Sukmawati Sukarnoputri | |
Birth Date: | 26 October 1951 |
Birth Place: | Jakarta, Indonesia |
Nationality: | Indonesian |
Alma Mater: | Universitas Bung Karno |
Education: | International Relations |
Parents: | Sukarno, Fatmawati |
Party: | PNIM |
Spouse: | Mangkunegara IX (m. 1974–1984), Muhammad Hilmy (m. ?–2018) |
Children: | Paundrakarna, GRA Putri Agung Suniwati, Muhammad Putra Perwira Utama |
Known For: | daughter of Indonesia's founding father and first president |
Diah Mutiara Sukmawati Sukarnoputri (born 26 October 1951)[1] [2] is the third daughter of Indonesia’s founding president Sukarno and his wife Fatmawati. Sukmawati is the younger sister of former Indonesian president Megawati Sukarnoputri and politician Rachmawati Sukarnoputri.[3]
Sukmawati attended elementary and junior high school at Sekolah Rakyat (SR) Cikini in Jakarta, graduating in 1967. In 1969, she graduated from State Senior High School 3 Teladan. She attended the Dance Academy of the Jakarta Arts Education Institute (LPKJ) from 1970–1974. In 2003, she enrolled as a student of the Department of International Relations (HI) in the Faculty of Social and Political Sciences (Fisip) at Jakarta’s Bung Karno University.[4]
In 1998, following the fall of Suharto, she revived the Indonesian National Party (PNI), which was renamed PNI Supeni (or Soepeni) and competed in Indonesia’s 1999 general election, winning only 0.36% of the vote.[5] Being ineligible to contest future elections because of its poor performance, the party changed its name to PNI Marhaenisme in 2002 and Sukmawati was appointed chairwoman.[6] The party received 0.81% of votes in the 2004 general election, winning just one seat in parliament.[7] In the 2009 election, the party won just 0.3% and lost its only seat.[8]
On November 13, 2008, Sukmawati was named as a suspect in a fake diploma used as a requirement for the 2009 Indonesian legislative election candidacy of a Member of the House of Representatives candidate from PNI Marhaenisme for the electoral district of Bali.[9] The Election Supervisory Board (Bawaslu) then reported Sukmawati to the National Police in July 2009, to open an investigation alleging she had falsified her high school diploma when registering as a legislative candidate for the Marhaenism Indonesian National Party.[10] She used a photocopy of a diploma from SMA 3 Jakarta graduated in 1970, but it was not legalised. The school refused to legalise it because it stated that Sukmawati only attended school until second grade (grade 11) and did not attend school after marriage.[11] She was only named as a suspect and not detained in this discontinued case. It was previously known that in the 2004 Indonesian legislative election, she used a certificate from SMA 22 Jakarta graduated in 1969 so she had two certificates with different graduation years.[12] [13] Police in August dropped the case, saying there was a lack of evidence as the school's records had been destroyed by a fire in 2007. Sukmawati withdrew her candidacy due to this case.
In 2011, Sukmawati wrote a memoir about the 15 years she lived at the Merdeka Palace, called Creeping Coup d'Etat Mayjen Suharto (The Creeping Coup d’Etat of Major General Suharto). The book reveals the story of Sukmawati's life since she was born in Merdeka Palace and tells her historical testimony regarding the coup against Sukarno in 1965–1967.
She believes Suharto and other members of the military conducted a coup against Sukarno by using the Order of March 11, 1966. She said she cannot forgive Suharto for human rights violations that occurred in the aftermath of the coup.[14]
Sukmawati was married to Prince Sujiwa Kusuma (now Adipati Mangkunegara IX) of the Mangkenegara royal family of Solo, Central Java. Later on, Prince Kusuma ascended the throne and took the title Kanjeng Gusti Pangeran Adipati Arya Mangkunegara IX. They had three children, and later divorced. [15]
On 26 October 2021, she converted from Islam to Hinduism in a "Sudhi Wadani" Hindu ceremony in Bali. She defined the process as going back to her roots and described being influenced by her grandmother who was a Hindu.[16] [17]
In October 2016, Sukmawati filed a police complaint against radical Muslim cleric Rizieq Shihab, accusing him of insulting Sukarno and Indonesian state ideology Pancasila. Rizieq had allegedly made a speech stating “in Sukarno's Pancasila, God is placed in the ass, whereas according to the Jakarta Charter, God is in the head”. The Jakarta Charter was a proposed preamble to Indonesia’s 1945 Constitution that would have required Muslims to follow Shariah law.[18] Police declared Rizieq a suspect in January 2017. He fled Indonesia in May 2017 when also named a suspect in a pornography case.[19]
On 28 March 2018, Sukmawati recited a poem deemed offensive and blasphemous by some Muslims.[20] Her poem, Ibu Indonesia (Mother Indonesia) was recited at the 29 Years of Anne Avantie Work event at Indonesia Fashion Week 2018 and intended to celebrate Indonesian fashion and tradition, which she compared to imported Islamic fashion and tradition.[21] [22] Amron Ansyhari of Hanura Party and lawyer Denny Andrian Kusdayat on 3 April reported Sukmawati to Jakarta Police for alleged blasphemy.[23] Denny, who had in 2012 been jailed for extortion,[24] claimed Sukmawati had belittled God by saying Mother Indonesia's ballad was more soothing than the Islamic call to prayer.[25]
On 2 April, Presidium Alumni 212 administrator Kapitra Ampera said that the alleged violation was borderline religious blasphemy. Ampera, who is also Rizieq Shihab's lawyer, said "there is (a strong allegation) of discrediting religion. The Azan is a call to worship."[26] as a response, Sukmawati denied this allegation, saying that her poem "has no-SARA." (SARA being an acronym for Ethnicity, Religion, Race and Intergroups (in indonesian: Suku, Agama, Ras, dan Antargolongan.) Sukmawati assumes that mothers in Eastern Indonesia do not know sharia.[27]
Though on 4 April, Sukmawati apologized to all Indonesian Muslims, saying she was especially sorry to those who felt offended by the poem. On the same day, another two organizations, the Indonesian Ulema Defense Team (TPUI) and the Indonesian Islamic Student Movement (GMII), reported Sukmawati to police, claiming her poem was an insult.[28] On 6 April, conservative Muslims, including children, protested in Jakarta, demanding Sukmawati be jailed.[29] [30] They said she should not be forgiven for the poem, whereas the Indonesian Ulemas Association and several politicians had called for forgiveness.[31]
Sukmawati Sukarnoputri converted to Hinduism from Islam on 2021 October 12 in a ritual called 'Sudhi Wadani' . The ceremony took place at the Sukarno Centre Heritage Area, named after her father, located inside the Buleleng Regency in Bali. Sukmawati’s Balinese grandmother, Ida Ayu Nyoman Rai Srimben, played a major role in influencing her decision to convert to Hinduism.[32]