Jakarta Globe, Basten Gokkon, Mar 01, 2015
Jayapura, Papua. While primary education remains a luxury that many children in Papua cannot afford, 10-year-old Eko Kogoya is doing his best studying the various subjects delivered at Tiom Elementary School in Papua’s Lanny Jaya district.
Children at an elementary school in Manokwari, West Papua, in this December 2014 file photo. (Antara Photo//Indrianto Eko Suwarso) |
Jayapura, Papua. While primary education remains a luxury that many children in Papua cannot afford, 10-year-old Eko Kogoya is doing his best studying the various subjects delivered at Tiom Elementary School in Papua’s Lanny Jaya district.
Eko has
been placed in a special program established by the school for fifth-graders
who are academically more advanced than their peers. While children in the
regular scheme go home at noon, Eko and several other gifted students spend
four additional hours at school to cover extra material.
The
program, which is fully funded by the Lanny Jaya district office, also requires
the students to live in a dormitory located some 10 meters away from campus.
“I want to
become a professor — an engineering professor,” Eko told the Jakarta Globe
during a visit to the school with Wahana Visi Indonesia on Wednesday.
Located in
the Middle Mountains some 2,000 meters above sea level, Lanny Jaya district is
said to be a hot spot for the separatist Free Papua Organization (OPM).
Christian
Sohilait, secretary of the district office, acknowledged that separatist
activity was among the area’s top three challenges — after education
development and HIV/AIDS.
He
acknowledges that Wiyawage subdistrict has long been the base of operations for
the separatist outfit.
In August
last year, a group of people believed to have been from the OPM fired shots at
Christian and his team as they were traveling back from Wamena district. Nobody
was killed in the attack but a police officer was injured.
Shallow
pool of human resources
“When a gun
attack happens, it can disrupt village activities for a whole day,” Christian
says.
“Psychological
after-effects from the attacks linger for some time, especially for the
non-Papuan teachers who are here doing the SM3T program,” he adds, referring to
the obligatory, state-funded teaching certification program for university
students pursuing a career as a full-time, government-listed teacher.
During the
one-year program, these young prospective teachers are based in regions across
the archipelago categorized as the least developed and located in the most
remote areas.
Lanny Jaya
is among the program’s many destinations to support the region’s shallow pool
of human resources for the field of education.
Non-Papuan
teachers are especially needed to filter out the separatist doctrines seeping
into local schools.
Christian,
who previously headed the education office in Lanny Jaya, claims district
officials have discovered that 24 local teachers are members of the OPM.
“There was
a plan to brainwash children [with the group's vision] through schools,” he
says, adding that he has personally been in contact with fighters from the OPM
on several occasions.
“What I did
was I suspended the teachers’ salaries and told them that if they wanted their
pay back, they’d have to commit fully to educating the children upon their
return,” he says.
When it
comes to developing the education system in Lanny Jaya, Christian says he
refused to surrender to the separatist movement’s threats and decided to create
the Tiom Elementary School and the program for academically gifted students.
“To me, the
OPM is just a temporary problem because the attacks don’t happen every day,” he
says, noting that since 2011 the OPM has waged six gun battles with the
Indonesian Military (TNI) and police. A total of six police officers were
killed and 14 guns confiscated during the clashes.
“But
illiteracy threatens these people every single day,” Christian says.
Data from
the Central Statistics Agency (BPS) show that in 2011, only 37 percent of Lanny
Jaya residents aged 15 to 24 years old were able to read, a marginal increase
from 36.7 percent the previous year.
Lanny Jaya
this year received a regional budget of Rp 1.2 trillion ($92 million). About 20
to 30 percent of that will be set aside for education development in the
district, which is home to 214,000 people, according to Christian.
Efforts by
the Lanny Jaya district administration to boost education include building a
science center for the Tiom Elementary School in late 2013, which boasts 12
computers — a donation made by one of the office’s private partners.
“Our goal
is to be a model of developed education for schools in the Middle Mountain area
by 2016,” Christian says.
“Our dream
is for every single child here to be able to read, write and count. And for
Lannny Jaya to be the educational model for other districts in Papua.”
Different
districts, same problem
In another
district in Papua’s Middle Mountains, located just 100 kilometers from Lanny
Jaya, fifth-grader Gustaf Adolf shares a similar situation with Eko.
Studying at
the Maima Advent Elementary School in Asolokobal, Jayawijaya district, Gustaf
wishes for peace during times of fighting so that he can go to school and study
his favorite subjects.
The
Asolokobal village neighbors that of other Papuan tribes, including the Kurima,
Wouma and Welesi.
The feuding
between the different clans has often resulted in violence, with the latest
conflict breaking out on Dec. 19 between the Asolokobal and the Kurima, which
left three people dead and 70 injured. The fighting went on for weeks before
both tribes eventually agreed to a truce on Jan. 6 with the help of the
district police.
“I don’t
really understand what exactly was happening but my parents told me not go to
school,” says 11-year-old Gustaf.
“School
should have started on January 5, but it was postponed for a week for our
safety,” says Anie Joyce Nirupu, the Maima Advent principal. “Teachers were
afraid to go to the school.”
Anie says
the school will not skip any classes for its students despite losing a week’s
worth of lessons.
“We
acknowledge the challenges we face, but we don’t want to push the children if
they’re not ready,” she says.
She adds
she knows that there is nothing she can do when fighting breaks out between
tribes, but says she realizes that she can at least teach her students to live
in peace so that they will not be propagate the generations-long feuding in the
area.
In early
2013, Anie decided to adopt an educational method introduced by Wahana Visi
Indonesia for her school.
Pakima Hani
Hano , which translates into “Unity Is Good and Beautiful,” combines up to 34
Papuan seeds of wisdom, including the tenet of living in harmony, to be taught
to children at elementary schools.
“When I
started implementing [the methodology], I urged my staff to always be the first
to set an example,” Anie says.
She
concedes to having no hard figures to prove the system has worked for the
children, but claims the students always side with peace whenever she asks them
how they feel after a clash between tribes.
“These kids
are the future, and hopefully they won’t make the same mistakes their elders
are committing now [by fighting],” Anie says.
“I don’t
like war,” Gustaf says. “When it happens, I can’t go to school and play with my
friends.”
The
writer’s visit to Papua was facilitated by Wahana Visi Indonesia, a community
empowerment NGO.
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