Building
faith-based coalition of peace
Tia Mariatul Kibtiah ; A lecturer in international relations
at Bina Nusantara University,
Jakarta
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JAKARTA
POST, 27 Desember 2014
Muhammadiyah, the second largest Muslim organization in the
country after Nahdlatul Ulama (NU), has completed the World Peace Forum, held
in Jakarta on Nov. 20-23, focusing on lessons in conflict resolution,
discussing experiences in Aceh, the Philippines, Thailand, Kosovo, Palestine
and other regions.
Participants also raised the threat of the Islamic State (IS)
movement and regional security.
It is estimated that a few hundred fighters who traveled to
Syria and Iraq are from Southeast Asia, especially Indonesia. The UN Security
Council reported about 15,000 foreign fighters had traveled to Syria and
Iraq, from more than 80 countries. The returnees from Southeast Asia will be
among the main threats to regional security in the future.
Indonesian fighters in Syria frequently post their call for
jihad on YouTube. One video states “it is compulsory for Indonesian Muslims
to join the fight in Syria and Iraq under the banner of ISIL [Islamic State
of Iraq and the Levant] headed by Abu Bakar al-Baghdadi.” This issue needs a
comprehensive solution through a strong partnership between state and civil
society.
Muhammadiyah and NU have publicly stated that the IS movement is
against the principles of Islam and Pancasila, the state ideology
accommodating different faiths and ethnic groups. The government under former
president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono was committed to fighting jihadism and
extremism.
This policy is being continued by President Joko “Jokowi”
Widodo. In an exclusive interview with The Australian, Yudhoyono said
“Indonesia is not an Islamic state. We respect all religions. Our state
ideology is Pancasila”.
NU executive chairman Slamet Effendy Yusuf said the public had
to be critical of the judgment and teachings of IS, adding a caliphate could
lead to sectarianism. Former NU chairman Hasyim Muzadi stated that IS was “a
new Islamic phenomenon in the Middle East, which is by no means appropriate
for Indonesia”.
Muhammadiyah chairman Din Syamsuddin declared that his
organization “opposes the movement and thought” of IS in Indonesia, “due to
its principles [being] against the true principles and values of Islam.”
“The violent approach of IS in reaching its goals is the
opposite of the teachings of Islam, [a religion that] teaches peace, ethics
and morality,” he said.
Muslim civil society organizations have initiated teachings,
seminars and discussions on how to overcome radicalism and terrorism in
Indonesia. Islamic schools in Muhammadiyah and NU are opposing the
interpretations, teachings and values of an Islamic caliphate propagated by
groups, such as IS.
However, the threat of radicalism and violent interpretations of
Islam still flourish in Islamic radical schools. The government needs a
stronger legal system to enable security forces to fight the development of
Islamic radicalism.
President Jokowi stated that “not only a security approach, but
also a religious approach is needed” to tackle radicalism.
NU and Muhammadiyah represent the backbone of Indonesian
ideology and interreligious peaceful unity against the threats posed by IS in
Indonesia. In Indonesia’s past, Darul Islam and the Islamic State of
Indonesia (NII) movement attacked Islamic schools and killed ulema in the
1950s.
That radical movements have grown after the New Order is alarming
for the silent majority of moderate Indonesian Muslims and the state.
Further, overcoming movements like IS requires a global
coalition focusing not only on a security approach, but on a fair balance of
power as well as a fair policy against conflicting regions in the Middle East
and other regions.
Indonesian Muslims also respond to perceptions of unfairness in
the Middle East, in particular between Palestine and Israel. Peace
negotiations and economic reconstruction should be well supported by the UN
and the international community.
Indonesian experiences in international conflict resolutions as
discussed at the World Peace Forum will strengthen Indonesia’s position in
Southeast Asia and the world. ●
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