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----- Original Message ----
From: Nugroho Dewanto <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [email protected]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, September 24, 2008 3:08:22 PM
Subject: [ppiindia] The Odyssey of an Indonesian Muslim pluralist


Ahmad Syafii Maarif: The odyssey of an Indonesian Muslim pluralist
Ary Hermawan , The Jakarta Post , Jakarta | Thu, 09/18/2008 10:32 AM | People

Ahmad Syafii Maarif was not born pluralist. In fact, he had to travel all 
the way to the other side of the globe to find what he now believes in.

He discovered the true Koranic Islam, which encourages peaceful coexistence 
among humankind.
At the time, his age had already passed forty.

"I was late in many things," confessed the 73-year-old Muslim intellectual, 
who recently won the prestigious Magsaysay Award for guiding Muslims to 
embrace tolerance and pluralism, speaking at his office in South Jakarta.

Years before he flew to the United States to study Islam and politics, 
Syafii was just an ordinary young man from a small, unknown district called 
Sumpur Kudus in West Sumatra.

Living in a quiet and poverty-stricken district, he never dreamed of 
becoming a Muslim leader, intellectual and champion of pluralism in the 
world's largest Muslim country.

He thought he would probably end up becoming a trader just like many of his 
childhood friends, with whom he shared a romantic lifestyle in his idyllic 
village -- farming, fishing in rivers and watching cow-fighting competitions.

His life took a twist when his senior, Sanusi Latief, took him to Java to 
continue his studies at Mu'allimin Yogyakarta, an Islamic boarding school 
run by Muhammadiyah, the country's second largest Muslim organization.

At that time, Indonesia was a young, hopeful nation and was about to hold 
its first democratic elections in 1955.

Like many of his Muhammadiyah fellows and other intellectualized Muslims, 
including the late Nurcholis Madjid, Syafii was infatuated with the Islamic 
party Masyumi, which was led by the charismatic thinker Mohammad Natsir.

"I think I was a hardliner, but I never supported violence. I was a 
hardliner because I was fighting for the creation of an Islamic state, 
though at the time I believed it had to be carried through peacefully, 
using democratic methods," he said.

"But that was part of my past."

During those tumultuous years, Syafii, then a vigorous young activist, 
often wrote articles in magazines expressing his support for Masyumi, which 
later after studying in the United States he criticized for often failing 
to base its political decisions on valid and accurate sociological data.

When the party was disbanded, along with the demise of the Indonesian 
fledgling democracy, with the rise of Soekarno to almost-absolute power 
with his "Guided Democracy", then Syafii still held onto the idea of an 
Islamic state as a panacea for all the troubles facing humankind.

He then brought the idea to the United States in the late 70s and early 
80s, but only to discard it after encountering Pakistani thinker Fazlur 
Rahman -- the most influential person in the development of Maarif's 
Islamic and political thought, who was then a lecturer at Chicago University.

After attending his lectures for a few months, according to his 
autobiography, Syafii could no longer ask his rhetorical question, 
"Professor Rahman, please give me one fourth of your knowledge of Islam, 
and I will convert Indonesia into an Islamic state".

It was during his discussions with Rahman that he was able to get off "the 
path of fundamentalism which was filled with flaming spirit but empty from 
deep, contemplative thoughts".

"I have never found the term *Islamic state' in the Koran or in any Islamic 
classical literature. This term was made in the twentieth century. If there 
is no reference to it in the primary sources of Islam, why do we have to 
fight for it?" he said.

Upon returning to Indonesia, many of the radicalized heirs of Masyumi were 
angry at him, accusing him of betraying the political ideas of Natsir and 
being an agent for the U.S. to weaken Islam from within.

"They don't know Pak Natsir," Syafii said.

This xenophobic allegation prevails until now, but he remains undeterred in 
fighting for what he believes in; mutual coexistence and social justice, 
which are far beyond the vague idea of an Islamic state or caliphate.

"The thought transformation occurred after a great intellectual struggle. 
We learned and contemplated deeply about Islam," he said, referring to 
himself and other Muslim scholars.

He explained that Rahman actually never abandoned the idea of an Islamic 
state and that Syafii developed his own thoughts using the "ingredients" of 
Rahman's progressive thoughts, known among academics as Islamic Neo Modernism.

Seeing himself as an intellectual- activist, Syafii stood between two great 
Indonesian Muslim scholars -- the late Nurcholis Madjid, known as Cak Nur, 
and Amien Rais, both of whom were also students of Rahman in Chicago.

As an intellectual, he seems to be closer to Cak Nur, while as an activist, 
he had long been a close friend of Amien, his predecessor as chairman of 
Muhammadiyah.

Cak Nur passed away in 2005, while Amien turned to practical politics after 
the fall of the New Order, leaving his post in Muhammadiyah to Syafii.

"Amien has changed so much now; the three of us are intellectually getting 
closer," he said.
Syafii not only abandoned the idea of an Islamic state. In the eyes of 
people who know him -- regardless of their faiths -- he is the icon of 
Islamic pluralism, a true defender of Pancasila and a beacon of hope for 
Indonesian democracy in which everybody, even atheists, can have equal rights.
Yet, he is aware of the challenges the country is now facing, such as 
extreme poverty, conservative edicts that are counterproductive to 
religious freedom and the exploitation of religious symbols for worldly 
purposes.

After leaving the Muhammadiyah leadership in 2005, he now has more freedom 
to respond to these challenges by regularly writing articles for a number 
of the media, just as he did when he was a young activist.

Unlike the elusive Cak Nur, Syafii is more blunt in expressing his 
opinions, believing that poverty is the mother of radicalism and seeing its 
eradication as crucial to curbing terrorism.
The Indonesian Ulema Council (MUI), he suggests, has to be more progressive 
in seeing contemporary problems and be more contextual in issuing edicts.

At the same time, he will never stop criticizing the people who "praise 
Pancasila in words and betray it by their actions".

What he has been doing, he humbly says, is insignificant compared to the 
prestige the Magsaysay Award has given to him.

Yet, Syafii has become a beacon of inspiration for the younger generation 
to foster tolerance and to combat bigotry in any form.

He praises young Indonesian Muslims as progressive, heralding a bright 
future for the country's pluralism and democracy.

Islamic radicalism is ahistorical, he says, it has nothing to offer and its 
supporters are now suffering from internal conflicts.

"It is just a matter of time for the demise of the fundamentalist groups," 
he said, optimistically.

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