Hehehe .. tuh, kliatan gimana orang islam ketakutan 1/2 mati kalo ada gereja 
di antara orang Islam. Ngakunya sih ga takut dgn Lady Gaga, tp dgn gereja, 
takutnya 1/2 mati.
Ngakunya sih warga setempat ditipu oleh gereja spy tanda tangan, anehnya, 
cuma tim Islam ini aja yg ngoceh begitu, warga setempat ga ada yg ngoceh spt 
itu.
Jadi ingat dulu di Sukoharjo jg ada orang FPI yg protes dgn alasan yg sama. 
Nyatanya, yg protes itu dr Solo, bukan Sukoharjo. Berarti warga orang Sukoharjo 
ga keberatan, tp orang FPI Solo yg ngaku2 mewakili warga Sukoharjo.
 
Hehehe... gua rasa, ga lama lagi akan ada anjing buduk piaraan orang Islam yg 
kaing2 mau ngegigit gua demi ngebela majikannya.

 
http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/jakarta/the-battle-over-bekasis-hkbp-filadelfia-church/518726
 
The Battle Over Bekasi's HKBP Filadelfia Church
Ronna Nirmala | May 19, 2012
 
“Why would they build a church here when most of the residents are Muslim?” 
Taupik says. “What reason could they have unless it was to convert us all?” 

Now in his 50s, Taupik has lived in Jejalen Raya village in Bekasi all his 
life. 
For him and many of his neighbors in North Tambun subdistrict, the first 
mention 
of the planned HKBP Filadelfia church to be built in their midst seemed like a 
sinister plot — the start of a wider Christian conspiracy to undermine the 
local 
Muslim community. 

“What I’m worried about is my grandchildren’s future. I don’t want them to be 
influenced by infidel activities because there’s a church here,” he says. 

The deeply ingrained mistrust toward the church can be traced back to 2005, 
when 
plans for the building were first released. At the time, a prominent local 
cleric, Naimun, wrote an open letter to all residents urging them to reject the 
church. 

The letter, addressed ironically enough to “All those people in the village 
whose thinking isn’t backward,” claimed that the church was meant to lead local 
Muslims astray. 

“Our peace has been disturbed because in front of our eyes is being built a 
gateway to apostasy that beckons to our children and grandchildren,” the cleric 
wrote. “This door to perversion is none other than the construction of the HKBP 
Filadelfia church.” 

He added that he hoped the letter, and an attached petition from some 300 
residents, would persuade the village chief to reject the congregation’s 
request 
to build the church. 

Though it kicked off the now-widespread animosity felt by residents toward the 
church, the letter failed to sway local authorities from continuing to process 
the request for the building permit. But the church’s progress on this front, 
Taupik claims, was achieved through trickery and lies. 

He said that toward the end of 2007, he attended a meeting that the subdistrict 
head called with several local clerics and community leaders. They were shown a 
letter from the Jejalen Raya village head recommending the congregation for a 
building permit. 

Under the terms of a 2006 joint ministerial decree, congregations of all faiths 
seeking to build a house of worship must get the signed support of local 
residents before a building permit can be issued. 

“But they manipulated the petition from our residents,” Taupik claims. “We set 
up a team to check it and we went door to door, asking people in the area if 
they’d approved of a church being built there.” 

He insists that the team found that most of the residents “had been cheated” 
into signing blank forms that they knew nothing about. 

“Some were told they’d get Rp 200,000 [$22] for signing, others that they would 
get access to loans and others that they would get free goods,” he says. He 
also 
claimed that many of the 259 people who signed the approval were unfit to do 
so, 
“being either insane or dead.” 

With opposition mounting, the Bekasi administration withheld the permit, 
despite 
the congregation meeting all the requirements. At the end of 2009, the district 
head went a step further and banned the members of the congregation from 
worshipping on the land, forcing the 560 worshipers to hold services by the 
side 
of the road fronting the property. 

Church leaders challenged the ban at the Bandung State Administrative Court 
(PTUN), which ruled in September 2010 that the decision to ban services on the 
church’s property was unconstitutional. 

Subsequent appeals to the Jakarta PTUN in March 2011 and the Supreme Court 
three 
months later led to the earlier ruing being upheld. 

The nation’s highest court ruled that barring the congregation from worshiping 
on church property was illegal. 

But these decisions have done nothing to sway the administration or the 
residents. “If from the very beginning there have been irregularities, why 
would 
we now agree to having the church?” Taupik says. 

“It’s definitely twisted.”

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



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