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Raden Saleh Palace
now a Hospital

In the
1970s, those being treated at or visiting Cikini Hospital could see groups of
antelope playing and running about in the vastgarden.
Since the number of the
animals, which originally belonged to Prince Raden Saleh Sjarif Bustaman
(1811-1880), a keen animal lover who originally owned the land, grew so rapidly
and often ate the grass and trees in the area and broke fences, the management
of the hospital, run by the Communion of Churches in Indonesia (PGI) since 1957,
finally decided to move the antelopes to other areas owned by the communion.
The presence of the
antelope also attracted visitors, particularly children, who fed the animals.
There had been several incidents in which the antelopes bit the children.
Unlike many other old
hospitals across the country, Cikini Hospital, located slightly back from busy
Jl. Raden Saleh in Central Jakarta, has rooms which are built like small villas.
The other distinct
difference between Cikini Hospital and other hospitals is its well-kempt park,
full of towering old trees.
Walking through the
hospital's garden, it's easy to forget you are still in heavily-polluted
Jakarta.
Apart of the park's
wonderful scenery, the most magnificent part of the 102-year-old hospital is the
main building located at the center.
The main building, used
in the past as a meeting hall, was designed by Raden Saleh himself in the 1850s
with a mixed "West and East" architectural style that no one could exactly
identify.
"Raden Saleh often went
abroad and used to spend long periods of time in the Netherlands and Germany,
where he was inspired by their architectural styles," said Djauhari Sumintardja,
an expert on old buildings at the privately owned Tarumanegara University in
West Jakarta.
Like many other old
buildings in the city, the interior of the two-story mansion consists of a big
hall with several rooms to its right and left and a round balcony.
At a glance,
the interior is much more like a concert hall rather than just a meeting room of
a resident.
According to Djauhari,
one of the most unique aspects of the building is its windows, the style of
which is usually found in mosques.
"The windows are
characteristic of Islamic architecture," he said.
In the old days of
Batavia, Raden Saleh's mansion was located in a suburb of Cikini, the expert
explained.
A book titled Raden
Saleh, Prince among Romantic Painters reveals the mansion was constructed
with "strange and astonishing" taste.
German Ambassador to
Indonesia, Heinrich Seemann, wrote in the book 100 Years of Cikini Hospital,
issued by the hospital, that the building was a replica of the main building of
a German castle called Callenberg.
"The original stands on
a fortified hill surrounded by walls and towers and is situated near Coburg,
right in the heart of Germany," the ambassador said.
Wild animals
In earlier days, the
hospital hall was the only building within the some 100 hectares of Raden
Saleh's original compound, encircled by a vast garden. Some people referred to
it as a small wild forest due to the artist's large collection of wild animals.
An observer on old
buildings, Wisnu Murti Ardjo, said the collection included lions, deer, snakes
and tigers.
Raden Saleh's garden,
of Javanese origin, was turned into a zoo by Gemeente Batavia, the city
administration during the Dutch colonial period, when the painter was visiting
Germany in the late 1880s prior to his death in Bogor, West Java, in 1880.
Many believe the
animals were models for many of Raden Saleh's masterpieces, some of which are
kept at world-class museums in Europe and Indonesia, of course (see also our
Comprehensive Listing of Raden Saleh Works of Art).
Many parts of the large
garden remain as they were but several changes have been made by both the Dutch
colonists and PGI management.
The takeover of Raden
Saleh's mansion by PGI is still unclear, but Rev. Dharma Angkuw, head of the
hospital's spiritual service, wrote in the commemoration book that the estate
was bought in June 1897 by the management of Koningin Emma Ziekenhuis (Queen
Emma Hospital).
The hospital was
pioneered by Dutch woman Adriana Josina de Graaf-Kooman, wife of Rev. Cornelis de
Graaf, who was a Dutch missionary in Indonesia between 1873 and 1905.
Rev. Dharma said
Adriana was famous for her charity work, taking care of the sick while
accompanying her husband.
When Adriana spent her
holidays in the Netherlands, she received enough support to open a health
service in the Dutch East Indies (as Indonesia was called at that time) and
collected donations; Dutch Queen Emma donated 100,000 Guilders.
The hospital, then
named Koningin Emma Ziekenhuis, initially started its public service at the
so-called Gang Pool area, which is now known as the site of the Baiturrahman
Mosque at the presidential palace complex in Central Jakarta.
Since the hospital
needed more space, the management decided to buy Raden Saleh's estate and
inaugurated the hospital on Jan. 12, 1898.
On Aug. 1, 1913, Queen
Emma Hospital became independent and changed its name to Tjikini Hospital, "because
it did not want to become a Christian hospital," the management said in 100
Year Cikini Hospital.
Forty-four years later,
the hospital changed its name to DGI (the Council of Churches in Indonesia)
Cikini Hospital after the management of the hospital was handed over to the
council of Protestant churches.
In 1984, it was changed
to PGI Cikini Hospital following the change of the term "church council" (DGI)
to "church communion" (PGI) in 1984.
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