Christian Post  
Indonesia Islamists Decry 'Christianization' Project in West  Java


Sat, Oct. 16, 2010 Posted: 10:52 PM EDT  
  
____________________________________

 
JAKARTA, Indonesia (Compass Direct News) – Islamic organizations have 
mounted  a campaign against the planned construction of Mother Teresa Catholic 
Church in  West Java Province, where Christian leaders report 20 other 
churches have faced  Muslim hostility since 2009. 
Muslim leaders said plans for the Mother Teresa church in the Lippo 
Cikarang  property project in the Cikarang area will make it the largest church 
building  in Bekasi City. Adang Permana, general chairman of the Bekasi Islamic 
Youth  Movement, said Bekasi area Muslims oppose the church building 
because they fear  it will become “a center of Christianization,” according to 
the Islamic website  Hidayatullah.com. 
“This church will become the center of apostasy and clearly disturb the 
faith  of Bekasi citizens, who are mostly Muslims,” Permana said, according to 
the  website. “In addition to rejecting this parish church, we also call for 
the  disbanding of all unauthorized churches in Bekasi Regency [City],” he 
stated. A  church leader, however, said area residents had approved the 
presence of the  church. 
Adang said opposition to the church was based in the Islamic roots of the  
city. 
“Historically, sociologically, and demographically, Bekasi cannot be  
separated from Islam, with the cleric K.H. Noer Ali as one of the founders and  
developers of the city,” Adang told Hidayatullah.com. “Because of this, we  
reject the church.” 
H.M. Dahlan, coordinator of United Muslim Action of Bekasi, also expressed  
fear that the church would become a center of Christianization in Bekasi. 
“Bekasi Muslims reject the presence of this church,” Dahlan said in a 
letter  that he has circulated among mosques in the Bekasi area. In it he 
states 
that  plans for the Mother Teresa church would make it the largest church 
building in  southeast Asia. The letter has reportedly generated much unrest 
among area  residents. 
At a recent press conference, Dahlan said Unified Muslim Action of Bekasi,  
along with “all Muslims, mosque congregations, leaders of women’s study 
groups,  Quranic schools, and Islamic education foundations have firmly 
decided to reject  the construction of Mother Teresa Catholic Church in 
Cikarang 
and request that  the Bekasi Regency cancel all [construction] plans.” 
The Islamic groups also called on Bekasi officials to clamp down on “
illegal  churches” meeting in homes and shops and to block “all forms of  
Christianization” in the area. Local government officials frequently stall  
Christian applications for building and worship permits, opening the way for  
Islamic groups to accuse churches of being “illegal.” 
The Mother Teresa church applied for a building permit in 2006, but the  
Bekasi government has not yet acted on the application, said a clergyman from  
the church identified only as Pangestu. He added that his church has met 
all  requirements of 2006 Joint Ministerial Decrees No. 8 and No. 9, but the 
permit  has still not been granted. The 2006 decrees require at least 60 
non-Christian  residents to agree to the construction of a church building, and 
the  congregation must have at least 90 members. 
The parish now worships at the Trinity School auditorium. 
Pangestu said the church has provided school funds for poor children, free  
clinics, and food for needy neighbors. 
“There are no problems between the church and the local people,” Pangestu  
said. 
Mother Teresa Catholic Church began worshiping on Jan. 25, 2004. The church 
 plans to build on an 8,000-square meter lot near Trinity School. 
The objections from Islamic groups are the latest evidence of Islamic  
hostility to churches. Theophilus Bela, president of the Jakarta Christian  
Communication Forum, released a statement this week that 36 churches in  
Indonesia have been attacked, harassed or otherwise opposed since 2009; 20 of  
the 
churches were located in West Java, with six of those in the Bekasi  area. 
The list is growing, Bela said, and does not yet include recent reports of 
10  churches that local authorities were opposing in Mojokerto, East Java 
Province,  and three others that were closed down in Tembilahan, Riau 
Province. 
Still, large-scale attacks on Christians do not happen as they did in the  
1990s and before, he said. 
“Now the attacks on churches happen only sporadically,” Bela reported. “In 
 2007 I noted 100 cases of attacks, and in 2008 the figure went down to 
only 40  cases, and until October 2009 I noted only eight cases of attacks on 
Christian  churches. But with an attack on St. Albert Catholic Church on Dec. 
17, 2009, the  figure of cases went up again.” 
Copyright 2010 _Compass Direct News_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/article/20101016/muslims-in-bekasi-indonesia-oppose-another-church-building/www.compa
ssdirect.org) 

Compass Direct News
Samuel Rionaldo   

 
Indonesia Islamists Decry 'Christianization' Project in West Java
Sat, Oct. 16, 2010 Posted: 10:52 PM EDT   
____________________________________
  
 
JAKARTA, Indonesia (Compass Direct News) – Islamic organizations have 
mounted  a campaign against the planned construction of Mother Teresa Catholic 
Church in  West Java Province, where Christian leaders report 20 other 
churches have faced  Muslim hostility since 2009. 
Muslim leaders said plans for the Mother Teresa church in the Lippo 
Cikarang  property project in the Cikarang area will make it the largest church 
building  in Bekasi City. Adang Permana, general chairman of the Bekasi Islamic 
Youth  Movement, said Bekasi area Muslims oppose the church building 
because they fear  it will become “a center of Christianization,” according to 
the Islamic website  Hidayatullah.com. 
“This church will become the center of apostasy and clearly disturb the 
faith  of Bekasi citizens, who are mostly Muslims,” Permana said, according to 
the  website. “In addition to rejecting this parish church, we also call for 
the  disbanding of all unauthorized churches in Bekasi Regency [City],” he 
stated. A  church leader, however, said area residents had approved the 
presence of the  church. 
Adang said opposition to the church was based in the Islamic roots of the  
city. 
“Historically, sociologically, and demographically, Bekasi cannot be  
separated from Islam, with the cleric K.H. Noer Ali as one of the founders and  
developers of the city,” Adang told Hidayatullah.com. “Because of this, we  
reject the church.” 
H.M. Dahlan, coordinator of United Muslim Action of Bekasi, also expressed  
fear that the church would become a center of Christianization in Bekasi. 
“Bekasi Muslims reject the presence of this church,” Dahlan said in a 
letter  that he has circulated among mosques in the Bekasi area. In it he 
states 
that  plans for the Mother Teresa church would make it the largest church 
building in  southeast Asia. The letter has reportedly generated much unrest 
among area  residents. 
At a recent press conference, Dahlan said Unified Muslim Action of Bekasi,  
along with “all Muslims, mosque congregations, leaders of women’s study 
groups,  Quranic schools, and Islamic education foundations have firmly 
decided to reject  the construction of Mother Teresa Catholic Church in 
Cikarang 
and request that  the Bekasi Regency cancel all [construction] plans.” 
The Islamic groups also called on Bekasi officials to clamp down on “
illegal  churches” meeting in homes and shops and to block “all forms of  
Christianization” in the area. Local government officials frequently stall  
Christian applications for building and worship permits, opening the way for  
Islamic groups to accuse churches of being “illegal.” 
The Mother Teresa church applied for a building permit in 2006, but the  
Bekasi government has not yet acted on the application, said a clergyman from  
the church identified only as Pangestu. He added that his church has met 
all  requirements of 2006 Joint Ministerial Decrees No. 8 and No. 9, but the 
permit  has still not been granted. The 2006 decrees require at least 60 
non-Christian  residents to agree to the construction of a church building, and 
the  congregation must have at least 90 members. 
The parish now worships at the Trinity School auditorium. 
Pangestu said the church has provided school funds for poor children, free  
clinics, and food for needy neighbors. 
“There are no problems between the church and the local people,” Pangestu  
said. 
Mother Teresa Catholic Church began worshiping on Jan. 25, 2004. The church 
 plans to build on an 8,000-square meter lot near Trinity School. 
The objections from Islamic groups are the latest evidence of Islamic  
hostility to churches. Theophilus Bela, president of the Jakarta Christian  
Communication Forum, released a statement this week that 36 churches in  
Indonesia have been attacked, harassed or otherwise opposed since 2009; 20 of  
the 
churches were located in West Java, with six of those in the Bekasi  area. 
The list is growing, Bela said, and does not yet include recent reports of 
10  churches that local authorities were opposing in Mojokerto, East Java 
Province,  and three others that were closed down in Tembilahan, Riau 
Province. 
Still, large-scale attacks on Christians do not happen as they did in the  
1990s and before, he said. 
“Now the attacks on churches happen only sporadically,” Bela reported. “In 
 2007 I noted 100 cases of attacks, and in 2008 the figure went down to 
only 40  cases, and until October 2009 I noted only eight cases of attacks on 
Christian  churches. But with an attack on St. Albert Catholic Church on Dec. 
17, 2009, the  figure of cases went up again.” 
Copyright 2010 _Compass Direct News_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/article/20101016/muslims-in-bekasi-indonesia-oppose-another-church-building/www.compa
ssdirect.org) 

Compass Direct News
Samuel Rionaldo 

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