Rubbing Shoulders With Two Presidents
The Gentler Sides Of Soekarno And Suharto
by
Book Details
About the Book
The book is a memoir relating the author’s personal experiences as a free-lance journalist working in Jakarta, Indonesia, from 1965 to 1972. The early part of the book describes how he met President Soekarno and became quite close to him during the last year of his presidency. Soekarno made him sit on his chair and his girl friend on his wife’s chair during a performance one night at the president’s summer palace. He told the author, “You play president tonight.” The author also met President Suharto. The president and Mrs. Suharto invited him and a colleague to have lunch with the First Family on Monkey Island, one of the Thousand Islands Group in the Jakarta Bay. Suharto himself drove the car, with his wife next to him, in which the author and his colleague were seated on the passenger seat, on the trip from the president’s residence to the Yacht Club. Then the president was at the helm of the yacht steering her to Monkey Island. These were Indonesia’s first and second heads-of-state, more often than not portrayed by the foreign media as tyrannical and corrupt. But the author got to know the warm, friendly sides of the two leaders which he narrates in the book.
About the Author
Tom Graciano was a free-lance journalist in Jakarta, Indonesia, from 1965 to 1972.Time magazine and CBS News were among the media he reported for. Tom covered the bloody aftermath of the abortive communist coup attempt in 1965 in which five army generals were slain and more than 500,000 people killed. He became quite close with President Soekarno and fairly close with President Suharto.