http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Asia-Pacific/2013/0508/Provoking-peace-in-Indonesia

Provoking peace' in Indonesia
Christians and Muslims in Ambon, Indonesia, have relearned how to live together 
after a 1999 - 2002 war killed 5,000 people and displaced half a million.

By Dan Murphy, Staff writer / May 8, 2013 

  a..  Muslim residents (foreground) clashed with Christians in Ambon, 
Indonesia, on Sept. 11, 2011. Religious leaders on both sides are working to 
improve relations.

ANGKOTASAN/AFP/Getty Images/File

  a.. In Pictures: Indonesia: a nation of islands 

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Ambon, Indonesia

When trouble finally came to Ambon, it came hard. Centuries of tradition that 
had kept the peace in this tropical corner of the world, where Muslims and 
Christians had lived mostly harmoniously since the late 16th century, were 
washed away in a spasm of violence that reverberated across Indonesia.

  a..  Baldus Bakerpessy in the Christian village of Waai recalls being driven 
from his home by Muslim militia but says he isn’t bitter or seeking revenge.

Dan Murphy/The Christian Science Monitor

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  a..  
  In Pictures: Indonesia: a nation of islands 

  a..  
  Graphic: Indonesia 
  (Julie Fallon/Staff) 

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The Christian Science Monitor
Weekly Digital Edition
The war in Ambon and the wider Maluku islands started for a variety of reasons. 
But it quickly boiled down to a question of identity, of Christians versus 
Muslims, as more than 5,000 people were killed and 500,000 were displaced from 
their homes between 1999 and 2002.

The religious passions and communal hatred stirred up in the war put a question 
mark over Indonesia's moves to build a democracy after 40 years of 
dictatorship. Could Indonesia's Muslim majority coexist with Christians and 
other religious minorities without an authoritarian hand on the tiller?

Sitting in Ambon's Joas Coffee House 13 years after the fighting ended, the 
answer is clear: Yes. And sitting across from me is Jacky Manuputty, one member 
of a brave group of local community leaders, Muslim and Christian alike, who 
have helped heal the wounds of war and today act as the first responders of 
harmony when the fragile peace looks threatened.

Mr. Manuputty and his friends half-jokingly call themselves the Peace 
Provocateurs, and the tale of what they've accomplished is a rare message of 
hope not just for Indonesia, but in some ways for the world.

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A Protestant pastor, Manuputty says it would be a mistake to see Ambon as a 
society that's fully healed. But he says he and his colleagues have at least 
found a way of containing small sparks – those rumors of "provocateurs" in 
their midst seeking to start another war.

"That term, provocateur, made people angry, so I tried to find a counternotion. 
It should really be a neutral term. It means how to steer people to do 
something, to grab the youths' attention," he says. "I don't believe we 'make' 
peace – everyone has the seeds of peacefulness inside themselves, but for some 
reason they struggle to see it, make it public. All we're trying to do is to 
bring out what's already inside of them."

What the Peace Provocateurs brought out in individuals here has in some ways 
brought together a nation. At the height of the fighting between Christians and 
Muslims, political commentators wondered if this diverse nation of 270 million 
people could survive the political demise of President Suharto. The word on 
many lips then was "Balkanization."

That may seem absurd now, with Indonesia since emerging as Asia's second 
largest democracy and the world's largest Muslim-majority one. It has ended two 
of its three longstanding separatist wars, and put out sectarian brush fires 
all along the way. The fire that burned in Ambon was among the country's 
hottest after long-ruling dictator Mr. Suharto was ousted in 1998.

That it was put out helped damage the interests of the small militant Islamist 
movement, bolstered respect for the central government, and helped set the 
stage for Indonesia's economy to start growing again.

So it's worth examining how it was done – and how still-existing tensions and 
disputes are kept from erupting again into open warfare. It wasn't easy, and 
success on the island had as much to do with local knowledge as with easily 
generalizable principles that might apply in countries like Egypt or Libya.

But if you're looking for examples of how people can put the horrors of 
sectarian war behind them, you could do worse than Ambon.

Manhattan traded for Moluccas
Ambon was once a center of attention for European imaginations, home to almost 
unimaginable riches for the bold.

What kind of riches? In 1667, the Dutch formally ceded control of Manhattan 
Island to the British in exchange for Britain granting to the Dutch control of 
Run, a postage stamp of an island in the Banda Sea south of Ambon that the two 
empires had fought over because of its nutmeg.

It was a comically bad trade from the perspective of today. But in those days, 
local farmers looking down the barrel of a European rifle sold nutmeg for next 
to nothing, which would be worth 1,000 times or more what was paid for it by 
the time it reached the salons of Europe.

For centuries, the European with the gun was the Dutch East India Co., which 
transformed Ambon and the surrounding islands, traditionally called the 
Moluccas in English and Maluku in Indonesian, into corporate possessions. 
Anyone who got in its way was likely to be killed, with methods particularly 
ruthless against native populations.

But the Dutch presence for centuries also led to the spread of Protestant 
Christianity in an area where Islam had arrived in the early 16th century. 
Christians were more likely to belong to local elites than Muslims.

While the region has never been entirely without conflict, faith rarely 
featured in disputes, with Ambon's Christian and Muslim inhabitants both 
looking to their shared past for answers to problems when they flared.

In particular, the people of Ambon had two customs that maintained bridges 
across faiths: pela and gandong. Pela refers to semiformal pacts between 
villages, and gandong derives from the word for "womb," emphasizing that all 
Ambonese are "brothers of the same womb."

A pela involved elements of mutual help. For instance, if a village were 
building a mosque, a neighboring Christian village would send men and supplies 
to help finish the roof. A Muslim village would act in kind. Gandong called on 
all Ambonese to look toward their common ancestry, embodied in a folk tradition 
that all people here descended from a tribe that lived on the large, 
mountainous island of Seram to the north.

But down the years, particularly since independence, the old ways have faded 
under pressure from newcomers from other parts of Indonesia, most of them 
Muslim, and from a central government that until recently was hostile to local, 
traditional forms of government.

Under Suharto, the power and respect of traditional leaders was steadily 
chipped away, shifted to officials answerable to the central government. That 
worked, in Ambon and elsewhere, for as long as Suharto's military-backed 
dictatorship remained standing. But when he fell, a network of control – taut 
strands composed of informants and soldiers and flunkies reaching out from 
Jakarta to every remote corner of Indonesia, including idyllic-seeming Ambon – 
sprang apart. Violence was coming.

In January 1999, about eight months after Suharto was pushed from power, a 
fight between a Christian bus driver and a Muslim passenger sparked ethnic and 
religious fighting across Ambon and neighboring islands. Among Christians at 
the time, there were rumors of national Muslim militias with designs on wiping 
out the Christian population of the region. Among Muslims, many whispered there 
was a Dutch-led conspiracy to create a breakaway Christian state in the region. 
Shops were smashed, houses burned, and men were bludgeoned to death in the 
street, by both sides.

In the early months of the conflict, local Christians, who were dramatically 
overrepresented in the regional police, had the upper hand. But as time went 
on, the balance shifted, as would-be jihadis from other parts of Indonesia were 
drawn in by national media that emphasized the Muslim community's plight.

While the fighting was originally driven by local issues involving economic and 
political competition, the Muslim fighters from the rest of Indonesia had a far 
darker agenda.

In September 2000, Jaffar Umar Thalib, a cleric who led a militia from Java 
called the Laskar Jihad, made no bones about the militia's intent. He described 
a lull in the conflict as only "halftime" and called for all Christians to be 
driven out of Ambon. A week later, he went to Waai, a Christian village that 
had been abandoned after a July 2000 attack. He decreed a new town, to be 
called Waai Islam, would be built there and praised its imminent "return" to 
Islam.

'Provoking peace'
In the end, Mr. Thalib and those like him lost the war. Christians like 
Manuputty had something to do with that. But so did Muslim leaders like Abidin 
Wakano.

Mr. Wakano, a Muslim scholar who teaches at the Islamic institute on the island 
and preaches at Al Fatah Mosque, its largest, chuckles as he recalls how he and 
Manuputty began working together, against considerable hostility in their own 
communities.

A few years ago he was putting the finishing touches on his sermon for Idul 
Fitri, the Muslim holiday that marks the end of the fasting month of Ramadan, 
and decided it wasn't quite right. So Wakano, one of the senior Peace 
Provocateurs, went over to Manuputty's office next to the Maranatha Church on 
the Christian side of town and asked him to edit the piece – a fact he shared 
with the thousands of Muslims he preached to at the service.

Manuputty has done likewise, recalling his efforts to get the Christian 
community of Ambon to see fellow Muslims as "subjects" rather than "objects" 
and to build empathy for their shared suffering. He invited a woman whose home 
had been burned and husband killed in the fighting to come speak before a 
Sunday service at Maranatha, the sort of emotional talk that was used to whip 
up anger against the other side during the war. There wasn't a dry eye in the 
audience as she wrapped up her speech – then revealed that she's a Muslim.

"Brotherhood isn't just about sweet words; it's constant work and criticism," 
Wakano says. "Often we have meetings with both sides and the talk is 
ridiculously nice and then everyone goes home, and all Muslims become 
terrorists and all Christians become liars again. We have to break the 
stereotypes."

Talk to average Ambonese, and they insist the ugly past is well behind them. On 
a recent sun-dripped day in Waai, it's easy to believe them. The Christian town 
of about 5,000 was mostly destroyed in 2000 by an attack organized from the 
neighboring Muslim town of Tulehu just up the coast. About a dozen people were 
killed in the attack, and the rest fled for their lives. The townspeople didn't 
return home until 2006.

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The rebuilding of the town's large church is now the only outward sign of the 
trauma. A freshwater spring feeds a clear pool holding eels that the people of 
Waai consider sacred. It's also filled with children frolicking, and 
downstream, women chatting over laundry.

Baldus Bakerpessy, a retired fisherman, says he was frightened and angry when 
they were driven out of town. But asked if he wants revenge today, he insists 
the village has moved on. "We're rebuilding. We've established good relations 
with Tulehu again – they've helped out with the church – it's all in the past."

For their efforts at peace, both Manuputty and Wakano received some hostility 
from former friends and death threats from within their own communities.

A new segregation
And while Ambon is much better off today, both say it would be a mistake to 
assume another war isn't possible.

The conflict itself led to a religious cleansing of all the mixed neighborhoods 
and villages around the island. Today, there are none left. While Christians 
and Muslims mix in markets and cross communal lines by day, at night everyone 
retreats to their own communities.

The town is still pocked with scars of burned homes and warehouses, and the 
countryside is littered with remnants of villages whose residents were driven 
out – never to return.

And the traditional ways aren't exactly returning. Muslim migrants from other 
parts of Indonesia, mostly from South Sulawesi and surrounding islands, 
continue to pour in, and they have no interest in Pela and Gandong or what it 
once meant. There are still preachers from other parts of Indonesia that 
trouble Wakano.

"There are people that praise Islamic solidarity above all other things, who 
say traditional beliefs are haram [forbidden], polytheism," Wakano says. "Any 
movement, Christian or Muslim, that rejects this kind of local wisdom is 
absurd. If Muhammad and Jesus were still alive, maybe they'd make Pela Gandong. 
Fear is not what either religion is about."

Stamping out sparks
In 2011 that premise was sorely tested. That September, a Muslim motorcycle 
taxi driver died in an accident in a Christian area, and soon rumors were 
flying that he had been murdered by a Christian gang, including an insistence 
from some of the dead man's relatives that his wounds weren't consistent with 
an accident.

The fire was lit. Within hours, Muslim attacks on two Ambon City Christian 
neighborhoods, Talake and Mardhika, were swiftly followed by an attack on the 
Muslim neighborhood of Waringin. In all, 750 homes were damaged or destroyed 
and more than 3,000 people temporarily displaced.

The whole island held its breath. Muslim extremists in other parts of Indonesia 
tried to capitalize, with one website calling Ambon the "Gaza of Indonesia" and 
complaining of massacres carried out by Christian "crusaders."

But a competent police and military response was matched by community efforts. 
Wakano, Manuputty, and others quickly began working with women in all the 
affected communities, helping them organize to reach out for government 
rebuilding assistance and setting up a sort of community exchange program: 
Christian women spent the night at the houses of Muslim families, and vice 
versa. The fire, that time, was banked.

But Novi Pinontoan, the editor of Suara Maluku, the small island's leading 
newspaper, says the danger remains: "It's still too easy to provoke people. We 
are getting good at putting a lid on things; that's the difference between now 
and 1999 to 2002. We keep it small."

Manuputty worries, too, that full healing remains elusive: "We need to work out 
the future, but we've lived as a wounded community for centuries," he says. 
"There's a serious post-colonial syndrome here. People are still segregated, 
and there's no clear permanent solution."

But he takes hope in the bridges that have been built and says the best that 
can be done is to keep getting people to sit down and talk.

"We're building friendship webs, like weaving palm fronds for a roof," he says.


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