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At the Heart of Indonesia Terror Attacks, a Well-Liked Family

SURABAYA, Indonesia — Famela, 8, excelled at math and martial arts. Her sister, Fadhila, 12, was good at drawing. Firman, 15, was on the student council at the liberal Muslim experimental school they attended, and he had a soft spot for Taylor Swift. Yusuf, 17, liked to make videos and take care of his little sisters.

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HANNAH BEECH
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MUKTITA SUHARTONO, New York Times

SURABAYA, Indonesia — Famela, 8, excelled at math and martial arts. Her sister, Fadhila, 12, was good at drawing. Firman, 15, was on the student council at the liberal Muslim experimental school they attended, and he had a soft spot for Taylor Swift. Yusuf, 17, liked to make videos and take care of his little sisters.

All four children were seen as being astonishingly well-behaved and accomplished by their neighbors and friends in their multiethnic residential enclave in Surabaya, Indonesia’s second-largest city. They all wondered how the parents, Dita Oepriarto and Puji Kuswati, did it.

But by Sunday morning they wondered if they had really known the family at all, after back-to-back bombings at three Christian churches. Famela, Fadhila, Firman and Yusuf blew themselves up in the attacks, as did their parents, killing 12 bystanders and wounding at least 40 others.

To the end, the children were dutiful. Oepriarto set off a bomb in their family Toyota at the Surabaya Center Pentecostal Church. Around the same time, the teenage boys rode together on a motorcycle to the Roman Catholic Santa Maria Church, where they set off their explosives. The father massacred seven people; his boys killed five others.

Famela and Fadhila detonated their explosives at the Indonesia Christian Church, one by one, before Kuswati triggered her own bomb. Their strike resulted only in their own deaths.

Adding to the horror, by Monday two other families had set off bombs and the police had found links to a sprawling terrorism plot centered on Oepriarto, 47.

In the aftermath was the haunting question that mystified anyone who is a parent, as well as those who knew the families best: How could the conspirators have done this to their own children?

In the case of Oepriarto and Kuswati, in particular, the family was known to be close-knit. The only explanation, it seemed, was that they believed martyrdom would unite them again in the afterlife. The alternative, having only Oepriarto commit jihad while leaving the rest of the household stranded among the living, may have been too hard a notion for the family to bear.

“All of us are shocked, not only the police but also the whole country, because this goes against the social ethos that we should love our children,” said Frans Barung Mangera, the police spokesman for East Java province, where Surabaya is. “We condemn the family, especially the father who planted his deviant ideology in his children.”

The Islamic State claimed responsibility for the assaults through its Amaq news agency, describing them as a “martyrdom operation.”

Hours after the bloodshed, Indonesian authorities identified Oepriarto as the head of the Surabaya chapter of Jamaah Ansharut Daulah, an Indonesian militant organization that has pledged allegiance to the Islamic State. The police are also investigating whether Oepriarto had any contact with the Islamic State’s remote terrorism planners in the Middle East.

While Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim-majority nation, is hailed for its embrace of religious pluralism, the country also has a painful history of domestic terrorist attacks. And in recent years, the Islamic State has become more active here, starting with deadly suicide attacks in the center of Jakarta in January 2016.

After the church bombings in Surabaya, the plots connected to Oepriarto were violently exposed.

On Sunday evening in a working-class suburb of Surabaya, security forces rushed to the scene of a large but mysterious explosion. In a shabby apartment complex, they discovered Anton Ferdiantono, a father of four, holding the detonator for a bomb that had killed his wife and one of their daughters. Counterterrorism forces shot him dead.

The police said Ferdiantono had mistakenly triggered the bomb, which was meant for a future attack in Surabaya and was composed of a highly volatile compound, TATP. That explosive has been widely used in Islamic State-supported terrorist plots around the word, and was also used in the bombs that Oepriarto and his family set off.

Then on Monday morning, a family of five squeezed onto two motorcycles and drove toward the police headquarters in Surabaya. In front of the police station — a symbol of the secular Indonesian state — they activated two bombs. The parents, Tri Murtiono and Tri Ernawati, died, along with their two sons. The couple’s 7-year-old daughter, who was sandwiched between her parents on the motorcycle, survived.

In little more than 24 hours, three families in Surabaya had been transformed into agents of death. All three fathers had attended the same extremist Quranic recitation group, according to the East Java police, and on occasion they brought their wives and children with them to the indoctrination sessions.

The violence was all the more stunning because the families’ lives were woven into the fabric of their multicultural communities in Surabaya, a bustling port city with a vibrant Chinatown and places of worship for various faiths. None of the three mothers wore the niqab, the Islamic head covering that obscures all but the eyes. One of the fathers ran a door-frame business, while another sold watches online.

But camouflage was the point, especially for Oepriarto, who hid his leadership of Jamaah Ansharut Daulah from neighbors, childhood friends and business associates. He and his wife constructed a model of modern existence in Indonesia: the ethnically mixed neighborhood in which they lived, the private school their children attended that stressed racial harmony, the friendship with people who believed in other gods.

“We always chatted when we bought vegetables or when the family rode their bicycles around the block,” said Melly Tahalele, a Protestant neighbor in the quiet cul-de-sac where Oepriarto and his family lived for the past seven years. “They didn’t match any stereotype of terrorists. They were the complete opposite of that.” Ahmad Faiz Zainuddin, who went to the same elite public high school in Surabaya as Oepriarto and briefly attended the same extremist prayer group, said that such integration was inculcated early and deliberately in potential recruits. Zainuddin said that he had left the group after being disturbed by its teachings, but that he had stayed in touch with some people he had met there.

“The covert ideology that was taught said you should never show that you’re a fundamentalist: wear normal clothes and even do things that are un-Islamic as a cover,” he said. “With Dita Oepriarto and his family, I know that if you weren’t in their inner circle, you would never have seen the real them.”

Oepriarto, the son of an architect and the oldest of three surviving siblings, grew up in Surabaya. The family was from aristocratic Javanese stock, but neighbors said Oepriarto never bragged about his blue blood.

“He was very quiet and polite,” said Arif Moestofa, who knew Oepriarto his whole life, repeating the same characterization that was used for Oepriarto’s children. “There was nothing about him that signaled that he would become a terrorist.”

For decades, one of Oepriarto’s closest friends on the lane was Hanna Ningsih, an ethnically Chinese Pentecostal Christian who ran a printing business out of her house. Even though Oepriarto never finished his diploma course in marketing management, he was interested in startup businesses and found a kindred spirit in Ningsih, she said.

Oepriarto persuaded her to join Amway and introduced her to another multilevel marketing scheme involving Chinese herbal supplements. Ningsih helped sell products from his latest business venture: soy milk, white pepper or herbal oils. Even outside his leadership of Jamaah Ansharut Daulah, Oepriarto was good at gaining converts.

On Sunday morning, Ningsih was at home, having decided to attend the evening services at the Surabaya Center Pentecostal Church. Then, as she was watching the television report on the car bombing of her church, her friend’s name popped up on the screen as the attacker. “It was the shock of my life,” she said. “I am still in shock.”

Dendri Oemiarti, one of Oepriarto’s sisters, said all she could do was apologize for the terror unleashed by her brother and his family.

“We were not that close anymore,” she said, as she stood inside the small convenience store at the front of the family home. “I don’t have any explanation for what he did, but I want to say that I am so sorry to all the victims.”

Looking back, some saw small signs of a disconnect in Oepriarto’s life, but they gained import only after Sunday’s massacre.

Eight years ago, Arnoldus Jondo, a Catholic neighbor, helped the community construct a Muslim prayer hall because, he said, that is what good Christians do in Indonesia.

“Dita said he envied my having a neutral life in which a Catholic could build a mosque,” Jondo said. “I remember wondering what kind of burdens he had that made him jealous of my life.”

Two days before the church assault, Jondo was walking by the prayer hall when he saw Oepriarto sitting on the veranda. It was unusual to see him because Oepriarto and his family had moved to a different neighborhood seven years before. “He smiled at me,” Jondo said, “but even though I waved and spoke to him he said nothing in return.”

In recent years, Oepriarto had distanced himself from his parents and sisters, said friends and acquaintances. He was never close with his wife’s relatives, prosperous factory owners who disapproved of the marriage. Instead, he lavished attention on his immediate family.

This closeness could explain Oepriarto’s decision to bring his children into his deadly plot, said Haula Noor, an Indonesian who is working on a doctoral thesis at Australian National University on the family context of jihadis.

“They see bombings as jihad, which is a good deed that will bring rewards for the entire family,” Noor said. “And we know they believe that the reward for conducting jihad is to enter heaven all together.”

Oepriarto’s family gave little indication of what they were about to unleash on Sunday. Shortly before the attack, the couple went to a residents’ association meeting on paving a nearby road. They continued to give their neighbors cakes and cookies.

On Friday at her liberal private school, which offers classes in hip-hop and Chinese martial arts, Famela, the youngest child, took her examinations for entering the next academic year. She will never make it to third grade.

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