> “If the mayor wants us to return the true Islamic teaching, please ask him 
> what kind of true Islam that he was referring to,” Firdaus said. “If he means 
> true Islam like the FPI, it’s better for us not to be Muslim.”

Hehehe... ga salah yg dibilang si Firdaus ini.

Apa Islam yg benar itu adalah Islam versi FPI? Betul sekali, itulah
Islam yg benar.

Jadi sebaiknya emang keluar aja dr Islam.


http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/news/bekasi-mayor-mui-petition-sby-to-ban-ahmadiyah/

 Bekasi Mayor, MUI Petition SBY to Ban Ahmadiyah
By Jakarta Globe on 11:13 am May 14, 2013.
Category Featured, News
Tags: Ahmadiyah Muslims, Indonesia religious intolerance, West Java
Governor Ahmad Heryawan

Bekasi Mayor Rahmat Effendi and local Islamic leaders will petition
President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono to institute a nationwide ban on
the oppressed Ahmadiyah Muslim sect.

“The request is part of an agreement between Bekasi ulema and the
[local] government who met to discuss the Ahmadiyah today,” Rahmat
told the state-run Antara News Agency on Monday.

The mayor met with the Bekasi chapter of the Indonesian Council of
Ulema (MUI) to hash out a solution to the city’s strained relationship
with its Ahmadiyah community on Monday. The solution, according to
Rahmat, is a complete ban on the religious sect.

The Bekasi MUI threw its support behind the city’s ban on the
Ahmadiyah, demanding that followers renounce their beliefs and convert
to mainstream Islam. Local MUI head Mursyid Kamil urged the central
government to either shut down all Ahmadiyah places of worship or
strip them of Islamic symbols. All Ahmadiyah members should convert to
mainstream Islam, Mursyid said. The Bekasi MUI plans to convert the
sect’s Al Misbah mosque, in Pondok Gede, to mainstream Islam as a way
to promote interfaith harmony, he said.

The Bekasi Public Order Agency (Satpol PP) shuttered the Al Misbah
mosque on April 5, locking at least 20 followers inside the mosque.
The congregation said they planned to remain in the mosque in protest
of the local government’s actions. But the Ahmadiyah, sealed behind a
metal wall erected around the mosque, have struggled with occasional
police interference as officers attempted to prevent community members
from delivering the protestors food.

Rahmat said he didn’t want to hear accusations that the police or
local government had violated the community’s rights.

“We banned Ahmadiyah activities, but it was violated,” he said. “The
20 members who decided to stay inside the mosque, it’s of their own
will, so don’t blame the Bekasi government by saying that it’s a human
rights violation.”

Jemaah Ahmadiyah Indonesia accused Rahmat of only presenting one side
of the meeting. Monday’s discussion was attended by several ulemas
from the Islamic Defenders Front (FPI) and Indonesian Islamic
Preaching Council (DDII), who pushed for harsh sanctions against the
Ahmadiyah, JAI spokesman Firdaus said.

But representatives from both Nahdlatul Ulama and the Muhammadiyah —
the two largest Islamic organizations in Indonesia — were present at
the meeting and offered more moderate solutions.

Firdaus refused to meet the Bekasi mayor and MUI’s demands.

“If the mayor wants us to return the true Islamic teaching, please ask
him what kind of true Islam that he was referring to,” Firdaus said.
“If he means true Islam like the FPI, it’s better for us not to be
Muslim.”

He urged the mayor to sit with the Ahmadiyah community, instead of
hard-line groups, to work out a solution to the issue.

“He wants to ask the president?” Firdaus said. “This is a Democratic
nation. He should sit together and have a discussion with us, to let
people know the real problem. [This is] something he has never done.”

Religious intolerance is a serious issue in West Java, where hard-line
Islamists stage regular assaults on the institutions of religious
minorities. The groups operate without fear of mass arrests and,
seemingly, with tacit support from the local government, critics
alleged. The Wahid Institute recorded 102 cases of intolerance and
violations against religious minorities in 2012. Forty occurred in
West Java.

The province’s Islamist governor Ahmad Heryawan, who won the recent
election by a narrow margin, previously told the Indonesian newspaper
Kompas that the Ahmadiyah’s “deviant belief” will stop causing
problems when “the belief disappears.” He told the Jakarta Globe in an
interview that claims of religious intolerance in West Java were
exaggerated.

“In my opinion this is the most tolerant province. There is no
problem, except in the corners of West Java. The corner of a small
area is where the problems occur, and the situation cannot be
characterized as intolerant,” Ahmad said.


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