http://www.theage.com.au/world/religious-partys-rise-raises-questions-20090403-9qqf.html?page=-1


Religious party's rise raises questions 
  a.. Tom Allard, Jakarta 
  b.. April 4, 2009 
 
A traditional Indonesian puppet, or ondel-ondel, drums up support for the 
Prosperous Justice Party at a mass rally inside Jakarta's Bung Karno stadium. 
Photo: AFP 

THE cadres of Indonesia's main Islamist party, the Prosperous Justice Party 
(PKS), have come out in force, staging the kind of mass rally in Jakarta about 
which the other parties could only dream.

More than 100,000 turned up to the Bung Karno stadium earlier this week - an 
impressive show for a work day and by far the largest rally of any party in the 
nation's capital.

As the people chanted "Allahu Akbar" ("God is great"), rock bands played and 
party officials spruiked their message of personal purity and anti-corruption. 
There was a festive feel to the occasion.

Yellow, white and black flags flew and an ondel-ondel - a giant, traditional 
Jakarta doll directed by two men inside - roamed the stadium's field. Rather 
than the usual caricature based on figures from Javanese legend or modern pop 
culture, the ondel-ondel depicted a pious young woman, complete with hijab.

As Indonesia prepares to go to the polls next Thursday to elect its national 
parliament, the fortunes of its Islamist parties are being closely watched.

The terrorist attacks that gripped the nation from 2000 to 2005, and the rise 
of hardline Islamist movements in the Middle East, have raised concerns that 
Indonesia's moderate form of Islam and its secular ideology are under siege.

It's a view put forward by former Indonesian president Abdurrahman Wahid, 
popularly known as Gus Dur. "Extremist agents" backed by "fantastic amounts of 
petrodollars" have infiltrated every level of Indonesian society, he contends - 
from mosques to educational institutions, religious councils and mass Islamic 
organisations, and right up to the presidential palace. "Since their appearance 
after the fall of Suharto, extremist movements have begun to succeed in 
changing the face of Indonesian Islam to become more aggressive, furious, 
intolerant and full of hate," he said in the preamble to a paper released this 
week by the LibForAll Foundation.

Yet despite Gus Dur's alarm, all the polling and the internal machinations in 
parties like the PKS suggest that Islam as a potent political force is actually 
on the wane in Indonesia - or, at best, is treading water.

"There's no reason to be fearful of the rise of Islamism in Indonesia," says 
Greg Fealy, the Australian National University professor in Indonesian politics 
who monitors Islam closely. "Overall, the polling is showing that Indonesian 
people are overwhelmingly concerned with economic performance - who can help 
them put food on the table and help them improve their daily lives."

A recent survey in the Kompas newspaper found only 8 per cent of respondents 
said religion would have a significant influence on who they voted for, while 
60 per cent said it would have no impact.

When grouped together, all the Islamist parties are polling about 25 per cent 
in the most authoritative surveys, compared to 38 per cent in 2004 - when 
disenchantment with the West, due to the Iraq invasion, was at its peak in 
Indonesia.

And the PKS - a movement inspired by Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood that began as a 
Koranic study group on the country's university campuses - is drawing 
significantly less support than the 7 per cent it achieved in 2004, garnering 
it more than 40 seats in the national parliament and three cabinet positions in 
President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono's Government.

To be sure, it's the PKS - which relies on young, educated urbanites for most 
of its support - that is uppermost in Gus Dur's mind when he takes aim at 
Islamist hardliners taking over Indonesia.

Yet Bachtiar Effendy, a political analyst at the State Islamic University, said 
the PKS was abandoning its "Islamic colour" to reach a bigger audience.

PKS politicians have been the driving force behind the country's controversial 
anti-pornography bill. In classic Indonesian fashion, however, the new law is 
not being enforced.

"Indonesia's social politics are so pluralistic. Anything that goes against 
Pancasila (the country's secular philosophy) cannot live in Indonesia," Dr 
Effendy said.


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