Biang kerok diskriminasi adalah dari pemerintah juga,
dengan adanya SK Bersama mendagri dan Menteri Agama
tahun 1969 (waktu itu Jendral Alamsyah Ratu Perwira
jadi Menteri Agama). SKB itu membatasi bantuan asing
(baca: buat Katholik dan Protestan) dan pembangunan
tempat ibadah (baca: gereja) harus ada ijin dari
penduduk sekitar.

Salam, 
RM

------------------------

 Print November 11, 2004 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
 
Sang Timur affair exposes government discrimination 
Pandaya, Jakarta

In recent years Indonesia has sadly been witnessing a
wide variety of religious conflicts that have corroded
the glue that keeps this multiethnic, multireligious
nation together. 

Sectarian flare-ups have been occurring throughout the
archipelago at higher frequency and magnitude. One
major shock came in 1996 with the burning of churches
in Situbondo, East Java. A few years later we were hit
with the deadly Muslim-Christian conflicts in Maluku
and Sulawesi. On Christmas Eve 2000, over a dozen
churches in almost all major cities were
simultaneously bombed, killing many of the Christian
worshipers inside. 

This year, the increasingly volatile interreligious
relationships have again been put to the test with the
forced closure of a church at the Sang Timur Catholic
school and the subsequent blockage of the school by a
group of local Islamists in Karang Tengah, Tangerang,
just outside Jakarta. 

The incident, right on the capital's doorstep,
following the revocation of the official permit to use
the premises for worship services, has provoked quite
a lot of heated debate on the freedom of religion as
guaranteed by the 1945 Constitution. 

This time the government can no longer sweep the
discord under the carpet and pretend nothing serious
happened, because the media has exposed it. 

While the problem remains unresolved, (a concrete wall
erected by Muslims, is still in place, and 9,000
Catholics have nowhere to worship) people wonder if
religious tolerance will ever become something of the
past. 

The Sang Timur incident, in which members of the
Islamic Youth Front of Karang Tengah forcibly broke up
Sunday mass on Oct. 3 and demanded the services be
stopped for good, was an ugly display of religious
discrimination, in which the majority bullies the
minority and the state just lets it happen. 

The local Muslim residents appointed themselves the
sheriff on the pretext that they were legally
enforcing the disputed 1969 joint ministerial decree
that requires local residents' endorsement whenever a
place of worship is to be built. 

The decree, which the new Minister of Religious
Affairs M. Maftuh Basyuni insists on maintaining,
remains in force despite fierce opposition from
religious minorities. Under the ruling, it is
practically impossible for the minority to build a
place of worship in the midst of the majority. This
ruling also applies in areas where Muslims are the
minority, such as predominantly Christian Papua, East
Nusa Tenggara, South Sumatra, North Sulawesi and
predominantly Hindu Bali. 

Obviously, the decree treats the followers of the
majority religion, in any particular area, like a
spoiled brat who can do anything they wish, no matter
if what they do in fact gives their own religion a bad
name. Imagine how chaotic Indonesia could be if Hindus
in Bali or Christians in Manado -- both in the
majority -- did the same thing at a mosque or a
pesantren? 

In Jakarta, Christians bear the brunt of the
discrimination and threats of violence: Building a
church is practically impossible, but they are subject
to harassment, or even violence, if they worship
elsewhere. Likewise in Papua, the minority Muslims
find it difficult to get the locals' endorsement for a
mosque. 

The Sang Timur affair only gives credence to the fear
of Islamic extremism that finds fertile ground with
the rise of "political Islam" in this era of political
reform. Since the fall of strongman Soeharto in 1998,
those promoting sharia as the state ideology have come
out in the open without fear of persecution. Along
with them came the extremist groups like FPI (Islam
Defenders Front) cashing in on weak law enforcement
and taking the law into their hands in the name of
religion. 

Again, the Sang Timur affair is a case that
illustrates how the government becomes part of the
problem when there is religious tension. The
revocation of the permit to use the school's hall for
worship, after 12 years of letting them do it, serves
as a bad example of public policy making. It clearly
smacks of systematic discrimination against the
minority and reduces the government's assurances of
respecting pluralism to cheap, empty slogans. Above
all, such a forced closure of a place of worship is
not only against the Constitution, but also a blatant
abuse of human rights. 

The bizarre policies that have provoked the problem
also proves that state intervention in religious
affairs often ends up in disaster because such
policies, alienates the minority and solves problems
in favor of the majority. 

While the joint ministerial decree continues to stir
up dangerous religious sentiment, another debate has
been brewing over a bill on "religious harmony"
drafted by the ministry of religious affairs during
the Megawati regime. Academics have warned that if the
bill eventually became law, the discrimination would
be more institutionalized and sectarian conflicts
would only worsen. 

All the conflicts that come with the weakening
religious tolerance would endanger the international
recognition of Indonesia's reputation as a place to
learn religious harmony. 

The religious tensions call for intensive interfaith
dialogs which involve people at the grassroots level,
where open conflicts start. The hard work of
institutions like the Center for Peaceful Religious
Coexistence (PKUB), the religious ministry and
Interfidei has not yet reached the masses. 

The lack of tolerance and mutual understanding has
given rise to suspicions that any initiative by either
side would have "Christianization" or "Islamization"
motives. 

The Sang Timur affair is the first actual case for the
new administration of Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono to
handle and prove his commitment to protecting
pluralism in Indonesia. SBY's stand is yet to be seen
-- an interventionist or facilitator. 

The author is a staff writer for The Jakarta Post. 
 



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