Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- A Note on the Name of the Country
- List of Figures
- Introduction: Timor-Leste’s Long Road to Independence: Outline for an Analytical Framework
- Part One Before The Portuguese Decolonisation
- Part Two The Portuguese Revolution Arrives In Timor-Leste
- Part Three Reaction To The Indonesian Invasion Of Timor-Leste
- Part Four Resisting The Indonesian Annexation Of Timor-Leste
- Index
12 - Walking a Tightrope between the Army and the Church: Jesuit Relief during the Indonesian Occupation of Timor-Leste, 1975–1999
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 February 2024
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- A Note on the Name of the Country
- List of Figures
- Introduction: Timor-Leste’s Long Road to Independence: Outline for an Analytical Framework
- Part One Before The Portuguese Decolonisation
- Part Two The Portuguese Revolution Arrives In Timor-Leste
- Part Three Reaction To The Indonesian Invasion Of Timor-Leste
- Part Four Resisting The Indonesian Annexation Of Timor-Leste
- Index
Summary
Abstract
This chapter discusses the dilemmas faced by the Indonesian Jesuits who operated in Timor-Timur during the Indonesian occupation. Torn between their missionary activities and Indonesian integration propaganda, they walked a tightrope between the Catholic Church and the Indonesian army. The Indonesian Jesuits in Timor were fully aware of their political role and the need to engage in constant negotiation between the Indonesian forces and their Timorese flock. They thus tried to act as a bridge between the local population and the military occupiers, an impossible endeavour whose fragility was exposed at every twist and turn of Timor's blood-drenched politics. Still, this dubious position also allowed them to communicate across the political divide to organise educational and medical relief.
Keywords: Catholic Church, Society of Jesus, Timor missionaries, liberation theology, Bishops’ Conference of Indonesia (MAWI/KWI)
The carnage which followed the August 30, 1999, East Timorese independence referendum took so many lives that, at times, the tragedy appears too great to comprehend. Still, snapshots of the gruesome bloodletting reflect frictions that existed long before the ballots were cast. One of the victims whose passing is still widely remembered is Father Karl Albrecht (c. 1929–1999). Romo Karim Arbie, as he was locally known in Indonesia, was a German-born Indonesian-nationalised Jesuit who was behind the complex logistics required to transport medicines and victuals from Atambua to Dili and the dispatch of refugees in the reverse direction. This umbilical cord between Indonesia and Timor-Leste would be severed following Father Albrecht's fatal shooting on the night of September 11, 1999, by unknown assailants.
The fact that Father Albrecht was on the hit list appears to have come as a surprise to him despite the carnage which engulfed the territory after the announcement of the referendum result on September 4, 1999. As the director of the Timorese branch of the Jesuit Refugee Service (JRS) and an Indonesian citizen, he had long enjoyed a form of diplomatic immunity. This allowed him to operate as the dean of the University of Timor and maintain Jesuit hospitals and related education, cooperation and healthcare projects across the territory. The latter had been hanging on a thin thread throughout the Indonesian occupation of this long-neglected former Portuguese colony. But this thread also relied on the voluntary services of a brave few. Among these, the Indonesian Jesuits were key.
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- Timor-Leste's Long Road to IndependenceTransnational Perspectives, pp. 349 - 374Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2023