Mohammad Husni Thamrin


Mohammad Husni Thamrin was an Indonesian political thinker and National Hero.

Biography

Thamrin was born in Weltevreden, Batavia, Dutch East Indies, on 16 February 1894. His father, Thamrin Mohd. Tabri, was the son of an English businessman who owned hotel Ort in Batavia. However, Tabri did not carry an English last name because he was raised by his Javanese uncle and adopted his uncle’s name. Thamrin was therefore born into a neo-priyayi class and in 1906, his father became district head under Governor General Johan Cornelis van der Wijck. After graduating from Koning Willem III Gymnasium, Thamrin took several government jobs before working for the shipping company Koninklijke Paketvaart-Maatschappij.
In 1919, Thamrin was elected a member of the Jakarta City Council. He later became deputy mayor. In 1927 he was elected to the Volksraad; he soon formed the National Fraction to unite ten groups of Indonesian nationalists under one flag and counteract the reactionary Fatherlands Club. Along with Dr. Soetomo, Parindra's chair, Thamrin believed that independence could be achieved through cooperation with the Dutch colonial government.
As a Volksraad member, Thamrin and Kusumom Utoyo went to eastern Sumatra to look into working conditions at plantations there. Disgusted by what they found, upon his return Thamrin gave a speech condemning the plantation owners. He criticised the legalised gambling and corporal punishments given for minor offences. In 1935 he was a founding member of the Grand Indonesia Party.
After the death of Dr. Soetomo in 1938, Thamrin became deputy chair of Parindra. In at a meeting of the Volksraad in 1939, Thamrin proposed that the Dutch terms Nederlands Indie, Nederlands Indisch and Inlander be replaced with the nationalist terms Indonesia, Indonesisch, and Indonesier. Although this received majority support in the Volksraad, the Dutch government vetoed the motion. After his request, the colonial government kept him under surveillance. By 1940, his proposal for the use of the term Indonesian had begun to receive consideration, much to Thamrin's perplexity.
In May 1939, Thamrin spearheaded an effort to unite eight nationalist organisations, including Parindra, in the Indonesian Political Federation. The group had four main goals: Indonesian self-determination, national unity, a democratically elected party answering to the Indonesian people, and solidarity between Indonesians and the Dutch to combat fascism.
On 6 January 1941, Thamrin was put under house arrest under suspicion of aiding the advancing Japanese forces; he had previously maintained warm relations with Japanese residents of the Indies. Already ill, he died five days after his arrest. He was buried in Karet Bivak Cemetery, Central Jakarta.

Legacy

Thamrin has several objects named after him, including Jalan M.H. Thamrin, a thoroughfare in Central Jakarta, and Mohammad Husni Thamrin School for the Gifted, a school in East Jakarta for students with an IQ of more than 120. His old home on Kenari street in Senen, Central Jakarta, is now a museum dedicated to his life. Two statues of Thamrin have been erected in Jakarta: a bust near the National Monument and a full-body statue in front of the Thamrin Museum.
He was declared a National Hero of Indonesia in 1964.
He is also depicted in the 2016 series of the Rp 2,000 Indonesian rupiah banknotes