A
government worker removes ISIS (Islamic State of Iraq and Syria) flags painted
on to walls near Veteran Street in Surakarta City. Photo: AAP
It’s an old enemy of
Wahhabism.
But is Indonesia’s Nahdlatul Ulama and its project of tolerant, peaceful
Islam an antidote to the extremism of Islamic State?
A
statement late last year by Islamic State’s spokesman and senior leader, Sheikh
Abu Muhammad Al Adnani, drew attention mainly because of his orders to attack
“unbelievers” in the West.
It was
widely assumed that these unbelievers were non-Muslims, like those killed in
the Paris attacks. But Adnani was also telling Muslims that they too may be
judged unbelievers, and suffer the consequences.
He urged
Muslims to attack unbelievers in any way they could.
If you
refuse to do this, while our brothers are being bombarded and killed, and while
their blood and their possessions are destroyed everywhere, then review your
religion. Then you are in a dangerous situation.
Islamic
State is playing on an old Islamic theme. If a caliphate exists, Muslims must
defend it. If they fail to do so, they will be considered apostates.
They’re
are no greys in the Islamic State religious scheme, notes Holland Taylor, head
of non-profit LibForAll, which fights for tolerant Islam. Islamic State, like
so many other religious groups over the centuries, believes it is the only way
to God. Anyone who does not believe that may be killed or enslaved, sold as
chattel.
As many
have already noted, Daesh, as many Muslims prefer to call Islamic State, is a
death cult attempting to put the world into reverse and turn it into a medieval
construct ruled entirely by its leaders’ strict interpretation of shariah law.
The acronym Daesh happens to sound like Dahes, Arabic for sowing discord. Small
wonder that Islamic State will cut your tongue out for using the term.
The
emergence of Daesh is a problem for Muslims, for whom it is doctrinally
impossible to deny sharia, or fiqh, the law. To deny Islamic State is,
at least in the eyes of the radicals, to deny Islam. Many Muslims who know very
little of their faith are easily cowed into submission by the threat of
apostasy.
But while
Daesh has wreaked havoc in the Middle East, many Indonesian Muslims are
determined to oppose its demands.
Entering
the lift at the central headquarters of traditionalist Sunni movement Nahdlatul
Ulama (NU) in Jakarta, I and the other passengers are greeted by a recorded
voice: “Salam Alaikum” (Welcome). When we stop at a floor, the recorded
voice says “Alhamdililah” (thanks to God). There are a few titters from
the passengers, who perhaps like me are reminded of an evangelical prayer group
in the West.
Indonesia,
and even cosmopolitan Jakarta, adheres increasingly to the formalities of
Muslim life.
Muslim
modes of fashion and public behavior have become far more entrenched in daily
life. NU, among all the changes of modern life, stoutly defends its traditional
style of Islam. The world’s largest single organisation of any kind with an
estimated 50 million members, it represents a traditional, Indonesian-flavored
Islamic community that says the barbarians of Daesh have got it all wrong.
The lift
reaches the seventh floor, and we arrive at the Aula, the hall, where I grab a
seat in the second row. The hall fills up quickly, the audience including a
number of acquaintances, some foreign journalists, another Indonesia-watcher, a
finance man. I ask the latter why he’s come to the screening of the NU film.
“I’m French. After Paris this is important to me,” he states. It’s important to
all of us, I respond.
The
speakers arrive. Kyai Haji Said Aqil Sirodj, the general secretary of the
central board of Nahdlatul Ulama, tells us why we’re here.
The aim
of the film is to export to the whole world. Donald Trump wants to ban all
Muslims from entering America because of the actions of a small group of people
who are conducting terror in the name of Islam. Islam Nusantara is not
anti-Arab but it is an Islam that developed in the eastern islands and it is
very different to the Islam of the Middle East.
Siradj
and his allies at NU are promoting their unique form of Islam as an antidote to
Islamic State, a rejection of Wahhabism, an alternative model for Muslims
everywhere as a comfortable fit of religion and culture, and as a message to
the West that not all Muslims are crazed murderers.
Islam
Nusantara, says Said Aqil, was introduced to the Indonesian islands in 1470,
nearly 300 years before Ibn Abd al-Wahhab formed an alliance with a local
ruler, Muhammad Ibn Saud, in what many believe has now become an unholy
alliance of religious fanaticism and oil wealth.
We settle
down to watch the documentary, The Divine Grace of Islam Nustantara.
It’s a one-and-a-half hour movie, slickly produced that carries the argument of
the local brand of the religion as a remedy to Islamic State. The theme of the
movie is a festival held in 2014 to honour the last resting places of the Walisongo
(Nine Saints).
While
there is debate among historians about how Islam arrived in the islands, NU
credits Maulana Malik Ibrahim with the honour. Considered the first of the Walisongo,
the others were his descendants. While some say they were of Arab descent, NU
itself states that they were Chinese mystics. The second Walisongo,
Sunan Ampel, is believed to have been born in Champa, modern-day Vietnam.
The tombs
of the Walisongo, scattered around the north coast of Java, are pilgrim
sites to this day. At just one, the custodian says that on an average day
around 15,000 people visit. In Saudi Arabia, sites such as this have been
erased from the earth by the purist Wahhabi in a sterilised form of state Islam
that Said Aqil states is also intrinsically capitalist.
Mysticism
The presence of the Walisongo in Java did not result in conflict with established religions. The courts followed Hinduism and Buddhism but most people, according to historian and religious school operator KH Agus Sanyoto, followed a belief system called Kapitayan. Instead of rejecting this creed, the Walisongo adopted it into what became Islam Nusantara – Islam with the flavor of the East Indies archipelago.
The presence of the Walisongo in Java did not result in conflict with established religions. The courts followed Hinduism and Buddhism but most people, according to historian and religious school operator KH Agus Sanyoto, followed a belief system called Kapitayan. Instead of rejecting this creed, the Walisongo adopted it into what became Islam Nusantara – Islam with the flavor of the East Indies archipelago.
“The
Kapitayan worshiped the highest God, who they called Sang Hyang Taya, the Great
Void or Absolute,” Sanyoto recounts in the film. “Taya means emptiness, yet
although the word literally means ‘that which is not’ it does not imply
non-existence.
“This
cannot be explained in purely rational terms, which is why Sang Hyang Taya came
to be described with the phrase Tan Keno Kinoyo Ngopo, ‘that to which nothing
can be done’. The mind cannot grasp ‘That’ which lies beyond human concepts,
nor can ‘That’ be approached using any of the five senses.”
Followers
of Sang Hyang Taya venerate rocks and boulders, which they see as containing
the essence of the absolute. Priests meditated to caves, which represented
emptiness. The Dutch described the belief system as animist, and Daesh and the
Wahhabi consider it – and Islam Nusantara with it – as apostasy.
Old enemies
For NU, the propagation of Islam Nusantara as a counter to Daesh is not merely a question of theology. The organisation was formed specifically to counter pressure from Wahhabi infiltration. “We know who these people are, we have been fighting them for 90 years,” says KH Yahya Cholil Staquf, one of the leaders of the Islam Nusantara project.
For NU, the propagation of Islam Nusantara as a counter to Daesh is not merely a question of theology. The organisation was formed specifically to counter pressure from Wahhabi infiltration. “We know who these people are, we have been fighting them for 90 years,” says KH Yahya Cholil Staquf, one of the leaders of the Islam Nusantara project.
KH
Mustofa Bisri, until recently the spiritual head or Roos Aam of NU, describes
the proselytising of the Wahhabi as an offence to the Prophet Muhammad. “The
Prophet advised those who proselytise (da’wa) to make things easy for
people, not cause them to live in terror. And yet lately it is precisely da’wa
that makes people feel horrified and appalled by Islam.
“Genuine
Islam, Islam Nusantara, Indonesian Islam, the Islam taught by the Messenger of
God, has been supplanted by Saudi Islam, a grasping and materialistic Islam,
coarse, cruel and savage. The Wahhabi view is just a ghoulish nightmare that
keeps the world awake at night, trembling in horror.”
The
enmity between Indonesian Islam and Wahhabism has deep roots.
Pilgrims
from West Sumatra who returned from the haj in the early 1800s determined that
their indigenous Islam, coloured with local traditions and culture, was
inferior to the austere Wahhabi form they had seen in Mecca and the other
centers of Islamic life.
They
strove to apply its strictures in their own country, where Sufi traditions had
blended with local cultural legacies. Those who refused to acknowledge the new
‘pure’ version of Islam were murdered, including close family members. Others
were enslaved, just as Daesh enslaves ‘unbelievers’ today. The conflict became
known as the Padri wars.
Historical
accounts of the Padri wars say they stretched from 1821 to 1837. The Wahhabi
faction might have prevailed, but their philosophy denied the legitimacy of
local rulers, who were naturally reluctant to give up their power and fought
back. The Dutch colonists, initially tied down in a war in Java, finally were
able to assist the rulers and defeat the Wahhabi adherents. Ironically, the
attempt to impose an austere form of Islam on the people of West Sumatra ended
as a springboard for Dutch expansion into other areas of Sumatra.
For NU,
the war against the Wahhabi has been a long one, and it is still not finished.
Said Aqil Sirodj warned in October 2015 that Daesh wants to expand its network
across Asia by 2017. And, while he did not provide any sources to back up his
statement, he added that it is aiming for a global caliphate by 2022. That
would absorb Indonesia, Malaysia and Muslim areas of the southern Philippines,
answering the prayers of hard-liners in the three Southeast Asian states.
The right to innovate
In opposing the Wahhabi theology, the proponents of Islam Nusantara realise what they are taking on. They are actively pressing for revisions of Islamic law to outlaw practices such as killing of so-called apostates and slavery.
In opposing the Wahhabi theology, the proponents of Islam Nusantara realise what they are taking on. They are actively pressing for revisions of Islamic law to outlaw practices such as killing of so-called apostates and slavery.
Yahya
Staquf admits that, as the law – fiqh — currently stands, Muslims have a
problem. “The introduction of slavery by Islamic State is based on Islamic
law,” he says. “What can we do about this? Logically, we must revise Islamic
law.”
On the
question of slavery, he states that:
This is a
question of jurisprudence and perhaps it needs to be re-interpreted. Other
factors need to be considered such as the relationship between people of
different religions. What we believed hundreds of years ago isn’t necessarily
relevant or appropriate today.
This
represents bi’dah – innovation, which in the Muslim sense is usually a
negative connotation. One hadith is reputed to state: “Every bid’ah is a
going astray and every going astray is in hellfire” (although the point is made
that in Arabic ‘every’ means ‘nearly every’.)
The
website Masjid al-Muslimiin states the following:
God
ordered Muslims not to divide themselves into sects. Innovations and divisions
in matters of religion and worship within Islam are considered to be
contamination, error, and deviation.
And this:
The
changing of God’s laws is forbidden in Islam. God condemns religious leaders
who alter divine principles. One who attempts to make changes places him or
herself on the same level with God, committing polytheism. An example of this
would be to make the killing of innocents lawful. The laws of God are perfect
and do not need to be ‘modernised’ by anyone.
The
question of bid’ah goes to the heart of the scriptural argument between
Islamic State and other Muslims, including Islam Nusantara. Holland Taylor, a
former US telecoms tycoon who has been working for years with NU, notes that
for most Muslims there are acceptable and unacceptable bid’ah.
The
latter would include attempts to change the basic rules of Islam. “If someone
says it is not necessary to pray five times a day (that) is unacceptable bid’ah.
But to ‘innovate’ by adjusting the practice of Islam to current circumstances
is acceptable to many,” he states.
To Daesh,
any bid’ah is unacceptable. They insist on the application of fiqh
as formulated in the centuries immediately after the Prophet Muhammad. These
were times of violence and bloodshed, and required a violent stance but the
Wahhabi argue that Muslims must live under the laws that applied at that
bloodthirsty time.
For NU,
that is erroneous. Its teachers point out that the fiqh that Daesh
insists still applies to society was not formed by the Prophet himself but by
the Umayyad and later caliphates that came a century later.
As such,
this interpretation of fiqh cannot be seen as the word of God. Instead,
NU believes that Islam should reflect changing times. “They are not bound by
the letter of the law but by the spirit of the law,” says Taylor.
This
presents a diametrically opposed view of Islam. Islam Nusantara is setting
itself up as the champion of tolerant, moderate Islam, rejecting all forms of
violence. Yet it too has engaged in violence.
In the
wake of an aborted pro-communist coup in Indonesia in September 1965, Muslim
mobs, with major involvement of Ansor, the NU youth group, embarked on a
slaughter of communists and sympathisers. Accounts vary of the death toll, but
at least 500,000 people died, clogging
rivers in Java and Bali with dead bodies.
This
bloody history leads many to reject a role of Islam Nusantara and NU from
attempting to oppose Islamic State. Those with blood on their own hands cannot
now claim to be the champions of peace and tolerance, they argue.
I put
this to Said Aqil. “We have to see this in the context of history and not just
the outcomes,” he replied. “There were many actions of the PKI (the Indonesian
Communist Party) that opposed the beliefs of the Indonesian people and many
conflicts occurred.”
The PKI
became increasingly confrontative in the wake of a rebellion in the East Java
town of Madiun in 1948, as nationalists were still fighting the Dutch for
control of the country. Put down harshly by the Indonesian Army, the communists
regrouped quickly and aimed their venom at traditional societies.
“Between
1948 and 1965 there was no time when there was not conflict between the PKI and
the followers of Islam, especially NU,” says Said Aqil. “If we look at this
from the perspective of the day, not today’s perspective, it compares to
periods of conflict elsewhere in the world. The past is the past.
“There is
no need for an apology (for the killings, as many demand). Leaders in the
regions have approached the descendants of those that were killed and come to
good terms. We don’t need to apologise.”
Said Aqil
is keen to stress that NU and Islam Nusantara is about peace, not conflict. Yet
it is not difficult to see NU and Ansor taking out the knives once again, this
time not against communists, but against hard-line Wahhabi groups if they
continue to contest the right of Indonesian Muslims to believe in the religion
that has been their’s for centuries.
So far it
has not come to that. But in distributing the film The Divine Grace of Islam
Nusantara widely, NU is mounting a direct challenge to Islamic State and
the Wahhabis. Yahya Staquf states that the film is an invitation to Muslims
everywhere to reject radicalism and theological straight-jackets and stand up
for their own cultural adaptation of Islam.
“They
have the right to be Muslims and still retain their own civilization and
culture. What the world needs now is to learn about the true nature of the
threat.
“Islamic
State is a part of Islam and the threat is real. We need to build a coalition
and the will to combat this. The threat is what it is and we need to build a
consensus on how to address the threat… We consider this a threat to all
humanity.”
Keith Loveard has been reporting on Indonesia
since 1990.
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