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Paiso (born 1894, date of death unknown) was an Indonesian communist activist and political prisoner who was imprisoned by the Dutch in the Boven-Digoel concentration camp from 1927 to 1932. His son-in-law Manai Sophiaan (1915-2003) was an Indonesian diplomat and politician and his grandson Sophan Sophiaan (1944-2008) was an actor and politician.
Little is known of Paiso's early life. He was Javanese and was born in 1894 in the Dutch East Indies; he probably had a basic Dutch-language education.[1][2]
He worked as a civil servant in Merauke, as a writer for the Assistant Resident and later clerk for the Magistrate.[2] By the mid-1920s, he was active in communist politics in Makassar, which at that time was in the Celebes and Dependencies Residency (today in South Sulawesi, Indonesia). In February 1924 he became secretary of a new branch of the People's Union (Indonesian: Sarekat Rakjat) in Makassar, an organization affiliated with the Communist Party of Indonesia (PKI).[3][2] In 1924 his daughter Moenasiah was born.[1] By 1925 he was also chairman of the local PKI branch, and also led a branch of the Islamic Communist Association (Indonesian: Perserikatan Komunis Islam).[4][5] These activities soon led him to be targeted by authorities. The police arrested him at a ceremony marking the death of Sun Yat-sen in March 1925.[1] The next year he was arrested under the Indies' strict censorship laws; in January 1926 he was sentenced to a year and a half in prison for speech infractions (Dutch: spreekdelicten).[6][7][8] He was initially sent to the capital Batavia.[1] Before he finished his sentence, in October 1927, authorities decided to exile him to Boven-Digoel concentration camp along with hundreds of other Communist Party members.[2]
While interned in the camp, Paiso lived in Kampong C and was said to have supported himself by baking and selling bread.[9] By the early 1930s, Digoel internees who were well-behaved and considered rehabilitated started to be released in large numbers. Paiso was allowed to return home with a group of 157, including Lie Eng Hok, in March 1932.[10][11] He returned to Makassar and to politics after his release, although he was careful not to be re-arrested.[1] During the Japanese occupation of the Dutch East Indies his daughter Moenasiah married a teacher named Manai Sophiaan, who would later become an Indonesian National Party politician.[1]
After Indonesia became independent, the Communist Party was legalized and Paiso was able to operate more openly with the party once again.[1] By the 1950s he was a key figure in the PKI's activities in South Sulawesi.[12] He was involved in the Permesta rebellion, a cross-party regional movement centered in Makassar, for a time in early 1957 but formally withdrew his participation when it became increasingly anti-communist and anti-Sukarno.[13]
He was still alive at the time of the banning of the PKI in 1965[14] and the Transition to the New Order, but it is unknown what happened to him.