Sun, 06/08/2008 12:01 PM | Headlines
Christians are so close to God that they call Him "father" in prayer, while Muslims are so far away from Allah that they need loudspeakers to talk to Him.
This is an old joke, but I couldn't tell you earlier because I was afraid. If Rizieq Shihab had found out, he might have beaten me black and blue or, worse, burned down my house.
Thank God, he is now in police custody.
If you happen to have watched the news (not the saucy gossip shows or soap operas) or read the paper recently, you would know of Rizieq, the leader of the Islam Defenders Front (FPI).
A radical group, FPI, attacked members of the National Alliance for Freedom of Faith and Religion (AKKBB), who were rallying last Sunday at the National Monument (Monas) park to mark the 63rd anniversary of Pancasila state ideology.
The FPI made their attack because the alliance supports Jamaah Ahmadiyah, a minority Islamic sect dubbed "heretical" by a government panel which also recommended it be banned.
The hardliners had earlier attacked Ahmadiyah sect members, their houses and mosques, and called Ahmadiyah a deviant sect.
The sect leader was once accused of blasphemy, but other than that I have never heard of the sect's members committing theft, robbery, murder or any other crimes listed in the Criminal Code.
If they have their own interpretations of some verses in the Koran, it is only God who could decide whether it is right or wrong.
In 2006, FPI members vandalized the Play Boy magazine offices in South Jakarta, when the magazine first published its Indonesian version. They said the publication could damage people's morality, but perhaps the real reason was that they were disappointed to find the Indonesian version didn't have the same 'hot' pictures as its American parent.
They had also repeatedly attacked cafes, bars and nightspots during the Ramadhan fasting month because they believed the establishments violated existing regulations and would tarnish the Holy month.
And they committed all these violent acts in the name of God. Frequently FPI members shouted "Allahuakbar" (God is Great) while conducting their anarchic deeds. They also prayed a lot.
Praying five times a day is one of the five pillars of Islam followed by, not only FPI members, but all Muslims around the world.
The Muslim call to prayer, and prayer itself, can be heard in every corner of the city. It would seem it is a case of the louder, the better, so that everyone in the neighborhood can hear it. It doesn't matter if it is still dawn or if it's during school hours and the mosque is right next to a school. If one mosque is next to another, they may even compete to be loudest.
On Friday, mosques are crowded with congregations who enthusiastically come to pray and listen to preachers.
Non-Muslims also perform their religious rituals devoutly. Churches are always full on Sundays, when Christians and the Catholics pray and praise the Lord.
Indonesia is indeed one of the most religious nations in the world, a fact confirmed by last year's religion monitoring study conducted in 21 countries by the German-based Bertelsmann Foundation.
Ironically, Indonesia is also notorious for being among the world's most corrupt countries.
Being religious, corruptors must pray first before stealing state money, or perhaps they set aside a little of the corrupted money to build mosques or churches.
Another indicator of the strength of religion in Indonesia was in the huge number of people who enjoyed the recent movie Ayat-Ayat Cinta (Verses of Love), which is heavily loaded with religious messages.
President Soesilo Bambang Yudhoyono who watched the blockbuster along with several cabinet ministers reportedly shed tears because he was so touched by the story. But many joked, saying he had cried because he shared the pain of not being allowed to have more than one wife like the leading role.
Anyway, following the Monas attack, many people (mostly Muslims) demanded the ban of the FPI and some even called its members preman berjubah (thugs in Muslim robes) as they wore long white robes and headscarves during the violence.
Not only FPI members, but it seems many other Muslims, Christians and other deeply religious people are often too busy talking to God in one-way conversations, praising and worshiping God, reading the Koran, the Bible and other holy books, while turning their backs on fellow human beings.
Of course, talking to God is important, but if they think praying five times a day or going to Church every Sunday, or even everyday, is enough to allow them climb the stairway to heaven, maybe they should think again.
By the way, if you find the opening of this piece offensive, please accept my apology. I don't mean to upset anyone, let alone God, who must be sad enough seeing the violence and frequent religious conflicts within this so-called religious nation.
-- T.Sima Gunawan
Marilyn Richter (not verified) — Sun, 06/08/2008 - 9:06am
I read with interest T. Sima Gunawan's article, "FPI too busy talking to God". It should give all of us something to think about and cause us to consider our actions, in light of our profession of whatever faith. In the Christian's Bible is this definition of "pure religion": "If anyone considers himself religious and yet does not keep a tight rein on his tongue, he deceives himself and his religion is worthless. Religion that God our Father accepts as pure and faultless is this: to look after orphans and widows in their distress and to keep oneself from being polluted by the world." James 1:26, 27 (NIV)
Hadrian (not verified) — Sun, 06/08/2008 - 6:59am
Indeed a very perceptive article. It articulates the connundrum that has puzzled me for years; how can a nation that shows so much religiosity exhibit so much immorality, esp. corruption? Living in Indonesia has not helped me understand the apparent contradiction, only compounded it.
The only conclusion that outsiders can reach is that religiosity Indonesian style doesn't automatically translate into morality as one might assume, at least when it comes to corruption.
Perhaps, continueing the writer's strong analogies, Indonesians are able to change their values like chameleons change colour; one set of values when talking to God, another when not. Perhaps the answer is less talking, more listening, to God and/or one's own conscience.
The Reader (not verified) — Sun, 06/08/2008 - 5:11am
Yes, your opening is offending. "Christians are so close to God that they call Him "father" in prayer, while Muslims are so far away from Allah that they need loudspeakers to talk to Him." This is a joke, but there is no spirit of appreciating other faith you also promote with this piece. The joke see something superficially and fails to get the substance of religious practices.
>You wrote:
In 2006, FPI members vandalized the Play Boy magazine offices in South Jakarta, when the magazine first published its Indonesian version. They said the publication could damage people's morality, but perhaps the real reason was that they were disappointed to find the Indonesian version didn't have the same 'hot' pictures as its American parent.
The part "but perhaps the real reason was that they were disappointed to find the Indonesian version didn't have the same 'hot' pictures as its American parent" shows that the piece is not written with sound data and just another humiliation based on subjective judgment that persons not belonging to your thinking group is bad.
If I have the same logic, I would have written: "perhaps, here you try to hide this hatred by putting this line afterward: Being religious, corruptors must pray first before stealing state money, or perhaps they set aside a little of the corrupted money to build mosques or churches."
You wrote:
Of course, talking to God is important, but if they think praying five times a day or going to Church every Sunday, or even everyday, is enough to allow them climb the stairway to heaven, maybe they should think again.
Yes, I agree. You should know also that a religion is also a system. Accepting one favorable part and rejecting most others are not the ideal one.
You wrote:
By the way, if you find the opening of this piece offensive, please accept my apology.
Yes, it is ok. It is just ok! It as very easy to say sorry and by saying that people can create of tolerant kind-hearted image for themselves. And they forget that the wound they leave are still there. Have a nice Sunday and thank you for reminding me that I am still a human being capable of being sad.
SH