

Like Di Bawah Lindungan Ka'bah ( Under the Protection of Ka'bah 1938) before it, Van der Wijck is critical of Minang adat (traditions), such as the treatment of persons of mixed descent and the role of women, an issue shown through Hayati's work to be an ideal wife despite Aziz mistreating her. After he dies, he is buried next to Hayati. Zainuddin's health worsens not long afterwards. They find her in a hospital, where Zainuddin and Hayati make up she then dies in his arms. Hearing the news, Zainuddin and Muluk rush to Tuban to search for her. The next day she boards the Van der Wijck, which sinks off the coast of northern Java. Zainuddin, who has suffered from his longing for Hayati, spurns her and tells her to return to Sumatra. After a period living with Zainuddin, Aziz runs away to Banyuwangi, leaving Hayati for Zainuddin in a letter, Aziz writes that Zainuddin is more deserving. However, their relationship has soured and Aziz's temper leads to him being fired, leaving the couple homeless. Aziz and Hayati also move to Surabaya, after Aziz is transferred. In despair, Zainuddin and his friend Muluk go to Java, first to Batavia and then to Surabaya, where Zainuddin becomes known as a writer and philanthropist.

Although Zainuddin receives a sizeable inheritance from Mak Base, he is too late to inform Hayati's family, and Aziz marries her. Aziz, who is of purely Minang descent and a noble background, is favoured by her family they look down on Zainuddin, who is poor and of mixed heritage. However, Khadijah's elder brother Aziz falls in love with Hayati, leading to Zainuddin and Aziz to compete for Hayati's affections. One day, Hayati goes to Padang Panjang to see Zainuddin and stays with her friend Khadijah. He decides to move to Padang Panjang, although he continues to write to Hayati. Although he loves Hayati, the daughter of local nobleman, he is not allowed to be with her. As a person of mixed descent, he faces much discrimination from Minang conservatives. He is now living with his father's friend Mak Base in Batipuh, Sumatra. His Minang father died in exile after killing a relative over inheritance his non-Minang mother has also died. It was while in Medan that he wrote Van der Wijck, which was inspired in part by the sinking of an actual vessel in 1936. In 1935 he left Makassar for Medan, North Sumatra, where he became the editor of an Islamic weekly magazine, Pedoman Masjarakat. During these travels, especially while in the Middle East, he extensively read works by Islamic scholars and authors, such as those by the Egyptian writer Mustafa Lutfi al-Manfaluti, as well as Arabic-language translations of European works. After a trip to Java and Mecca beginning when he was sixteen, he became a religious scholar in Deli, East Sumatra, then in Makassar, South Sulawesi. The film with the longest running time in Indonesian film history.ġ1 September 2014 the film was re-released in an extended version with 195 minutes running time.Haji Abdul Malik Karim Amrullah, better known as simply Hamka, was the Sumatran-born son of a devout Muslim who viewed local traditions as hindering the progress of religion – his father's opinions influenced his.

Hamka stands for Haji Abdul Malik Karim Amrullah. This novel tells the custom and wealth issues in Minangkabau that prevent the lovers relationship. The novel was first published as a serialized story in the magazine Pedoman Masyarakat 1938. NoteĪdapted from a novel with the same title. Love between Zainuddin and Hayati meet the toughest exams in a cruise ship tragedy of Van Der Wijck. In an opera, Zainuddin meet again with Hayati and Aziz, her husband. He works hard and become a famous writer. Hayati forced into marriage with Aziz, a noble-rich man who really wants to marry her. Zainuddin is poor and common people, while Hayati is born from pure Minang noble. From his native land Zainuddin sailes to the birth place of his father in Batipuh, Padang Panjang.
