http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/opinion/100-years-after-kartini-women-still-lack-rights-in-indonesia/587052

100 Years After Kartini, Women Still Lack Rights in Indonesia
Johannes Nugroho | April 21, 2013

 Military and police members rehearse for this year\'s Kartini Day ceremony. 
(JG Photo/Yudhi Sujma Wijaya) 


Religion must guard us against committing sins, but more often, sins are 
committed in the name of religion,” wrote early 20th century Indonesian women’s 
rights pioneer Raden Ajeng Kartini. In her correspondence with Estella 
Zeehandelaar, she also expressed her profound opposition to polygamy, a common 
practice among members of the Javanese nobility of her day, sanctioned by 
religion. And yet the great Kartini herself in the end had to bow to customs 
and religion when her father married her off as the fourth wife of the Regent 
of Rembang. 

More ironically still, more than one hundred years after Kartini’s death, even 
though arranged marriages are mostly extinct, religious doctrine has continued 
to be used against the advancement of women’s rights in this country. The cases 
range from being medieval to downright ridiculous. 

Hasan Ahmad, 47, a member of the legislative Council of Sampang, Madura, was 
recently arrested by the police for having had sex with nine underage girls. 
While acknowledging that his action was in breach of the law, Ahmad maintained 
that according to Islamic law he had not committed adultery as he had a cleric 
perform a marital rite — in a car — before engaging in sex with each one of the 
teenagers. 

As Islam only allows four wives, Ahmad also revealed that he almost always 
divorced them after paying their sexual services. During his interview with the 
press, he laughingly dismissed his arrest as “due to his naughtiness.” 

The fact that a lawmaker showed no contrition after being the perpetrator of 
sexual trafficking of underage girls simply highlights the challenges faced by 
Indonesian women’s rights movement. The defiant attitude also exemplifies how 
many Indonesians deem religious — read divine — laws are somehow higher than 
state laws, a definite handicap in any nation that endeavors to establish the 
rule of law. 

In the autonomous province Aceh, which has embraced Islamic Shariah as 
normative law, anachronistic regulations against women seem to be in vogue. 
Earlier this year, the province’s city Lhokseumawe enacted a ban on female 
passengers straddling on a motorcycle, mandating sitting sideways as the proper 
religious way. In an April raid in the city, 35 women were detained for sitting 
astride on motorcycles. 

More recently, a law was proclaimed to outlaw audible farting by women. Mayor 
Sayyid Yahia explained that it was against Islam that a woman should pass wind 
in a manner that can be heard by others, as he believed audible farting was a 
male behavior. Hence, by farting audibly, a woman is guilty of impersonating a 
man. 

These clearly sexist regulations are clear setbacks for women’s rights in Aceh 
and highly ironic considering the region has had significant history of female 
leadership in the past. 

Aceh has produced Tjoet Nyak Dien, the celebrated 20th century rebel leader 
against Dutch colonialism and more importantly Admiral Malahayati, the first 
woman sea admiral in world history. On Sept.11, 1599, under Malahayati, the 
Aceh navy successfully defeated the Dutch in a sea battle and killed the 
latter’s leader Cornelis de Houtman. Significantly, this battle saw the full 
participation of Malahayati’s 2,000 strong regiment of Inong Balee, Aceh’s 
women soldiers. 

Today, in stark contrast, religion is being used in Aceh to discriminate 
against women. It does not help that Islamic religious texts are interpreted by 
religious councils comprising exclusively of male clerics. 

However, hope remains as more and more intellectual Muslim women are coming 
forward to voice their opinions on gender equality. Muslim feminist Siti Musdah 
Mulia, and other prominent women with orthodox Muslim background such as Yenny 
Wahid, daughter of the late President Abdurrahman Wahid, will undoubtedly help 
shape the future of the struggle for equality between men and women in 
Indonesia. 

Still, the road ahead is arduous, as evident in the recent difficulties 
experienced by political parties to fulfill the 30 percent quota of candidacy 
for parliament in the 2014 legislative elections. 

It would seem, more than a century after its publication in 1911, Kartini’s 
“Out of Darkness Into Light” is still a pertinent reminder of unfinished her 
work, and indeed our work, towards gender equality in Indonesia. Her 
frustration with religion in relation to women’s rights is still, regrettably, 
relevant today. As did their ancestors who adapted Islam to the local values 
and customs, today’s Muslim feminists of this country must be the ones to shape 
the blending of their faith with the betterment of rights for all women. Happy 
Kartini Day! 

  

Johannes Nugroho is a writer and businessman from Surabaya. He can be contacted 
at [email protected]

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