Sunday, October 28, 2012

Indonesian Muslims and Their Place in the Larger World of Islam

Martin van Bruinessen,
‘Indonesian Muslims and Their Place in the Larger World of Islam’,
Paper presented at the 29th Indonesia Update conference, Australian National
University, Canberra, September 30 – October 2, 2011.

With over 220 million Muslims, Indonesia has the largest community of Muslims in the world. Nevertheless, Indonesian Muslims do not play a role in global Muslim thought and action that is commensurate with their numbers. Indonesian Muslims have been eager to learn from Arab as well as Indian, Turkish and Persian thinkers, but do not seem to think they may have something valuable to offer in return. In Indonesian bookshops one finds the translated works of classical and modern Arabic authors, as well as studies of and by major Indian, Pakistani, Iranian and Turkish authors. But Malaysia is the only other country where one can find works by Indonesian Muslim authors, and there are virtually no serious studies of Indonesian Islam by scholars of other Muslim nations. The Arab world has shown a remarkable lack of interest in Asia in general, let alone in the social and cultural forms of Islam in Southeast Asia.1 Though more outward looking, other Muslim regions of Asia have not taken a serious interest in their Southeast Asian co-religionists either.


Retrieved from: http://igitur-archive.library.uu.nl/th/2012-0210-200244/Bruinessen_Indonesian_Muslims_in_the_larger_world_of_Islam.pdf

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