Career
She is usually known as Ibu Tien to Indonesians, but is also known as Siti Hartinah Soeharto (the difference in spelling is due to Dutch Colonial era spelling). Madame Suharto was also widely acknowledged to be a close confidant and political advisor to Suharto. Siti Hartinah was distantly related to the Mangkunegaran Royal household.
Some commentators state that her honorific title of Raden Ayu was reserved only for faithful commoner courtiers or servants (abdi dalem) of the Mangkunegaran court.
The Javanese custom was for the bride"s family to pay the bulk of the wedding costs. Suharto apparently drove there in a battered De Soto sedan.
Suharto stated that the marriage was initially not one of romantic love, but they did eventually grow to love each other devotedly, a type of marriage that was very common for many Javanese of that era. Her marriage to Suharto was initiated by Suharto"s foster mother at the time, Ibu (Mrs) Prawirowiharjo, who sought an audience with her mother.
Ibu Prawirowiharjo cultivated a close relationship with her mother, a family in Suharto"s own words as "well regarded and respected in the city of Solo"
Siti Hartinah became to be known in Indonesia as "Madame Tien".
Many Javanese saw her as one of the major causes of Suharto"s own power. Ong Hok Ham, a prominent Indonesian social historian, said in an interview “When Suharto rose to power, people believed that the wife had the wahyu, the flaming womb, and whoever united with her would get the wahyu. After her death, people began to sense the wahyu was gone.”.