http://www.asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2213&Itemid=202


            A Muslim Call for Tolerance and an End to Tyranny 


      Written by Terry Lacey     
      Thursday, 24 December 2009  
       A voice of reason gropes to be heard in Jakarta 


      In a decade when Islam has been castigated and condemned as a result of 
the combined efforts of Islamic extremists who seem bent on destroying it and 
the Western struggle against them, the massive majority of moderates in the 
Muslim world have felt pushed into a corner and marginalized.  

      Yet in Jakarta, a small voice of reason was heard, and even reached page 
three in the newspapers, that most Muslims want to recognize their problems and 
deal with them, and fight back against them.  With the Christmas season upon 
us, it is a good time to listen to what they have to say.  

      Ridwan Max Sijabat reported from Jakarta that the largest Muslim mass 
organization in Indonesia, the Nahdlatul Ulama, (NU), held a joint meeting of 
the International Conference of Islamic Scholars (ICIS) along with the 
International Forum of Islamic Scholars.  This hosted more than 100 Muslim 
intellectuals from Iran, Egypt, Syria, Lebanon, Libya, Palestine, Jordan, 
Malaysia, Thailand, the Philippines, Singapore and Indonesia.  

      Haysim Muzadi, the NU Chairman, said that 60 percent of problems among 
Muslims reflected internal conflicts which should be addressed.  

      "The world´s Muslim community has been fragmented because of the 
emergence of internal factions (each) with their own claims to be the truest 
one. In Iraq, Lebanon and Pakistan, this has provided the main reasons to kill 
one another." he said.  He argued part of the Muslim community is trapped in 
internal conflicts and that this was not a reaction to the global economic 
crisis.   

      The ICIS meeting pursued three logical lines of argument with positive 
global implications for Muslim communities:   

      First, that the Sunni-Shiite split should be addressed by dialogue and 
not by sectarian violence, civil war and political splits. Haysim said, 
"Although the ideologies are different, we are now sitting together for 
extensive dialogue to achieve a common vision."  

      The secretary-general of the World Forum for Proximity of Islamic 
Thought, Ayatollah Mohammad Ali Taskhiri, supported this, arguing that Islamic 
factions have common reasons to pursue mutual acceptance and recognition.  

      "This conference is important for the pursuit of peace. It gives an 
important and strategic significance to the reality of the world´s Muslim 
community because it features delegates from countries playing roles in 
determining the development of Islam in the world," he said.  

      Second, Said Agil Siraj argued that current disputes among Muslims, 
either within the country or abroad, had been (largely) triggered by political 
differences, not religious differences. "We have to fight against ignorance, 
which has become Islam`s largest enemy," he said.  

      Finally Islamic scholar Sri Mulyati called for the promotion of unity in 
diversity, arguing that "Tolerance should be a political and legal 
requirement". Sadly this comes as some Indonesian local authorities are doing 
the reverse.  

      As Ridwan Max Sijabat reported, these "Islamic leaders urged fragmented 
Muslim communities to pursue unity and solidarity to settle internal conflicts, 
and that majority tyranny over minorities must end to achieve tolerance and 
harmony".   

      So the conference called for an end to sectarian warfare between Sunni 
and Shiite extremists, an end to Muslim tyranny over other Muslims, a call for 
tolerance between Muslims of different traditions as well as with others and 
above all to join the battle together against  ignorance and under-development, 
which are dragging Islam down.   

      These Muslim leaders  also said that Muslims can deal with these things 
if they face up to them and that the world Muslim community has the capacity 
and the responsibility to help put Islam on the right track and not to simply 
accept divisions, destruction and derision.  

      When Muslims can face their own problems squarely and fight to put their 
own house in order, then it becomes easier to deal with Islamophobia and the 
West.   

      But the voice of reason only reached page three. Page one is still 
reserved for the extremists and political opportunists who are pulling Islam 
down. But let´s be grateful for one miracle at a time. 

      Terry Lacey writes from Jakarta on modernization in the Muslim world, 
investment and trade relations with the EU and Islamic banking.   


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Kirim email ke