Opinion and Editorial - November 18, 2005
http://www.thejakartapost.com/yesterdaydetail.asp?fileid=20051118.E02

Are hard-liners deviants or true believers?

Ahmad Najib Burhani, Jakarta

Some of the moderate and liberal Muslims (I consider myself as part of 
this group) often charge that hard-liners, jihadists, terrorists and 
suicide bombers are not true believers. The jihadist and terrorists are 
more aptly called deviant Muslims, people with a fallacious 
understanding of Islam.

We also blame their activities as tarnishing the name of Islam and 
harming its reputation before the hallmark of modern civilization. Their 
interpretation of Islam is also said to be destroying the religion's 
fundamental and truest mission. This is what we have to say about them.

For the terrorists, jihadists, and hard-liner camps, there is a strong 
conviction that their activities are solely for the sake of the purity 
of Islam. The real intention of their jihad is for the glory of Islam. 
They bravely conduct the most despised acts in the mind of 
Westerners--i.e. terrorism -- in the hope that Islam will eventually 
seize power. By doing so, peace in this world will become a reality.

Abu Bakar Ba'aysir once said, "If they want to have peace, they have to 
accept being governed by Islam." This group of people understand Arabic 
language and recite the Koran well. They follow the fatwa of 
authoritative clerics such as Sayyid Qutb, Ibn Taymiyyah, Muhammad bin 
Abdul Wahab, Al-Maududi, Abdullah ibn Baz, and Syekh Rabi' Hadi al 
Madkhaly. Imam Samudra, for instance, recounts why he bombed Bali.

He quoted a translation for that verse from Yusuf Ali that takhawwuf 
means "to terrorize", not "to make them afraid." "To whom the terror 
should be directed? To the enemies of God, the enemies of Islam."(Tempo, 
10/9/04) As a counter to moderate Muslims, Samudra accused them of 
hiding valid prophetic tradition such as, "I am chosen as a Rasul 
(prophet) close to the Day of Judgment to bring the sword."

Moderate Muslims, for him, display a hypocritical character before 
Westerners for the sake of money.

 From the ritual point of view, it seems that it is more accurate for 
the radicals and terrorists to call themselves Muslims. Compared to 
liberal and moderate Muslims, they are more likely to be proud to use 
Islamic symbols, attend majlis ta'lim (Islamic study group) more 
regularly, visit the mosques more often, and are more eager to deliver 
Friday sermons. If we go around Jakarta on Friday and visit some 
mosques, it is terribly difficult to find liberal Muslims giving the 
Friday sermon.

Even though they are well aware that the Friday sermon is, perhaps, the 
best way to promote a peaceful interpretation of Islam to the Muslim 
community, moderate Muslim groups prefer to voice their views by writing 
articles in major newspapers.

In other words, liberal Muslims are probably an elite group or an elite 
movement that does not have a concrete tool to liberate the Indonesian 
Muslim. They do not have, to use Paulo Freire's term, "the pedagogy of 
the oppressed" or, in the Indonesian context, "the pedagogy of the 
frustrated Muslims".

 From the social point of view, it is not so difficult to point out that 
some Islamic hard-liners are diligent in conducting social work. 
Proponents of zakat (philanthropy) movements in Indonesia, for instance, 
are dominated by people from this group. Just visit and mingle with some 
zakat activists, from organizations such as Dompet Dhuafa, PKPU, and 
Hidayatullah. Many activists of the sharia movement in economic 
discourse and activities are also against a liberal interpretation of 
Islam.

Now, the question is who are the true believers, the moderate, liberal 
or radical Muslims? Who has the mandate from God to say that this group 
is deviant while that group is true? Which group more accurately 
represents Islam? What kind of evidence is needed to say that a group is 
deviant? When two or three Islamic groups take the same texts as their 
sources for claiming their monopoly on the truth or accuse other groups 
of having a wrong interpretation of Islam, can we use or take the same 
texts as a tool to judge that the claim of one of them is the most 
accurate?

Might it be reasonable to say that the truth is not one, but many, 
multifaceted and diverse. From the perspective of human rights and 
democracy, it seems that the religious understanding of the liberal and 
moderate Muslims is right, moral, lawful and legitimate; while the 
religious performance of the radicals are wrong, bad, sinful, illegal 
and illegitimate.

However, if we look at their outward appearance, hard-liner groups look 
more Islamic, devout and orthodox.

We do not have a reliable instrument or mechanism to test and verify the 
right or wrong of a certain belief and religious understanding. I do not 
pretend to be a judge or referee for this case. I also do not pretend to 
be able to give a correct answer.

These two extreme groups of Islam, liberal and radical, are problematic. 
In finding a solution to the problems faced by Muslims today, they have 
some apologetic claims, standard and ready-made answers. In response to 
the issue of jihad, suicide bombing, the status of women, human rights 
and democracy, the liberals boringly claim that: "Islam is a peaceful 
religion," "tolerance and democracy have very deep roots in Islam", and 
"Islam liberates women and honors human rights."

They repeat this jargon. While the same dull theme is declared in public 
by the hard-liners, such as: al-Islam huwa al-hal (Islam is a total 
solution), al-Islamu shalihun likulli al-zaman wa al-amkinah (Islam can 
be applied anytime and anywhere, it has no boundaries), and Islam is din 
wad daulah (Islam is religion and a system of government).

The former group suffers from a crisis of identity, while the later 
bears an acute social frustration, projecting an enduring feeling of 
powerlessness, defeat and alienation by defining Islam as the exact 
antithesis of the West.

The writer works at the Research Center for Society and Culture in the 
Indonesian Institute of Sciences (LIPI), and is a member of 
Muhammadiyah. He can be reached at [EMAIL PROTECTED]



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