Islam in Indonesia
Author
: Jajat Burhanudin and Kees van Dijk
Subject
: Islamic law, Majelis Mujahidin Indonesia, Islamic
reformism, Dakwah radio, traditional Islam
An Indonesian
Publisher
: Amsterdam University Press
Summary :In recent years, the way Islam manifests itself in Indonesia has
changed. As elsewhere in the Muslim world, there is stricter adherence
to Islam, and fundamentalism has gained strength. An increasing
number of Indonesian Muslims are observing the tenets of their religion
more faithfully. More people fulfil the hajj, one of the basic pillars
of Islam, and an increasing number of women wear a headscarf, sometimes
a very fashionable one. These women include members of a segment
of society that used to be considered the embodiment of secularism
and syncretism, known in Indonesia as the abangan.
National surveys confirm this trend. In the last ten years or so, Muslims
in Indonesia have become more religious in their attitudes and
practices. The use of rituals associated with abangan culture has decreased,
to be replaced by those of more observant Muslims, the santri.
As a result, Islamic symbols and elements can be seen everywhere in
Indonesian public life, including in liberal and capitalist institutions
such as company offices and shopping malls.
The increasing emphasis on Islam is also reflected in the shifting
position of fundamentalist groups. Since Suharto was forced to step
down in the late 1990s, Indonesia has witnessed a growing religious
militancy. Not only have the militants increased in number, but they
are also more actively engaged in missionary activities among fellow
Muslims. Various radical organisations have emerged, including the
FPI (Front Pembela Islam, Front of the Defenders of Islam), the
MMI (Majelis Mujahidin Indonesia, Indonesian Council of Jihad
Fighters) and the Laskar Jihad (Jihad Force). With a militant agenda
of purifying Islam, these organisations are engaged in a series of violent
acts against others, creating concern among moderate Muslims,
who still form a majority in Indonesia. Their aspiration is to implement
Islamic law in the public sphere, which in Indonesia is supposed
to be religiously neutral
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