Born: September 27, 1907 Solo (Surakarta) Indonesia
Johan was the eleventh child of Albert and Diena Rusche
His siblings were:
Alberta Wilhelmina (Bertha) Samuels de Wilde
Roelof Willem Albert (Willem) Rusche
Johannes Phillippus Cornelis (Jootje) Rusche
Diena Anna Magdalena Theodora (Annie)
Albert Willem Roelof Rusche
Julius Cornelis Alexander Augustus (Alex) Rusche
Theodorus Willem Albert (Theo) Rusche
Alberdina (Dina) Doesburg
Cornelis Marinus Alwin Albert (Alwin) Rusche
Adolph Heinrich Christiaan (Ade) Rusche
Johan’s father was Albert Rusche, born in Amsterdam on July 28, 1851
Albert married Diena Jansen in 1884 in Bogor, just South of Jakarta.
He owned a store and publishing house, “Albert Rusche & Co.”
Albert died in 1931 in Solo.
Diena passed away Oct 11 1934
Albert’s father was Roelof Rusche (1823-1858) and his father wasAlbert Rusche (1803-1870) and his father was Rudolphus Spurtus (Roelof) Rusche (1778 -1808) and his father was Albert Rusche (1738 -1798) and his father was Roeloff Rusche (1688 -1770) All from Amsterdam, Netherlands
1907 – 1930
Grew up in the former Dutch colony for 300 years calledThe Dutch East Indies , now known asIndonesia. He lived in Solo (Surakarta) in the West and Central part of the island of Java, the stronghold of the Dutch occupancy. He worked at the Rusche Family businesses.
Johan was captured as a Prisoner of War by the Empire of Japan.
1942 – 1945
Johan was a Prisoner of War by the Empire of Japanand sent to internment camps throughout World War II. He was on the famous Junyo Maru that was torpedoed with 6500 POWs, slaves and crew. 5620 perished in the waters off southwest Sumatra – making it the largest maritime disaster of World War II!
Out of 2,220 allied POWs on the Junyo Maru, 723 survived and only 96 survived after the war! Johan was amongst the 96!
Reunited with Conny. They moved to Bandung in Central Java, which was also a Dutch stronghold.
The city of Bandung is 768 metres (2,520 ft) above sea level and is surrounded by up to 2,400 m (7,874 ft) high volcanic terrain. The 400 km² flat of central Bandung plain is situated in the middle of 2,340.88 km² wide of the Bandung Basin. The northern part of the city is hillier than the rest, with the distinguished truncated flat-peak shape of the Tangkuban Perahu volcano (Tangkuban Perahu literally means ‘up-turned boat’) can be seen from the city to the north. Due to its geological condition, the land is very fertile, the Parahyangan Mountains surrounding Bandung supports productive tea plantations which create a beautiful and tranquil panorama. Due to its elevation, the climate in Bandung is cooler than most Indonesian cities and can be classified as humid; the average temperature is 23.6 °C (74.5 °F) throughout the year. The average annual rainfall ranges from 1,000 millimetres in the central and southeast regions to 3,500 millimetres in the north of the city. The wet season conforms with other Indonesian regions, around November to April.
The British took over the authority and prepared for the re-establishment of the Dutch government. A temporary agreement made afterwards resulted in the division of Bandung into two areas, the north and the south. These segments were separated by the railroad.
The Dutch took over the power for three years again.
Continued by the independence war during the period of 1945 – 1950, the city was finally seriously deteriorated. Many clashes against the return of colonialism took place in several regions including Bandung. In 1946, a new agreement was reached, which mentioned that armed people were prohibited to enter the boundaries set up 11 km from the city centre. Consequently, the Indonesian troops repositioned to the rural hinterland followed by a rush of the natives. Although in this city the clashes lasted less than half a year, it brought serious damages to the city. Bandung was even called “Lautan Api” (the sea of fire) because of the terrible devastation caused by the guerrilla strategy of sabotages and scorched earth by Indonesian battlers.
1946
Johan becomes a teacher at the Electrical Technical School in Bandung. Teachers and professors are among the few Dutch Nationalists that remain in Indonesia.
Violence had also increased toward the former Dutch occupiers that had remained in the strive for independence.
November 1946 Conny becomes pregnant.
July 1947 Conny gives birth to my sister, Joyce Margeriet in Bandung.
1949 The Netherlands recognizes the Indonesian state.
After the De-Hague Conference in 1949, the Dutch had to leave Indonesia. This conference resulted in a change of Indonesia into a federal country that contained some autonomous states.
1950 The drive for Indonesian independence spurred violence toward the former Dutch occupiers and the family flees on refugee boat for refuge back to The Netherlands.