Protesting Jakarta’s Governor: Flaking Indonesian
Islam’s Pluralistic Tradition – Analysis
The protests in the lead-up to
Jakarta’s gubernatorial elections, demanding the ouster of minority candidate
Ahok for blasphemy, demonstrated how religion, in its decontextualised form,
was employed for politics. The misuse of sacred texts for political gains can
undermine the pluralistic tradition of Indonesian Islam.
Jakarta recently witnessed its
biggest rallies in years when on 4 November 2016, some 100,000 people took to the
streets. Most called for the arrest, and some demanded the execution, of
Jakarta governor Basuki Tjahaya Purnama, popularly known as Ahok, for alleged
blasphemy. Thousands more were involved in a second rally on 2 December. These
rallies were organised by the National Fatwa Guardians of the Indonesian Ulama
Council (GNPF-MUI) and led by the conservative Muslim group Islamic Defenders
Front (FPI), under the banner “Bela Islam” (Defend Islam). They were followed
by the court trial of Ahok for blasphemy the week after.
While grievances with Ahok should
not be dismissed as purely religiously driven – claims of corruption and
policies biased towards the middle class ethnic Chinese minority are allegedly
aplenty – mass support and mobilisation were possible precisely because of the
use of religious rhetoric. This has led many media reports to simply frame the
protests as a sign of a radical and hardline strain of Islam taking hold in
Jakarta. What the hardliners have also demonstrated was how a decontextualised
reading of a sacred text – in this case the Quran – can lead to ends that stir
up public peace and social cohesion.
Reading Q 5:51 in Context
Ahok, a Chinese Christian, had
suggested that verse 51 of Chapter 5 of the Quran (Q 5:51) had been misused by
his political opponents to sway voters and justify their assertion that Muslims
could not have him as their political leader. The MUI responded by saying that
in so claiming, Ahok had defamed the Quran and blasphemed Islam.
Taken literally, verse Q 5:51 discourages
Muslims from taking as friends, confidants and leaders, their Abrahamic
brethren, the Christians and Jews. However, this verse should not be read out
of context without consideration for its historical circumstances. It was
revealed at a time of hostilities between a nascent Muslim community and
specific tribes, including particular Christian tribes – not Jews and
Christians as such – in seventh century Arabia.
Indeed, some scholars have
acknowledged the Qur’an holds Christians in high regard and singles them out as
being “closest in affection” to Muslims (Q 5:82). It also makes reference to
the People of the Book, which could be read to include Christians, as belonging
to an “upright community” (Q 3:113).
Contextualisation in Islamic Tradition
Reading the Quran in context refers
to the understanding of the meaning and objective of revelation in relation to
a specific context, and then being able to apply its teachings anew taking into
account contemporary realities. Indeed, the very act of contextualising the
religion has been integral to its historical acceptance by distinct peoples
living in diverse places at different times.
Islam’s ability to incorporate
external elements from other non-Muslim cultures has allowed it to flourish in
places like China, once thought to be a remote and an unlikely destination for
Muslims. For instance, the Chinese ulama’ of the 17th-century such as Wang
Dai-yu (d. 1660) and Liu Zhi (d. 1739) wrote about and taught Islam, using
Confucian terminology and categories of thought. In this manner, the concepts
of God, prophethood, heaven and hell became intelligible for the Chinese
community. As a result, Chinese Muslims are able to live a form of Islam that
is familiar, while still in accordance with the dictates of the religion.
Centuries earlier, Muslim
philosophers such as al-Kindi (d. 873), al-Farabi (d. 950) and Ibn Rushd (d.
1198) synthesised the writings of Plato and Aristotle with Islamic philosophy.
Beyond translating the texts, these philosophers made significant contributions
to the corpus of knowledge in the world. For example, al-Kindi repurposed the
Greek notion of the first principle (arche) to be the Creator, thereby bringing
out the relevance of Greek philosophy not only to Islam but to other
monotheistic religions like Christianity in the West.
Contextualisation Within Ethical Boundaries
The examples from the Quran and from
within the Islamic tradition are theological and historical justifications to
contextualisation within Islam. Nevertheless, contextualisation has been met
with scepticism by some who argued that it can lead to moral relativism or a
dilution of the “true Islam”. How then can we ensure that Islam does not become
too foreign or unrecognisable? What are the elements of the religion that can be
contextualised?
The Islamic scholarly tradition has
established a hierarchy of values in Islam that could help us in distinguishing
the permanent elements of the religion (tsawabit) from those that are changing
(mutaghayyirat), in order to derive meaning from the Quran and address the
challenges of contextualisation. They set the boundaries for contextualisation
and ensure that efforts at doing so do not fall into moral relativism. At the
same time, recognising the existence of a hierarchy of values would also
prevent interpretations that conflict with the very substance or universal
values of the religion.
An example of an obligatory value in
Islam is its theological worldview of One God that creates and sustains the
universe. This explains why, despite being heavily influenced by Greek learning
in philosophy and the sciences, classical Muslim scholars engaged with Greek
philosophy but did not freely import Greek mythology into its literary corpus
because of concerns that doing so undermined its monotheistic worldview.
Islam in Contemporary Context
This episode has put at stake a
critical matter for Indonesian Islam. It is not the transitory issue of the
electioneering for the governor of Jakarta or Ahok’s ouster as such that is of
fundamental concern here. What is at stake crucially is how a religious
rationalisation through a decontextualised reading of the Qur’an that is
unfriendly towards Christians and other non-Muslims could become encrusted into
the tradition of Islam in Indonesia.
Indonesia has the world’s largest
Muslim community, and is a pluralistic society. On the very subject of Islam’s
hospitality to other religions, it has much to offer to the Muslim world of
today, which is riven by religiously-motivated violence. It behooves Muslim
scholars and leaders to challenge the misuse of religious scriptures for errant
political ends through their contextualised reading.
*Nursheila Muez is a Research Analyst
with the Studies in Inter-Religious Relations in Plural Societies Programme
(SRP), at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies (RSIS), Nanyang
Technological University, Singapore. A version of this appeared earlier in The
Straits Times.
No comments:
Post a Comment