Explicitly and vigorously opposing widespread racial discrimination by the colonial elite of expatriate Dutchmen and advocating total independence from the Netherlands, the colonial government hastened to brand the political organisation as
subversive and banned it only one year after its foundation. Having been designated a banned organisation, the party leadership decided to dissolve the Indische Partij on 31 March 1913. With heavy heart, Dekker's final message to his members was that they should join the government-recognised
Insulinde association with the spirit of the Indische Partij. Its activities were continued by
Insulinde, which was based in Semarang. The date 6 September, when the Indische Partij was formed, is celebrated as Indische Partij Day. Although the government's strict measures resulted in many Indische Partij members losing their nerve, De Expres continued to survive. In 1914, business cards, papers and the like with Indische Partij colours were still advertised in
De Expres. The triumvirate continued to voice their criticism of the government through
De Expres. For example, when the Dutch East Indies government wanted to celebrate the 100th anniversary of Dutch independence from
Napoleon Bonaparte in the Dutch East Indies by collecting money from the people, they formed the ‘
Bumiputera Committee' in July 1913 headed by Tjipto. This committee later congratulated the queen and asked her to revoke article 111 of the R.R. and immediately convene an Indies Parliament. Meanwhile, Suwardi Suryaningrat wrote an article satirising the Dutch East Indies government entitled
Als ik eens nederlander Was or ‘If I were a Dutchman’. The contents of Suwardi's writing include: Then Tjipto Mangunkusumo also wrote an article entitled Kracht of Vrees? which means ‘Power or Fear?’. As a result, they were both arrested by the Dutch and exiled. Later Dekker protested against the arrest of his two friends and wrote
Onze Helden: Tjipto Mangunkusumo en R.M. Suwardi Suryaningrat (Our Heroes: Tjipto Mangunkusumo and R.M. Suwardi Suryaningrat). He to was arrested. The activities of the committee initiated by this triumvirate were considered dangerous by the government so that based on article 48 of the R.R, Governor-General Idenburg sentenced them to
exile. Initially 18 August 1913 on domestic exile, and then changed to foreign exile on 27 August, to the Netherlands. With the exile of the Indische Partij leaders, the Indische Partij's work in Indonesia ended. Van Deventer likened the organisation to a stillborn baby, meaning that the Indische Partij could not prove its greatness amidst the national movement organisations because the Dutch East Indies government had already dissolved it. The exile of E.F.E. Douwes Dekker was lifted in August 1917, Suwardi Suryaningrat in July 1918, and Dr Tjipto Mangunkusumo in July 1914. They were able to remain politically active and eventually return to the Dutch East Indies. Upon arrival in the Dutch East Indies, Dr Tjipto Mangunkusumo engaged in politics and later became a member of the
PNI. Meanwhile, Dekker and Suwardi plunged into education. They each founded the ‘
Ksatrian Instituut’ school and the
Taman Siswa school, which meant strengthening the ranks of private schools that had been pioneered by the Muhammadiyah school. Tjipto became future president
Sukarno's second political mentor, after an imprisonment in
Banda he died in 1943. After Indonesia's declaration of independence in 1945 Douwes Dekker, now named Danoedirdja Setiaboeddhi to sound Indonesian, became minister of state in the cabinet of Indonesian prime minister
Sjahrir. Soewardi became Indonesian minister of education in 1949, having changed his name to Ki Hadjar Dewantara in 1922. ==See also==