http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2012/06/18/habib-prayer-groups-gain-ground-among-youth-top-politicians.html
‘Habib’ prayer groups gain ground among youth, top politicians
The Jakarta Post | Expose | Mon, 06/18/2012 11:21 AM 
Seeking blessings: Participants of the Majelis Rasulullah congregation pray 
during a sermon at the Dalail Khoirot building inside a Defense Ministry 
housing complex in Kebayoran Lama, South Jakarta, on May 24. In the past 
several years, Jakarta has seen a rise in sermon groups led by young 
charismatic clerics of Arab descent who claim to be descendants of Prophet 
Muhammad. (JP/Ricky Yudhistira)

Despite the inconvenience of the chaotic traffic jams that their mass prayers 
create, sermon groups led by clerics claiming to be descendants of Prophet 
Muhammad are gaining popularity among moderate Muslim youths in Jakarta and top 
politicians. The Jakarta Post’s Hasyim Widhiarto and Fikri Zaki Muhammadi 
explore the issue. Here are the stories: 

Habib sermon groups have a distinctive feature that sets them apart from the 
others: They block roads to accommodate their audiences at the expense of 
motorists caught in traffic congestion that usually lasts for more than four 
hours.

Their leaders usually don Yemeni-style clothes and turbans, and attendees 
invariably come in big groups by motorcycle or bus, carrying flags depicting 
the name of their sermon group in Arabic. 

Many members of the public often mistake them for members of the hard-line 
Islam Defenders Front (FPI) bent on violence. 

But these sermon groups are far from the radicals that their attributes would 
have people believe. 

There is, for example, no segregation between men and women during sermons, as 
can be seen in the absence of any partition separating the sexes during 
sermons. And it is common to see a married couple holding hands while listening 
to the sermon. 

The clerics, who prefer to stay out of the limelight that mainstream preachers 
crave, usually discuss topics related to Prophet Muhammad’s deeds or the story 
of the Nine Holy Preachers, known locally as Wali Songo, who spread Islam in 
Java.

With the ability to gather thousands of participants, many politicians and 
high-ranking government officials regularly attended such sermons, including 
President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, Jakarta Governor Fauzi Bowo and National 
Police chief Gen. Timur Pradopo.

In the past several years, Jakarta has seen a rise in sermon groups led by 
young and charismatic clerics of Arab descent, who claim to be descendants of 
the Prophet. 

Pioneering the trend is Yemen-educated cleric Munzir Almusawa, 39, with his 
flagship Majelis Rasulullah sermon group. 

Established in 1998, Majelis Rasulullah, literally meaning Prophet’s Assembly, 
is the biggest with more than 50,000 loyal followers. 

The group currently organizes two weekly sermons — every Monday night, which 
used to be held at Al-Munawwar mosque in Pancoran, South Jakarta, and Thursday 
night at Dalail Khoirot Hall in Kebayoran Lama, South Jakarta. 

This Monday’s sermon, however, was been relocated to the National Monument 
Square in Central Jakarta to accommodate more participants.

“I haven’t missed a weekly sermon in the last four years, and I definitely 
don’t want to miss this one,” Muhaimin, 32, a resident of Warakas, North 
Jakarta, said on May 7. “I usually bring my wife and children too, but today I 
didn’t have time to pick them up as I was a bit late in leaving my office.”

Although the sermon was scheduled to start at 8 p.m., Muhaimin, however, was 
not the only one to show up early. 

Thousands of people, mostly teenagers, crowed the square’s south side, where a 
concert-size stage, equipped with high-tech and powerful lighting and sound 
system, stood in the middle of the crowd.

Two dozen giant projector screens were installed around the square to enable 
participants sitting far from the stage to see Munzir’s facial expressions. 

Yudhoyono and several of his ministers attended Munzir’s sermon on Feb. 5.

Yudhoyono was also a regular participant of a similar sermon group, Nurul 
Musthofa, which was set up two years after Majelis Rasulullah. 

The President’s last attendance was on Feb. 29, a few weeks before the group’s 
leader, Hasan bin Ja’far Assegaf, 35, was accused of molesting underage male 
students. While the case is still being investigated by the Jakarta Police, 
Hasan has repeatedly denied the allegation. 

Nurul Musthofa claims to have about 50,000 followers. 

The huge number of followers may in part be due to the cleric claiming direct 
lineage to Prophet. 

Clerics use the title Habib, meaning “beloved”, before their names to indicate 
their direct lineage to the Prophet. 

There is also speculation that intelligence agents are behind the forming of 
such sermon groups in a bid to counter radical groups, and that they help them 
garner supporters and funds over a very short period.

National Counterterrorism Agency chairman Brig. Gen. (ret) Ansyaad Mbai has not 
denied his agency’s engagement with such groups. 

“We’ve indirect links with such groups because we have a similar mission to 
fight radical Islam,” said Ansyaad, refusing to comment further. 

Indonesia, the world’s largest predominantly Muslim country, has seen growing 
radicalism over the past couple of years that has regularly ignited violence. 

Intelligence agents have taken various measures to prevent the threat by 
“facilitating” moderate Muslim groups to compete with radical ones in luring 
supporters. 

Majelis Rasulullah’s event coordinator and Munzir’s close aide, Syukron Makmun, 
denies that the group is a product of engineering. 

He said the group’s success had not been achieved overnight, and that it took 
several years to finally come up with the concert-style sermon after running it 
as a small, door-to-door activity. 

“When Habib Munzir started his preaching activities in 1998, the way he ran the 
sermon was actually no different from what other clerics of Arab descent did 
here,” he said. 

“What makes him different is his focus on finding ways to attract teenagers to 
learn about Islam, since he believes they have abundant spirit and potentials 
to be actively involved in spreading the teachings.” 

In terms of financing, according to Syukron, the group relies on donations from 
sermon attendees. 

“Habib Munzir makes money through a family-owned plantation in Bogor, West 
Java,” Syukron said.

The group also sells various items, such as jackets, shirts, DVDs and large 
posters of Munzir, allowing followers, about half of them teenagers, to share a 
common identity and attributes with each other.

“Many participants, especially students and those in their 20s, told me that it 
was Habib’s youth and charisma that prompted them to join our congregation. I 
also heard some female teenagers say they attended sermons because of Habib’s 
good looks,” he said.

Munzir could not be reached for comment as he was recovering from brain 
inflammation. 

Majelis Rasullulah’s success story has inspired Nurul Musthofa to try a similar 
recipe.

“We only use the best quality sound system for our sermons. It costs a lot but 
it’s totally worth it as all participants can enjoy the opening hadrah 
performance and clearly hear what Habib [Hasan] says,” Nurul Musthofa’s 
spokesman Abdulrahman said.

Hasan’s supporters are also mostly teenagers, according to Abdulrahman. 

“Many people are interested in learning about Islam from Habib Hasan because of 
his charisma,” Abdulrahman said, adding that funding for the group’s activities 
came entirely from donations. 

He also denied that the sermons often created traffic congestion, saying: 
“Jakarta’s traffic has always been crowded, with or without our sermons.” 

In response to the phenomenon, University of Indonesia historian J.J. Rizal 
said residents of Greater Jakarta had no strong historical attachment to 
clerics of Arab descent because the influence of local clerics was relatively 
more dominant during the spread of Islamic teachings in the city in the past 
few centuries. 

However, Rizal said the mushrooming of sermon groups managed by clerics of Arab 
descent was probably a result of the absence of a new generation of influential 
Betawi clerics.

“Since cleric Zainuddin MZ died last year, native Jakartans currently have no 
influential Muslim figure to identify with,” he said, referring to the 
Jakarta-born cleric who was known as the “one-million-follower preacher”.

Betawi Brotherhood Forum (FBR) chairman Lutfi Hakim said the groups had easily 
gained fame as they were able to accommodate the catharsis needs of teenagers. 

“Sorry to say, but I think most teenagers enjoy riding without helmets in 
motorcycle convoys to sermons more than listening to the preaching,” Lutfi said.


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