http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/features/indonesian-hijabers-shun-west-buy-into-an-islamic-economy/

Indonesian ‘Hijabers’ Shun West, Buy Into an Islamic Economy 
By Angela Dewan on 10:33 am May 23, 2013.
Category Arts & Fashion, Business, Economy, Editor's Choice, Featured, Features
Tags: Indonesia Islam 
 
This photo taken in Jakarta on May 2, 2013 shows Risti Rahmadi, spokesman for 
Hijabersmom, an Islamic community dedicated for young and married female 
Muslim, retounching her make-up in Jakarta. The events coordinator wears an 
Islamic headscarf, uses halal lipstick and knows that it’s time to pray when an 
app on her Blackberry emits Koranic verses five time a day. (AFP Photo/Adek 
Berry)

Indonesian event organizer Risti Rahmadi wears an Islamic headscarf, uses halal 
lipstick and knows that it’s time to pray when an app on her BlackBerry emits 
Koranic verses five times a day.

The 37-year-old, who in her 20s would save up for the latest Guess clothes and 
Revlon make-up, now strictly buys products that show she is a proud Indonesian 
Muslim — and she hopes to persuade others to do the same.

She is a member of the “Hijabers Community,” an Islamic all-women business 
network which is part of a Muslim consumer boom jostling for market share with 
Western firms keen to take advantage of Indonesia’s strong growth.

“I think Indonesia has become too Western,” said Rahmadi, who says her business 
has increasingly won clients who want to host Islamic events since she joined 
the Hijabers.

“Younger Indonesians spend most of their time hanging out at malls, and they 
forget to pray.”

Many now share Rahmadi’s view that persuading a new class of consumers to buy 
Islamic is about more than just shopping habits — it is about combating a 
rising tide of Western influence that threatens to erode traditional Muslim 
values.

They see Western consumerism as inextricably linked to a rash of imported 
social ills, from greater sexual promiscuity to increased alcohol consumption, 
and believe Islamic consumerism can be a counterweight.

Successful Islamic products range from celebrity preachers raking in money with 
live shows to RomantISLAM, a text-message service that gives relationship 
advice with Koranic references.

Designers are increasingly coming up with clothing and jewellery with an 
Islamic twist, including pieces that rival high-end, imported goods from the 
likes of Chanel and Louis Vuitton.

In an affluent south Jakarta suburb, jewellery designer and “Hijaber” Reny Feby 
displays glittering $500 (385-euro) brooches that women can pin to their 
headscarves, and also has more expensive items such as a diamond ring for 
$50,000.

“Fifteen years ago, no one wanted to buy my jewellery because it was seen as 
too Muslim, and I used ‘proudly made in Indonesia’ as my tagline,” said the 
42-year-old, wearing orange beads and an electric-blue headscarf.

“But now Indonesians are proud to buy local and Islamic fashions, and the elite 
who buy my pieces use them as status symbols.”

The rise in consumption is driven by the fast expansion of the middle class as 
Southeast Asia’s top economy booms, notching up growth of more than six percent 
annually in recent years.

Annual per capita income has steadily risen in Indonesia from $890 in 2003 to 
around $3,000 in 2011, World Bank figures show — although millions still live 
in abject poverty.

 
Indonesian jewellery designer Reni Feby showing a broach at her outlet in 
Jakarta. (AFP Photo/Adek Berry)

A shift towards conservatism

As people’s spending power grows, they are literally “consuming” their Muslim 
faith “in a very tangible way,” according to Greg Fealy, an Indonesia expert at 
Australian National University in Canberra.

“A lot of the pious Muslims in the middle class want to show to the people 
around them they’re living pious lifestyles — through their clothes, schools, 
the shopping they do and the books they read,” he said.

While there was undoubtedly already a desire for products with a Muslim flavor, 
groups such as the 3,000-strong Hijabers hope to increase this trend.

The nationwide organization, which takes its name from the traditional Islamic 
headscarf, promotes products such as Islamic jewellery and halal beauty 
products.

They are in the vanguard of the campaign against Western consumerism, most 
visible in the ubiquitous shopping malls and chains such as Starbucks.

The Hijabers protested this year against Valentine’s Day, which they believe is 
encouraging Muslim couples to be more physically affectionate in public.

Inspired by a Pakistani movement to rename it Hijab Day, they handed out 
pamphlets in several cities instructing women on covering up.

Some of the Islamic consumption clearly fits with a shift towards a more 
conservative form of Islam that has been growing in Indonesia since the fall of 
dictator Suharto in 1998.

Nevertheless, the overall picture remains complex and contradictory in a 
sprawling archipelago of more than 17,000 islands.

Even as more people buy Islamic products, there has also been an explosion in 
the popularity of “dangdut” music, an Indonesian fusion of Arabic, Malay, 
Indian and Western pop notorious for its lewd lyrics and raunchy dance moves.

On the other hand, people are buying up properties in an Islamic housing 
complex just one kilometer from a concert venue on Jakarta’s outskirts, where 
pop stars such as Kylie Minogue and Justin Bieber have performed sold-out shows.

The Bukit Az–Zikra complex, built around a mosque and study center funded by 
slain Libyan dictator Moamer Kadhafi, is a tobacco- and alcohol-free zone and 
those who live there must dress according to Islamic law.

It aims to “compensate for modern life, business and routines that often make 
people indifferent and inattentive to religious values,” according to its 
website.

Agence France-Presse


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Kirim email ke