. It only
proved how clever the Dutch was at learning Indonesia’s archipelago and rich culture;
to use the isolation of so many islands (with many different languages and
cultures) to their advantage. Not only that, the Dutch knew one typical
character of Indonesians: humble, obedient, inferior. And with our rich soil,
no wonder any superior nation—if not Dutch, others would—could easily take
advantage of Indonesia as their slave.
Back to the
book, Max Havelaar (fictional character which is clearly representing Dekker)
is a newly appointed assistant resident in Lebak. He was young, vigorous, brave,
and honest. Soon after being appointed, he found out the practice of the regent
(“bupati” in Indonesia) in employing local people or taking their animals by
force, without paying, as a pretext to preserve his dignity. Instead of
protecting local people to be burdened by these thieving, while they still had
to pay taxes, Havelaar’s colleagues seemed to close their eyes of these
injustices. They chose to please the regent to gain their support, and in the
end to create an “all-is-good” report to the government. Other than that, the
local people are also forced to grow coffee and sugar on their land, to be
shipped to Europe, instead of growing rice for their food. In the end they
became poorer and suffered more. Havelaar protested to Dutch government about
these cruel treatments; writing many letters which eventually became a
manuscript.
Interestingly,
the book is narrated by two different persons with two different ways of
thinking. The most dominant is a hypocrite, pompous coffee merchant named Mr.
Droogstoppel. Max Havelaar’s manuscript accidentally came to his possession
and—thinking that its coffee auction subject would be useful to promote his
business—instructed his apprentice, Stern, to rewrite it into a book. Being a
romantic young man, Stern, instead of writing about coffee trade issues,
decided to take another course, that is Havelaar’s effort to fight the
injustice done by Dutch government. It was really funny to read how
Droogstoppel was furious and indignant of Stern’s romantic idea, while bragging
about his hypocritical views. Finally, near the end, Multatuli took over the
pen himself to write his own opinions, and closing it with sharp threats that
he was going to expose every dirty detail if the government kept silent.
Max Havelaar might not be a great
classic—in fact, if it’s not about my nation, I might have not picked it at first
place—but we cannot ignore its big influence in Indonesian revolution in 1945
which ended Dutch colonialism, as well as colonialism at some other nations. It
was such that the Indonesian greatest writer Pramoedya Ananta Toer called Max Havelaar as “the book that killed
colonialism”.
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