Christian Post 
Muslim Protesters Surround Worshippers in Indonesia
Around 300 Muslim protesters and 300 police officers  surrounded members of 
the Batak Christian Protestant Church (Huria Kristen Batak  Protestan or 
HKBP) on Sunday as they worshiped in an open field in Ciketing,  Bekasi, local 
sources said. 
Wed, Aug. 04, 2010   
____________________________________
  
 
DUBLIN (Compass Direct News) – Around 300 Muslim protesters and 300 police  
officers surrounded members of the Batak Christian Protestant Church (Huria 
 Kristen Batak Protestan or HKBP) on Sunday as they worshiped in an open 
field in  Ciketing, Bekasi, local sources said. 
“There were many police on guard, but the attackers were able to get very  
close to the congregation,” Theophilus Bela, president of the Jakarta 
Christian  Communication Forum, said in a statement to international government 
and  advocacy groups. “We are afraid that they will attack the church again 
next  Sunday.” 
He added that a protester hit the Rev. Luspida Simanjuntak on the cheek. 
Police held back the shouting protesters while the church worshiped, but at 
 one point they allowed Murhali Barda, leader of the Front Pembela Islam 
(FPI or  Islamic Defenders Front) in Bekasi, through the cordon for an angry  
confrontation with church leaders, Voice of America (VOA) reported. 
Bekasi police commander Imam Sugianto told VOA that his forces were there 
to  protect “both sides.” 
The New York Times quoted Sugianto as saying that, “If the local people don’
t  give their permission, they can’t worship here,” but Pastor Simanjuntak 
said the  Bekasi administration had approved the church’s decision to meet 
in the field,  according to The Jakarta Globe. 
“We demand the Bekasi administration to let the public know that they gave 
us  the green light to conduct our prayers here,” Pastor Simanjuntak 
reportedly  said. 
The 1,500-strong congregation, established some 15 years ago, initially met 
 in each other’s homes before purchasing a residential property in the 
Pondok  Timur housing complex in Bekasi for use as a worship building. The 
group 
then  met in the building while they waited for local officials to respond 
to a  building permit application filed in 2006. 
When Muslim neighbors in December objected to the meetings in the housing  
complex on the grounds that the church had no permit, officials banned 
church  members from meeting there. As the local government had delayed the 
processing  of its application for a building permit, the church ignored the 
ban, 
leading  officials to seal the building on June 20. 
Bekasi Mayor Mochtar Mohammad on July 9 said he would allow the 
congregation  to meet in public areas or at the city hall, according to the 
Globe. 
Pastor  Simanjuntak chose to move to the proposed building site, and Sunday 
meetings at  the field in Ciketing were soon greeted by crowds of protesters. 
The FPI’s Barda said the church’s insistence on worshipping at the site 
was a  provocation, according to VOA. He also accused Christians in Bekasi of  
attempting to convert Muslims away from their religion, citing a recent 
Internet  report claiming that the Mahanaim Foundation, a local Christian 
charity, had  carried out a mass baptism of new converts. 
Foundation spokeswoman Marya Irawan, however, told The Jakarta Post that 
the  crowds were not baptized but only invited to Mahanaim leader Henry Sutanto
’s  home as part of an effort to reach out to the poor. 
Pastor Simanjuntak’s church has now filed a case against the Bekasi  
administration. 
“I fully support any efforts to take this to the courts,” a local 
Christian  leader who preferred to remain unnamed told Compass. “We need to 
respond 
through  legal channels and let the government know that these attacks are a 
gross human  rights violation.” 
Hard-line Islamic groups held a congress in Bekasi on June 20, and on June 
27  announced their united intent to combat the “Christianization” of the  
region. 
Bonar Tigor Naipospos, spokesman for Indonesia’s Institute for Peace and  
Democracy (Setara), told VOA that unsubstantiated rumors about Christians 
using  deceptive practices to convert Muslims have fueled the anger in Bekasi. 
He  reportedly said that Muslims believe that Christians badger people to 
convert  and entice them with money, food or other incentives. 
Pastor Simanjuntak has said that she and her church will continue meeting 
in  the field, as they have nowhere else to go.
Compass Direct News
Sarah Page  
 



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