FIFTEEN years have passed since the fall of Suharto in Indonesia, and though Indonesians have grown older and wiser since then, it remains an extraordinarily young country.
In the city of Jogjakarta where I occasionally research and lecture, I am struck by the fact that the oldest person I see in the streets on some days happens to be me. Jogja is young, dynamic, vibrant and mobile -- like the country itself. But youth has always been a factor in Indonesian politics and history, dating back to the Sumpah Pemuda and the role that the young had played during the anti-colonial struggle of the previous century. When we look at the figures who were instrumental to that great moment in the country's history, one is struck by how young they all were: some were still in their teens when they took up arms in Indonesia's fledgling nationalist army, some in their 20s and 30s.
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