----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Taken from : *( http://www.let.uu.nl/~Martin.vanBruinessen/personal/publications/State-Islam.htm#_ftn15 )* * *Martin van Bruinessen : *ISLAMIC STATE OR STATE ISLAM? FIFTY YEARS OF STATE-ISLAM RELATIONS IN INDONESIA*
The most emotional issue over which the Council and the ummah have been at odds in recent years was the government-sponsored soccer tote, Porkas ('forecast') and its successor of other names. In practice this tote, which was started in 1986, functioned as a lottery and provided Indonesia's only legal form of gambling. Muslim protest was immediate, with preachers all over the country demanding a ban of Porkas. Both the Muhammadiyah and the NU declared it a form of gambling and therefore haram ('forbidden'). Several provincial Ulama Councils followed suit, and asked the government to stop the tote. The central MUI long kept silent, considering it a matter on which the ulama's legal opinion was divided. But it finally sent a carefully phrased letter to the Coordinating Minister of Social Welfare (the former Minister of Religion, General Alamsyah), not condemning the tote on religious grounds but asking the government to 'review' its policy considering its negative social impact. The head of the MUI's fatwa committee, Prof. Ibrahim Hosen, had meanwhile produced *arguments* to the effect *that * *the form of gambling forbidden by Islam, maysir * *(a gambling-match between two persons in which one's gain is the other's loss), differed in kind from lottery, so that Porkas was permissible. *This produced an outcry from committed Muslims. Independent ulama refuted Hosen's arguments and issued fatwa condemning the tote. The government made it clear it intended to continue the Porkas because it needed its considerable contribution to the budget for sports and youth affairs. Several leading members of the MUI were known to have very strong feelings about the Porkas privately, but they refrained from raising their voices in spite of continuing pressure from all Muslim circles to take a clear stand. More than anything else, the Porkas affair has caused the MUI the loss of the confidence of large segments of the Muslim community. -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------