Hilmar Farid
Hilmar Farid is an Indonesian academic, activist, politician and translator. He was Director General of Culture in the Indonesian Ministry of Education, Culture, Research, and Technology from 2015 to 2024. During his career he has helped establish various Indonesian organizations, including the Culture Working Network in 1994 and the Indonesian Institute of Social History in 2002.
Biography
Early life
Hilmar Farid Setiadi was born in Bonn, West Germany on 8 March 1968. His father, Agus Setiadi, was a translator, notably of children's novels, and his mother Els Lapian was a civil servant in Indonesian embassies. The family returned to Indonesia in 1976. Before enrolling in university, as a youth, he followed in his father's footsteps and published some Indonesian translations of Enid Blyton and Anthony Buckeridge books with Gramedia in the late 1980s.Academic career
Hilmar Farid started a Bachelor's degree in History from the University of Indonesia in 1988, completing it in 1993. After that, he became an instructor at the Jakarta Institute of the Arts, where he stayed for four years. During that period he helped co-found the Culture Working Network in Jakarta, a progressive cultural organization which published a magazine Media Kerja Budaya. Through this group he developed his ideas about history and culture and their limitations under the New Order dictatorship, which lasted until 1998.He founded and became the head of the Institute for Indonesian Social History in 2002. The ISSI worked hard to preserve archival materials about social movements and minority groups and to increase the Indonesian public's understanding of their country's history. In 2007 he stepped down from his position leading the ISSI, although he remained on its board.
After that he started a Phd in Cultural studies at the National University of Singapore examining the Indonesian writer Pramoedya Ananta Toer. In May 2014 he defended his PhD dissertation Rewriting the Nation: Pramoedya and the Politics of Decolonization. Since 2014 he has once again resumed teaching at the Jakarta Institute of the Arts, as well as at the University of Indonesia.
Political career and activism
Hilmar Farid was critical of the Indonesian government's behavior in the 1999 East Timorese crisis and traveled to East Timor as a representative of the activist group ELSAM. Through the ISSI and other groups, he continued to be active in campaigns to support human rights in the Indonesia in the 2000s and 2010s. In 2010 spoke out on behalf of religions minorities, such as members of the Batak Christian Protestant Church and Ahmadiyyas who were being targeted by members of the Islamist group Islamic Defenders Front. He was also vocal in support of a case in the Constitutional Court of Indonesia which, in October 2010, struck down decades-old book censorship laws.In 2012 he became head of the organization Perkumpulan Praxis, a civil society research and advocacy group. He also helped found the New Jakarta Movement Volunteers which sought to support its preferred candidates in the 2012 Jakarta gubernatorial election, including notably the successful candidate Joko Widodo, whom Farid had been impressed by when he made an appearance at a Praxis event. He was also a supporter and senior advisor to Jokowi's candidacy in the 2014 Indonesian presidential election. Anies Baswedan, then Minister of Education and Culture, appointed Farid Director General of Culture under that Ministry on 31 December 2015, replacing Kacung Maridjan. He was the first non civil servant to be appointed to that role. In an interview with BBC early in his term, he explained that he hoped to create new and long-lasting frameworks to support cultural creation in Indonesia and that he hoped to improve attendance in the country's museums. He was also active in negotiations with the Netherlands government over the repatriation of items taken out of Indonesia during the colonial era.
He was also appointed by Jokowi as an independent commissioner of the state-owned steel enterprise Krakatau Steel in April 2015, though in April 2016 he was replaced in that role by Ridwan Djamaluddin. Since November 2020 has been head commissioner of Balai Pustaka, the state-owned literary publishing agency.
Selected works
- Tahun yang tak pernah berakhir: memahami pengalaman korban 65: esai-esai sejarah lisan
- The struggle for truth and justice: a survey of transitional justice initiatives throughout Indonesia
- Kisah Tiga Patung.
- Arus Balik Kebudayaan: sejarah sebagai kritik
- Perang suara: bahasa dan politik pergerakan
- Pemuda, Pergerakan dan Sejarah: Kumpulan Esai di Prisma.