April 06, 2007  SLIDING TOWARDS CONSERVATIVE ISLAM  Indonesia's Secular State 
under Siege  By Jürgen Kremb
  Indonesia is a nominally secular democracy. But the influence of conservative 
Islam is gaining in the world's biggest Muslim country. A further step away 
from tolerance may be just around the corner.
   
   
        
  
         
  AP
  A group of conservative Muslims protests against the acquittal of Playboy 
editor-in-chief Erwin Arnada on Thursday.



  It is Saturday afternoon in Kemang, the garish bar district in the Indonesian 
capital Jakarta. The young patrons partying at poolside on the roof deck of the 
trendy restaurant "Edge" enjoy a panoramic view of the entire southern part of 
the city. The only reminder that these partygoers are unwinding in the world's 
largest Muslim country is the muezzin's call to prayer at a nearby mosque. 
   
  
  Well-off models, successful trendsetters, designers and young filmmakers make 
up the guest list, and everyone is in high spirits, at least until Izabel 
Jahja, 30, speaks up. Wearing a tiny bikini, she raises her glass of red wine 
in a toast and says: "Let's enjoy life, as long as our country continues to 
allow it."
   
  Jahja, the self-confident editor-in-chief of glossy magazine A-Plus, is dead 
serious. The Indonesian parliament has been debating a more stringent 
anti-pornography law for months. If the law is passed, it will ban a lot more 
than X-rated books and movies. In fact, it would spell the end of parties like 
this one, would make public kissing illegal and would mean prison time for 
anyone bold enough to wear "lascivious clothing." Theater, the cinema, painting 
and music, would likewise be curtailed, just as they are today in many 
countries of the Middle East. "We are on the brink of a comprehensive 
Islamicization of Indonesia," says Jahja.
   
  For years, radical Islamists have taken advantage of the democracy gained 
after the 1998 ouster of former Indonesian dictator Suharto to question that 
very democracy, all in the name of piety. A cultural war has broken out between 
the supporters and opponents of religious fundamentalism, a struggle that could 
deeply change this country and its traditionally softer brand of Islam.
   
  A brutal spectacle 
   
  With 221 million inhabitants, of which 194 million are Muslims, the island 
nation is not only Southeast Asia's most populous country, but is also home to 
the world's largest Muslim population. And that population looks to be growing 
increasingly devout. Significantly more women wear the headscarf today than a 
decade ago, and the number of Indonesians making the pilgrimage to Mecca grows 
year after year. Alcoholic beverages are disappearing from the shelves of 
supermarkets, and in some places those who violate the Islamic ban on alcohol 
already face public whipping -- a brutal spectacle that is even broadcast on 
local television stations.
  
  Since two bombs killed 202 people, most of them Western tourists, at the Kuta 
beach resort on the island of Bali in the fall of 2002, Islamist terrorists 
have repeatedly attacked Western targets at the same time of the year, 
prompting Indonesians to refer to autumn as "bomb season." Al-Qaida, which is 
clearly allied with local extremists, has identified the country as a 
battlefield of the future. 
   
  
  While the country's secular president, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, may be tough 
on terrorists, there is little he can do to stop the Islamists from gaining 
political ground. The winner of the struggle between proponents of a secular 
state and radical imams calling for a theocracy stands to capture a valuable 
prize -- one of the world's most strategically important countries. All major 
shipping routes connecting Europe and East Asia pass through the waters off 
this island nation. It is precisely here, in this archipelago between the 
Straits of Malacca and the Celebes Sea, that a new front in the battle of 
cultures is emerging.
   
  That she would be assuming a pivotal role in this struggle is something the 
beautiful Izabel Jahja, once one of Indonesia's most successful models, would 
never have expected.
   
  A poster on display at the Jakarta Biennale art festival two years ago -- 
depicting Jahja in the nude, but in a rather modest pose, with well-known actor 
Anjasmara -- set off a furor among radical Islamists from the Islamic Defenders 
Front (FPI), who stormed the event. They demanded that the "work of 
pornography" be removed, and threatened to kill Jahja and the actor if their 
demands were not met. But when Jahja filed a complaint against the radicals, 
she was the one who was arrested. Only after civil rights groups protested her 
arrest was she released.
   
  Too much Western decadence 
   
  Islamic Defenders Front founder Habib Rizieq, 41, is proud of the actions 
taken by his supporters. He wears a white turban and a long kaftan, clearly 
imitating his Saudi teachers; he spent 10 years living in the Saudi capital 
Riyadh. The only decoration in his sparsely furnished office in eastern Jakarta 
is a portrait of terrorist leader Osama bin Laden. Rizieq is convinced that he 
too is on a holy mission. His struggle, he says, is directed against the 
Western decadence he insists is inundating "Indonesia's great culture."
   
  The FPI's roughly 3,000 activists, dressed in white, have become almost as 
audacious in public as Iran's Revolutionary Guards or Malaysia's religious 
police. The group besieged the offices of Playboy magazine in Jakarta until the 
publication gave in and moved to Bali, a liberal vacation paradise. 
Editor-in-chief Erwin Arnada was acquitted on Thursday of disseminating 
indecent pictures to the public with the court referring to Indonesian media 
laws passed in the wake of Suharto's downfall.
   
  
         
  Getty Images
  Recent outrage has been directed at Playboy magazine. But conservative dress 
has become the enforced norm for women across the country.



   
  Despite the decision, groups like the FPI have little to worry about when it 
comes to the police; and the extremists and their demands have long been 
acceptable in the Indonesian parliament. Hidayat Nur Wahid, for example, former 
head of the Justice Welfare Party (PKS) -- a party modeled after the Egyptian 
Muslim Brotherhood and the Palestinian Hamas -- is speaker of Indonesia's 
parliament, the People's Consultative Assembly. In Indonesia's splintered party 
structure, the PKS captured 7.3 of the vote in the 2004 elections, garnering 45 
seats in the parliament. Hidayat, who earned a doctorate at the University of 
Medina in Saudi Arabia, and his party are actively involved in social work, and 
hold themselves up as religious examples. The party wants to see Sharia law 
introduced countrywide. 
   
  
  In a country that has been at the losing end of globalization, the salient 
causes of Indonesia's religious conservative shift are economic. With foreign 
investment on the decline (it dropped by more than a third last year alone) and 
regional competitors like Singapore, Vietnam and Malaysia booming, Indonesia 
has never truly recovered from the Asian financial crisis. For the roughly 42 
percent of the population living on less than $2 a day, a strict religious 
order promises support.
   
   
  But not everyone welcomes the advance of the Islamists. "If the 
anti-pornography law is enacted, it will be a political catastrophe for our 
country," says Eva Sundari, a member of parliament who sits on the legal 
committee. Until now religious tolerance has been a distinguishing feature of 
Indonesia, a nation scattered across more than 18,000 islands. Under the 
so-called Pancasila, or "Five Principles," instituted by the country's founder 
Sukarno, the government expressly guarantees freedom of religion.
   
  Sundari is wearing a short, pleated skirt and a tight T-shirt. "The radicals 
want to force Indonesia to take on a different face," says Sundari. But despite 
her combative stance, Sundari senses that she is increasingly supporting a 
losing cause. "There are days," she says, "when the PKS representatives in the 
committee simply start speaking Arabic" -- in lieu of the official national 
language Indonesian. When that happens she leaves the room in protest, which at 
least temporarily prevents the committee from adopting resolutions. But the 
PKS, as the unstable government's coalition partner, is in demand these days. 
"If President Yudhoyono wants to be re-elected," says Syafi'i Anwar, director 
of the Jakarta-based International Centre for Islam and Pluralism. "He'll need 
the Islamists to get his majority." Yudhoyono's party holds only about 10 
percent of seats in the parliament, while the other major parties plan to put 
up their own candidates in the presidential election two
 years from now.
   
   
  
       
  AP
  Shariah law is enforced in many parts of Indonesia. Here, a woman is publicly 
caned in Banda Aceh.


  In other words, an increase of conservative Islam influence seems 
unavoidable, but just how far the process will ultimately go remains a 
question. It is being spurred on by imams from Saudi Arabia who preach 
Wahhabism, a particularly strict form of Islam. Every year they flood Indonesia 
with millions of free books that promote their interpretation of the Koran with 
mosques and the religious boarding schools known as pesantras gratefully 
accepting the literature. Riyadh also selectively hands out grants to radicals 
from the Islamic universities, including people like FPI founder Rizieq. 
   
  
  But even the government feels uneasy about all this missionary zeal. "In the 
past there was no question that our country stood for openness," says former 
journalist Yenny Zannuba Wahid, 32. "Today we must increasingly justify our 
openness to the West."
   
  Yenny is one of Indonesia's most politically influential women. When her 
father, the blind Islamic scholar Abdurrahman Wahid, better known by the name 
Gus Dur, was president from 1999 to 2001, she was his right hand. Today Yenny 
is an advisor to President Yudhoyono and heads a center for inter-religious 
dialogue. She is also one of the leaders of her father's party, the political 
voice of the country's largest Muslim association Nahdlatul Ulama, with its 
30-million members.
   
  Victim of the United States 
   
  Yenny wears a silvery green silk scarf over her hair to suggest a headscarf. 
Without the jilbab, admits Yenny, who was educated in the West, she would no 
longer be accepted, not even in her organization, which is considered liberal. 
"The religious agenda is shaping more and more areas of daily life," she says. 
She is especially concerned by the fact that the radicals are far more 
successful in rural parts of the country than in urban centers.
   
  Central Java is one of those rural areas. It's evening in Solo, and Imam Abu 
Bakar Ba'asyir, an elderly man with a handlebar moustache, leads the prayers in 
the house of a well-known publisher who specializes in schoolbooks. More than 
500 prominent citizens in this old city of Sultans are in attendance, their 
Mercedes and BMW limousines lined up outside the villa.
   
  Intelligence agencies are convinced that Ba'asyir heads the terrorist group 
Jemaah Islamiyah. He also runs Al-Mukmin, an Islamic school on the city's 
outskirts where many of the October 2002 attackers were educated. He acquired 
even more respect at home when, despite strong objections from the West, he was 
pardoned after being imprisoned for almost two years on charges of conspiracy. 
"The emir is merely the victim of the anti-Islamic policies of the United 
States and Australia," says the publisher and host, defending his prominent 
guest.
   
  Ba'asyir wants to re-establish the caliphate -- the Islamic form of 
government which once united the Muslim world. And in some parts of Indonesia, 
other aspects of conservative Muslim rule have already been put in place. The 
province of Aceh at Indonesia's northwestern tip, devastated by the Indian 
Ocean tsunami in December 2004, has been administered by Sharia law since 2001. 
At the time, the government granted the deeply religious region this special 
right to prevent Aceh from seceding. But nowadays the only ones in Aceh who 
monitor compliance with the religious rules are radical clerics.
   
   
  
       
  REUTERS
  Playboy may be off the hook for now, but a new law requiring conservative 
dress is making its way through Indonesian parliament.


  When women refuse to wear headscarves, their heads are shaved in public as 
punishment. An adulteress has already been stoned. And the boyfriend of a 
French aid worker who was recently caught kissing her in a car was subjected to 
the humiliation of a public caning. 
   
  
  Aceh stopped being an exception long ago. More than 60 regional 
administrative bodies throughout the country have already established their own 
religious rules. One of them is Padang, a large city in western Sumatra where 
schoolgirls, female university students and female public servants have been 
required to wear headscarves for some time. Fauzi Bahar, the city's 44-year-old 
mayor and a former member of the Indonesian navy, has even barred Christian 
restaurant owners from opening their businesses in the daytime during the 
Muslim fasting month of Ramadan.
   
  Harmless soap operas 
   
  And in Tangerang, a large city just west of Jakarta, special police units 
patrol the streets every night searching for women they believe to be 
prostitutes. Their victims are promptly thrown into reformatories.
   
  That was how Lilies Lindawati, a 35-year-old teacher, ended up in police 
custody. A mother of two and pregnant with a third, she was picked up as she 
was walking home from work in the evening. As evidence of her supposedly amoral 
way of life, the police cited the fact that they found lipstick in her purse.
   
  The mistake was discovered and Tangerang's mayor apologized to Lindawati. But 
the discussion on Muslim morality triggered by the incident spread quickly to 
the capital. Anjasmara, the actor photographed with a nude Jahja for the 
controversial poster, apologized to the radical Islamists of the FPI for the 
transgression and promptly denounced "Western decadence." Since then he has 
only appeared on Indonesia's TV screens in harmless soap operas.
  Translated from the German by Christopher Sultan 
  

   
  
http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,476068,00.html

 
---------------------------------
Don't get soaked.  Take a quick peek at the forecast 
 with theYahoo! Search weather shortcut.

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

Kirim email ke