Education
Raised in Pasuruan, East Java, Dede Otomo attended a Catholic school, but was not raised in a religious family.
Raised in Pasuruan, East Java, Dede Otomo attended a Catholic school, but was not raised in a religious family.
Dede Oetomo is currently the National Coordinator of GAYa Nusantara. He learned to speak English in high school using a book entitled, English for the SLTP, which was developed for Indonesian students with funding from the Ford Foundation. In 1978, he completed the TESOL course and was awarded a grant by the Ford Foundation to study linguistics at Cornell University in Ithaca, New New York
He received a second grant in 1984 to work with the Modern Indonesia Project at Cornell.
The project, established in the early 1950s by Professor George McTurnan Kahin and Professor John M.Echols, engages in Indonesian area studies. Dede Oetomo received a scholarship from the Social Science Research Council to assist with his dissertation studies during 1983 and 1984.
He then moved into the study of sexuality, gender and the Human Immunodeficiency Virus/Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome issues in Indonesia. Between 1984 and 2003, Oetomo lectured in political science at Airlangga University in Surabaya, East Java, Indonesia.
In 2010, Oetomo and the feminist activist Soe Tjen Marching established the first journal on sexuality in Indonesia, Gandrung.
Was started by Oetomo in 1982, as a newsletter providing a forum where people could write letters to receive advice. Though Lambda was discontinued in 1984, it was restarted by Oetmomo as an organisation in 1987, under the name Gaya Nusantara. Oetomo continues to use GAYa as an educational tool around the subjects of sexuality, gender and sexual health, with a focus on Human Immunodeficiency Virus prevention.
Aims of the organization include raising public awareness of these topics and education in schools and tertiary institutions across Indonesia.
Dede Oetomo is active on social media, using the growing popularity of platforms such as Twitter to deliver his messages.
He is an active member of the Asia-Pacific Council of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome Service Organisations.