Presiden Indonesia, Soekarno berbicara pada Konferensi Asia Afrika di
Bandung (KAA), 1955. Lisa Larsen/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images/tempo.co |
Peringatan Konferensi Asia-Afrika yang jatuh pada peringatan ke-60 di
tahun 2015, membuat publik dewasa ini kembali menengok perjuangan sosok
Presiden pertama Indonesia Ir Soekarno dalam menghelat KAA untuk yang pertama kalinya.
Pidato Ir Soekarno yang menghentak publik Asia-Afrika membuat para bangsa yang ikut berpartisipasi semakin menghormati Indonesia sebagai bangsa yang besar.
Seperti pada kutipan dalam paragraf terakhir, Soekarno melantangkan:
"if we succeed in doing so, the effect of it for the freedom, independence and the welfare of man will be great on the world at large. The Light of Understanding has again been lit, the Pillar of Cooperation again erected. The likelihood of success of this Conference is proved already by the very presence of you all here today. It is for us to give it strength, to give it the power of inspiration-to spread its message all over the World."
Dari penggalan paragraf terakhir tersebut dapat diartikan, meski para delegasi KAA berkumpul dari negara berbeda, latar belakang politik yang berbeda, kulit berbeda, mereka dapat bersatu dan berjuang melawan gerakan kolonialisme dan mempromosikan perdamaian dunia.
Indonesia menjadi tuan rumah Konferensi Asia-Afrika di Bandung, Jawa Barat, pada 18-24 April 1955. Inisiatif ini diambil oleh Indonesia, India, Pakistan, Birma (Myanmar) dan Ceylon (Sri Lanka).
Konferensi ini dihadiri oleh delegasi dari 29 negara Asia dan Afrika. Tujuan dari konferensi ini adalah promosi kerjasama yang lebih erat di bidang ekonomi, budaya dan politik.
Resolusi dari Konferensi ini dikenal sebagai "Dasa Sila", Bandung.
Hal ini menekankan perdamaian dunia, menghormati satu sama lain kedaulatan dan integritas teritorial, dan non-campur tangan dalam urusan internal masing-masing. Resolusi itu juga berusaha menegakkan prinsip-prinsip hak asasi manusia Perserikatan Bangsa-Bangsa.
Ide untuk konferensi tersebut dilanjutkan dalam pembahasan konferensi Colombo (28 April 1964) dan disempurnakan dalam konferensi Bogor (28-29 Desember 1954), Seperti dilansir melalui situs Sukarno-years.net
Benih yang tumbuh di Bandung berakar kuat enam tahun kemudian ketika negara-negara merdeka secara resmi mendirikan Gerakan Non-Blok di Beograd Summit tahun 1961.
Berikut isi pidato lengkap Soekarno yang disampaikan dalam Bahasa Inggris berjudul "Let a New Asia and African be Born" pada KAA pertama di Bandung 18 April 1955.
Pidato Ir Soekarno yang menghentak publik Asia-Afrika membuat para bangsa yang ikut berpartisipasi semakin menghormati Indonesia sebagai bangsa yang besar.
Seperti pada kutipan dalam paragraf terakhir, Soekarno melantangkan:
"if we succeed in doing so, the effect of it for the freedom, independence and the welfare of man will be great on the world at large. The Light of Understanding has again been lit, the Pillar of Cooperation again erected. The likelihood of success of this Conference is proved already by the very presence of you all here today. It is for us to give it strength, to give it the power of inspiration-to spread its message all over the World."
Dari penggalan paragraf terakhir tersebut dapat diartikan, meski para delegasi KAA berkumpul dari negara berbeda, latar belakang politik yang berbeda, kulit berbeda, mereka dapat bersatu dan berjuang melawan gerakan kolonialisme dan mempromosikan perdamaian dunia.
Indonesia menjadi tuan rumah Konferensi Asia-Afrika di Bandung, Jawa Barat, pada 18-24 April 1955. Inisiatif ini diambil oleh Indonesia, India, Pakistan, Birma (Myanmar) dan Ceylon (Sri Lanka).
Konferensi ini dihadiri oleh delegasi dari 29 negara Asia dan Afrika. Tujuan dari konferensi ini adalah promosi kerjasama yang lebih erat di bidang ekonomi, budaya dan politik.
Resolusi dari Konferensi ini dikenal sebagai "Dasa Sila", Bandung.
Hal ini menekankan perdamaian dunia, menghormati satu sama lain kedaulatan dan integritas teritorial, dan non-campur tangan dalam urusan internal masing-masing. Resolusi itu juga berusaha menegakkan prinsip-prinsip hak asasi manusia Perserikatan Bangsa-Bangsa.
Ide untuk konferensi tersebut dilanjutkan dalam pembahasan konferensi Colombo (28 April 1964) dan disempurnakan dalam konferensi Bogor (28-29 Desember 1954), Seperti dilansir melalui situs Sukarno-years.net
Benih yang tumbuh di Bandung berakar kuat enam tahun kemudian ketika negara-negara merdeka secara resmi mendirikan Gerakan Non-Blok di Beograd Summit tahun 1961.
Berikut isi pidato lengkap Soekarno yang disampaikan dalam Bahasa Inggris berjudul "Let a New Asia and African be Born" pada KAA pertama di Bandung 18 April 1955.
This
twentieth century has been a period of terrific dynamism. Perhaps the
last fifty years have seen more developments and more material progress
than the previous five hundred years. Man has learned to control many of
the scourges which once threatened him. He has learned to consume
distance. He has learned to project his voice and his picture across
oceans and continents. lie has probed deep into the secrets of nature
and learned how to make the desert bloom and the plants of the earth
increase their bounty. He has learned how to release the immense forces
locked in the smallest particles of matter.
But has man's
political skill marched hand-in-hand with his technical and scientific
skill? Man can chain lightning to his command-can be control the society
in which be lives? The answer is No! The political skill of man has
been far outstripped by technical skill, and what lie has made he cannot
be sure of controlling.
The result of this is fear. And man gasps for safety and morality.
Perhaps
now more than at any other moment in the history of the world, society,
government and statesmanship need to be based upon the highest code of
morality and ethics. And in political terms, what is the highest code of
morality? It is the subordination of everything to the well-being of
mankind. But today we are faced with a situation where the well-being of
mankind is not always the primary consideration. Many who are in places
of high power think, rather, of controlling the world.
Yes,
we are living in a world of fear. The life of man today is corroded and
made bitter by fear. Fear of the future, fear of the hydrogen bomb,
fear of ideologies. Perhaps this fear is a greater danger than the
danger itself, because it is fear which drives men to act foolishly, to
act thoughtlessly, to act dangerously. . . .
All of us, I
am certain, are united by more important things than those which
superficially divide us. We are united, for instance, by a common
detestation of colonialism in whatever form it appears. We are united by
a common detestation of racialism. And we are united by a common
determination to preserve and stabilise peace in the world. . . .
We
are often told "Colonialism is dead." Let us not be deceived or even
soothed by that. 1 say to you, colonialism is not yet dead. How can we
say it is dead, so long as vast areas of Asia and Africa are unfree.
And,
I beg of you do not think of colonialism only in the classic form which
we of Indonesia, and our brothers in different parts of Asia and
Africa, knew. Colonialism has also its modern dress, in the form of
economic control, intellectual control, actual physical control by a
small but alien community within a nation. It is a skilful and
determined enemy, and it appears in many guises. It does not give up its
loot easily. Wherever, whenever and however it appears, colonialism is
an evil thing, and one which must be eradicated from the earth. . . .
Not
so very long ago we argued that peace was necessary for us because an
outbreak of fighting in our part of the world would imperil our precious
independence, so recently won at such great cost.
Today,
the picture is more black. War would riot only mean a threat to our
independence, it may mean the end of civilisation and even of human
life. There is a force loose in the world whose potentiality for evil no
man truly knows. Even in practice and rehearsal for war the effects may
well be building up into something of unknown horror.
Not
so long ago it was possible to take some little comfort from the idea
that the clash, if it came, could perhaps be settled by what were called
"conventional weapons "-bombs, tanks, cannon and men. Today that little
grain of comfort is denied us for it has been made clear that the
weapons of ultimate horror will certainly be used, and the military
planning of nations is on that basis. The unconventional has become the
conventional, and who knows what other examples of misguided and
diabolical scientific skill have been discovered as a plague on
humanity.
And do not think that the oceans and the seas
will protect us. The food that we cat, the water that we drink, yes,
even the very air that we breathe can be contaminated by poisons
originating from thousands of miles away. And it could be that, even if
we ourselves escaped lightly, the unborn generations of our children
would bear on their distorted bodies the marks of our failure to control
the forces which have been released on the world.
No
task is more urgent than that of preserving peace. Without peace our
independence means little. The rehabilitation and upbuilding of our
countries will have little meaning. Our revolutions will not be allowed
to run their course. . . .
What can we do? We can do
much! We can inject the voice of reason into world affairs. We can
mobilise all the spiritual, all the moral, all the political strength of
Asia and Africa on the side of peace. Yes, we! We, the peoples of Asia
and Africa, 1,400,000,000 strong, far more than half the human
population of the world, we can mobilise what I have called the Moral
Violence of Nations in favour of peace. We can demonstrate to the
minority of the world which lives on the other continents that we, the
majority are for peace, not for war, and that whatever strength we have
will always be thrown on to the side of peace.
In this
struggle, some success has already been scored. I think it is generally
recognised that the activity of the Prime Ministers of the Sponsoring
Countries which invited you here had a not unimportant role to play in
ending the fighting in Indo-China.
Look, the peoples of
Asia raised their voices, and the world listened. It was no small
victory and no negligible precedent! The five Prime Ministers did not
make threats. They issued no ultimatum, they mobilised no troops.
Instead they consulted together, discussed the issues, pooled their
ideas, added together their individual political skills and came forward
with sound and reasoned suggestions which formed the basis for a
settlement of the long struggle in Indo-China.
I have
often since then asked myself why these five were successful when
others, with long records of diplomacy, were unsuccessful, and, in fact,
had allowed a bad situation to get worse, so that there was a danger of
the conflict spreading. . . . I think that the answer really lies in
the fact that those five Prime Ministers brought a fresh approach to
bear on the problem. They were not seeking advantage for their own
countries. They had no axe of power-politics to grind. They had but one
interest-how to end the fighting in such a way that the chances of
continuing peace and stability were enhanced. . . .
So,
let this Asian-African Conference be a great success! Make the "Live and
let live" principle and the "Unity in Diversity" motto the unifying
force which brings us all together-to seek in friendly, uninhibited
discussion, ways and means by which each of us can live his own life,
and let others live their own lives, in their own way, in harmony, and
in peace.
If we succeed in doing so, the effect of it
for the freedom, independence and the welfare of man will be great on
the world at large. The Light of Understanding has again been lit, the
Pillar of Cooperation again erected. The likelihood of success of this
Conference is proved already by the very presence of you all here today.
It is for us to give it strength, to give it the power of
inspiration-to spread its message all over the World.
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