Take Action on U.S. Support for Mass Violence in
Indonesia
The Oscar-nominated documentary, The Act of
Killing will be broadcast on PBS, Monday October 6, 2014, on POV. We hope
you will watch this important and disturbing film, where
Although the massacre of between 500,000 and 1,000,000 communists,
leftists, ethnic Chinese, and others in Indonesia in 1965-1967 is a
foundational event in modern Indonesian political history, it remains
mostly a footnote for most in the United States and elsewhere. In 2012,
the documentary The
Act of Killing shocked audiences throughout the world as
perpetrators of the mass murder reenacted their violence. The film shows
sociopathic gangsters from Medan, Sumatra, who committed these acts as
they are celebrated by many in modern Indonesia. The film has fueled a
debate within Indonesia and drawn attention internationally to events
unknown to many. Events that the U.S. facilitated and cheered at the
time.
The public television program
POV will be airing
the Oscar-nominated The Act of Killing on October 6 (and you can
watch it on POV's website from October 7-21) and the film is available
for online streaming and purchase elsewhere.
The Look of Silence, a
companion film currently showing at film festivals, focuses on the
victims. It follows the investigation by Adi Rukun into the murder of his
older brother who was killed during the violence.
These powerful films tell us much about Indonesia today as they do about
the past. However, any evaluation of the events of 1965-1967 must include
a discussion of the role of Western powers in the violence, including
that of the United States. The East Timor
and Indonesia ActionNetwork
(ETAN) continues to call for accountability for those in the West who
encouraged and assisted in the mass violence in Indonesia. The full truth
must come out and the U.S. should declassify all files related to
Suharto's U.S.-backed seizure of power and the murderous events which
followed.
1)
Sign the petition urging the U.S. government to take two
immediate steps:
a) declassify and release all documents related to the U.S. role in
the 1965/66 mass violence, including the CIA's so-called "job
files." These detail its covert operations,
b) and formally acknowledge the U.S. role in facilitating the 1965-66
violence and its subsequent support for the brutalities of the Suharto
regime.
2) Watch The Act of Killing and write a letter to the editor about
the need for the U.S. take responsibility for its role in the mass
violence in Indonesia. We will have some sample letters available by the
weekend, but it is better to write your own. Feel free to use ETAN's
Backgrounder:
Breaking the Silence: The U.S. and Indonesia's Mass Violence, if you
do so.
3) If you are high school teacher or college professor teaching an
appropriate subject, consider assigning The Act of Killing to your
students. Use it as a springboard for discussions on the impact of U.S.
foreign policy, the need to address human rights violations, and how the
past affects the present. (Contact:
Chris Lundry for further info
or assistance.)
4) Support ETAN. We need your support to continue our work for justice
and accountability. Please
donate today.