De
repatriëringen |
Amerindo's 4. Mr. René Creutzburg and "his" Indo Magazine
Humphrey de la Croix
Visiting Mr. René Creutzburg was part of
IndischHistorisch.nl's trip to California in September 2011. In his residence
in Walnut (Los Angeles region) we had the occasion to get to know each other.
In this article we will put Mr. Creutzburg's activities within the larger historical
context of over 50 years of Indo-related activities which started with Tjalie
Robinson in the early sixties. In several ways René Creutzburg is the
"official" adherent of Tjalie after his return to the Netherlands.
Introduction
The worldwide Indo community really
has at it's disposal a genuine international magazine: De Indo. This
magazine was formerly the official voice of the Indo Community Center "De
Soos" Inc. De Soos was founded in 1963 in Pasadena and an initiative
of Tjalie Robinson. Mr. René Creutzburg was secretary of the first board.
Tjalie himself was not a member but nourrished the organization with initiatives
and ideas. At the background he was also it's critical "watchdog"
and conscience.1)
René Creutzburg emigrated from the Netherlands
first to Michigan and later to California. At the moment a relative in sunny
California showed her surprise about snowy weather in Michigan, Creutzburg knew
he had to go to the Westcoast too. And so he settled in the Los Angeles area.
René Creutzburg had been in the Netherlands a computer programmer of
the first generation and his intuition led him to the United States, the cradle
of cybernetical innovations and where state of the art technologies were developed.
It proved to be a fortunate choice as we all now in which extent IT would influence
modern business and life in general. Creutzburg soon became an employee of IBM,
the "Big Blue" and a succesful career in IT industries started.
René Creutzberg in his house in
Walnut. At the background portraits of Tjalie Robinson and himself
Photo: Humphrey de la Croix
Indo Forever
Although easily integrated in American society
he did keep his Indo identity. Creutzburg shared Tjalie Robinson's conviction
that Indo's should constitute a strong community which could continue a genuine
and vital Indo culture outside it's "natural" Indonesian habitat.
Tjalie emphasized the importance of cultural activities
and education. He hoped the "Amerindo's" developed themselves as enterprising,
non-typical Indo's who were willing to reconstitute a new, strong and selfconfident
Indo community which had escaped narrow minded dutch circumstances.2)
René Creutzburg was responsible for the
journal of De Soos. Apart from this paper he published the American Tong
Tong, following the example of it's original Tong Tong magazine.
Creutzburg's garage functioned (and it still does) as the printing office. The
American Tong Tong existed from 1963 until february 1965 and had an average
of 300 subscribers. The distribution of
both periodicals was executed by mr. Roy Steevensz. After a while Creutzburg
changed the American Tong Tong into De Indo. He managed to establish
and hold a group of loyal readers, and as a result in 2011 over 2000 subscribers
all over the world. De Indo is written in English and Dutch, sometimes mixed
with Indonesian or Indonesian words.
Because of his efforts for Indo immigrants and Indo culture in the USA, in 2007
the Dutch Consulate in California on behalf
of Queen Beatrix of the Kingdom of the Netherlands appointed René Creutzburg
Lid in de Orde van Oranje-Nassau (Member of the Order of Oranje-Nassau).
An Indo Library in California
According to Tjalie Robinson's idea of educating
the people and keep Indo culture alive, Creutzburg built up a truly library
of over 2,200 books in his residence. After paying a small bail people are allowed
to borrow books from this Indische bibliotheek and if one discovers
copies, you can get one for free. The library is open each second and fourth
wednesday or after making an appointment by phone. The library is almost entirely
built up of donations and contains both older publications (some more than 100
years old) as more recent works.


René Creutzburg in his "Indische
bibliotheek" ("Indische Library") in Walnut, California
Photo by Humphrey de la Croix
Internationaal Tijdschrift De Indo
(International Magazine De Indo)
De Indo is a small magazine
but very appreciated by Indo's the USA, the Netherlands and in a less extent
in Australia and Canada. Of course also Indo's in Indonesia do read De Indo.
De Indo is comparable with Moesson magazine in the Netherlands, but is a low
budget periodical and with less glamorous looks. The content of the Indo is
entirely the same and that's what matters. René Creutzburg executes functions
of editor, publisher and printer. It guarantees a stable quality but in the
long term this is a vulnerable situation as Creutzburg wonders who will be his
successor in future. He doubts if he or she will be found among members of the
second or third generation of Amerindo's. For this moment De Indo is still growing
and enjoys the supply of enough content from it's readers.

International magazine De Indo
(edition september 2011): frontispice and backside
Conclusion
René Creutzburg's efforts
were and are indispensable to keep alive Indo culture and especially De Indo
as an important medium. First generation Indo immigrants in the USA are still
able to keep together Indo community and it's cultural and social life. Although
most of the Indo's feel American citizen, they still did not lose Indo identity.
Like Indo's in he Netherlands Amerindo's have different modes of life: there
is an outside world of neighbours, school and work next to an inside
Indo world of keroncong music, rijsttafel, ngobrol (chitchats) and sharing the
nostalgia of tempo doeloe, the good times past. As Tjalie Robinson stated these
first generation Indo immigrants lived in modern USA but kept the lifestyle
of Soerabaja, Djakarta and or Makassar. René Creutzburg played in that
scene the rol of "cultural broker" according to Tjalie Robinson's
vision. His mission should be the rise of a new Indo identity and culture in
a brandnew habitat without boundaries of a colonial past and colonial rule.
The Indo and not the dutch should be the compass to navigate.

René Creutzburg and Kees Kunstt:
two Indo veterans in Creutzburg's garage annex printing office in Walnut, California
Photo by Humphrey de la Croix
Noten
1)Wim
Willems, Tjalie Robinson. Biografie van een Indo-schrijver, p. 461.
2)Idem, pp. 462-463.
3)The
Netherlands America Foundation
Internet
AmerIndo.
A Portal for the Dutch Eurasian Indo Community in the United States
http://www.indisch3.nl/2010/02/02/american-dutch-indonesian/
http://www.latimesmagazine.com/2011/02/the-long-way-home.html
Tijdschrift de Indo
http://dutcheastindies.web.id/
Literature
Carol Annink, Orang Indo en
Indonesian-Dutch: Indische Nederlanders in Indonesië en de Verenigde Staten
van Amerika. In: Wim Willems en Leo Lucassen (red.), Het onbekende
vaderland. De repatriëring van Indische Nederlanders (1946-1964),
's Gravenhage 1994, pp. 147-159.
Humphrey de la Croix, Inge Dumpel, Ton van Naerssen, Karen Portier, Gelders
blauw. Indisch leven in de provincie, Nijmegen 2007.
Jeroen Dewulf, Amerindo Country. De stem van de Nederlands-Indische gemeenschap
in de Verenigde Staten; in: Biografie Bulletin (najaar 2010),
pp. 21-28.
J.E. Ellemers en R.E.F. Vaillant, Indische Nederlanders en gerepatrieerden,
Muiderberg 1985.
B.R. Rijkschroeff, Een ervaring rijker. De Indische immigranten in de Verenigde
Staten van Amerika, Delft 1989.
Wim Willems,
De uittocht uit Indië 1945-1995,
Amsterdam 2001.
Idem, Tjalie Robinson. Biografie van een Indo-schrijver,
Amsterdam 2008.
Other Sources
De Indo magazine. Editions august and
september 2011.