Indonesians Very Busy People

Posted on August 29, 2007 
Filed Under Indonesia

Uton: Hey Harun, where have you been? I ask you to come over here several times…
Harun: Sorry, Pak (Sir). I am very busy nowadays.
Uton: Busy, huh? Are you busier than me?
Harun: *smiling awkwardly*

The above conversation happened several years back between Harun Al Rasyid, then was a PhD student and is currently teaching at Universitas Sumatera Utara (USU), Medan, North Sumatra, with Uton Mochtar Rifai then was a Director of World Health Organisation for Asia Pacific and is currently a Professor of Medical Science in Universitas Padjajaran (UNPAD), Bandung, West Java. Pak Uton, as we used to call him, is a father of Izzur Mochtar, a renowned Indonesian actor and a father figure of us, Indonesian students in India.

When I urge some friends of mine who are currently holding some key positions in bureaucracy or academics offices to blog, and blog in English, the same answer come up: I am very busy.

The same question with the same answer will come up whenever I ask them why they don’t write a book or just a simple op-ed piece in a newspaper.

Why Indonesians are so busy? Are they working a 24-hour a day for all week or just can’t manage their time effectively? Or is it just a pure excuse of their lethargic and laid-back habit? Or both?

If most of us are so busy and don’t have enough time to do some more useful things then why a few Indonesians whose hectic schedules are unquestionable still have more time. Why then a few people like Juwono Sudarsono, Hermawan Kartajaya, Wimar Witoelar, to name just a few, still have time to blog or write articles? Why then a person like Uton Muchtar Rifai, at the time he headed WHO, still had many times to make a lenghty talk with me and my friends an hour before he left for Vienna to attend a WHO conference?

John Esposito, in his introduction to Encyclopaedia of Modern Muslim World, an Encyclopaedia he edited, aptly said that “The most prolific person is the busiest one,” which implies that when you say ‘I am busy,” basically you are not busy. You are just reluctant to do more.


Subscribe Blogger Indonesia by Email, click here!

Related Articles

  • Indonesian Blogger Ministers
  • Periscope
  • Pesta Blogger 2007
  • When Indonesian Gets Appreciation
  • Indonesian According to Google
  • For Cheaper Internet, Stop Telkom Monopoly
  • Are Indonesians friendly People? (2)
  • Kosovo a Muslim State in Europe
  • New Year Eve in India: a Flashback
  • Blogger Indonesia of the Week (73): Tasa Nugraza Barley
  • Comments

    RSS feed | Trackback URI

    Comments are welcome in one of these following languages: English, Arabic, Bahasa Indonesia, Malaysia, Brunei, Singapore, Jawa and Madura.

    4 Comments »

    2007-08-31 15:44:12

    [...] because they need to do their own household chores (cooking, cleaning, doing errands, etc.), most Indonesians presume or even believe that they are busier than the rest of the world [...]

     
    Comment by hmcahyo
    2008-02-01 08:47:12

    aduh komen oleh ngganggo boso jowo toh mas… madure engkok bisa nik sekunik :))

    #lha salahe dewe laopo gik komen sadurunge nganggo cas cis cus barang hehehe

     
    2008-03-03 09:52:04

    [...] umumnya orang ketika ditanya mengapa belum menulis buku biasanya klasik, “Saya sibuk. Tak ada waktu.” Saya tidak mau terperangkap dalam apologi orang kalah seperti itu. Alasan semacam ini hanya akan [...]

     
    Comment by Marisa
    2008-03-06 04:32:57

    You are just reluctant to do more.

    Ouch. That’s deep. :mrgreen:

     
    Name (required)
    E-mail (required - never shown publicly)
    URI
    Your Comment (smaller size | larger size)
    You may use <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong> in your comment.