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Indonesia, Islam and democracy: A perspective (By: Blake Respini and
Herdi Sahrasad)
Friday, 5 February 2010
The Jakarta Post
There are currently hundreds moderate Muslim organizations in Indonesia,
many of them set up following the fall of President Soeharto in May
1998. The nurturing of these civic organizations may be as important to
the future of Indonesia’s democracy as is the curtailment of extremists.
Furthermore, simple political maturity, such as developing true parties
with accountability and that stand for something beyond personality as
well the development of an educated and experienced electorate should
protect and stabilize Indonesia’s democracy.
However, a critical component of Indonesia’s democratic future involves
recognition of the special role of Islam in the state.
As most Indonesian Muslims want their government to respect Islamic
customs even if they do not support the creation of an Islamic state,
the line between support for and opposition to sharia is often blurred.
Many Indonesians, including those who are only nominally Muslims,
hold conservative values and support strict moral laws without
necessarily seeing them as purely religious- or sharia-based.
It is easy to mistake support for a conservative moral law as support
for Islamism when it is more simply a reflection of basic conservative
values.
By the same token, many Muslims in Indonesia reject some social
arrangements and norms that are commonly associated with democracy in
the West, including our pluralism and secularism. But this too neither
makes them theocrats nor anti-democratic.
While the political debate is often framed by pitting Islamists against
non-Islamists, the lines are really much more subtle than this and
democratic negotiation will require all parties to recognize this so
that they can find common ground.
In this regard, Ahmad Shboul (2005) reminds us that keeping religion out
of politics is not the same as keeping it out of society in general and
that aside from the communists, even the most secular governments of the
Western world have not attempted to do this.
Shboul suggests that the US attempts to secularize Arab politics may
have even resulted in a backlash that has contributed to the growth of
political Islam. Westerners would do well to remember that there is not
only one form democratic society can take.
In fact, we do well to remember that even in the West, notions over what
accruements democracy must have remains in flux and have changed over
time.
As Hefner points out, whereas family was once seen as the central base
of Western culture, today individual freedom is often elevated above
family unity.
Additionally, the very notion of family is being redefined as Ame-ricans
consider a variety of arrangements including domestic partnerships,
civil unions, and gay marriage.
Despite our consensus on many central values there is constant stress in
Western societies over the proper balance of individual right and needs
of the community, equality and freedom, and even the pro-per role of
religion and morality in politics.
Just as various Western democratic societies define each of these
somewhat differently, Muslim democracies are likely to have their own
brand of pluralism.
The debate over the passage of sharia-based legislation reflects that
that Indonesia continues to map out the most central questions
concerning the basic shape of its democracy.
The debate is less a debate about whether sharia is good or bad, but
more about the proper meaning of sharia and its relationship to the
state and thus its relationship to the national ideology of Pancasila.
Ultimately, it reflects a deep debate over the very meaning of the
Indonesian nation and what it means to be Indonesian.
All of us have multiple identities. We may define ourselves as students,
scholars, husbands, wives, athletes, musicians from an array of images
that form our composite selves.
However, for a nation state to succeed it is essential that one of the
imbedded images that a country’s inhabitants hold of themselves is that
of their national identity.
But it is not enough to simply be an American, German, Indonesian or
Turk, for a nation to function it is necessary that one’s national
identity represent some share sense of community, and thus shared
values.
Most nations form out of a long history that creates a shared past.
In most of Western Europe these shared histories have been bound
together by common languages, religions and cultural norms.
Thus, while the Italians and French were both Catholics, the growing
awareness of their differences became an expression of nationalism.
Indonesians similarly may share Islam with others across the globe, but
Islam can fulfill only part of the nationalist vision. Of course this is
especially true in light of the tens of millions of Indonesians who are
not Muslims.
The challenge for Indonesia is to find a place for sharia that neither
subverts the uniqueness of Indonesia from rest of the Islam nor
undermines non-Muslim Indonesians.
Indonesian Islamic scholarship has long and deep ties to the Middle East
that form a strong bond with the rest of the Muslim world and recent
decades have seen what is often called the Islamization or sometimes
even the Arabization of Indonesia.
It would thus be a mistake to dismiss Indonesia as a worthy example of
what the type of democratic society that Islam has produced even if it
would be a mistake to assume that what can work in Indonesia could be
exported to rest of the Islamic world.
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