Aw Tjoein Lan moved to Batavia upon her marriage, on March 2, 1907, to the bureaucrat
Lie Tjian Tjoen, Kapitein der Chinezen, son of
Lie Tjoe Hong, the
3rd Majoor der Chinezen of Batavia and a member of the influential and well-connected
Lie family of Pasilian. Together with D. van Hindeloopen Labberton and Soetan Temanggoeng, Dr. Zigman invited Aw to co-found and manage a new organization in 1912, called Ati Soetji, aimed at fighting the trafficking in Chinese women and children for prostitution and menial labor, and at giving them an education instead. Although met with initial resistance from various underworld organizations and entrenched interests, Aw persevered. She used her family's connections with the Dutch and Chinese colonial authorities, acquiring the patronage of the
Governor-General,
Johan Paul, Count of Limburg-Stirum and his wife, as well as the support of
Khouw Kim An, 5th Majoor der Chinezen of Batavia. Ati Soetji opened its first facility for girls,
Tehuis voor Chineesche Meisjes ('Home for young Chinese women'), on October 17, 1917, at rented premises, followed in 1925 by a similar facility for young boys. In 1929, the foundation acquired its current headquarters in
Kampung Bali, Tanah Abang, now in
Central Jakarta. By the late 1930s, Ati Soetji had two orphanages, a refuge for former prostitutes, a facility for young women from poor families, a school and a dressmaking school. On the recommendation of Majoor Khouw Kim An,
Queen Wilhelmina of the Netherlands made Aw a
Ridder in the
Order of Orange-Nassau in September 1935. The award was granted to Aw personally by the Dutch prime minister,
Hendrikus Colijn, on behalf of the queen. In February 1937, representing the Dutch East Indies, Aw participated in the proceedings of the
League of Nations in
Bandung, West Java. In her speech, she advocated education for impoverished young women and girls to help them attain personal and professional independence as a safeguard against human trafficking. She also encouraged the rehabilitation of 'fallen women'. The
Japanese occupation of the Dutch East Indies from 1942 until 1945 during the
Second World War marked a low point for both Ati Soetji and Aw herself. Together with other leaders of the colonial government, Aw's husband, Kapitein Lie Tjian Tjoen, was put in a concentration camp. Their family house at Jalan Kramat Raya 168, which at the time housed Ati Soetji's orphan boys, was confiscated by the Japanese. Aw arranged alternative lodgings for her charges, and ensured that the foundation's young women and girls were not taken by the Japanese as '
comfort women'. She rebuilt Ati Soetji's operations at the end of the war, thus ensuring the organization's survival to this day. Aged 76, Aw Tjoei Lan died on September 19, 1965, in Djakarta, Indonesia. Her body lay in state at the headquarters of Ati Soetji before her burial at
Petamburan. ==References==