hebat....
saluttt...

oh my father Suharto, please come back once more!!!!

i beg you...for kicking out islamic terrorists in this archipelago for 
32 years....





--- In [email protected], "Ambon" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> 
> 
>       
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-hatred20m
ar20,1,6400945.story?page=2&cset=true&ctrack=1&coll=la-hea
dlines-world
> 
>       From the Los Angeles Times
>       Separation of Mosque, State Wanes in Indonesia
>       By Richard C. Paddock
>       Times Staff Writer
> 
>       March 20, 2006
> 
>       MALANG, Indonesia - Yusman Roy, a former boxer and a 
convert to Islam, is serving two years in prison because he 
believes that Muslims should pray in a language they can 
understand.
> 
>       Roy, who led bilingual prayer sessions at his small East 
Java boarding school, is seen as a heretic by conservative 
Muslims here. They believe true prayer can be conducted only in 
Arabic.
> 
>       Roy's desire to pray in Indonesian has sparked such an 
outrage that he was convicted last year in criminal court of 
"spreading hatred." Animosity toward Roy ran so high that police 
posted guards to keep an angry mob from torching his house 
and school. 
> 
>       Now, he is kept in a cell by himself at overcrowded 
Lowokwaru prison, and the warden has warned him not to 
preach to his fellow inmates in any language.
> 
>       Roy is one of at least 10 Muslims incarcerated in recent 
months for what the Indonesian Council of Ulemas, the country's 
most influential Muslim body in setting religious policy, has 
deemed deviant thinking. 
> 
>       "The government and the council have been working 
together to suppress my ideas," Roy said during an interview in 
prison. "But this will not stop me from doing what I believe." 
> 
>       Indonesia is a democratic, secular country, and there is no 
constitutional basis for using Islamic law in court in most 
regions. But insulting a religion is a crime, and a fatwa, or 
religious edict, issued by the Council of Ulemas can carry great 
weight as evidence of an alleged offense to Islam. 
> 
>       Indonesia, which has more than 190 million Muslims, the 
world's largest Islamic population, has become increasingly 
conservative since the 1998 collapse of President Suharto's 
military regime. In recent years, the government has grown more 
active in enforcing religious law.
> 
>       In recent months, fatwas issued by the Indonesian Council 
of Ulemas and its regional councils denouncing clerics and 
cults as deviant have been followed by arrests, prosecution and 
sometimes mob violence against the accused. 
> 
>       Sumardi Tappaya, 60, a high school religious teacher on 
the island of Sulawesi, was locked up in January after a relative 
told police he had heard Sumardi whistling while he prayed. The 
whistling was declared deviant by the local ulemas, and 
Sumardi is now in jail awaiting trial on charges of religious 
blasphemy. He faces five years in prison.
> 
>       Ardhi Husain, 50, who ran an Islamic center in East Java 
that treated drug addiction and cancer with traditional medicine 
and prayer, was sentenced in September to five years in prison 
for writing a book that the ulemas said contained 70 "errors," 
such as claiming that Muhammad was not the last prophet and 
that non-Muslims could go to heaven. Five editors of the book 
also received five-year terms. An employee who sold a copy to a 
neighbor received three years. 
> 
>       After Husain's arrest, a mob burned down his facility. No 
one has been arrested in the attack.
> 
>       Lia Aminuddin, 58, who claims to be the Virgin Mary and 
leads the quasi-Islamic God's Kingdom of Eden cult, was 
arrested in December on blasphemy charges after thousands of 
angry protesters surrounded her headquarters in Jakarta, the 
Indonesian capital. The ulemas and demonstrators accused her 
of insulting Islam by claiming that she was married to the 
archangel Gabriel and that God spoke to her through him. (In 
Islam, Gabriel, or Jibril, is revered as the archangel who 
communicated God's word to Muhammad.) 
> 
>       Prominent human rights lawyer Adnan Buyung Nasution, 
whose Indonesian Legal Aid Foundation represents several of 
the accused, says the government is ignoring zealots who 
commit religious violence and instead prosecuting the targets of 
religious hatred.
> 
>       "The intolerance is becoming worse," Nasution said. "Why 
are the victims being punished?"
> 
>       Fighting between Muslims and Christians has claimed 
thousands of lives in Indonesia in recent years, and Islamic 
suicide bombers have staged high-profile attacks in Bali and 
Jakarta that have killed hundreds. Less visible has been the 
effort by conservative Muslims to compel other members of their 
faith to hew to a more traditional line.
> 
>       The Indonesian Council of Ulemas, which is made up of 43 
Muslim scholars and leaders of major Islamic organizations, 
was formed in 1975 to guide Muslims on how to live in 
accordance with Islamic principles. Muslims make up more than 
85% of the nation's population.
> 
>       The council has recently issued fatwas banning women 
from leading prayers if a man is present and prohibiting Muslims 
from praying alongside members of other religions. Provincial 
and local branches of the council also have issued numerous 
fatwas regulating Islamic practices. 
> 
>       Ma'ruf Amin, a vice chairman of the Indonesian Council of 
Ulemas and the chairman of its fatwa committee, says the 
ulemas' role is to define proper behavior for Muslims and to set 
boundaries that protect the purity of Islam. 
> 
>       He denies that the ulemas are promoting hatred, and says 
Muslims who engage in deviant practices are bringing violence 
upon themselves.
> 
>       "These kinds of people are the ones who cause all the 
trouble, and the people wouldn't bother to riot if there was no one 
who deviated," Amin said. "These kinds of people should not 
exist."
> 
>       Some moderate Muslim leaders charge that the Council of 
Ulemas has been infiltrated by hard-line groups, particularly the 
Islamic Defenders Front.
> 
>       Defenders Front Chairman Habib Rizieq, who declares 
himself a follower of Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, says it 
is important to keep Muslims from being swayed by ideas 
deemed to be heretical, such as bilingual prayer. "All deviant 
teaching has to be banned," he said. 
> 
>       It is clear that Roy, 51, is not a conventional Muslim. 
> 
>       An eagle carrying a red heart is tattooed on the back of his 
left hand. His Koran is in Indonesian as well as Arabic, and on 
nearly every page he has highlighted passages in yellow and 
marked them in pen. A flattened nose and a cauliflower ear 
testify to his days as a professional boxer. He says he once held 
the Indonesian lightweight record for the fastest knockout: 59 
seconds.
> 
>       Sitting cross-legged on a thin mat on the floor of the prison 
visiting room, the father of nine contends that he is a victim of 
religious persecution. He says he is being silenced for 
challenging the Islamic establishment, particularly the Council of 
Ulemas, with his effort to ensure that all Muslims understand the 
principles of their religion.
> 
>       "My original thinking has made them jealous," said Roy, 
wearing his prison denims and sporting a few short whiskers on 
his chin.
> 
>       Born to a Dutch Catholic mother and an Indonesian Muslim 
father, Roy chose Catholicism as a teenager but converted to 
Islam when he was in his early 30s. He says Islam helped save 
him from a life of a crime and violence. 
> 
>       Even as he boxed professionally, he says, he hired himself 
out to businessmen and politicians to beat up rivals and critics, 
collect money from debtors and recruit thugs to carry out 
mayhem. He avoided prison by bribing police whenever he was 
arrested, he says. 
> 
>       Roy embraced Islam but, like most Indonesians, never 
learned Arabic well. 
> 
>       The disadvantage is greatest when it comes to salat, the 
prayers performed by the faithful five times a day while facing 
Mecca. Many scholars interpret Muhammad's guidance to "pray 
like you see me praying" to mean that salat can be performed 
only in Arabic. But other scholars disagree, saying there is 
nothing sacred about Arabic itself.
> 
>       In theory, Indonesian Muslims learn the meaning of their 
prayers in their own language as they memorize the Arabic 
words. But Roy estimates that at least 70% of Indonesia's 
Muslims don't know what their prayers mean. Most Indonesians 
defer to Arabic speakers in interpreting the Koran, he says, 
which can make them vulnerable to the teachings of militant 
Muslims.
> 
>       "Because of their lack of understanding, they do not have 
high-quality prayers," he says. "That is why there are people who 
are angry and commit violence. If they had high-quality prayers, 
they would not become terrorists."
> 
>       At his small boarding school and residence on the outskirts 
of Malang, Roy quietly began three years ago to lead salat in 
Indonesian for a few of his followers. His practice might have 
gone unnoticed, but in his zeal to spread his idea, he made a 
video of himself praying in Indonesian and Arabic and distributed 
copies at nearby mosques.
> 
>       Word of Roy's practices soon reached members of the 
Islamic Defenders Front, whose white-robed members 
confronted him during a debate at his school. The local and 
provincial ulema councils issued fatwas against him. Some in 
the community became outraged, and Roy was put on trial.
> 
>       Prosecutor Ahmad Arifin, 39, who tried the case against 
Roy, presented nine witnesses, including three from the local 
and provincial ulema councils. The fatwas were entered as 
evidence that Islam rejects bilingual prayer and that Roy had 
insulted Islam. 
> 
>       "He distributed his video, and it spread hatred in the 
community," Arifin said. "People hated Roy for spreading his 
ideas in a public way." 
> 
>       In August, the judge acquitted Roy of the charge that his 
teachings deviated from Islam, but found him guilty of inciting 
hatred by challenging the views of local clerics.
> 
>       Roy seems to accept his fate with equanimity. Serving two 
years in prison for his faith, he says, helps atone for his violent 
crimes that went unpunished. He says prison has only affirmed 
his belief in bilingual prayer, and he plans to continue pushing 
for its adoption once he is freed.
> 
>       Roy's sentence is only six months shorter than the term 
given radical cleric Abu Bakar Bashir, the purported spiritual 
leader of Jemaah Islamiah. The Southeast Asian affiliate of Al 
Qaeda is believed to have killed at least 225 people in suicide 
bombings in Bali and Jakarta.
> 
>       Yet some think two years behind bars may be too short for 
Roy.
> 
>       "Whether it is enough depends on whether he realizes his 
error," said Rizieq, the Islamic Defenders Front leader. "If he 
doesn't, not even a life sentence is enough." 
> 
>      
> 
> 
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>







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