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Celebrating Indonesia: Fifty Years with the Ford
Foundation 1953-2003
By Goenawan Mohamad
Celebrating Indonesia: Fifty Years with the Ford Foundation
1953-2003 commemorates the Ford Foundation’s long partnership
with Indonesia, presenting the voices of some of the many individuals
who have interacted with the Foundation over the past five decades
and honoring their role in their country’s development. The
distinguished essayist, Goenawan Mohamad, wrote the narrative. A
team of talented writers and interviewers, Sandra Hamid, Andreas
Harsono, and Laksmi Pamuntjak, prepared "sidebars" about
some of the institutions and projects the Foundation has supported
in Indonesia; and edited interviews they conducted with a number
of current and former grantees. This text, illustrated by over 200
contemporary and historical photographs, offers a collective account
of themes and challenges that have resonated over Indonesia’s
first half-century, and evokes the diversity and pluralism of this
vast and complex country. While the authors' point of departure
was the legacy of the Ford Foundation’s engagement with Indonesia
over the past fifty years, they brought their own critical perspective
to bear, presenting an original and unvarnished reflection of their
country’s past. In this way they celebrate Indonesia, recalling
the struggles it has faced as a new nation and challenging readers
to imagine possibilities for its future.
The emblem on the book’s cover, created by artist Enrico Soekarno,
is comprised of motifs from five of the country’s many cultural
and ethnic groups. Starting clockwise from the top, they are: a
Batak weaving pattern, a Papuan bamboo-carving design, an ikat motif
from Sumba, a house-carving design from Toraja, and Dayak bamboo
ornamentation. This is intended to symbolize continuity, diversity,
and dynamism in Indonesian society; and this message is echoed in
the sampler of music from around the archipelago presented in the
compact disc at the back of this volume.
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