Indonesia:   Religious tolerance bill creates news problems in Indonesia
Parliament and government submit draft bill to solve confessional conflicts, 
which have flared up in recent years. However, the proposal has generated a 
heated debate among scholars and in civil society. Bishops call for “a law that 
guarantees the right to practice one’s faith”.
Friday, October 28, 2011By Asia News 


Jakarta – Far from being a breakthrough, the religious tolerance bill has 
stirred controversy on fundamental issues. Drafted by the three government 
bodies, namely the Ministry for Religious Affairs, the Interior Ministry and 
the Ministry for People’s Welfare, the bill on religious tolerance, known here 
as the Rencana Undang-undang (RUU) Kerukunan Beragama, was presented to the 
Indonesian House of Parliament earlier this year (February 2011). After a 
series of discussions between members of the Eighth Commission of the House and 
top government officials from the three ministries, the RUU Kerukunan Beragama 
has met with strong criticism in Indonesian civil society and it is unclear 
when it might be adopted.

What is more urgent is not to turn the bill on religious tolerance into law, 
but “to come up with a bill that guarantees the freedom to practice one’s 
faith,” said Fr Benny Susetyo Pr, from the Interfaith Commission of the 
Indonesian Bishops of Conference. 

For the clergyman, the Indonesian Constitution 1945 has not yet settled several 
fundamental issues, including how to guarantee people the right to practice 
their faith. “In my personal opinion, the most urgent thing to do is to put 
into practice the bill on free religious practice,” he said in an open 
discussion.

An open discussion was recently held by the National Awakening Party (PKB), a 
moderate Muslim party established by the late President Abdurrahman Wahid, in 
cooperation with the Asian Muslim Action Network to critique the bill. 

The RUU Kerukunan Beragama does not address a number of concerns on several 
fundamental issues, some important scholars from different universities noted. 
For instance, instead of fostering interfaith tolerance and peaceful 
coexistence in a country prone to sectarian clashes between Muslims and 
Christians, the bill does the opposite by creating new problems between 
religious groups and in the relationship between citizens and the state over 
religious freedom.

Held in parliament in mid-October, the seminar saw three noted Muslim and 
Catholic scholars critique the bill from different perspectives. The three 
keynote speakers were Jesuit priest and philosophy and politics professor Fr 
Franz Magnis-Suseno from the High School of Philosophy Institute, Prof Siti 
Musdah Mulia from the Islamic State University, who is also the current 
chairwoman of the Indonesian Conference on Religion and Peace (ICRP), and Dr 
Ali Munhanif, also from the Islamic State University.

All three agreed that the bill has created serious problems rather than promote 
religious tolerance, despite what its name says.

According to Prof Siti Musdah Mulia, the bill’s name is misleading. “I have no 
idea what kind of religious tolerance it addresses,” she said. “The bill has 
nothing to say about this fundamental issue”.

A number of problems in relation to religious tolerance are evident. They 
include violent actions against other religious denominations or Ahmadis. 
Several hard-line Muslim groups view the latter as a false Islamic sect, Prof 
Mulia said. Such problems are not the result of many ideas on the issue but of 
government regulation.

Prof Mulia said that the Indonesian government only recognises five official 
religions, namely Catholic and Protestant Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, 
Buddhism and Confucianism (Kong Hu Cu).

“In fact, millions of Indonesians practice other religious beliefs that are not 
officially recognised,” she noted. For her, adopting any particular religious 
belief is something very personal and “the state should not intervene”. 
Instead, the Indonesian government has tended to project a biased image of 
religious tolerance in the country.

For Prof Franz Magnis-Suseno, the bill is easilyy subject to unexpected 
intervention by the state and from other parties with vested interests. 

The Jesuit priest and philosopher noted that under Chapter 17, Paragraph 2, of 
the bill people can proclaiming their faith only to people who have not adopted 
a religion or who are atheists. “This is very problematic since the state has 
officially said that every Indonesian citizen is legally expected to adopt a 
particular religion,” Magnis said.

Another legal and political problem is the fact that people with no religion 
can be easily become scapegoats. Communists, for example, were politically 
targeted under the regime of President Suharto (1967-1998). Being an atheist is 
politically dangerous in Indonesia.

The notion of “disseminating one’s faith” is another problem issue according to 
the clergyman. Each party has its own definition of what proclaiming the faith 
means, Fr Magnis explained. Christians and Catholics have their own idea about 
it; Islam has its own, based on a different spirit and atmosphere.

Another issue concerns places of worship. It is ridiculous that building a 
place where people can worship needs the approval of neighbours. “The state 
should allow any place of worship as long as it can provide parking space and 
not disturb others,” he said.


http://www.speroforum.com/a/QNBEKYXPPE39/Indonesia---Religious-tolerance-bill-creates-news-problems-in-Indonesia?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+speroforum%2Fnroq+%28Spero+News%29
Source: Asia News

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