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"#Happiness is our people's right. We shouldn't be too hard on behaviors caused by joy." 29/6/2013
— Hassan Rouhani (@HassanRouhani) May 21, 2014Thousands of people are already dancing for a #HappyPlanet! Join in at http://t.co/OfXTxf1A8q #happyday pic.twitter.com/XF02VkW2B7
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.
“… The Shift in Human Nature
You're starting to see integrity change. Awareness recalibrates integrity, and the Human Being who would sit there and take advantage of another Human Being in an old energy would never do it in a new energy. The reason? It will become intuitive, so this is a shift in Human Nature as well, for in the past you have assumed that people take advantage of people first and integrity comes later. That's just ordinary Human nature.
In the past, Human nature expressed within governments worked like this: If you were stronger than the other one, you simply conquered them. If you were strong, it was an invitation to conquer. If you were weak, it was an invitation to be conquered. No one even thought about it. It was the way of things. The bigger you could have your armies, the better they would do when you sent them out to conquer. That's not how you think today. Did you notice?
Any country that thinks this way today will not survive, for humanity has discovered that the world goes far better by putting things together instead of tearing them apart. The new energy puts the weak and strong together in ways that make sense and that have integrity. Take a look at what happened to some of the businesses in this great land (USA). Up to 30 years ago, when you started realizing some of them didn't have integrity, you eliminated them. What happened to the tobacco companies when you realized they were knowingly addicting your children? Today, they still sell their products to less-aware countries, but that will also change.
What did you do a few years ago when you realized that your bankers were actually selling you homes that they knew you couldn't pay for later? They were walking away, smiling greedily, not thinking about the heartbreak that was to follow when a life's dream would be lost. Dear American, you are in a recession. However, this is like when you prune a tree and cut back the branches. When the tree grows back, you've got control and the branches will grow bigger and stronger than they were before, without the greed factor. Then, if you don't like the way it grows back, you'll prune it again! I tell you this because awareness is now in control of big money. It's right before your eyes, what you're doing. But fear often rules. …”
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Tuesday, March 29, 2011
RI registers three cultural heritage sites at UNESCO
Monday, December 27, 2010
Indonesia to submit three cultural assets to UNESCO
Friday, January 8, 2010
Taman Mini kicks off Museum Festival
Hasyim Widhiarto, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Fri, 01/08/2010 5:40 PM
Taman Mini Indonesia Indah (TMII) theme park launched the 2010 Museum Festival on Friday, aiming at increasing the public’s interest in visiting museums and learning about the country's culture and history.

The whole-year festival, also held as a part of the government-initiated 2010 Visit Museum Year program, offer visitors various programs, including workshops, seminars, talk shows and book fairs, run regularly in all of TMII's 17 museums.
"We hope this event will attract more and more people to once again put museums as one of their tourism destination options," TMII president director Sugiono told reporters Friday.
Among the most famous museums in TMII are the Museum of Indonesia, the Museum of Information, the Museum of Science and Technology and the Bayt Al-Quran Museum.
During the festival, TMII will offer a 50 percent discount off the entrance fee for visitors.
Tuesday, December 22, 2009
President leads Women's Day event in Jakarta

Activists from the Indonesian Muslim Students Action Front (KAMMI) stage a rally in front the Banten Gubernatorial Office in Serang commemorating National Mother’s Day, which falls on Tuesday. The protesters demanded the government stop the exploitation of women and give women more support. (Antara/Asep Fathulrahman)
President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono led the Women's Day event at Sasono Langen Budoyo in Taman Mini Indonesia Indah in Jakarta on Tuesday, at which he conferred state awards on several institutions and local governments for their contribution to women’s empowerment.
The President was accompanied by First Lady Ani Yudhoyono and Vice President Boediono's wife, Herawati Boediono.
State Women's Empowerment Minister Linda Amaliasari and Jakarta Governor Fauzi Bowo were also present at the event.
Yudhoyono was to present the Parahita Ekapraya award, an award presented to those who had shown commitment to gender equality and gender-responsive policies.
Among those who will receive the award this year were Central Java Governor Bibit Waluyo, East Java Deputy Governor Saifullah Yusuf, North Sumatra Governor Syamsul Arifin, Magelang (Central Java) Mayor Fahriyanto and Malang (East Java) Regent Sujud Pribadi.
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Monday, December 21, 2009
Jakarta New Year Eve Revelry to Be Moved From Monas

Crowds ring in the start of 2009 in Central Celebrations this New Year's Eve will be moved to alternate parts of the city. (Photo: EPA)
The city administration has announced plans to move New Year Eve celebrations from the center of the city in a bid to ease the crippling effects of the often deadly celebrations on traffic, as well as to cut down on the damage caused to the National Monument Park.
Muhayat, Jakarta’s provincial secretary, said the city would hold its official celebrations at Ancol in North Jakarta and the Taman Mini Indonesia Indah theme park in East Jakarta, and not at the National Monument (Monas) as in previous years.
“Gardens inside the complex have sustained a lot of damage after previous New Year’s celebrations and the surrounding streets have also experienced heavy traffic. We want to avoid that by moving the celebrations elsewhere,” he was quoted by Antara as saying.
He said other moves by the administration to reduce disorder included limiting this year’s New Year celebrations to 3 a.m., adding that restaurants and bars that breached the regulations “would be fined.”
Another policy was a crackdown on dangerous firecrackers, very much a feature of celebrations in the past, with raids planned for traditional markets between Christmas and New Year’s Eve.
Sr. Comr. Boy Rafli Amar, Jakarta Police spokesman, said they were still discussing which places required heavier security.
“We plan to have more officers along the major streets where traffic is usually congested. We will allow people to parade in the street but we shall not tolerate any infractions,” he said.
Last year, police estimated a crowd of 300,000 people, including 100,000 motorcyclists, flocked to the city’s center, bringing traffic to a standstill. The areas most badly affected included the Hotel Indonesia traffic circle and roads leading to Monas, Ancol in North Jakarta, and Taman Mini.
Dozens of major traffic accidents and numerous deaths or injuries are also a feature of the annual, often rowdy celebrations, mainly involving young males, a number of whom are drunk.
Boy said more than 16,000 police officers from Jakarta Police would be deployed to safeguard the capital.
He said on a normal shift, 9,000 police officers were deployed in the capital, but that would be boosted by 7,300 during the festivities. That total number accounts for two-thirds of Jakarta’s police force.
“The additional officers will include those from Jakarta Police’s crime prevention department, traffic control, detectives and the Mobile Brigade [Brimob],” he said. “The bomb squad will be on high alert and standing by although they won’t be deployed to patrol the streets.”
Boy said that on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day, every church in the capital would be guarded, particularly during prayer services.
The Christmas Eve bombings, including five attacks on churches in Jakarta, in 2000, left eight people dead and many others injured. The attacks, blamed on Al Qaeda and Jemaah Islamiyah, were allegedly planned by Riduan Isamuddin, better known as Hambali, who was once described as Asia’s Osama bin Laden. He is currently believed to be in detention in Guantanamo Bay.
Another implicated in the plot was hard-line cleric Abu Bakar Bashir, though he was found not guilty of involvement in 2003.
On Friday, it was reported that a church under construction in the Harapan Indah Housing Complex in Bekasi was attacked by hundreds of people marching home from a parade to mark the Islamic New Year on Thursday.
Boy refuted the story, which was reported by a number of media outlets, including the Jakarta Globe, saying the incident was a case of theft.
“A man broke into the construction site and stole drills and equipment. By coincidence there was a parade nearby: the two weren’t related,” he said. “It wasn’t an attack. So we won’t be taking extra precautions such as increasing patrolling officers.”
Wednesday, March 18, 2009
City welcomes 900 cruise ship tourists for a day
The Jakarta Post, Wed, 03/18/2009 2:34 PM

JAKARTA: The Costa Allegra cruise ship was docked at Tanjung Priok seaport in North Jakarta recently, carrying 900 tourists from Europe and Asia, an official said Tuesday.
About 400 of the tourists got off the ship to tour the capital, riding 16 buses to the National Monument in Central Jakarta, the Indonesian Miniature Park (TMII) in East Jakarta, the Old Town area in North and West Jakarta and several shopping centers. They were accompanied by 20 guides.
"I hope the tourists get a positive impression of Jakarta and return here," Arie Budhiman, head of the city's tourism agency said, as quoted by beritajakarta.com.
Wednesday, March 11, 2009
TMII to send art envoys to Europe this month
The Jakarta Post, Wed, 03/11/2009 2:03 PM
JAKARTA: The Indonesian Miniature Park (TMII) will send a team of 100 envoys to participate in the East-West cultural exchange program this month.
The team will tour Italy, France, Germany and the Netherlands from March 11-28, according to a statement released by TMII on Tuesday. The team includes 20 members of the dance group Exotica Nusantara Renaissance Royal Dance and 80 descendants of royal families from across the archipelago.Sunday, January 25, 2009
Catch the eclipse on Monday
Agnes Winarti, The Jakarta Post | Sun, 01/25/2009 1:49 PM
Indonesians will have the rare opportunity to view a solar eclipse Monday afternoon, as the archipelago is the only land mass on earth from which the annual cosmic occurrence will be visible.

In a solar eclipse, the moon and the sun appear to merge and a ring, or annulus, of bright sunlight beams from behind the moon. This is caused when the moon passes directly in front of the sun, blocking the majority of light but leaving the exterior glow.
Those with sunlight filters will be able to stare at the sky Monday afternoon, although only several parts of the archipelago will enjoy the annulus in its most identifiable form.
Its path will pass through the southern part of Sumatra including Tanjung Karang in Lampung and Tanjung Pandan in Belitung, the western part of Java including Cilegon, Serang and Anyer and the central part of Kalimantan including Puruk Cahu and Samarinda in the east.
”Jakarta will also be able to observe the eclipse, though not likely in its fullest form,” B. Adi Nugroho, founder of the astronomy hobbyist community IndoSkyGazer said.
At 03:24 p.m., Jakartans will be able to observe the moon aligning with the middle of the sun, then at 04:45 p.m. about 92 percent of the sun’s rays will be covered by the moon’s mass. The resulting ring surrounding the moon will last for around six minutes.
By 5:50 p.m. the eclipse will be complete.
It is extremely harmful to view a solar eclipse directly with unprotected eyes or common sunglasses.
The Science Exhibition Center (PP Iptek) at the Indonesian Miniature Park TMII in East Jakarta have prepared six telescopes especially designed for solar eclipse observation, promotion manager Putu Lia Sur-yaningsih said.
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Partial eclipse set for Jan 26
Indonesians among the few to witness solar eclipse
The Jakarta Post, Zakki Hakim, The Associated Press, Anyer, Banten | Mon, 01/26/2009 7:00 PM
Indonesians were among the few worldwide to witness an eclipse of the sun Monday, but even there the view was hampered in most places by cloudy skies.
Dozens gathered in the western coastal town of Anyer as the moon passed across the sun's path at 4:40 p.m., covering 92 percent of the sun's diameter and leaving a white, flaming ring of fire that lasted about four minutes.
"I'm old, but I still think this is magical," said Roanna Makmur, 66, who drove several hours with eight friends to witness the sight, known as an annular eclipse, because it does not completely black out the sun.
"I can't help but feel the greatness of God," she said, as other onlookers cheered. "Anyone who passed up this opportunity, really missed out."
Annular eclipses, which are considered far less important to astronomers than total eclipses of the sun, occur about 66 times a century and can only be viewed by people in the narrow band along its path.
A relatively small number of people were in the best places to view Monday's eclipse, said Jay Pasachoff, professor of astronomy at Williams College in Williamstown, Massachusetts, and chair of the International Astronomical Union's Working Group on Eclipses.
Aside from several regions in Indonesia, the world's largest archipelago, only villagers on a tiny South Pacific island group known as the Cocos, administered by Australia, were to have been able to see the ring-shaped corona, he wrote in a statement.
A partial eclipse - with coverage ranging from 1 percent to 84 percent of the sun's diameter - was to be visible in the southern third of Africa, in southeastern India, and southeast Asia, as well as the western part of Australia.
The last total eclipse of the sun was Aug. 1, 2008, and was visible in Canada, across northern Greenland, the Arctic, central Russia, Mongolia and China.
The next total eclipse will be July 22, 2009, and will be visible in India, Nepal, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Myanmar, China and some Japanese islands.
Friday, January 4, 2008
Japan's royalty to visit RI, celebrations
JAKARTA (Jakarta Post) : Japan's Prince Akishino and Princess Kawashimo Kiko are scheduled to visit Indonesia from Jan. 18 to 24 to attend celebrations for the 50th anniversary of Indonesia and Japan's diplomatic relations.
"The Japanese prince and princess will arrive here on the evening of January 18 to start their activities the next day," Presidential spokesman Dino Patti Djalal told Antara on Thursday.
The peak of celebrations for the anniversary will be held at the Indonesia-in-Miniature Park (TMII) on Jan. 20 in the presence of President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, Dino said.
Prince Akishino and Princess Kiko would represent Japanese Emperor Akihito.
Akishino, the second son of Akihito, was married to Princess Kiko in 1990.
To honor their 50th anniversary of bilateral relations, the two governments would hold a number joint activities in the economic, social, cultural and sports fields, Dino said.
Sunday, June 24, 2007
Craft fair celebrates city birthday
The event, dubbed "We Love Indonesia", will be held all day every Thursday, starting this week until Aug. 17.
The Jakarta Post, Jakarta
A bazaar featuring traditional handicrafts from all over the country has been organized at South Jakarta's Cilandak Town Square mall -- better known as Citos -- to help out small and medium sized businesses.
The event, dubbed "We Love Indonesia", will be held all day every Thursday, starting this week until Aug. 17.
The event is being held to coincide with Jakarta's 480th anniversary and the 62nd celebration of Independence Day on Aug. 17.
Each week, the bazaar will display products from one of 10 regions of Indonesia: Greater Jakarta, West Java, Central Java, East Java, North Sumatra, Bali, East Nusa Tenggara, Papua, West Sumatra and Kalimantan.
"Through this event, we want to help enterprises promote their goods. We also want Indonesian people to further know their own cultures, and expatriates to see what Indonesian cultures look like," said Baby Jim Aditya, the director of Sinergy, a company coordinating the event along with the Ministry of Cooperatives and Small and Medium Enterprises and the Tourism Ministry.
On its first day Thursday, the weekly bazaar displayed goods produced by small and medium enterprises in Greater Jakarta, including handmade embroidered bags, batik wall cloths depicting traditional puppets, paper lamps and ondel-ondel (traditional Betawi effigy) ornaments.
Next week, the bazaar will feature traditional products from West Java.
Nani from Setu Betawi Group, a collection of several Betawi craft makers, showed off a pencil studded with an ondel-ondel ornament made from areca nut.
"It takes about a month to make 100 of these because we have to dry the nuts first to get the perfect shape and color," said Nani, who made the pencils.
At the market was also a stand displaying West Javanese Baduy handicrafts, at which a woman weaved a Baduy shawl.
"I have been weaving since I was 15 years old," said Bisna, 31.
She added that it usually took her about a week to weave a shawl.
"It's quite difficult, therefore there are only a few women from outer Baduy who can weave," Bisna said.
Unlike the inner Baduy sub-tribe who still make their shawls without any tools, Bisna and other outer Baduy make their shawls with the help of a simple loom.
Besides displaying handicrafts, the event will also feature dances and other traditional performances.
On Thursday, a group of dancers from the Jakarta Pavilion of Taman Mini Indonesia Indah performed the so-called Nandak Ganjen (a dance to charm) accompanied by Betawi Gambang Kromong music.
"I choreographed the dance in order to preserve Betawi culture," said Entong, a dancing teacher from the pavilion.
On Aug. 17, the peak of the event, traditional games from throughout the country will highlight the event along with the games usually performed during Independence Day celebrations.
Thursday, April 19, 2007
Chinese garden at Taman Mini a symbol of change
Anissa S. Febrina, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta
In the scorching heat of East Jakarta last Wednesday, construction workers unloaded carved solid marble blocks, placing them under an unfinished 24-meter wide Chinese gate.
Several meters from the workers, children picnicked beside a two meter high stone statue of a lion, while their parents took pictures of the gate.
The whole scene would not be unusual in a housing complex in any Jakarta suburb. Anything remotely Chinese seems to sell like hotcakes these days.
But this Chinese garden project -- which has been running for little over five months -- is inside the Taman Mini Indonesia Indah amusement park. And it is something exceptional.
The project is worth noting in its scale and the sums of money put into it. But more important is how the garden project reflects the country's decision, post-Soeharto, to embrace Chinese culture.
"Every culture in Indonesia is represented by individual gardens in Taman Mini. We felt that it was about time that this window into Indonesia represented the Chinese culture," Indonesian Tionghoa Group (PSMTI) chairman Tedy Jusuf said last week.
After getting the nod from Taman Mini owner Yayasan Harapan Kita, which granted PSMTI an approximately one hectare lot at the back of the park, the group footed the bill for the groundbreaking and first phase of construction.
With plans boasting a mini Imperial Palace, a pagoda, a man -made lake and several other replicas of Chinese buildings, the project has needed some Rp 70 billion in investment.
Currently, visitors to the park can only see a wide gate bearing the sign "Indonesian Tionghoa Cultural Garden", two tall columns carved with Chinese mythical figures and two giant lion statues.
Several marble outdoor seats and smaller lion statues sit waiting to be placed somewhere permanent.
"We have only come up with around 10 percent of the investment required for the project. But, I believe that since the project is for a good cause, we'll be able to collect more donations," Tedy said.
The group also hopes the project, which is scheduled for completion by 2008, will attract more visitors to the 32-year old amusement park.
Visiting Chinese-themed amusement parks is nothing new for Jakartans.
Since 1999, when the government began trying to combat the anti-Chinese sentiment fostered under the New Order regime, private developers have been introducing their own versions of Little China.
New housing complexes, with their imported facades, have opened Chinese-styled food courts and bazaars, such as Kampung Cina in Cibubur, East Jakarta.
But building a Chinese garden inside Taman Mini, the pet project of former first lady Tien Soeharto, is altogether more interesting.
The late wife of Indonesia's ruler for 32 years first mulled the idea of building a miniature Indonesia in 1970.
Five years later, the 145-hectare amusement park was opened to the public, boasting several museums and displays of the culture of the country's then 26 provinces.
Chinese culture was most definitely not on the original park's list. Soeharto's regime forbade Indonesian Chinese from celebrating the lunar new year and other public displays of their culture.
The fact that a Chinese garden is welcomed in today's Taman Mini shows the park is keeping up to date with the country's political and cultural trends.
Despite claims that Taman Mini is a true representation of this culturally diverse country, the park that Soeharto built is more a symbol of the Java-centered Indonesia of his rule.
But, ethnocentrism aside, the park does serve as a public space in the capital.
These days, the park -- which will celebrate its 32nd anniversary on April 20 -- still boasts an average of 30,000 visitors on weekends and public holidays.
The park is still the best place for elementary students to explore traditional houses from all over the country. The park is also well known for its museums, including the gigantic inverted cone of the Purna Bhakti Pertiwi museum, which is filled with souvenirs from foreign countries.
The park is still a place where families and friends can roll out their plastic mats, unpack their picnic baskets next to the man-made lake and have lunch together.
