The Jerusalem Post
April 6, 2008

Opinion

Will Indonesia's breeze of democracy reach here?

By DR. GIORA ELIRAZ

photo: A Jakarta woman reads the Koran at the Istiqlal Mosque. AP

While strolling through bookstores in London years ago, I happened upon a
book by Deliar Noer entitled Modernist Muslim Movement in Indonesia,
1900-1942 (Oxford University Press, 1978). Leafing through it, I was
surprised to learn that the Islamic modernist stream of thought originating
in the Middle East - Egypt in particular - found its way to Indonesia in the
first decades of the 20th century, firing the imagination of Indonesian
youth and challenging the traditional order. I wondered how had these ideas
found their way to the remote eastern edge of the Islamic world? More
importantly,
why has the Indonesian archipelago proved itself to be a successful habitat
for Islamic modernism - for both conceptual and organizational growth.

The riddle propelled me years later to start my own intellectual journey to
Indonesia Studies. There I was exposed to the centuries-old interaction, in
an Islamic context, between Indonesia and the Middle East, which created
widespread feeling of close bond among Indonesia's large Muslim population
to the Middle East - where Indonesia itself, however, remains nearly
unknown, as it does to most peoples around the globe.

Yet as Indonesia engages in building the third largest democracy in the
world, it's worthwhile asking if this process has caught any attention in
the Arab Middle East.

WHILE NOT evoking much interest in the Arab media, Indonesian democracy has
not gone totally unnoticed by observers there. They see it as encouraging
evidence for both the possibility of a country switching to democracy after
a long period of authoritarian rule and for the compatibility of Islam and
democracy - particularly as Indonesia is home to the world's largest Muslim
community.

Reports on Indonesia's democratic parliamentary elections and the first
direct democratic presidential elections of 2004 made some headlines in the
Arab Middle East, not only in countries conspicuous for political reform but
also in countries where the political system differs strongly from the model
suggested by liberal democracy. Indonesia demonstrates that the global
process of democratization does not leave predominantly Muslim countries
untouched and suggests that the current state of democracy in the Arab
Middle East is not related to Islam.

Still, the applicability of the Indonesian model of democracy to the Middle
East is rarely debated there, perhaps due to the lack of in-depth analysis
of Indonesia as a complex of polity, society and culture. The causal
connection between democracy in Indonesia and both the pluralistic nature of
its society and the moderate, tolerant type of religious belief that
dominates the Muslim mainstream there are discussed only slightly in the
Middle East media and then mainly in articles by foreign commentators and
experts.

But while Indonesian matters are not prominent in the Arab media, the
country is mentioned in other contexts as the eastern border of the Islamic
world and as the nation with the largest Muslim population. After my article
"Democracy in Indonesia and Middle East countries" appeared in The Jakarta
Post on November 30, 2007, a prominent Indonesian scholar wrote me that
democracy in Indonesia has increasingly attracted attention in growing
circles in the Middle East. He noted that over the last few years he has
been invited to regional capitals to speak on both Islam and democracy in
Indonesia.

Ideas from the Middle East have traveled for centuries to Indonesia - much
less so in the opposite direction. Perhaps now is the time for the breeze of
democracy from "the lands below the winds" (that is, the Malay World or more
generally, Southeast Asia) to blow towards the Middle East.

The writer is associate researcher at the Truman Institute for the
Advancement of Peace at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. 

 
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