[nasional_list] [ppiindia] Religious persecution

  • From: "Ambon" <sea@xxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <"Undisclosed-Recipient:;"@freelists.org>
  • Date: Wed, 8 Feb 2006 01:32:11 +0100

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Religious persecution 

The inconsistency between what the government says and what it does (or does 
not do) about freedom of religion could not have been more starkly illustrated 
than it was by two incidents that took place just hours, and a few hundred 
kilometers, apart Saturday.

In Jakarta, President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, in a speech celebrating Chinese 
New Year, said the government was constitutionally bound to protect freedom of 
religion and the right of all people to practice their faith. 

Using the occasion to address followers of Confucianism, here is what the 
President said, in part, as quoted by Kompas: "In this country, there is no 
such thing as religions that are recognized or not recognized by the state. The 
Constitution guarantees the freedom of every citizen to have a religion and to 
practice their faith. The state shall never interfere in any religious 
teachings. The duty of the state is to protect, serve and facilitate the 
building and maintenance of places of worship and to encourage citizens to 
become good followers of their religions." 

To the east, in a village on Lombok, about 2,000 people attacked a compound 
housing 31 families of followers of Ahmadiyah, an Islamic sect with origins in 
India. Police sent to protect the families were far outnumbered and helpless to 
stop the attackers from burning the houses. 

Fortunately, there were no deaths and all of the families were safely 
evacuated. Still, the ugly attack had the tacit approval of the local 
administration and Muslim ulema. Nationally, Ahmadiyah has been declared a 
heretical sect by the Indonesian Ulema Council, which is one reason the 
authorities have been halfhearted in coming to the aid of its followers when 
they find themselves under attack, including this latest incident. 

The President's speech was comforting, particularly for religious minorities in 
the country. To them, these were words to live by in a country that has, since 
its inception, strived to adhere to the principles of pluralism where the 
rights of minorities are respected and protected. 

Yudhoyono was simply invoking the Constitution in his speech. He was 
reiterating the duties and obligations of the government in guaranteeing and 
protecting religious freedom. Although the context of his speech was the 
discrimination followers of Confucianism, mostly ethnic Chinese, continue to 
encounter, there was no doubt the promises and guarantees were universal and 
applicable to followers of all religions and beliefs that exist in the country. 

Sadly, the reality is far from the rosy picture painted by the Constitution and 
the President. If anything, the situation seems to be deteriorating of late. 
Minority Christians are finding it harder to build new churches and established 
Christian places of worship have been forced to close down by their Muslim 
neighbors and radical groups. And the followers of Ahmadiyah face nothing less 
than persecution, with very little state protection being offered. 

The President himself appeared ambiguous, if not inconsistent, in his speech, 
invoking a 1965 presidential ruling that identifies six religions -- Islam, 
Christianity, Catholicism, Hinduism, Buddhism and Confucianism -- that are 
followed by citizens of the country. This ruling amounts to a state recognition 
of these religions, and by way of implication, the nonrecognition of any other 
religions and beliefs. 

The bureaucracy has religiously applied this policy of recognition and 
nonrecognition when dealing with such issues as the religion of a person on 
his/her identification card. The civil registry will not accept marriages that 
are not performed in accordance with the rituals of one of these 
"state-recognized" religions, much less marriages between people of different 
faiths. 

This practice of "selective pluralism" in dealing with religion contravenes the 
very nature of the freedom of religion guaranteed in the Constitution and 
invoked by the President in his speech. This policy has many unintended 
consequences. 

Under current practices, for example, Ahmadiyah has to be considered an Islamic 
sect. But the denunciation by the Indonesian Ulema Council has left Ahmadiyah 
in a quandary, while its followers continue to be subject to violent attacks. 

If the President were to wipe the 1965 ruling off the books, then Ahmadiyah 
followers could safely put "Ahmadiyah" as their religion on their ID cards. 
This would help end the heated debate over whether the sect is Islamic, and the 
persecution of Ahmadiyah would, hopefully, cease once and for all. 

Why is there still such a huge divide between what the Constitution says on the 
question of religious freedom, as eloquently evoked by the President on 
Saturday, and the reality on the ground? Perhaps the President, or someone in 
the government, would care to explain?


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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