Jakarta’s Slippery Slope: Bias against Muslim Ahmadiyah Sect, Sharia rising

comment by Jerry Gordon

mirza-ghulam-ahmad.jpgWe posted on the story of death threats by fellow Muslims to a Shia Muslim who dared to publish an ad by the peace-loving non-Jihadist Ahmadiyah sect in his urdu language newspaper, Pakistan Time, in Houston, Texas. In this Wall Street Journal Asia editorial we note how the alleged ‘moderate Muslim’ country of Indonesia is barring the Ahmadiyah sect and permitting destruction by fundamentalist groups of the Ahmadiyah Mosques. Why? Because it is viewed as being deviant: it is peace loving and not Jihadist.

Note this:

    On Thursday, Islamic radicals sealed off more than 10 Ahmadiyah mosques in Indonesia. This was the predictable outcome of a June 9 government ruling barring the Ahmadiyah from “dissemination activities,” whatever that means. Their crime? Peacefully worshipping a liberal form of Islam.

    President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono sold the ruling as a way to forbid a “deviant” Islamic group from propagating their ideas but not banning them outright. But it was really a cave-in to radicals such as the Islamic Defenders Front, who advocate strict interpretations of Islam and have made their views known by beating up people in the streets.

So despite Indonesian Constitutional rights to freedom of worship, Jihadists are given leave to oppress, a peace loving Muslim sect. Bizarre? Not really. Read this Washington Times comment about how 82 million Indonesians favor adoption of strict Islamic Sharia law.

    More than two-thirds of Indonesians favor the country’s current secular system of law, according to a privately funded nationwide survey by the Indonesian Survey Circle, a pollster. If that seems like good news, read it this way: This means there are “only” about 82 million Indonesians who favor Shariah… And while Indonesia’s religious and cultural climate is justifiably regarded as moderate in comparison to much of the rest of the Muslim world — and its government is a very useful ally against terrorism — the numbers still leave plenty of room for concern.

So if the peace-loving Ahmadiyah Muslim sect can be barred, what other non-Muslim religions are next in a country whose constitution guarantees freedom of religion? Indonesia is some moderate Muslim country, eh?

Wall Street Journal Asia, June 25, 2008
With the World Peace Forum under way in Jakarta today, Indonesia is happy to boast of its commitment to interfaith dialogue. The 200,000 members of the Ahmadiyah sect would disagree.

On Thursday, Islamic radicals sealed off more than 10 Ahmadiyah mosques in Indonesia. This was the predictable outcome of a June 9 government ruling barring the Ahmadiyah from “dissemination activities,” whatever that means. Their crime? Peacefully worshipping a liberal form of Islam.

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono sold the ruling as a way to forbid a “deviant” Islamic group from propagating their ideas but not banning them outright. But it was really a cave-in to radicals such as the Islamic Defenders Front, who advocate strict interpretations of Islam and have made their views known by beating up people in the streets.

Now, a coalition of Islamic fanatics, the Forum Umat Islam, has taken the ruling as a pretext to shut down Ahmadiyah mosques. In response, Mr. Yudhoyono has ignored the Indonesian constitution’s freedom of religion clause and done nothing.

Perhaps he is worried about sparking wider violence if he opposes the well-funded and well-organized Forum Umat Islam. Or perhaps he wishes to court what he perceives as the “Muslim vote.” But short-term gain could have serious long-term consequences.

If radical thugs are allowed to target Ahmadiyah houses of worship today with impunity, what prevents them from targeting other kinds of Muslims tomorrow? Or Christians? Or Sikhs? The government’s refusal to protect the Ahmadiyah threatens the underpinnings of Indonesia’s tolerant society. It’s a familiar theme in history, and one that has not boded well for liberal democracies.

June 25th, 2008 at 5:03 • opinionEditorialWashington TimesIndonesia edict against Muslim Ahmadiyah sectWall street Journal Asia 0 Comments

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