I am happy to write this article on the auspicious occasion of the 75th Independence Day of Indonesia. This is the occasion when the country commemorates the struggles of founding fathers of Indonesia to break the shackles of colonialism to proclaim independence and laying the foundation of the modern Republic of Indonesia that we see today.
Historical Relations
The shared history of colonialism of both Indonesia and India brought our two peoples very close in the last century. The founding fathers of our two countries worked closely with each other, shared ideas and strategies and drew inspiration from each other’s struggle. India hosted the Conference on Asian Relations in New Delhi in 1947, bringing together leaders of 29 countries to express solidarity with the freedom struggle in the other parts of Asia and foster cooperation amongst Asian people, which was an early assertion of Asian identity.
The importance that India attached to Indonesia could be gauged from the fact that the President of Indonesia Sukarno was the Guest of Honour at the first Republic Day celebrations of India in 1950. This shared history set the stage for our leadership in global affairs.
Similarly, Indonesia hosted the Bandung Conference of 1955 bringing together the newly independent countries of Asia and Africa. Together, we helped write the closing chapters of colonialism and the opening sequence of the Non Aligned Movement, which forged the bonds of South-South cooperation and Afro- Asian solidarity.
The India-Indonesia diplomatic ties may be just little more than 70 years old. But these seven decades of engagements have reconnected the people of India and Indonesia and reignited a friendship forged through common civilizational links, a shared struggle against colonialism and an endeavor towards progress and prosperity.
India’s ties with Indonesia stretch back more than two millennia. Forged in peace and friendship, religion and culture, art and commerce, language and literature, these enduring linkages are now present in every facet of the magnificent diversity of India and Southeast Asia, providing a unique envelope of comfort and familiarity between our people.
Be it the annual Bali Jatra celebrated in Odisha or the legends of Ramayana and Mahabharata, which are visible across the entire landscape of Indonesia. Sufi traders and Islamic missionaries from Gujarat carried Islam to Indonesia in the 13th Century. Language and literature and the timeless art forms of Ikat and Batik strengthened these linkages. Trade and commerce flourished between our two countries. These bonds between our two people led to the flowering of unique cultures with the same genes of tolerance, non- violence and compassion.
‘Unity in Diversity’ or Bhinneka Tunggal Ika is also a key facet of the shared societal value structures that both countries celebrate, as also the common values of democracy and rule of law.
