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You are here: Home Members Papuan Voices [Merauke] Videos Surat Cinta Kepada Sang Prada (Love Letter to the Soldier)
You are here: Home Members Papuan Voices [Merauke] Videos Surat Cinta Kepada Sang Prada (Love Letter to the Soldier)
You are here: Home Members Papuan Voices [Merauke] Videos Surat Cinta Kepada Sang Prada (Love Letter to the Soldier)
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Surat Cinta Kepada Sang Prada (Love Letter to the Soldier)

by Papuan Voices [Merauke] last modified May 12, 2012 12:07 AM
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A letter from a Papuan woman to an Indonesian soldier who was once based in her village on the PNG-Indonesian border. Theirs was a controversial relationship but she begs him to return to meet their three-year-old daughter: "I will continue to wait for you, Samsul. I don't care what people say."

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Produced by EngageMedia, JPIC MSC, Kunang-Kunang Media
Directed by Wenda Tokomonowir
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Produced Feb 02, 2012

Full Description

Many of us know that West Papua is fighting for independence – but what else goes on there? How often do we hear directly from the Papuans themselves about life in Indonesia’s most secretive province?

EngageMedia’s Papuan Voices project is a combination of empowerment and production. We collaborate with Catholic Church groups in Jayapura and Merauke to teach Papuan activists new video production and distribution skills so that they have the means to tell their own stories to the world.

Importantly, the stories we tell are not only framed around West Papua’s political struggle for independence. Why is this important? Because when a Papuan man punches an Indonesian soldier because the soldier has assaulted his sister, more often than not that man will be branded a “separatist” by the press and Indonesian authorities. The soldier will walk free while the Papuan will be charged with serious offences against the state.

These kinds of injustices occur daily in Papua and a lack of understanding about the issues affecting Indonesia’s poorest citizens works to entrench the problem.

The Papuan Voices project overcomes political, geographical and financial barriers - as well as lack of technology - to bring important Papuan stories to the world. In doing so, it shines light on the injustices that regularly occur behind the closed doors of this resource-rich and restive province.

Project partners: Justice, Peace and Integrity of Creation (JPIC), MSC (Jakarta) and the Secretariat for Justice and Peace (SKP KC Jayapura).

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