Indonesian
political Islam fails again
Saidiman Ahmad ; The writer, a student at the Crawford School of Public Policy at
Australian National University, was editor of Pembaharuan tanpa
apologia? Esai-esai tentang Ahmad
Wahib (Reform without apology? Essays on Ahmad Wahib, 2010)
|
JAKARTA
POST, 16 April 2014
The
legislative election has again shown how political Islam has failed in
Indonesia.
This
failure, as cited by Olivier Roy in 1992, highlights how Islamic ideology has
been eroded day by day in the Muslim world. This does not mean that all
Islamic political parties will collapse. They may still dominate the result
of the elections, but not because of their Islamic ideology.
Compared
to their achievements in 1995, the performance of Islamic political parties
in terms of vote percentage has decreased by more than half. In the three
last elections, they only gained about 13 to 15 percent of the popular vote.
Such parties referred to here are limited to those using an Islamic ideology
at their foundation. Even though they have an Islamic community base, the
National Awakening Party (PKB) and the National Mandate Party (PAN) cannot be
included as Islamic parties because of their basic principles, which include
the state ideology of Pancasila instead of Islam.
Islamic
political parties have tended to tone down their ideological stance during
political campaigns. The Prosperous Justice Party (PKS) even invited a church
choir to sing its anthem. It also proposed some non-Muslim figures as
legislative candidates, located its national conference in Bali, and so on.
The
discourse on an Islamic state has disappeared from all Islamic political
parties’ campaigns, replaced by issues linked to economic and national
independence, bureaucratic reform and the fight against corruption.
Most
Indonesians do not support issues on the Islamic political agenda such as the
prohibition on women running for president, amputations for thieves and the
mandatory wearing of headscarves, as cited by political researchers Saiful
Mujani and William Liddle.
The most
popular argument about democratization in Indonesia is related to moderate
Islam in the country. Greg Fealy and Sally White use the term “indigenized”
Islam or “Indonesianized” Islam to show how pre-existing religions and
culture in Indonesia infiltrate and shape a new form of Islam — “Indonesian
Islam”.
The role
of Muslim intellectuals has also been identified as a significant element
supporting democracy and the idea of freedom. Greg Barton classified several
intellectuals as “liberal Muslims”, arguing they had developed a progressive
form of Islamic political thought that subsequently became the foundation for
democratic building in Indonesia.
Another
argument relates to the role of Islamic civil society. Michael Buehler, for
instance, argues that the fragmentation of Islamic authority in Indonesia’s
civil society is the main reason why Islam and democracy can live together in
the country.
In
general, Muslim countries do not have very different experiences in terms of
the indigenization of Islam, the fragmentation of Islamic authority and the
existence of Muslim liberal scholars.
The
difference of Indonesia is that Muslim-democratic scholars spread their ideas
about democracy and freedom through organizations. They institutionalize
their Islamic progressive ideas. There are four long-established Islamic
institutions that can be provided as examples here: Muhammadiyah, Nahdlatul
Ulama (NU), State Islamic University (UIN) and the Islamic Students
Association (HMI).
Muhammadiyah
is a Muslim modernist organization from which several progressive Muslim
thinkers have emerged. Muhammadiyah has thousands of schools transmitting the
progressive ideas of their leaders. Another scholar of Islam, Nakamura
(2012), explains that the establishment of Muhammadiyah was not only
representative of the Muslim organization in the modern era, but also as a
social and intellectual explosion.
NU,
meanwhile, is one of the world’s largest Muslim organizations with about 60
million members. Known as a traditionalist organization, NU can accommodate
local cultures and has played a big role in moderate Islam in Indonesia,
through its many progressive Muslim thinkers and its thousands of Islamic
boarding schools (pesantren).The other institutions, the 14 Islamic state
universities across the country, have been established since 1963 to
accommodate Islamic school alumni (mostly from NU pesantren and Muhammadiyah
schools). Since the 1980s, a former rector of the State Institute of Islamic
Studies (IAIN) Jakarta, Harun Nasution, introduced Islam and Western
philosophy and theology as compulsory courses in those universities.
From
this curriculum, critical thinking was injected into mainstream Islamic
universities in Indonesia. That explains the production of many critical
Muslim thinkers from IAIN/UIN.
The last
institution is HMI, the largest student organization in Indonesia. An
Indonesian liberal thinker, Nurcholish Madjid, who is also former HMI
chairman, wrote a document on the basic values of HMI. This progressive
document has become the key at every level of HMI’s annual training sessions,
involving thousands of members. Many key figures in most political parties
are HMI alumni.
Islamic
political parties have been losing their ideological articulation since the
Islamic academic community moved in a more liberal and progressive direction.
The counter argument to the idea of political Islam has not come from the
nationalistic or secular community, but mainly from inside Islam itself. ●
|
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar