http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2010/02/21/generational-conflict-muhammadiyah.html


Generational conflict in Muhammadiyah
Ahmad Najib Burhani ,  JAKARTA   |  Sun, 02/21/2010 4:10 PM  |  Opinion 



"People like hamburger, but Muhammadiyah keeps selling gethuk *an Indonesian 
cassava dish*." This is a statement from a prominent leader of the young 
generation of Muhammadiyah in Surakarta, Central Java, who has been accused of 
having inclinations toward a salafist, borrowing the term from Olivier Roy 
(2004), or neofundamentalist orientation. 

For the first time since hearing this statement three years ago, I did not 
assume any deeper meaning or interpretation beyond the opposition between old 
and new. It is only after getting involved in activities and studying the 
religious behavior of various groups in Muhammadiyah, I became aware that the 
difference between "hamburger" and "gethuk" is not simply old versus new 
commodities, or old organizational management in the Muhammadiyah versus a new 
one; it is more about a conflict between old religiosity versus a new one. 

In the first half of the 19th century, there was a bloody conflict in western 
Sumatra between kaum mudo (younger people) and kaum tuo (older people). The 
kaum mudo intended to purify religious beliefs from any external elements such 
as local culture and mysticism. Through this process, they wanted to revive 
Islam so that it could compete with and overcome Western encroachment as had 
happened during the beginning of Islam and in the Middle Ages. 

At the beginning of the 20th century, Ahmad Dahlan (the founder of the 
Muhammadiyah) represented a new generation of Muslim who struggled to revive 
Islam by challenging traditional beliefs. The established order of 
socioreligious life became the subject of criticism because of its 
ineffectiveness and its powerlessness compared to external power. 

On Nov. 25, 2009, the Muhammadiyah, one of Indonesia's biggest Muslim 
organizations, celebrated 100 years of its establishment and the recurrent 
generational conflict between the "old generation" and the "young generation" 
has reappeared in the organization. 

>From our historical records, the younger generations at those times (the 
>beginning of 19th and 20th centuries) are often considered as representing new 
>progressive views against the outdated beliefs of the kaum tuo. They were the 
>champions of change which we are now celebrating. 

In contrast to the perspective of the past younger generations, some activists 
in the Muhammadiyah perceive the current younger generation represents nothing 
but a dangerous view of religion. Is that view coming from our biased 
perspective as members of the older generation or that a real fact? 

In theological discourse, there are two types of younger generation that 
currently exist in the Muhammadiyah: young-salafists and young-progressives. 
Both of them do not feel comfortable and satisfied with the way the older 
people handle the movement and practice religious teachings. 

The conflict between the older generation, which I usually call the "puritan 
group", and the young-salafist group, following the previous comparative 
between hamburger and gethuk, revolves around several issues. 

The former prefers the Indonesian type of Islam, concerned with social-oriented 
religion (e.g. schools, hospitals, and orphanages), has a national and local 
orientation, believes that salvation can be achieved through social activities, 
and praises the achievements of the West and does not hesitate to adopt Western 
innovation. 

Conversely, the young-salafist generation inclines to promote global or 
transnational Islam, believes that there is only one Islam by abandoning 
sociological and anthropological facts about the multiplicity of religious 
practice. They are concerned with personal faith, a ready-made and easily 
accessible set of norms. For them, religion is more about experiencing faith, 
doing rituals, having certainty in life. Islam is more about an individualistic 
religion. 

Different from the salafists, the young-progressive group tends to be elitist. 
Their activities revolve around theological issues. For them, salvation can 
only be reached through intellectual exercises. Freedom of thought is the key 
idea in this context. 

>From these three groups, which one will prevail and determine the face of 
>Islam for the next 10 to 100 years? Which one will dominate the Muhammadiyah? 
>It is difficult to assess and predict. However, there are general tendencies 
>in our society which can be used to analyze the current generational conflict, 
>namely: the elite versus the masses, the social versus the individual, and 
>knowledge versus faith. 

tendency of contemporary religiosity, not only in Indonesia, is against elite, 
social, and knowledge-based religiosity. Only a few people are interested in 
theological debate. What we call a resurgence of religiosity in current times 
is more about an "other-worldly" orientation than a "this-worldly" and social 
orientation. However, social factors are always changing. It is in the hands of 
religious people to determine the future of religiosity. 

The writer is a researcher at the Indonesian Institute of Sciences (LIPI) and 
the Maarif Institute.


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