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Sunday, December 04, 2011
Imam Bonjol the Freedom Fighter
Tuanku Imam Bonjol (1772 – November 6, 1864), also known as
Muhammad Syahab, Peto Syarif, and Malim Basa, was a hero in
the Indonesian struggle against Dutch rule. He was born in the
village of Tanjung
Bunga in the Pasaman regency of West Sumatra. His father's name was Buya
Nudin. He was immersed in Islamic
studies as he grew up, studying first from his father and later under various
other Muslim theologians.
After founding the state of Bonjol,
Syarif became involved in the Adat/Paderi controversy as a
Paderi leader. The Paderi movement, which has been compared to the Ahlus Sunnah
wal Jamaah (Sunni)
school of Islam in Saudi
Arabia, was an effort to return the Islam of the area to the purity of its
roots by removing local distortions like gambling, cockfighting, the use of
opium and strong drink, tobacco, and so forth. It also opposed the powerful role
of women in the matrilineal Minangkabau culture. The Adat, or
traditionalist, position was that local custom that pre-dated the arrival of
Islam should also be respected and followed.
Feeling their leadership position threatened, the traditionalists appealed to
the Dutch for help in their struggle against the Paderis. At first, the Dutch
were not able to win militarily against the Paderis because their resources were
stretched thin by the Diponegoro
resistance in Java. In 1824, the Dutch signed the Masang
Agreement ending hostilities with the state of Bonjol.
Subsequently, however, once the Diponegoro resistance was suppressed, the
Dutch attacked the state of Pandai
Sikat in a renewed effort to gain control of West Sumatra. Despite valiant
fighting by the Indonesians (by this time the traditionalists had realized they
didn't want to be ruled by the Dutch either and had joined forces with the
Paderis in their resistance), the overwhelming power of the Dutch military
eventually prevailed. Syarif was captured in 1832 but escaped after three months
to continue the struggle from his tiny fortress in Bonjol.
After three years of siege, the Dutch finally managed to sack Bonjol on
August 16, 1837. Through a negotiation ruse, the Dutch again captured Syarif and
exiled him, first to Cianjur in West
Java, then to Ambon, and
later to Manado in Sulawesi. He died on November 6, 1864, at the age of
92 and is buried in Sulawesi. The site of his grave is marked by a Minangkabau
(West Sumatran) house.
Captions from Wikipedia
Captions from Wikipedia
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