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A late apology, a longer reckoning

In the Dutch context, colonial events are known, documented, even taught, but their moral weight remains strangely muted. 

Editorial Board (The Jakarta Post)
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Tue, June 30, 2026 Published on Jun. 28, 2026 Published on 2026-06-28T23:38:06+07:00

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T

he Dutch government's apology to the Moluccan community in the Netherlands is both necessary and overdue. It acknowledges a painful chapter that sat, for decades, at the uncomfortable edge of Dutch national consciousness, and reveals something deeper: a shadowed trait of a national character otherwise celebrated for its openness and civility.

When the first Moluccans arrived on Dutch shores around 1950, they did not come as migrants in search of a new life. They came as soldiers and families of the Dutch colonial army, loyal allies suddenly displaced by geopolitical realities, and were told their stay would be temporary, a holding arrangement until the creation of an independent homeland, the South Maluku Republic (RMS).

That promise was never fulfilled.

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Instead, they were abandoned. Discharged without honor, housed in grim and isolated camps, including former wartime sites, and denied meaningful opportunities to build a stable future, they were left suspended between worlds: not integrated into Dutch society, nor permitted to return to the one they had lost. A temporary arrangement became permanent limbo.

That first generation has largely passed away. The apology, painfully, comes too late for many who lived through the betrayal. Yet their descendants have endured and, in many ways, flourished, visible and influential, especially in sports, music and the arts. Their success, however, is not evidence of a system that worked, but of resilience in spite of it.

To understand why such an injustice persisted so long without acknowledgment, consider the concept historians call colonial aphasia. It describes not outright denial, but a peculiar inability to fully articulate and integrate the realities of colonial violence into national identity.

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In the Dutch context, colonial events are known, documented, even taught, but their moral weight remains strangely muted. Historical facts are acknowledged, but not fully owned.

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