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Sickle and Crescent - The Communist Revolt of 1926 in Banten (Paperback, Equinox ed.)
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Sickle and Crescent - The Communist Revolt of 1926 in Banten (Paperback, Equinox ed.)
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"Alongside the crescent, the star of the Soviets will be the great
battle emblem..." - Tan Malaka Twice in this century the people of
Banten have risen in revolt against those they considered to be
their oppressors. On both occasions the leadership of the revolts
was largely religious and yet at the same time announced to all
that it was Communist. The revolutionary leadership successfully
portrayed their ideology as both past and future. In 1926 and again
in 1945, revolt was to be the harbinger of freedom from colonial
rule and the dawn of a new era of social justice and prosperity.
These are familiar themes of Communist-inspired revolt, but the
Bantenese revolutionaries also delved deep into their past history
to proclaim that the advent of Communist revolt would also lead to
the restoration of the Sultanate of Banten. The Banten region
illustrates strikingly that the movement from "archaic" to modern
forms of political protest is not lineal but dialectical. As Geertz
has perceptively remarked, "there is in such matters no simple
progression from 'traditional' to 'modern,' but a twisting,
spasmodic, unmethodical movement which turns as often toward
repossessing the emotions of the past as disowning them." This
dialectical connection between future, present, and past was
evident not only in the ideology of the two main revolts, but also
in the social composition of the revolutionary leadership. In both
uprisings descendants of the former Sultans of Banten, called
tubagus, and others holding noble titles they had borne from old,
played a prominent role. Indeed one of the very first actions of
the Indonesian Communist Party (PKI) branch in 1925 was to demand
compensation and pensions for all who bore the title tubagus from a
sultanate abolished nearly a century before. They rubbed shoulders
in the revolutionary leadership with other traditional leaders of
peasant revolt, such as the Islamic teachers, the ulama, and the
local men of violence, the jawara, but also with more "modern"
revolutionaries such as artisans, printers, journalists, and trade
unionists. In short, the uncompromising insistence on modernity
that was to be a hallmark of the PKI after 1951 was certainly not a
prominent feature of the movement in the 1920s or in 1945.
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