Selling atheism in the shadow of religious fundamentalism Ary Hermawan ,  
The Jakarta Post ,  Jakarta   |   Thu, 05/29/2008 10:35 AM  |  Potpourri 
  
  A  man browsers the "God and Religion" section of Aksara's Plaza Indonesia 
outlet.  Aksara and other International bookstores in the country, like 
Kinokuniya and  Periplus, sell books on atheism.(JP/Ary Hermawan) 
 Does atheism sell in Indonesia, the world's largest Muslim country and home  
to such bigoted religionists as the Bali bombers? 
 Will it ever have a place in a "God-fearing" society whose forefathers had  
unanimously decided to place the Abrahamic doctrine of the Unity of God as its  
first national credo? 
 The default answer would be unsurprisingly "no". Atheism books like Richard  
Dawkins' The God Delusion, Sam Harris' The End of Faith or  Christopher 
Hitchens' God is Not Great may have been on the bestselling  charts somewhere 
else and can now be spotted in nearly all international  airports, but the top 
local publishers have no interest in bringing these books  to local bookstores. 
 Kepustakaan Populer Gramedia (KPG), which publishes the Indonesian  
translation of River out of Eden, a book by the card-carrying atheist  Dawkins 
who happens to be an excellent writer on popular science, had considered  
translating The God Delusion, but abandoned the idea. 
 "We thought about it last year and we decided that it was too provocative,"  
Candra Gautama, the publisher's editor in chief, said. 
 KPG, however, plans to publish The Selfish Gene, Dawkins' book that  has now 
become a classic in popular science literature. Gautama said the book,  despite 
its apparent atheistic tone, did not explicitly support atheism.  Dawkins, he 
argued, is only explaining how evolution works; it has nothing to do  with the 
question of the existence or non-existence of God. 
 "The other reason why we don't publish the book (The God Delusion)  is that in 
it Dawkins, as a scientist, does not provide us with compelling  scientific 
arguments," he said. 
 Serambi, a small publisher that has enjoyed sizable profits from selling the  
translation of Dan Brown's controversial novel, The Da Vinci Code -- a  golden 
opportunity passed out by the giant Catholic-leaning publisher Gramedia  Group 
-- said it had invited experts and readers alike to discuss the  possibility of 
publishing Dawkins' book. The conclusion they reached was that  the public was 
not yet ready to accept such an offensive book. 
 "We fear that people won't even read the book as there is already prejudice  
against it. We actually have no problem with its content and even think that it 
 could actually enlighten people to reexamine their faith," Serambi's editor in 
 chief, Qomaruddin SF, said. 
 The book, he predicted, was unlikely to gain considerable success in the  
Indonesian book market, while Serambi, as a commercial publisher, had to seek a 
 balance between the margins of its idealism and, of course, profits. 
 The country's biggest Islamic publisher, Mizan, which offers books containing  
progressive thoughts in Islam, is not interested at all in publishing books 
that  "attack religions". 
 "There is no use in publishing those books for the public. They can of course  
be used as an intellectual exercise for a small number of readers, and I think  
their availability in English editions at some local bookstores is enough," the 
 publisher's founder, Haidar Bagir, said. 
 As a Muslim scholar, Bagir sees the new wave of books on atheism as a sign of  
frustration of the anti-religion thinkers who predicted that religions would  
naturally disappear in the twenty first century, and who are now facing what  
appears to be the opposite: Religions persist and there are more people  
returning to their faiths. 
 "We, on the contrary, publish books that counter the arguments of atheists,"  
he said, adding that Mizan tried to be consistent with its mission: Religious  
propagation and education. 
 If Mizan was to publish books critical of religions, it would only consider  
the works of a sympathetic author like Karen Armstrong, a former nun who calls  
herself a "freelance monotheist". Her books, such as The Battle for God  
(translated into Berperang Demi Tuhan), Bagir said, had been selling  well in 
the past few years. 
 While the answer is -- for different reasons and degrees of rejection -- "no"  
for the big players, the smaller publishing companies are taking all the risks  
to say "yes". 
 Pustaka Alvabet, a Jakarta-based publishing company, said it had secured the  
right to publish The God Delusion, of which Dawkins claimed, "If this  book 
works as I intend, religious readers who open it will be atheists when they  
put it down." 
 The publisher is now preparing to release Sam Harris' A Letter to A  Christian 
Nation (translated into Surat Terbuka Kepada Bangsa Kristen)  and has already 
published Spiritualitas Tanpa Tuhan (The Little  Book of Atheist Spirituality 
by French writer Andre Comte-Sponville), which  advocates atheism. 
 "We are looking for the right moment for its release," Zulkifli A.H., the  
publisher's editor in chief, said, suggesting that it could be by the end of  
this year or early next year. 
 He said the company was aware of all the risks; being accused of advocating  
atheism, being attacked by the beleaguered religionists, especially those who  
liked to mob buildings and burn books in the name of, sadly, God, or getting 
the  books banned by the government. 
 Yet, he is upbeat that the atheism books the company sells will not face  
severe resistance from the public or the government like communist and Marxist  
books, which are considered by many as politically threatening. "So far, no one 
 has protested Sponville's book," he said. 
 He did not expect, of course, that anti-religion books would sell like hot  
cakes -- especially since books on atheism seem to mock the whole nation for  
believing in Pancasila, the first article of which is, according to Dawkins and 
 his allies, nothing but a delusion. 
 "We dare to publish those books because we think we have to. In the past  
decade, we have seen that religion, any religion, is being used to justify a 
lot  of atrocities. 
 "In Islam, we all know, there is terrorism. Meanwhile, the foreign policies  
made by such developed countries as the U.S., especially when dealing with Iraq 
 and Afghanistan, are undeniably influenced by certain theological  
considerations," he said. 
 Zulkifli considers books by stringent atheist authors like Dawkins, Hitchens  
and Harris as "enlightening" as well as "inspiring" critiques on religion. He  
said such books needed to be advertised appropriately, but admitted that it  
would not be an easy task. 
 "I think the most important thing we need to do in the Reform era is first  
give the public access to any kind of information, including atheism," he said. 
 Harris' The End of Faith was translated and published last year  under the 
title Terbenamnya Iman: Teror dan Masa Depan Nalar by Pustaka  Pelajar, a 
publisher in Yogyakarta. The circulation was, however, so limited  that it 
virtually went unnoticed. 
 Local English bookstore Aksara said it never had a problem selling books on  
atheism, which were placed in its stores' "religion" section. 
 "We always refer to the New York Times best-seller list in determining the  
books we'd like to offer. We don't promote certain ideas, of course. But as 
long  as they encourage a healthy discussion, we would provide them here," 
Penny  Purnawati, the bookstore's marketing manager, said. 
 Those books, however, are never on the bookstore's best-selling list,  
although, she said, "they have their own consumers." 
 The God Delusion and John Connor's The Atheist Bible may  have surpassed the 
other titles in the genre, but they, even at Aksara,  according to Penny, could 
not compete with Habiburrahman El-Shirazy's  Ayat-ayat Cinta or Lakmis 
Pamuntjak's Jakarta Good Food Guide. 
  

==========================================
Pustaka Alvabet
Ciputat Mas Plaza Blok B/AD
Jl. Ir. H. Juanda No. 5A, Ciputat
Jakarta Selatan Indonesia 15411
Telp. +62 21  7494032, 
Fax. +62 21 74704875
www.alvabet.co.id


       

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