Asian Geographic - 08.2018

(Grace) #1
Above left Adam Malik
(left) and George Bush
at the 26th United
Nations General
Assembly in 1971,
of which Malik was
elected president

top right Malik (right)
shakes hands with
Portuguese foreign
minister Ernesto Melo
Antunes in Rome, 1975

Above right Malik
(right) meets UN
Secretary-General
U Thant at the UN
Headquarters in New
York , 1971

“Pak Adam Malik raised us in an egalitarian way,


which was unusual considering the pronounced


family hierarchies in Asia. He wanted us


to call him bung (meaning ‘bro’),” Malik’s


granddaughter, Salmaini, shares. “He shed his


ethnic family name, Batubara, so people would


see his Indonesian identity instead of


his Mandailing ethnicity. And he always


emphasised to us the importance of learning


other cultures and languages.”


Born in North Sumatra, Adam Malik


was educated up to elementary school and


subsequently self-taught. Obsessed with books


from an early age, he worked as a clerk in his


father’s bookshop, where he picked up English,


Japanese, Dutch and Arabic.


Jailed at the age of 13 for his participation


in a nationalist group fighting against


Dutch rule, Malik later founded a news agency


to support the nationalist press. After Indonesia


declared independence, he took on key


positions in various political parties and rose to


the post of ambassador to the Soviet Union and


Poland. He was 50 when ASEAN was formed.


“In the years leading up to the ASEAN
Declaration, my grandfather was deeply
disturbed by konfrontasi, since his mother was
from Chemor, Perak [in Malaysia]. We have
lots of relatives there,” says the younger Malik.
“Malaysia always related to him on a personal
level, and he used to share his concerns about
the situation with my father.”
Malik’s peronal attachment to ASEAN even
led him to name one of his granddaughters
Aseani (she was born in the same year as the
inauguration of the ASEAN Secretariat in
Jakarta). After the formation of ASEAN, Malik
was elected President of the United Nations
General Assembly in 1971 and went on to
become Indonesia’s third Vice President. He
passed away from liver cancer in 1984.

“A region which can stand


on its own feet, strong


enough to defend itself from


any negative influence from


outside the region”


Adam Malik

Adam Malik (INDONESIA)


DATA SOURCES: TIME, SRIMAL FERNANDO AND CHAMINDA
PADMAKUMARA/THE DIPLOMATIC SOCIETY, FIDEL V RAMOS/
ASEAN@50, GODWIN NG/THE NEW PAPER, HISTORYSG

PHOTOS © UN PHOTO/TEDDY CHEN, KEYSTONE/GETTY IMAGES
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