- Gerwani
Gerwani (from "Gerakan Wanita Indonesia", Indonesian Women's Movement) was an organization of communist women active in
Indonesia in the 1950s and 1960s. The organization was founded in 1950, and had over 650,000 members in 1957. [ [http://www.datarealm.com/inside/edit50/martin.htm Inside Indonesia: Recovering women's history] ]The organization was closely affiliated with
Communist Party of Indonesia (PKI), but was an independent organization concerned with a variety ofsocialist andfeminist issues, includingmarriage law reform,labor rights , and Indonesiannationalism . After an allegedcoup d'etat ofSeptember 30 ,1965 , Gerwani was banned and many of its members killed, and under PresidentSuharto the organization became a commonly cited example of immorality and disorder in the pre-1965 era.Beginning
Gerwis, Gerwani's predecessor, was founded in June 1950 by the union of six existing women's organizations based in island of Java; other organizations from around the archipelago joined the group over the next few years. It established offices around the country, and was headquartered in
Semarang , then known as the "Red City" for its many leftist organizations.During most of its life, the organization saw internal tension between its feminist wing and its communist wing, which favored closer association with the PKI, although there was seldom a clear divide between these groups.
Early campaigns focused on reforming Indonesia's legal system to make women and men equal under the law. Much emphasis was placed on
marriage law s, which gave precedence to local customs that in many places restricted women's ability to inherit property or to resist involuntary polygamous marriages. On a local scale, Gerwani also provided individual support to women who had been abused or abandoned by their husbands. While much of the early membership was drawn from themiddle class es, the organization worked hard, with eventual success, to reach out to theworking class andpeasant ry.By the early 1960s, Gerwani had gained a role in national politics. Its links to the PKI became tighter, and the feminist aspects of its activism were diminished. The organization also became a strong supporter of President
Sukarno , who they respected for his nationalism and his socialist policies, despite some internal disagreement over the President's polygamous marriages, which were abhorrent to the group. The organization had a peak of about 1.5 million members in 1965.Fall
After six generals were killed in an abortive coup attempted on the night of
30 September 1965 (see30 September Movement ) the organisation was banned along with most other left-leaning groups. [Austin College Student Web Center [http://cassidy.austincollege.edu/eholman/page%203.htm Gerwani] ] The Army alleged that Gerwani members had helped to kill the generals, and had danced naked, castrated the men, and engaged in other similar depravity. Most contemporary historians agree these allegations were false. Thousands of Gerwani members wererape d and/or killed as a part of the bloody anti-Communist purge that followed and led to the downfall of Sukarno.Notes
References
*Blackburn, Susan (2004). "Women and the State in Modern Indonesia". Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-84225-5
*Wieringa, Saskia. (2002) "Sexual politics in Indonesia". The Hague: Institute of Social Studies. ISBN 0-333-98718-7.External links
* [http://cassidy.austincollege.edu/eholman/page%203.htm Gerwani at Austin College Student Center]
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