Friday, April 26, 2013

A work of reference on a period of Islam in Indonesia

Darul Aqsha, Dick van der Meij and Johan Hendrik Meuleman
(eds), Islam in Indonesia; A survey of events and developments from
1988 to March 1993.
Jakarta: IMS, 1995, 535 pp. ISBN 979.
811646.1. Price: / 40 (to be ordered from HAS, PO Box 9515,2300
RA Leiden).
MARTIN VAN BRUINESSEN
One of the tangible activities of INIS (The Indonesian-Netherlands
Cooperation in Islamic Studies, a joint project of the University of Leiden and the Higher Education Directorate of the Indonesian Department for Religious Affairs) has been the publication, since the inception of the project in 1989, of a half-yearly Newsletter.
The larger part of each issue has consisted of a ‘chronicle’: a summary in English, without commentary or analysis, of Indonesian press reports concerning Muslims and Islam. All major dailies and weeklies were scanned, and most reports on events (as against editorials, columns or interviews) summarized, apparently without any prior deliberate selection.
This approach had the benefit of giving readers a practically unfiltered view of the discourse on Islam in Indonesia’s print media. Most non-Indonesian readers, however, might have preferred some selectivity and editorial comments as to the relevance (or, in many cases, irrelevance) of the events reported. Be that as it may, although
I was an avid newspaper reader when I lived in Indonesia, I regularly found interesting bits of information in the Newsletter that I had missed or overlooked myself.
The present book reprints, rearranged by topic, the chronicles of the first ten issues of the Newsletter, covering events from 1988 through to September 1993. The news summaries are supplemented by a selection from another rubric in the newsletter, dealing with academic life in the 14 State Institutes for Higher Islamic Learning (IAIN).
The book has the same strengths and weaknesses as the Newsletter, although a 15-page index considerably adds to its usefulness as a reference work.
The years 1988-1993 were a turbulent period in the history of Indonesian Islam, and many Muslims believe that they represented a major turning point in the political fortunes of scripturalist Islam in Indonesia. The establishment of ICMI, the Association of Indonesian Muslim Intellectuals, in 1990 was perhaps the most spectacular development (on the meaning of which opinions are still divided: did it herald a triumph of political Islam, or the ultimate domestication of oppositional Muslims?). The period was also marked by growing tension between Muslims and non-Muslims, exemplified in the Monitor affair in 1990 and the burning down of churches.
Another event of 1990, Saddam Hussein’s occupation of Kuwait, and the American led international effort to force him out, had a considerable impact on Indonesian Muslims and distinctly strengthened their concern with developments in the Middle East. Middle Eastern-type Muslim radicalism, represented by the younger generation of the Dewan Dakwah Islamiyah and an increasingly vocal KISDI (‘Indonesian Committee for Solidarity with the World of Islam’) established a permanent, and publicly tolerated, presence during the early 1990s.
Within Indonesian Islam, however, there were also developments in other directions. Abdurrahman Wahid, the charismatic leader of the traditionalist Muslim organization Nahdlatul Ulama (NU), developed during these same years into a major critic of Soeharto’s rule and the New Order’s authoritarianism. Refusing to join ICMI, he established instead the informal Forum Demokrasi, in which he collaborated with intellectuals of secular and Christian backgrounds. He emerged victorious from the conflicts that this attitude generated within the body of NU. His lasting popularity and influence indicate that the religious tolerance and liberal attitudes that he stands for have a large and stable constituency in Indonesia.
Critical discussion (rather than passive reproduction) of the Islamic tradition, an activity that until recently would have led to virtual excommunication from NU circles, became accepted practice in the organization during the period covered by this book.
Islam in Indonesia resembles a series of snapshots illustrating these developments.
The chapters on ICMI, NU, ‘political aspirations’ and interreligious
relations contain interesting pieces of detailed information. But, as is generally the case with the Indonesian press, the level of noise is so high that it is very hard to discern any message. Unfortunately, the editors have refrained from helping the reader by deciphering coded messages or providing a context for events’ that mean nothing to the uninitiated.
The brief explanations which do appear here and there are hardly adequate and seem to suffer from a form of self-censorship mirroring that of the Indonesian press. (When Probosutedjo makes a donation to ICMI, for example, he is described as ‘a noted Indonesian businessman’, without any reference to the fact that he is Soeharto’s half-brother.) The index, moreover, does not really compensate for
the absence of cross-references between reports.
As in the Indonesian press, Soeharto is omnipresent, fulfilling his religious obligations, addressing various national and international Muslim audiences, patronizing organizations, opening conferences, instructing the United Nations how to deal with the former Yugoslavia, and so on. Muslim leaders are also regularly portrayed in similar roles.
Thus we see KH Ali Yafie, from 1989 until 1992 deputy Rois Am of NU, give numerous talks and express his support for the government, but the nature of the conflict setting him against Abdurrahman Wahid, and the role of ICMI in this conflict, are not even hinted at.
The usefulness of this book is therefore limited. Those who already have a fair amount of background knowledge on contemporary Indonesian Islam may fruitfully use it as a work of reference or read parts of it for a taste of the atmosphere of those years. But readers who look for an introduction to the debates and developments in Indonesian Islam during that period are better advised to read the relevant sections of a superior journalistic work like Adam Schwarz’s A Nation in Waiting; Indonesia in the 1990s (Sydney: Allen and Unwin, 1994) or the perceptive study by Douglas E. Ramage, Politics in Indonesia; Democracy, Islam and the Ideology of Tolerance (London: Routledge, 1995).
Source: KITLV, Bookreviews (The Netherlands)

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Thursday, April 25, 2013

A reliable primary source on Islam in Indonesia

Mona Abaza*
Darul Aqsha, Dick van der Meij, Johan Hendrik Meuleman, Islam in Indonesia: A Survey of Events and Developments from 1988 to 1993. Jakarta, 1995 (Inis Materials 26)
Darul Aqsha, Dick van der Meij and Johan Hendrik Meuleman provide a rich and well documented comphehensive survey about the events related to Islam, politics, education, social and economic life from 1988 to 1993.
Islam in Indonesia is publication by INIS, the Indonesian-Netherlands Cooperation in Islamic Studies, which aims at encouraging the study of Islam in Indonesia.
The merit of such a study is that it has no pretension of presenting any in depth analysis. Instead, it provides detailed information and listing of events that could be used as a reliable primary source.
The content is divided into the following: political aspirations and initiative of the Muslim community, conflicts and protest, government decisions and activities, hajj and umrah, miscellaneous political and social issues, international relations, trials and judicial decisions, economic life. Detailed information about the Majelis Ulama Indonesia, the Muhammadiyah, the Nahdlatul Ulama, the Ikatan Cendekiawan Muslim se-Indonesia, various Muslim organizations, seminars, conferences and scholarly discussions, Islamic education, religious sects, interreligious relations, and obituaries is also provided.
The value of this thick volume of 535 pages is that it supplies sensitive political information about first, Islam and politics in Indonesia as well as the recent events concerning the complex relationship between the Islam of the centre (the Middle East) and the so called peripheries.
For example, the volume provides stimulating details about female Indonesian labour in Saudi Arabia statiung that there are around 250,000 Indonesian women working as household servants and that they are mistreated by their Arab employers (p. 140).
As concerning pilgrimage it states that there is a 40% increase on the preceding year (1990) of pilgrims and that H. Munawir Sjadzali, the Minister of Religious Affairs was nominated as this year’s Amir al-hajj (leader of the Indonesian contingent) (p. 116). Transportation problems are mentioned (p. 119).
ut more important is the event of the second of July, of 1990 when “hundreds of pilgrims were trampled under foot in a tunnel linking the Turkish and Southeast Asian encampments in Mina with jamrah (place of the stone-throwing ritual) at Mina. The overhelming number of people streaming together from either end in this tunnel combined with panic which broke out after the lighting and air-conditiong system broke down were blamed for the accident.
The country most affected was Indonesia: “according ro a report of the Ministry of Religious Affairs of 24 July, 649 Indonesians died in the accident and 11 Indonesian were still missing”. (p. 116). The mismanagement led to the worseninh of the relationship between Saudi Arabia and Indonesia, in particular after that the victims were buried at four different places without any signs og identification. (p. 116)
Furthermore, this volume gives vivid examples of the reality in everyday life. The incidents related to the jilbab (female Islamic attire), instigated the Indonesian government to issue a decree on school uniforms in order toallow female students at public junior and senior high school to wear “special uniforms” the so-called jilbab. (p. 85).
I list a few other events that led to controversies such as the opinion of Muslim organizations and lottery (p. 75), Indonesian television stations criticized for presenting uncensored films and Zionist propaganda. (p. 80)
Ulama’ protest against prostitution; the Sumatra, which involved female senior high school students, have aroused the anger of the provicinal MUI. (in 1991) (p. 74). Muballigh were criticzed for receiving money in “envelopes” after they had delivered lectures. It was considered that this kind of muballigh tended to commercialize religion (p 90). Whether marriage by telephone is legal or not, are all issued mentioned.
For anyone studying Islamic education, or interested in the impact of Arabic language and the programme on Indonesian television (1990) (p. 98), on the promotion of religious awareness in the army (p. 99), on the Shi’a/Sunni controversy, on Islamic banking and debates on Islamic architecture, certainly this book provides reliable material.
The activities of Abdurrahman Wahid, the leader of the Nahdlatul Ulama and the various other political parties are very well covered.
The recent events which occurred at the IAIN Institut Agama Islam Negeri (IAIN, State Institute for Islamic Studies), activities and pesantrens are also comphrehensively covered. For instance, there were 43 Malaysian students at Sumatran IAIN’s (p. 394). Information on the development of religious education on grants, courses, teachers training. Finally, most important are the obituaries, that entail crucial information, biographies of religious and political public figures.
This volume is indeed central for anyone working on contemporary Islam in Indonesia.
*Professor of Sociology, American University in Cairo, Egypt
Welt des Islam, Germany

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