[Part 13]Indeed, when a Vice-President turns up at a neighbourhood night-watch, it is tempting to file the episode under “community outreach” and move on. Yet the spectacle of Mas Wapres arriving at several pos ronda in Jakarta this September reads rather differently when placed next to a freshly issued circular from the Ministry of Home Affairs urging the reactivation of community patrols. The visits were real—the Vive President was photographed and filmed inspecting pos ronda in Kembangan and Pesanggrahan, handing out torches and small provisions to volunteers.Call it what you will: a genuine attempt to stabilise neighbourhood security after recent protests, or a polished PR vignette with props and a script. The official line stresses community safety and continuity of siskamling; government bulletins note the visits aimed to reassure the public and supply simple equipment to patrol teams.Seen from an investigative angle, however, the optics invite a few inconvenient questions. Why does the revival of pos ronda suddenly attract high-level attention? Why are national figures making a point of showing up where local volunteers have long done the rounds? Those who trade in political stagecraft will tell you that optics are policy: the photograph replaces the policy paper, and the handshake replaces the white paper.There is nothing new about leaders seeking proximity to citizens — politics has always preferred faces over footnotes — but the context matters. When a minister issues a nationwide nudge to revive the ronda and, almost concurrently, the vice-president is seen on late-night patrols, the pattern resembles choreography rather than coincidence. The question for the curious is whether the patrol is a security response or a campaign tableau.To be clear: Mas Wapres’ late-night rounds included practical gestures—torches, coffee sachets, a cordial talk with residents—and locals reported feeling reassured by the visits. That is the script that reads well on television and in municipal newsletters. However, a glance at the political landscape reveals that spectacle can do the heavy lifting of persuasion without any substantial intellectual content: no policy debates, no manifesto clauses, just presence and goodwill. And when one’s cerebral cupboard is rather bare and competence is but a rumour, one must resort to a dazzling façade and enlist the digital town criers to sing one’s praises—preferably on loop and with emojis. Moreover, if it is added to the opinion of surveys which report that the popularity is increasing.This is where an investigator’s eyebrow arches. In political environments where messaging is calibrated down to the last smile, community patrols can double as grassroots staging grounds. For a politician who benefits from being “seen as one of us,” walking among residents at night is a neat shortcut to popular intimacy. The effect is immediate: photographs circulate, headlines tally the visits, and a narrative of approachability accrues without the bother of argumentation.Of course, not every photograph signals manipulation. But neither should every photograph be granted a presumption of innocence. When the national agenda is fraught — and Indonesia currently wrestles with heated political tensions and economic unease — the substitution of performative proximity for programmatic solutions is an insufficient remedy. A torch will not mend constitutional or economic gaps; a handshake will not fix judicial bottlenecks.So what did the late-night Ronda Theatre deliver? It delivered images of a vice-president in the field, smiling and handing out small comforts; it delivered reassurance for some, and unease for others who suspect the moves are engineered. It also delivered a useful lesson in modern campaigning: when governance gets messy, staging gets busy. And in that lesson lies the risk — that the nation’s deeper dilemmas will be kept at bay by nightly patrols and nightly optics, while the structural work remains undone.If nothing else, the episode is a reminder that politics nowadays is as much theatre as it is policy. For citizens inclined to think, that should be discomforting; for those who prefer to be amused, it is simply evening entertainment. Either way, the streets will keep their night watches, and the cameras will keep their close-ups. That, in short, is how you patrol a neighbourhood — and perhaps, how you patrol an electorate.
Back again to the cult of leaders in the Communist countries.
The cult of leadership in Communist regimes is often thought of as something unique, but in fact it shares much with authoritarian states of many kinds, whether Communist, Fascist, or even ostensibly non-ideological dictatorships. What unites them is the use of symbolic power, ritualised devotion, and controlled narratives to concentrate legitimacy in a single figure who becomes more than human.In Communist states, the leader was portrayed as the embodiment of the revolution: Lenin as the prophet of Marxism, Stalin as the “man of steel” who industrialised and defended the Soviet Union, Mao as the great helmsman guiding China through storms of struggle, Kim Il-Sung as the eternal sun of the nation. This sacralisation turned political authority into a kind of secular divinity.Fascist regimes showed similar patterns. In Nazi Germany, Hitler was not merely a chancellor but the “Führer,” presented as a saviour chosen by destiny to restore national greatness. Rituals such as mass rallies at Nuremberg, the Hitler salute, and the constant broadcasting of his image functioned like religious liturgies, binding the people into a single collective identity. In Fascist Italy, Mussolini was glorified as “Il Duce,” whose mere presence was supposed to embody the vitality and destiny of the Italian nation.Even outside rigid ideologies, authoritarian states have often nurtured leader cults. In North Africa and the Middle East, rulers like Gaddafi or Saddam Hussein saturated public spaces with their portraits, staged vast rallies, and insisted on loyalty that bordered on worship. In contemporary times, some populist leaders use social media in much the same way, creating a continuous performance of charisma in which the leader becomes the unquestionable source of truth.The parallels are striking. In all these systems, whether Communist or Fascist, the suppression of independent institutions—religion, media, civic associations—created a vacuum of meaning and authority. Into that vacuum stepped the leader, presented not simply as a politician but as the living symbol of destiny, truth, and unity. The difference lay in the ideological clothing: Communists claimed to be creating socialism, Fascists promised national rebirth, and authoritarian strongmen promised order and stability. But the underlying psychological mechanism was remarkably similar: transform politics into faith, and the leader into a secular god.Then let us examine why the cult of leadership so often ends in tragedy. When a political leader is elevated to the level of a secular god, the normal checks and balances of human governance are stripped away. Criticism becomes treason, dissent becomes heresy, and the natural process of questioning and correcting mistakes is paralysed. What begins as devotion soon hardens into silence, fear, and blind obedience.In such a climate, errors that would normally be challenged early are allowed to escalate into catastrophes. In Stalin’s Soviet Union, the unquestionable authority of the leader meant that disastrous agricultural policies, purges, and show trials continued unchecked, costing millions of lives. In Mao’s China, the aura of infallibility surrounding the Great Helmsman allowed the Great Leap Forward to spiral into famine, because local officials dared not report the truth about harvest failures. In Hitler’s Germany, the cult of the Führer transformed ideological fantasies into state policy, leading to genocidal war on a global scale.This mechanism is not unique to Communism or Fascism; it is the general danger of unchecked personal rule. The leader becomes surrounded by flatterers who echo his words rather than challenge them, and the people become too frightened—or too enthralled—to resist. The result is a system where mistakes are magnified, suffering multiplied, and tragedy almost inevitable.The irony is profound. The cult of leadership often begins with promises of liberation, unity, and destiny, but by silencing criticism, it creates the very conditions for tyranny and disaster. Instead of a godlike saviour, the leader becomes a mortal whose flaws now carry the weight of an entire nation. History shows again and again that when politics is turned into faith, the collapse of that faith is paid for in human lives.One might think that cults of leadership belong to dictatorships of the past, yet their shadows still loom in contemporary politics. Even in open societies, where institutions are meant to constrain authority, the emotional pull of populism can recreate many of the same dynamics, though in subtler forms.Populist leaders often present themselves not as mere politicians but as embodiments of “the people.” They speak in simple, absolute terms, reducing complex realities to battles of good against evil, insiders against outsiders. In doing so, they invite devotion rather than debate. The leader is no longer judged by policies but embraced as a symbol of identity. Criticism of the leader can then be dismissed as betrayal of the people themselves.Social media intensifies this dynamic. In place of parades and statues, we now have viral videos, hashtags, and endless feeds where the leader’s face, words, and gestures circulate daily. The performance of charisma is constant, demanding attention, loyalty, and emotional investment. This creates a culture where questioning becomes harder, because loyalty is framed as personal and emotional rather than rational or institutional.The risk is that democracy’s core—open criticism, institutional checks, and the peaceful rotation of power—can be eroded from within. Populist cults may not always produce the mass killings of twentieth-century revolutions, but they can hollow out accountability, polarise societies, and lead to reckless decision-making. The lesson of history remains relevant: when politics begins to demand faith rather than reason, when leaders are treated as saviours rather than servants, the seeds of tragedy are sown.Then let us move to the antidotes, the ways in which democratic societies can resist the drift toward cults of leadership. The strength of democracy lies not in the perfection of its leaders but in the resilience of its institutions and the critical capacity of its citizens. When those capacities weaken, even free societies can slide into personalised rule.The first defence is critical education. Citizens must be taught not only facts but habits of questioning, scepticism, and historical awareness. A population that can recognise the dangers of blind devotion is far less likely to surrender its freedom for the promise of simple answers. History taught honestly is itself a vaccine, showing how the worship of leaders in the past brought both fleeting glory and lasting ruin.The second defence is independent media. In every cult of leadership, control of information has been key—whether through censorship, propaganda, or endless repetition of the leader’s image. A diverse and free press offers counter-narratives, exposes contradictions, and reminds citizens that no leader is above scrutiny. In the age of social media, this also means encouraging platforms where voices outside the ruling circle can still be heard.In the twentieth century, Communist revolutions were not only political changes but also social earthquakes. They often sought to erase “old ideologies” such as feudalism, religion, nationalism, or liberalism, and in many cases this process led to mass killings.The Soviet Union under Lenin and especially Stalin provides the first major example. The Bolsheviks eliminated the aristocracy, clergy, and landowning classes. In the 1930s, Stalin’s collectivisation campaign led to the Holodomor famine in Ukraine, where millions perished, and his Great Purge executed or imprisoned countless intellectuals, priests, and suspected “enemies of the people.”In China, Mao Zedong’s campaigns targeted landlords during land reform, resulting in mass executions in the early 1950s. Later, the Cultural Revolution (1966–1976) unleashed violence against “old ideas, old culture, old customs, and old habits.” Monks, teachers, and traditional leaders were humiliated or killed, and religious sites destroyed.In Cambodia, the Khmer Rouge under Pol Pot (1975–1979) carried this logic to the extreme. Attempting to wipe out capitalism, religion, and intellectual life, they executed monks, professionals, and anyone associated with the old society. Nearly two million people—about a quarter of the population—died.Other Communist states also carried out violent purges. In North Korea, traditional elites were liquidated, and loyalty to the Kim dynasty replaced all other forms of belief. In Vietnam, there were executions of landowners and repression of religious groups, though on a smaller scale than in China or Cambodia. In Eastern Europe (for example, East Germany, Romania, Czechoslovakia), repression was often less bloody but still systematic: churches were restricted, dissidents jailed, and intellectual life heavily censored.On the second part of your question, yes—there are cases where Communism failed to erase old beliefs or could not be fully entrenched. In Poland, the Communist regime never managed to eliminate Catholicism; the Church remained a powerful institution, culminating in the election of Pope John Paul II, which inspired resistance movements like Solidarity in the 1980s. In Afghanistan, when a Communist government backed by the Soviet Union tried to suppress traditional Islamic and tribal structures in the late 1970s, resistance was fierce. The Soviet invasion that followed (1979) failed, and Islam remained the dominant force. In Hungary and Czechoslovakia, despite years of Communist control, strong cultural and religious traditions persisted underground, resurfacing with force when the regimes collapsed in 1989.Thus, Communist revolutions could be brutally effective in destroying old elites and reshaping society, but they were never entirely successful in erasing deep-seated religious and cultural traditions. Where such traditions were tied closely to national identity—like Catholicism in Poland or Islam in Afghanistan—Communism could not fully supplant them, and this failure became a source of eventual resistance and collapse.The third is civic participation. Democracy is not sustained by voting alone but by active engagement—citizens forming associations, debating policies, and holding leaders accountable through constant pressure. The more diverse the centres of loyalty—families, communities, unions, organisations—the harder it becomes for one leader to monopolise the people’s identity.None of these defences guarantee perfection, but they create an environment where politics remains grounded in reason rather than faith, in institutions rather than charisma. The lesson of both the twentieth century and the present is clear: the best way to resist the cult of leadership is not to hope for a perfect leader but to build a society strong enough to survive imperfect ones.Communism emerged in the twentieth century as a promise of liberation. It presented itself as the cure to inequality, exploitation, and humiliation, offering a vision of a classless society where history’s injustices would finally be overturned. For peoples struggling under feudal landlords, colonial masters, or corrupt regimes, its message was electrifying. It promised not merely reform but total transformation, the creation of a new human order.
The ideological heart of Communism rested on the writings of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, who described religion as the “opium of the people” and capitalism as an engine of exploitation. In their vision, revolution was not optional but inevitable, for class struggle would tear down the old system and replace it with socialism, and eventually communism. By the twentieth century, revolutionaries from Lenin to Mao sought to make this prophecy real, treating Marxism not simply as analysis but as a guide to action.
Yet when Communism moved from theory to practice, it often unleashed terrible violence. In the Soviet Union, Lenin’s Bolsheviks dismantled the aristocracy and Church with ruthless force, while Stalin later pursued collectivisation and purges that claimed millions of lives. What had begun as a movement for justice soon became a machinery of repression. In China, Mao’s campaigns against landlords, intellectuals, and religious leaders followed a similar pattern, embedding class struggle into the daily fabric of life.
The logic behind these campaigns was consistent: the old world had to die so that the new one could be born. Feudalism, religion, and capitalism were not treated as rival systems but as cancers to be eradicated. This absolutism gave Communist leaders licence to eliminate opponents and silence traditions, claiming that such sacrifices were necessary for history’s advance. Violence was not an accident but a method.
The most notorious examples demonstrate the human cost of this method. Stalin’s collectivisation triggered famine in Ukraine, remembered as the Holodomor, where millions starved. Mao’s Great Leap Forward, fuelled by exaggerated reports and blind faith in mass mobilisation, produced one of history’s worst famines, again costing tens of millions of lives. In Cambodia, Pol Pot’s Khmer Rouge tried to erase all traces of the old society, murdering nearly a quarter of the population in less than four years.
Religion was one of the chief targets. Churches, mosques, temples, and monasteries were closed or desecrated, and priests, monks, and imams persecuted. Faith was recast as superstition, an obstacle to progress. Yet in destroying religion, Communist regimes often built a substitute: the cult of the party and the leader. Lenin, Stalin, Mao, and Kim Il-Sung became figures of near-sacred authority. Portraits replaced icons, slogans replaced scripture, and mass rallies replaced festivals. The language of destiny and salvation endured, but its object had shifted from heaven to the state.
This cult of leadership magnified the dangers. When a leader is treated as infallible, mistakes become disasters. Stalin’s purges terrorised an entire generation of Soviets; Mao’s Great Leap Forward spiralled into famine because no official dared to report the truth; Hitler, though not Communist but Fascist, demonstrated the same mechanism, where unchecked devotion translated fantasy into catastrophe. The lesson is that any system which sacralises leaders risks turning politics into tyranny.
Despite its repressive power, Communism never fully succeeded in erasing old beliefs. In Poland, Catholicism survived underground, eventually fuelling the Solidarity movement and undermining Communist rule. In Afghanistan, attempts to impose atheism and socialism clashed with Islam and tribal traditions, provoking fierce resistance that helped bring down the Soviet occupation. In Hungary and Czechoslovakia, cultural and religious life endured beneath the surface, re-emerging with force once the regimes collapsed.
Thus, Communism revealed both its strength and its weakness. It could dismantle institutions, redistribute land, and silence opposition through fear. Yet it could not entirely extinguish the spiritual and cultural identities that gave people meaning. The very violence it deployed to destroy tradition often deepened resentment and created the seeds of future resistance.
Economically, the record was also mixed. While industrial foundations were laid in the Soviet Union and China, inefficiency, shortages, and rigid central planning stifled growth. The human costs of rapid industrialisation, combined with repression, undermined the legitimacy of the system. By the late twentieth century, many Communist states either collapsed or transformed into hybrid systems, abandoning ideology for survival.
The greatest danger of Communism lay in its moral arrogance. Believing itself the sole interpreter of history, it granted leaders the authority to annihilate the past and dictate the future. Dissent was not simply disagreement but betrayal of destiny itself. This absolutism turned politics into a battlefield of purity, where compromise was treachery and violence could be sanctified.
The tragedies of famine, purges, and cultural destruction all stemmed from this conviction. The attempt to build a “new man” by force ignored the stubborn reality of human diversity, culture, and faith. Societies are not machines that can be reset at will; they are living organisms with memory, tradition, and resilience. Communism’s failure lay in treating them as clay to be remoulded without cost.
Even today, the lessons are urgent. Democracy too can fall prey to cults of leadership and populist simplifications, though often by softer means. When leaders are elevated beyond scrutiny, when politics demands faith instead of reason, the old pattern threatens to repeat itself. History shows that the hunger for meaning will always persist; the question is whether it is channelled into open institutions or monopolised by a single authority.
In conclusion, the dangers of Communism were not limited to failed economics but stretched into the moral sphere. By demanding absolute conformity, suppressing faith, and enthroning leaders as secular gods, it created systems capable of both fleeting achievements and enduring tragedy. Its legacy is a warning: utopian promises, when pursued through absolutism, often lead not to liberation but to suffering.
[Part 11]