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I was asked by Dicky, a closest friend of mine and also the founder
of Lakoat Kujawas, to write something
about Timor from a perspective of an Atoin
Meto1 who is currently studying in Australia. Moving to
Melbourne from SoE, South Central Timor, clearly makes me always comparing the
situation here in there. My Taiwanese teacher at the University of Melbourne once
said that for international students, being in a foreign country will make us
to reflect a lot. Students do learn much about their country themselves when
they are abroad. They will realise the uniqueness of things that used to be
taken for granted in their home. I undoubtedly agree with him. Even until 1.5
years here, I still do reflections. I write some in my personal blogs as well.
Because I am here not only to pursue my degree but also to learn about life,
about people, and about nature. In this article, I will write about two
personal thoughts linked to Lakoat Kujawas (future) projects.
The first one is
the power of exchange knowledge. Last year, I lived in a flat with a senior
lecturer of my university. He used to encourage me to attend many public
lectures, held mostly by the university. He said, one of the nicest things you
get in Melbourne is you will find it is so easy to access knowledge. All the
public lectures are free. And it’s not only for students and staffs but it is
open for public. I really enjoy to attend those seminars. Some are about health
and public health. Some are about things that are not really related to my
study, such as history, politics, physics and science. Even sometimes I
couldn’t understand all contents. But it’s not the point to absorb all
materials. It is about open my mind to all useful information and knowledge.
Because at the end of the day, every thing is connected each other. For
instance, you cannot speak about health services without involving the economic
development. Moreover, by attending public lectures, I am just expanding my
networks. I met a lot of incredible people from these events.
This free public
lecture experience is a totally new for me. In Indonesia, there may no such
thing as free (well, I am exaggerating things). But seriously, free seminar is
really rare. I know a friend, who ever said that even if they want to hold a
free seminar in a university, it takes so long and complicated bureaucracy. And
probably sometimes they should pay for the room and for the permission.
I reckon that
sharing knowledge is really important. This world is moving so fast. If we are
not trying hard to catch valuable information, we are just left behind. By
learning more and more everyday, it will open our mind, shape our perspective
and make us a better person. And we don’t have to come to Melbourne to make it
happens. We surely can do it now in Timor. In Forum SoE Peduli (a local
non-profit organization in SoE), we have tried to start this idea of exchange
knowledge. We ever made several seminars in various topics. And we will be more
than happy to collaborate with Lakoat Kujawas. There are a lot of potential
human resources from SoE. We can invite academics, practitioners,
entrepreneurs, students, social workers, public servants, and public in general
to come and discuss about one topic each meeting. Of course we also need
people, who are expert in this topic to lead the conversation. So the talking
will be based on evidence. The main point here is we learn from each other. It
only needs commitment and consistency from the event makers. I think, this
simple move will lead to a good change in the future.
The second
reflection I want to share here is how Australian agencies make the most of
their natural resources for example, tourism destinations. Couple months ago I
traveled to Great Ocean Road (GOR) with a tour bus. GOR is on of the highlight
tourism attraction in Victoria. It is a long road, built by world war veterans.
The key destination of GOR is to see 12 Apostles, which are stones standing at
the side of the oceans. Unfortunately, they are only seven or eight (but mind
the catchy name, that actually not to connected with the history of the stones J). During the trip, we stopped at almost ten stops to take a rest or
simply just take a picture. I cannot say it was an incredible journey though.
But I really appreciate how they make each place becomes special. The access is
really good. They provide explanation board in every stop, and even the driver
bus is communicative. I learn some important things from him. Such as, how
indigenous people think a Koala is an ‘evil’ creature, because Koalas always
sleep, but they can alive. When I was at this trip, i remembered Timor island a
lot. The beach scenery along the GOR journey was cool. But Kolbano beach
scenery was cooler. When I saw the 12 apostles, I remembered the great Fatu’un
at Kolbano. Fatu’un is much more enormous than these stones. And don’t forget
all the giant stones at Fatumnasi. They are just so incredible. Our government
just still doesn’t think it as a historical and great natural phenomenon.
Well, I might be
wrong to make a comparison between the places. The place is never wrong, we are
humans, who take responsibilities to these places may be. Here, Lakoat Kujawas
(and all of the Atoin Meto) can play an important role to respect and to
introduce our beautiful natural resources. However, let’s make it gentle. Don’t
be too rush to over promote those innocent lands, forests, mountains, and
beaches without a proper preparation. Because as we are all aware, they are so
many greed people out there, who are secretly (or even really) looking at new
territory for their own businesses. We obviously don’t want to be like the
mainstream tourism destination in Indonesia, where the lands are owned by
foreigners. So, let’s empower our local people to make them realise that we are
so blessed with this nature. And it is us, who take responsibilities to sustain
these resources. It is us who know our lands better.
I just want to
add something about my GRO trip. When we arrived at those stops, I never saw
the staff there. Almost all stops are free. Everyone can access it. And there
is no staff who guard the place from (naughty) visitors who let’s say will
write with marker ‘Sandra and Yosua, forever’ at the walls. So, basically,
people can do whatever they want to do. The nice thing is there is (almost) no
rubbish. The places are clean. They provide rubbish bins for sure. The walls,
the benches, and everything are clean as well. And every tourist consciously
takes care of their own rubbish. Well, I reckon it’s about habit. In Indonesia,
we put attention seriously about cleanliness in our home. People even sweep
every single leave at their ground. However, once they reach public areas or
places that are not theirs, people do not care anymore. They throw away the
candy wrap on the ground and so forth. So, the simple act we can do now is how
to pay respect to our natural resources. We need to treat the land as our own
home, and indeed this is our home. By doing this, we will feel more attach to
this land, and it will lead us to be more ‘protective’. We then may feel the
eager to learn more about our land. And then together we can empower our
surroundings so in the future, it will become a beautiful tourism destination,
powered by local people.
So, these are
two points about living in Australia, from the academic side and also from the
tourism side. When I read the proposal of Lakoat Kujawas projects, I saw hope.
This is a dream that comes true, to see Timor from a new perspective, not a
land full of social problems, but a land full of rich natural and human
resources. Together we can enrich each other. I am looking forward for
collaborating with Lakoat Kujawas in projects, such as public seminars,
building library, travel promotions, or even in my area about health education.
Keep moving forward!
Greetings from
The cold, windy and rainy Melbourne.
(Sandra Frans, A medical
doctor and an activist at Forum Soe Peduli, who is studying master of Public
health, focusing on Women’s health and social science at the University of
Melbourne).
1 Atoin Meto: (Dawanese language referring to people who come from Timor)
wow
BalasHapus