THE JAKARTA POST ttg FFI

http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2008/04/17/when-cross-and-crescent- 
clash-web.html 

When the cross and the crescent clash on the web 
Ary Hermawan , The Jakarta Post , Jakarta | Thu, 04/17/2008 11:17 AM | 
Potpourri 

 
Bloggers gather at the Blogger Party 2007 at the Blitz Megaplex, in Grand 
Indonesia, Central Jakarta, in this file photo. It was estimated that the 
number of Indonesian bloggers has reached 247, 000 this year. (JP/Ary Hermawan) 

... 

The heated debate between the two faiths, whose followers now account for half 
of the world's population, is not only ancient, but also a global digital 
phenomenon. One can easily find apologetic sites such as answeringislam.com or 
answeringchristianity.com on the web. 

Interestingly, one will find it difficult to trace similar sites by the 
followers of other faiths such as Judaism, Hinduism and Buddhism. 

Indonesia Faithfreedom.Org, which is linked to the popular anti-Islam website 
Faith Freedom International, is one Indonesian language site that belligerently 
posts offensive articles on Islam. 

A number of local Muslim bloggers have created sites to counter the site's 
accusations, some of which are no less hostile than the site they combat. 

Blogging is nearly as easy as writing a diary on which almost every subject is 
permissible, breaking all the social taboos of the offline world: A high school 
student and an overseas PhD candidate have the same opportunity to speak their 
mind. 

This condition paves the way for an open debate between Muslims and Christians, 
which is no longer exclusively practiced by theologians and religious scholars. 
Saints or bigots, the learned or the laity, they are all allowed to join the 
frenzy. 

Does this new form of dialogue foster a better understanding between the two 
sides? 

Irwan, who chooses to remain anonymous when blogging from his Blackberry, said 
he had lost interest in discussing theology on the Internet. 

"Being anonymous, people can express their ideas more freely, but they can also 
commit acts of cowardice. They just do not respect the opinions of other 
people," he told The Jakarta Post. 

Instead of achieving a mutual understanding, he said, a number of religious 
blogs have been filled by hate speeches and the comment forums have turned into 
a warfare where the so-called believers can cowardly cast aspersions against 
other faiths. 

"From my experience, it is more effective if we have a face-to-face dialogue," 
he said. 

The concept of the Trinity is apparently too subtle to grasp for a young Muslim 
blogger who neither reads the Bible in its original languages (Hebrew and 
Greek), nor is trained in philosophy and the methods of multilayered exegesis 
of the Scriptures. 

Meanwhile, Christians can easily find references on the ugly faces of Islam to 
verbally attack the religion. 

Catholic priest Beni Susetyo said he did not consider the intense religious and 
theological debates on the net as positive, and refused to regard it as a form 
of "interfaith dialogue". 

"They are mostly people who have a narrow understanding of religion. They think 
other people are their competitors. What they say is nothing but rubbish," he 
said. 

With the enactment of the new cyber law and the recent blocking of YouTube and 
a number of sites by the government following the Fitna controversy, the 
question arises whether offensive sites should also be blocked; something that 
bloggers in general are now fearing. 

A lecturer on communication studies at the University of Indonesia, Ade 
Armando, said the existence of such provocative religious sites was inevitable 
as the Internet provided almost absolute freedom to its users. 

"We cannot let the state interfere," he said, adding that "for good reasons, 
freedom on the web should be upheld and supported." 

He argued that not all religious bloggers were zealots and provocative, and a 
blogger named Ahmad was not necessarily a Muslim nor did he represent Islam. 

"The bloggers have their own code of ethics and this matter is actually very 
much related to their conscience," said Armando, now editor in chief of Islamic 
magazine Madina. 

A blogger who uses the pseudonym Danalingga writes on his blog that posting and 
discussing religious matters is a good thing, but that bloggers must have the 
right attitude; that the opinions of others could be right or wrong. 

Both Armando and Susetyo believe the impact of sites containing hate speeches 
will not affect the coexistence of Christian and Muslim communities, because 
the number of people who have access to the internet in Indonesia is 
insignificant. 

The number of bloggers, however, continue to increase in line with the growing 
information and technology industry. According to Blogspot profiles, there are 
at least 600 new Indonesian bloggers per day. 

In addition to international weblog providers such as Blogspot, Wordpress, 
Multiply, Facebook and MySpace, a local weblog provider, Dagdigdug.com, has 
recently been launched to lure new local bloggers. 
http://dagdigdug.com



mediacare
http://www.mediacare.biz


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Reply via email to