Today
Jakarta

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Today
Jakarta

The Jakarta Post | Thu, 01/24/2008 2:04 PM | Profile
Don Hasman has tried his
hand at many fields, fueled by wanderlust to know more about the world.
He took time out from his travels to tell Andrew Greene about his
eventful life, the daunting problems facing
Don Hasman is an
enthusiastic man. When he speaks, his entire body pops and bubbles with
excitement.
The 66-year-old
He says when he was a young
man he studied law but decided to become a journalist for the chance to see the
world. “A journalist doesn’t need to pay to travel,” he explains.
“The company pays.”
Following his interests he
has mainly written about exploration, the environment and culture.
But being a journalist in
“During the Soeharto era,
one had to be an acrobat to write,” he remembers. “The Army, the Special
Forces [Kopassus], thought that no one else was clever, but we were clever
too.”
Although there is greater
freedom today and technology has made the reporter’s life easier, low salaries
are another problem for many Indonesian journalists, he said..
“The publishing business
here is worse, more evil than in capitalistic countries. The top get more
money, they are sharks, while those who face the sticks and rocks, the
reporters earn less and less. That is why reporters ask for money from
sources although it is illegal to do so,” Hasman said.
“Except for those from Tempo Magazine
and Kompas [daily newspaper], many journalists do this. According to
[the Indonesian Journalists Association] PWI regulations they face two years in
prison for this, though I do not think anyone has ever been charged. It
is like the 1974 polygamy ban, never enforced.”
Hasman acknowledges there
have been some positive players in Indonesian journalism over the decades, such
as Tempo founder and journalist Goenawan Mohamad
“Without him and others,
most of
Hasman is pleased with the
country’s present direction but says there remain many hurdles to overcome,
especially graft. “The more you know about
“People start being corrupt
at school, when they begin looking at their schoolmates’ tests. Parents
and teachers do not teach them. This situation will not improve until the
rule of law is implemented.”
Journalism has enabled
Hasman to travel as he has wished. He has been part of expeditions to
Irian Jaya,
The people of Papua are
among Hasman’s favorite to visit. “They’re very fragile. They
change their minds quickly because they’re not yet stable. The jump from
the stone age to the modern age is too high for them.”
One of his greatest
adventures was in 1993 when he was part of a group of international journalists
who bicycled across
Much of his anthropological
writing and work has been about the Badui of West Java. He says this is
because of their proximity to
Hasman says that he has
visited the Badui more than 500 times over the last 31 years. This makes him
one of the world’s foremost experts on the tribe that
has lived largely unchanged in the highlands of
Budi Hartono a
lecturer in anthropology and tourism from the
There are about 1,080 Inner
Badui in three inner villages and 9,100 Outer Badui in 37 outer villages,
Hasman said. The Inner Badui are only permitted to wear home-spun and
woven white cloth. They are forbidden from growing cash crops, eating
four-legged animals, taking modern medicine, using electricity or any form of
transportation.
The Outer Badui, says
Hasman, follow the same traditions and norms as the inner but are less strict
in their adherence.
Hasman says it is difficult
to get information on the Badui and that anthropologists have published papers
containing numerous mistakes.
“The more you want to
squeeze them, the more they try to mislead you. That’s the way their
brains are,” Hasman says. “They [the observers] do not spend long enough,
nor come often enough. Five to ten years is nothing. That is just
enough to study the cover. You must get their confidence, but even then
they’ll still try to hide things.”
Hasman has no
plans of slowing down. He is half finished writing a book about the Badui
for the Indonesian Heritage Society.
Next year he is planning a
journey to the world’s seven most deadly volcanoes, traveling to two sites in
Powered by his
unending enthusiasm, Hasman will undoubtedly continue to bring the stories of
hidden worlds to his readers for years to come.