Indies Monument
The Indies Monument is a memorial in The Hague in memory of all Dutch citizens and soldiers killed during World War II as a result of the Japanese occupation of the former Dutch East Indies. It is dedicated to all who died in battle, in prison camps or during forced labor. As stated in the mission statement of the 15 August 1945 Commemoration Foundation, it is also:
A place where you can pass on to your children the part of your childhood spent in the Dutch East Indies
The monument is unique, due to the fact that earth from the seven war cemeteries in Indonesia has been placed in an urn mounted on a small column at the front of the monument. In fall 2008 a second urn, with earth from the Galala Tantui war cemetery on Ambon Island, was placed behind the column.
Before the annual National Remembrance [15 August 1945], the Dutch ambassador to Indonesia lays a wreath at the Menteng Pulo War Cemetery on Java in cooperation with the Foundation. Once every five years, in coordination with the Dutch embassies and the Dutch War Graves Foundation, wreaths are also laid at all other war cemeteries in Indonesia, Australia and Southeast Asia where Dutch victims of war are buried.
In addition to this monument a commemoration site in Bronbeek, Arnhem was established in 2010.
Design
Designed by Jaroslawa Dankowa, the monument was unveiled on August 15, 1988 by Queen Beatrix. It consists of 17 bronze sculptures, a map of Southeast Asia and the inscription, "The spirit conquers". Its design was chosen in 1986 by the Mayor of Amsterdam and the Deputy Mayor of Amsterdam. The commission for the design stated:Recognition through a representation of the struggle and the conquest. The humiliation, the repression, hardship, pain and despair. But also the hope, perseverance, courage and solidarity. Acknowledgement through a portrayal of our understanding today of the causes, the circumstances and consequences of that suffering.
Development
It took the Netherlands 43 years to erect a national monument to its war victims in the Dutch East Indies. Until 1961, the National Remembrance of the Dead Day and Liberation Day were primarily dedicated to the Dutch victims of Nazi Germany. Since 1962, they include soldiers and civilians who fell during the Indonesian National Revolution.Memorial Day at the Indies Monument is August 15, the date of the Japanese surrender. Unlike May 5, it is not a public holiday in the Netherlands.
In the years following the transfer of sovereignty of the Dutch East Indies to Indonesia the political climate in the Netherlands was marked by sensitivity in relation to Indonesia and a sense of shame about the Netherlands' colonial past. As a result it took a long time before there was any interest in the war victims of the former Dutch East Indies colony.