http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/city/indonesian-islamists-eye-proselytizing-christians/384083
July 04, 2010 
Niniek Karmini

Indonesian Islamists Eye Proselytizing Christians


A banner with a picture of a young, bespectacled Christian man is draped in 
front of a mosque, a fiery noose around his neck and the words, "This man 
deserves the death penalty!"

Churches are shut down. And an Islamic youth militia held its first day of 
training.

Though the events all occurred less than nine miles (15 kilometers) from 
Jakarta, making headlines in newspapers and dominating chats on social 
networking sites such as Facebook, they've sparked little public debate in the 
halls of power.

"I really see this as a threat to democracy," said Arbi Sanit, a political 
analyst, noting leaders never like to say anything that can be perceived as 
"un-Islamic," because they depend heavily on the support of Muslim parties in 
parliament.

"Being popular is more important to them than punishing those who are clearly 
breaking the law," Sanit said.

Indonesia has a long history of religious tolerance, though a small extremist 
fringe has become more vocal in recent years. 

Members of the Islamic Defenders Front, or FPI, have been known to smash bars, 
attack transvestites and go after minority sects with bamboo clubs and stones.

Now, they are targeting Christians in the fast-growing industrial city of 
Bekasi.

Outsiders have steadily poured into the Jakarta suburb in search of work, 
bringing with them their own religions, traditions and values. 

That has made conservative Islamic clerics nervous. Some have used sermons to 
warn their flock to be on the lookout for signs of proselytization.

So, when 14 busloads of villagers arrived on June 30 at the home of Henry 
Sutanto, who heads the Christian-run Mahanaim Foundation, rumors quickly spread 
that he and Andreas Sanau, the condemned man whose face appeared on the mosque 
banner, were planning a mass baptism.

A spokeswoman for the group, Marya Irawan, insisted the crowds were invited as 
part of efforts to reach out to the poor.

The FPI was not convinced. Video footage provided by the hard-line group shows 
hundreds of people getting off buses and entering the residential complex, many 
of them women in headscarves holding babies in slings, and milling about the 
pool.

 When a questioner thrust the camera in their faces, demanding to know why they 
came, most just looked bewildered.

"Someone asked if I wanted to come," one woman said with a shrug. Others 
accepted a ride into the city because they were bored, and thought they would 
at least get a free lunch out of it.

When the questioner found Sanau, who had one ear to a phone, he asked if 
baptisms would be taking place. The 29-year-old Christian's brow furrowed. He 
shook his head, "No, no."

Asked if he had an ID card, Sanau flashed it at the interviewer, who zoomed in 
on his home address. The house has since been abandoned.

"He should be executed!" said Murhali Barda, who heads the Bekasi chapter of 
the FPI. "He tried to carry out mass baptisms!"

Days later, Barda's group joined nine others in recommending at a local 
congress that Bekasi mosques help set up youth militias to act as moral police 
and to intimidate Christians who are trying to convert Muslims.

They started training Saturday morning, about 100 young men turning out on a 
field wearing martial arts uniforms. Barda stressed there was no plan to arm 
them.

"We're doing this because we want to strike fear in the hearts of Christians 
who behave in such a way," he said. "If they refuse to stop what they're doing, 
we're ready to fight."

A regional leader of the Indonesian Muslim Forum, Bernard Abdul Jabbar, said 
the youths were given physical training and taught about Islam. "They will 
guard the Islamic faith and preach the right path to the people," he said.

Priest Andreas Yewangoe, a chairman of the Communion of Indonesian Churches, 
said the militia will only create fear, nervousness and unrest in the nation. 
"The government must protect all citizens from anarchist action as mandated by 
the constitution," Yewangoe said.

Religious-led violence has been on the rise for months in Bekasi.

Mobs have forced to shut two churches this year. Last month, a statue of three 
women was torn down by authorities after hundreds of hard-liners wearing skull 
caps and white robes took to the streets, claiming the monument symbolized the 
Holy Trinity.

Weeks earlier, black-clad youths attacked a Catholic-run school over an 
anonymous blogger's "blasphemous" website.

The government has made no public comment except when lawmakers were attacked 
by FPI during a meeting in East Java.


Associated Press

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