http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/home/indonesia-islam-leaders-stir-row-over-chinese-new-year/570697

Indonesia Islam Leaders Stir Row Over Chinese New Year
February 10, 2013


As Indonesia and other countries with Chinese diasporas welcome the Year of the 
Snake, some Islamic leaders have ignited a religious row by declaring the 
celebrations “haram” and off limits for Muslims.

After decades of repression under the dictatorship of Suharto, who rose to 
power after a bloody purge of communists and Chinese in the late 1960s, 
Chinese-Indonesians are now accepted in mainstream society of the largely 
Muslim nation.

Lunar New Year is also now a public holiday in Indonesia, where it is known as 
“Imlek.”

But a local leader of the country’s top Muslim clerical body has declared the 
celebration “haram” (forbidden), saying its rituals are tied up with Buddhist 
practices, particularly those that take place in temples.

“We cannot separate religion from culture, so we’re being cautious,” Zainal 
Arifin, head of the Indonesian Council of Ulema (MUI) in the city of Solo, told 
AFP.

“And if it’s part of a religious ritual, we must not celebrate it. It’s the 
same case with Christmas and other religious celebrations.”

The hard-line Islamic Defenders Front (FPI) said clerics would spread the 
message to Muslims through mosque loudspeakers, and warn Chinese-Indonesians 
not to invite Muslims to celebrations.

But ethnic Chinese leaders say such comments about a traditional festival are 
illogical and a sign of outdated thinking in some Islamic organizations.

“Chinese New Year is not a religious celebration and it’s especially not a 
Buddhist celebration,” said Andrew Susanto, president of the Chinese-Indonesian 
Youth Association.

He said marking the Lunar New Year was no different to celebrating the new year 
in other cultures.

“I don’t think that’s what most Indonesians think,” he said, adding the 
festivities have over time become an Indonesian tradition.

Despite the cleric’s comments, a Javanese-style Lunar New Year celebration was 
held in Solo last week, with thousands joining a procession akin to those 
commemorating Islamic holidays.

Local monks released 888 songbirds and catfish — eight being a lucky Chinese 
number — and distributed cakes to the jovial crowd.

Chinese-Indonesians make up around nine million of the nation’s 240 million 
people, most practicing Christianity, Buddhism or Confucianism.

Suharto, who ruled Indonesia with an iron fist for more than three decades 
until 1998, banned Chinese languages and symbols, and forced 
Chinese-Indonesians to change their names.

His rule began after an anti-Communist purge in 1965-1966, in which at least 
500,000 people considered communists or sympathizers — many Chinese — were 
killed and others tortured. Rights activists say two million perished.

Abdurrahman Wahid, an Islamic religious leader and politician who became the 
first elected president after Suharto stepped down, lifted the ban on Chinese 
culture in 2000, allowing ethnic Chinese to once again openly celebrate Lunar 
New Year.

In Glodok — Jakarta’s Chinatown which was reduced to rubble in the 1998 riots 
at the end of Suharto’s rule — two Muslim women wearing Islamic headscarves 
soaked up the atmosphere, as vendors sold traditional red money envelopes and 
cobra oil to mark the Year of the Snake.

“I’m Muslim, so I don’t myself take part in celebrations,” said one of the 
women, Widi Astudi, 37, as she visited a Buddhist temple Friday.

“But Indonesia is a tolerant country, and the Chinese here are Indonesians, so 
there’s no harm in visiting the temples and appreciating how they celebrate.”

Agence France-Presse

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