Raden Maladi (31 August 1912 – 30 April 2001) was an Indonesian athlete, songwriter, and politician. Interested in football from a young age, Maladi played in the Indonesian leagues beginning in 1930. In the 1940s he dabbled in songwriting and broadcasting before joining the pemuda troops during the Indonesian National Revolution. After a period heading the Football Association of Indonesia, he was selected as Minister of Information and, later, Minister of Sports.
By the 1940s Maladi, by then a teacher[2] and already experienced in radio broadcasting,[4] had begun composing works in the kroncong style.[1] During the national revolution Maladi fought in the pemuda, reaching the rank of major before retiring at the end of the revolution in 1949;[3] he was a leader of the four-day general offensive in Surakarta early in the revolution.[5] Towards the end of the war he worked to bring information of the revolution to Indonesian nationals abroad.[2] During this period he also worked as a broadcaster for the radio network RRI (Radio Republik Indonesia) in Surakarta.[1]
Beginning in 1951 he served as chairman of the Football Association of Indonesia, overseeing the organisation's change in names and bringing in coach Tony Pogacnik for the national team. Under Pogacnik, the Indonesian football team played the Soviet Union to a draw at the 1956 Summer Olympics in Melbourne.[1] He also became involved in the Olympics, supervising Indonesia's first delegation at the 1952 Summer Olympics in Helsinki, Finland, as well as the delegation at the 1956 Olympics.[6] Maladi left the position in 1959, when he moved to Jakarta, but remained an honorary board member.[1]
Government minister and death
In Jakarta Maladi became the director general of RRI while serinvg as Minister of Information in the Second Working Cabinet, beginning on 10 July 1959;[1][7] he had grown to be a close confidante of President Sukarno,[8] and had held the post of deputy minister in the previous cabinet.[9] While Minister of Information he helped spearhead the growth of television in the nation; he had been pushing for television to be introduced in the country since 1952, and the first broadcast on TVRI (Televisi Republik Indonesia) was on 24 August 1962, after ten months of preparations by Maladi and the ministry.[6] It was used to broadcast the 1962 Asian Games,[10] which Maladi had helped organise.[11]
On 6 March 1962 Maladi was made Minister of Sports in the Third Working Cabinet, before the television program came to fruit.[12] Aside from the Asian Games, Maladi supervised the Games of the New Emerging Forces, meant to counteract the perceived colonial presence of the Olympics.[13] He survived several reshuffles before the post was dissolved in the Second Revised Dwikora Cabinet on 27 March 1966.[1]
Maladi died on 30 April 2001 after spending two weeks in intensive care for breathing difficulties at Medistra Hospital in Jakarta. He was later buried in Kalibata Heroes' Cemetery. He was survived by his wife Siti Khadijah and nine children.[1]
Legacy
Maladi received several awards from the Indonesian government during his lifetime, including the Bintang Gerilya, Bintang Kemerdekaan, and Mahaputra (Kelas Tiga., III) [1] For his dedication to sports, the International Olympic Committee awarded Maladi the Bronze Olympic Order in 1983;[14] as of 2005[update] he is one of only three Indonesians to have received the honour.[15] R. Maladi Stadium (formerly Sriwedari Stadium) in Surakarta is named after him; Maladi had designed it.[5]
The Indonesian singer Chrisye covered Maladi's song "Di Bawah Sinar Bulan Purnama" for his 2002 album Dekade; the singer told The Jakarta Post that he had been inspired to make the cover album after singing "Di Bawah Sinar Bulan Purnama" in 1996 and realising that the song, which he described as a masterpiece, was not recognised by the younger generation.[16] The band Naif covered it for the 2009 film Ruma Maida.[17]
Suprapto, Bibit (1985). Perkembangan Kabinet dan Pemerintahan Indonesia [Development of Indonesian Cabinets and Government] (in Indonesian). Jakarta: Ghalia. OCLC13555282.
Government offices
Preceded by
Subidjo
Minister of Information of the Republic of Indonesia 1959–1962