Please sign the petition opposing the award and let others know. Thanks, 
John/ETAN 
sign here: change .org/SBYNoStatesman 

http://www.tabletmag.com/jewish-news-and-politics/132741/new-york-rabbis-awful-award

New York Rabbi’s Awful Award
Why is a Jewish group dedicated to tolerance honoring a politician who has 
failed to support religious minorities?

By Jeremy Menchik|May 21, 2013 12:55 PM|5comments 
Print Email 

 
Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono listens to a remark by Australian 
Prime Minister Julia Gillard at a meeting on July 3, 2012, in Darwin, 
Australia. (Glenn Campbell-Pool/Getty Images)
On May 30, Rabbi Arthur Schneier, the leader of Manhattan’s Park East Synagogue 
and founder of the Appeal of Conscience Foundation, plans to give the World 
Statesmen Award to Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono. The award is 
given annually to world leaders who support the foundation’s mission to promote 
tolerance and respect for human rights. Previous award recipients include 
Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper and German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

But this year’s choice is bizarre. Not only has Yudhoyono not fought 
intolerance in Indonesia, the world’s largest Muslim-majority country and home 
to millions of religious minorities, he has actively courted Islamist political 
parties and granted them key Cabinet positions. He appointed as government 
minister a politician who blames Christians for their persecution and routinely 
calls for heterodox Muslim sects to be outlawed. As a result, acts of violence 
against religious minorities have risen dramatically during his eight years in 
office. Christian churches in West Java and North Sumatra have been forced to 
close due to discrimination in the issuing of building permits. Minority 
Shi’ite Muslims have been forced from their homes by militant Islamists and 
made refugees in areas where they lived peacefully for decades. Most alarming 
is the militants’ 10-year campaign of violence against a heterodox Muslim sect 
called Ahmadiyah; vigilante groups have destroyed Ahmadis’ homes, set fire to 
their mosques, forced their relocation, and murdered Ahmadi Muslims with the 
tacit and sometimes outright approval of the government. Just this week, 
Yudhyono’s religious affairs minister oversaw the forced conversion of 20 
Ahmadi Muslims.

“It would be hard to choose a more inappropriate person to whom a religious 
tolerance organization would give an award,”  said John Sifton, Asia advocacy 
director at Human Rights Watch. ”The simple fact is this: Persecution of 
minority Christian, Shia, Ahmadiya, Bahá’í has been worsening under President 
Yudhoyono’s watch, in particular in the last two years.”

Rather than standing up for minority rights, Yudhoyono has sought to appease 
Islamists. His 2008 decree threatened five years in jail to anyone who 
“propagates” the Ahmadiyah teaching, stopping just short of the outright ban 
that Islamists demanded. Instead of guaranteeing Christians the ability to 
build new churches, Yudhoyono has issued even more restrictive administrative 
regulations and ignored Supreme Court rulings that sought to protect religious 
freedom. Furthermore, instead of trying to roll back authoritarian-era laws 
that limit government recognition to six orthodox religions, Yudhoyono defended 
the laws on the grounds that restrictions on minorities are necessary for 
peaceful coexistence. These actions send a message to Indonesians that it is OK 
to be intolerant toward minorities and have encouraged Islamist vigilantes to 
use violence.

What’s worse, this abysmal track record is apparent to anyone with access to 
the Internet. Human Rights Watch has issued dozens of reports and press 
releases calling on the government to fight intolerance, including calls by 
members of Yudhoyono’s Cabinet. Every week, the English-language newspaper The 
Jakarta Post chronicles the plight of Ahmadi Muslims forced from their homes 
with the tacit or outright approval of local mayors. In the past year, the New 
York Times has published two op-eds (here and here) lamenting the rise in 
intolerance under Yudhoyono. The most cursory Internet search turns up dozens 
of articles documenting Yudhoyono’s failure to safeguard Indonesia’s history of 
peaceful coexistence.

The proposed award to Yudhoyono has sparked equal parts confusion and outrage 
in Jakarta. A prominent Catholic priest said the award is “playing in the hands 
of those few radicals that want to purify Indonesia of all what they regard as 
heresies and heathens.” An interfaith coalition of Christians, Shi’ite Muslims, 
Ahmadi Muslims, and human rights organizations said the award provides the 
justification for acts of intolerance and mounted a peaceful protest in front 
of the U.S. embassy. A coalition of organizations representing atheists and 
ethical humanists called the award “a slap in the face to prisoners of 
conscience across the world.” A petition to Rabbi Arthur Schneier to withdraw 
the award has garnered over 1,700 signatures from Australia, the United States, 
Indonesia, the Netherlands, Japan, and around the globe. Most worrisome to the 
signatories is that the award will further bolster the forces of intolerant 
Islamists that they are trying to fight.

So, why is Schneier planning to honor Yudhoyono? Numerous calls, emails, 
Tweets, and posts to his organization’s Facebook page have gone answered. But 
it is worth noting that Yudhoyono is considered by some to be a “moderate 
Muslim”—which in his case means that he has not demonized Israel in the U.N. 
General Assembly. And perhaps the Appeal of Conscience Foundation failed to 
consult anyone in Indonesia about Yudhoyono’s domestic track record or even do 
a modicum of research into Yudhoyono’s international record—thus overlooking, 
for example, his recent speech at the U.N. in support of a controversial 
international ban on religious blasphemy. The alternative—that Schneier knew of 
Yudhoyono’s track record but was more concerned with increasing his visibility 
on the world stage than with the human rights of religious minorities in the 
world’s fourth-largest country—is almost too disheartening to consider.

By giving this award to Yudhoyono, Schneier is actively whitewashing the 
failures of his government while strengthening Islamist militants who are 
trying to marginalize religious minorities. Bestowing the award would be an 
insult to the millions of Indonesians who are trying to promote tolerance, 
pluralism, and human rights in their fragile democracy. There is still time for 
the Appeal of Conscience Foundation to remedy its mistake. Schneier should 
stand in solidarity with the victims of religious persecution in Indonesia and 
not only revoke Yudhoyono’s award, but press him to take steps to actually 
promote freedom in Indonesia.

***

Jeremy Menchik is an assistant professor of International Relations at Boston 
University and was a Fulbright scholar in Indonesia from 2009 to 2010.

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2012 Recipient of the Order of Timor (Ordem Timor)

John M. Miller, National Coordinator
East Timor & Indonesia Action Network (ETAN)
Phone: +1-718-596-7668   Mobile phone: +1-917-690-4391  
Email: [email protected] Skype: john.m.miller Twitter: @etan009
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