Acaranonton bareng film 'Pulau Buru Tanah Air Beta' yang seharusnya diputar di Warung Mbah Cokro, Surabaya, Jumat (20/5) malam terpaksa ditunda. Berbagai alasan tentang ditundanya nonton bareng ini dikemukakan oleh perwakilan panitia, Kapolsek Tenggilis Mejoyo, serta perwakilan dari Padepokan Tjokroaminoto, saat konferensi pers di hadapan puluhan awak media serta ratusan calon penonton. Pulau Buru Tanah Air Beta' is a movie about political prisoners that were detained in the Moluccan Island of Buru after the 1965 events. The most famous political prisoner imprisoned in Buru was the writer Andimewakili pihak dekanat menjelaskan, bahwa tujuan pemutaran film tersebut adalah untuk mempelajari sejarah dan juga hak asasi manusia Minggu, 7 November 2021 Cari PulauBuru Tanah Air Beta merupakan film yang mengisahkan mantan tahanan politik yang kembali lagi ke Pulau Buru, pulau yang digunakan sebagai tempat pembuangan orang-orang yang diduga terlibat dalam Vay Tiền Nhanh Chỉ Cįŗ§n Cmnd. Rate this movieWhat did you think?AdvertisementReleased2016-03-16Runtime48mDirectorRahung NasutionWriterRahung NasutionCountryIndonesiaLanguageIndonesianStudioButtonijo FilmsAdvertisement"They" reminisce about their stories of living on the Island of "Hope", hope for a long life, so they can feel the taste of going home one day, among free you like Pulau Buru Tanah Air Beta, check out... CastHHersri SetiawanKKen SetiawanCrewAAmir PohanProducerRRahung NasutionDirectorRRahung NasutionWriterPopular MoviesKnock at the Cabin"Save your family or save humanity. Make the choice."LouViolent Night"You better watch out."The Ledge"Don't lose your grip."Transformers Rise of the Beasts"Unite or fall."White Elephant"Live by a code. Die by a bullet."Teen Wolf The Movie"The pack is back."Creed III"You can't run from your past."Minions The Rise of Gru"A villain will rise."Black Adam"The world needed a hero. 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Director Andy Muschietti brilliantly...Read full reviewFollow MoviefoneFacebookTwitterInstagramPinterestYouTubeRSSMovie Trailers149'Joy Ride' Red Band Trailer 2209'Cobweb' Trailer239'Landscape with Invisible Hand' Trailer209'Elio' Teaser Trailer212'PAW Patrol The Mighty Movie' Trailer 1Pulau Buru Tanah Air Beta Buru Island My HomeDocumentary, 40 min., 2016Director Rahung NasutionProducers Whisnu Yonar and Dolorosa SinagaProduction Beranda RakyatDistributed via Indonesian with English subtitles 2Buru Island My Home follows the journey of former detainees, Hersri Setiawan and Tejabayu Soedjojono to the island in the Moluccas that was used by the Indonesian New Order regime as a prison site. They meet old friends, visit the graves of those who have passed away and tell their part of the island’s history. 3Hersri, a writer, was a member of the People’s Cultural Institute Lekra, Lembaga Kebudayaan Rakyat, a leftist cultural group that was linked to the Indonesian Communist Party. Tejabayu was a student activist in the organisation CGMI Concentrasi Gerakan Mahasiswa Indonesia, Indonesian Student Movement Centre at the prestigious Gadjah Mada University in Yogyakarta, Indonesia. The two are reasonably well-known publicly as former detainees, Hersri in particular, who has written several books about his experiences on Buru Island. Making use of his creative works, the film features a few of his poems as a voiceover and text on screen, evoking island life under the barrel of a gun. 4The Indonesian government transported and detained about 12,000 men from Java from the time Buru was first used as a place of detention in 1969 until their release in 1978. The camp’s most famous resident was Pramoedya Ananta Toer, who, like Hersri, was a writer and a member of Lekra. Works by former detainees and Lekra writers were banned by the government after the 1965 suppression of the Communist Party. Those sent to Buru Island from 1969 onwards by the army-dominated government led by President Suharto came from all walks of life ; the one factor that united them was their actual or suspected links with the PKI and leftist mass organisations. 5The film opens with a domestic scene of Hersri making himself a hot drink in his home and then listening to a cassette and looking at some notebooks. Shortly after President Suharto resigned in May 1998, which ushered in democratisation for Indonesia, Hersri travelled to several countries where he collected hundreds of interviews with Indonesians exiled abroad as a result of their differences with the New Order regime. Perhaps the cassette was the result of one such interview, although the filmmakers do not make this clear to the viewer. 6The film opens with mention of 30 September 1965’ and refers to a genocide and survivors of crimes of humanity’, but does not provide further explanation. On 30 September 1965, a group of army officers and soldiers calling themselves the 30 September Movement abducted and killed six generals and a lieutenant, including the highest echelon of leadership of the Indonesian Army. Major-General, later President, Suharto led a violent suppression campaign of this group and the PKI that Suharto alleged was the mastermind of the group. The suppression of the PKI resulted in the killing of half a million members and sympathisers of the party by the army and civilian militias. About 600,000 to three-quarters of a million Indonesians were also detained, mostly without trial, including those on Buru. The Suharto regime, over its 32 years in office, carefully restricted discussions about the army’s actions to gain power from President Sukarno in those tumultuous years of 1965-1966. By restricting the ability of writers like Hersri to communicate their experiences following their incarceration, the regime ensured that its version of history, provided in the school curriculum and in popular media, was easily transmitted to younger generations born many years after these events. 7It is this painful work of re-weaving connections with the younger generation and re-establishing contact with the places and people of Buru that the film is preoccupied with showing. Transmigrants, namely settlers from other parts of Indonesia, and indigenous people also live on Buru. The island is facing environmental problems from gold mining on the adjacent island of Sulawesi. Hersri undertakes his journey back to Buru also with his wife, activist Ita Nadia, and daughter, Ken Setiawan, an academic at the University of Melbourne, who herself writes and publishes on the 1965 issue. The film crew follows their journey by land and sea to find those former detainees Hersri knew who chose to remain, and to revisit some sites of significance to detainees. There is rich potential here for exploring how the family negotiates a difficult and mysterious past, given for many younger people, it has been difficult to unearth family histories that entail connections with the 1965 cataclysm. In a poignant scene, the three stand together, while Hersri recounted his early life, including his leadership of a poetry reading association in Yogyakarta and his subsequent placement with the Afro-Asian Writers’ Bureau office in Colombo, then-Ceylon in the early 1960s. Hersri Setiawan and his daughter, Ken Setiawan 8The film’s fly-on-the-wall’ observational style lends an intimacy to the scene above as we observe the three. In several parts of the film, the bond between Hersri and his daughter Ken is readily apparent and made explicit most frequently by Ken’s statements to Hersri’s former fellow detainees about her feelings of being on the island, with meeting them, and in retracing Hersri’s steps with him. However, we do not gain much further insight into the relationship between father and daughter. Similarly, Hersri’s conversations with other former detainees on the island about Indonesian politics lack context, and therefore are obscure for the viewer. 2 Hersri Setiawan, Diburu di Pulau Buru, Yogyakarta Galang Press, 2006, p. 194. 3 Anonymous, At Australia Bridge’, in Baskara T. Wardaya S. J ed., Truth Will Out Indonesian acco ... 9In visiting the sites of memory on the island, those places that marked and recalled incarceration, we see a refurbished cultural hall where detainees used to perform, a modest monument marking the village established in line with the prison camp, Savanajaya, and the grave of one of his closest friends while in exile, Heru Santoso. The movie does not explain the significance of this particular Heru was a leader of the CGMI student organisation in Surabaya, East Java, and had tried to convince Hersri to make an escape attempt from the island. According to one former exile, Heru died from hepatitis in the camp 10Regrettably, there is also little explanation here about the sites other than what is voiced by the interlocutors on screen. Without adequate setting up’ and organisation of information by the filmmakers, the significance of these sites is not transmitted adequately to the viewer. For example, a scene where prayers are recited by the group, led by a Father, Baskara who was not introduced in the film, beside Heru’s neglected grave could have been even more poignant, had we understood something about the deceased. 4 See comment by Whisnu Yonar in Ika Krismantari, Documentary Provides Different Angle on 1965 Trage ... 11This film provides glimpses of Buru Island, a relatively remote part of Indonesia and the return of men who had years of their lives taken by a faraway ruling regime by being placed there. They returned as free men who are still haunted by memories of those they left behind. This is surely a powerful premise for a documentary. Contrasting with other documentaries which provide more contextualization through interviews and archival images, the director chose to follow the men to Buru without providing background information about the key dramatis personae and the events that impacted their lives. The film may pose some difficulties for viewers who have little knowledge about Indonesian history, in particular, the history of the Indonesian Left and its destruction by the army in 1965. The observational style leaves the viewer wondering about some of the organisations and individuals mentioned in Hersri’s narrative, about which the film does not provide much explanation. In using mainly impromptu observation as its chief technique, the resulting footage contains many narrative gaps. Owing to the technique chosen ‒ the absence of active intervention such as the addition of interviews and tighter editing, and the lack of context and information provided ‒, it would be hard for younger Indonesians, the film’s purported target audience, to follow the narrative thread in this film fully and to develop more knowledge about the anti-communist violence of There continues to be disinformation and confusion in Indonesia and internationally about these events, including the phenomenon of long-term imprisonment, Indonesia’s major human rights issue of the 1970s. While the film contributes somewhat to our historical knowledge, there continues to be many unexplored possibilities in telling the story of Buru. The survivors of this gross human rights violation are diminishing in number and to tell their stories powerfully and meaningfully would contribute significantly to addressing this past. Informasi Awal - Pulau Buru Tanah Air Beta merupakan film yang mengisahkan mantan tahanan politik yang kembali lagi ke Pulau Buru, pulau yang digunakan sebagai tempat pembuangan orang-orang yang diduga terlibat dalam Gerakan 30 September 1965. Film ini dikemas dalam bentuk dokumenter dan disutradarai oleh Rahung Nasution. Film Pulau Buru Tanah Air Beta ini pertama kali diputar pada 16 Maret 2016. Awalnya film berdurasi 48 menit tersebut akan diputar di Goethe Institute, Jalan Diponegoro. Akan tetapi hal itu gagal lantaran adanya protes dari sekelompok orang, dan akhirnya pihak kepolisian melarangnya. Hingga kemudian pemutaran film itu dipindah ke Kantor Komisi Nasional Hak Asasi Manusia Komnas HAM. 1 2 Situasi saat berlangsungnya pemutaran film Pulau Buru Tanah Air Beta di Kantor Komnas HAM, Menteng, Jakarta Pusat, Rabu 16/3/2016. Rudi Baca FILM - Pengkhianatan G30S/PKISinopsis Cerita pada film ini berpusat pada sastrawan sekaligus anggota Lembaga Kebudayaan Rakyat Lekra yang bernama Hersri Setiawan. Ia merupakan sastrawan yang karya-karyanya tidak diakui oleh pemerintah. Di dalam film tersebut juga terdapat puisi-puisi karya dari Hersri Setiawan. Dalam film tersebut juga diceritakan kehidupan yang dialami para tahanan politik tapol selama 9 tahun di sana. Hersri Setiawan bersama dengan eks tapol Pulau Buru, Tedjabayu nampak mengunjungi suatu gedung kesenian yang dibangun oleh para tapol semasa berada di Pulau Buru. Selain itu, Hersri Setiawan dan kawan-kawan Lekra lainnya juga bercerita mengenai ketegangan politik menjelang 1965, peristiwa coup, dan juga hubungan antara PKI dan Lekra yang tidak serta-merta sejalan. Kemudian film ditutup dengan adegan Hersri yang menyambangi makam teman seperjuangannya yang juga menjadi tahanan politik. Seorang teman yang bernama Heru itu meninggal dan dimakamkan di Pulau Buru. 3 N

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