http://www.thejakartapost.com/detaileditorial.asp?fileid=20071109.F04&irec=3

An inconvenient truth of religion 

Ahmad Junaidi, Jakarta

Today, followers of various religions in Indonesia tend to view freedom and 
those different from them with a sense of unfriendliness and differences, as 
evident in the recent attack on al-Qiyadah al-Islamiyah sect members and the 
detention of its leaders.

In marketing, differentiation can be a key strategy to winning market 
competition, but in religion, here, it could lead one to police detention. 

The violence against al-Qiyadah is believed to be triggered by a fatwa 
(religious edict) issued by the Indonesian Ulema Council (MUI) which declared 
the sect a deviant. The Attorney General's Office has banned the sect 
nationwide. 

It was not the first fatwa of its kind. MUI has released many edicts which 
labeled other groups as heretical. Some of the fatwas triggered violent attacks 
on the sects' members, as in the case of Ahmadiyah. 

Activists of the Islamic Liberal Network (JIL) reportedly received death 
threats after the MUI issued an edict forbidding liberalism, pluralism and 
secularism in 2005. 

For Muslim intellectuals a fatwa, which is not binding anyway, often means 
nothing, but for radicals it's like a license to kill. 

An edict is just an opinion of a group of ulemas without any legal consequence. 
But the grassroots, particularly simple-minded followers, perceive an edict as 
an order from ulemas who they consider representatives of God. They will fight 
it out to make other people obey the fatwa. 

Unfortunately, the state could not really protect their citizens from the 
radicals. State apparatus have often come under pressure from religious groups. 

MUI leaders have denied responsibility for the violent reaction to its edicts, 
saying it has never suggested in the fatwa that Muslims should take law into 
their own hands. But the facts speak differently. Many hardliners even 
campaigned to assassinate "deviant groups" after reading the edict. 

History has taught that after the death of the Prophet Muhammad, many Muslim 
leaders were killed after groups of ulemas accused them of defying Allah and 
the Prophet. 

Until now, many traditional ulemas have hobbies to stamp out groups or 
individuals as infidels. Hardliners still believe that infidels deserve the 
death sentence. They pretend to forget the Koran which says la ikraha fiddiin 
(there is no coercion in the religion). 

The verse on freedom of religion was divulged when a friend of Muhammad 
complained to the prophet about his children who converted to Christianity, 
while at the time (Medina period) Muslims made up the majority in the Arab 
land. 

To justify their hostility against freedom of religion, the ulemas used to 
refer to another verse on a fight against infidels which was revealed later. 
None of them seemed to read the context of the verse, which was more a 
political solution to challenges to Islam. 

Young Muslim intellectual Muhammad Guntur Romli in his recently launched book 
Ustadz, Saya Sudah di Surga (Teacher, I'm in Heaven Already) views the 
narrow-minded scriptural method is also advanced by convicted terrorist Imam 
Samudra and his accomplices when they exploded Bali and killed more than 200 
people in 2002. 

Some of the terrorists have sent video recordings to their religious teachers 
and relatives, saying or reporting they were already in heaven when teachers 
and relatives watched the recordings. 

Certain media even made the convicted terrorists, who are on a death row, 
symbols of heroism in recent reports. 

Which is more dangerous, killing people in God's name or declaring a new 
prophet? 

Still smiling, the terrorists expressed their beliefs they would get to heaven 
for defending the religion from the infidels. They were referring to the United 
States, Australia and other prosperous countries as the enemies of Muslims. 

We never heard MUI declaring terrorist groups deviant or infidels, instead of 
just stating that the groups had mistakenly interpreted the concept of jihad or 
holy war. 

The new "prophet", Ahmad Moshadeq, reportedly did not oblige his followers to 
pray five times a day, fast and perform a haj pilgrimage -- rituals which might 
be considered heavy burdens among many common Muslims. 

Most of Moshadeq's fans are youths and students who might see many examples in 
the society that many Muslims still committed corruption although they 
conducted all the prayers, fasting and even, going to Mecca several times. 

The ulemas should not be worried much about the teachings of Moshadeq and other 
prophets. Through the natural selection, the thoughts would vanish if they 
could not fulfill the people's needs. 

Instead of branding other people as infidels, the preachers might be better to 
make self introspection and reviewing their teachings. Probably, they have 
taught an imbalance between ritual obligation and social devotion. 

They should teach their followers that fighting against corruption is the same 
important as conducting the rituals. Corruption and conflicts, according to 
Nobel Prize winning economist Joseph Stiglitz in his book Making Globalization 
Work, has trapped Indonesia in the so-called Natural Resource Curse, a country 
with rich natural resources but large poor population. 

Changing the curse into blessing could not be materialized only through 
praying. Settling the conflicts through peaceful dialog and addressing 
corruption through transparency and legal enforcement are ways to make the 
country blessed and prosperous. 

But hoping and waiting for the ulemas to change their mind would take too much 
time. The situation will worsen and become out of hand. For the time being, the 
state, through its law enforcers, should take firm actions against people who 
perpetrate violence. 

The writer is a journalist at The Jakarta Post. He can be reached at [EMAIL 
PROTECTED]

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