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Jakarta Post

Peace more important than sharia: NU

Anton Hermansyah (The Jakarta Post)
Jakarta
Tue, June 14, 2016 Published on Jun. 14, 2016 Published on 2016-06-14T11:14:29+07:00

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Peace more important than sharia: NU In peace and harmony -- The chairman of Indonesia’s biggest Islamic organization Nahdlatul Ulama (NU), Said Aqil Siradj (right), talks to journalists after he was reelected as NU chairman in a national congress (Muktamar) in 2015. (Tempo/-)

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ahdlatul Ulama (NU), Indonesia’s biggest Islamic organization, is of the opinion that making Indonesia a peaceful country with the world’s largest population of Muslims is more important than forcing it to adopt sharia (Islamic law), the organization’s leader has said.

NU chairman Said Aqil Siradj emphasized that NU wanted Indonesia to become a darussalam country, which in Arabic means an “abode of peace”.

Citing a principle from late NU leader Wahid Hasyim, Said argued that Islam should become the protector of minorities in Indonesia. The first religious affairs minister in the country passed on this principle to his son, Abdurrahman “Gus Dur” Wahid.

It was during Gus Dur’s leadership that NU declared its official support for the Unitary State of the Republic of Indonesia in a national congress (Muktamar) in 1984. Gus Dur was elected president in 1999.

“We want a darussalam, a peaceful land where everybody can live in harmony, which does not enforce the legal codes of Islam in the country. Islam is not a political commodity,” Said told thejakartapost.com on Monday.

The NU chairman further praised the role that Islamic leaders, or kyai, had played in the villages to prevent the Indonesian people from extremism and radicalism. Unlike Middle Eastern Islamic leaders, whose preachings often lead to conflict, the kyai in Indonesian villages were successful in tamping down religious conflict in the country.

“Rural areas are the vital points in preventing the spread of radicalism, and I’m grateful that we have kyai in villages who teach the creation of national character. This situation is very different from Middle Eastern countries, where conflict can easily flare up only because of provocations on social media,” Said added.  (ebf)

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