*Kalau Anda mau listerik gratis harus ganti agama seperti dianjurkan kepada
suku Baduy. Begitu juga bila Anda adalah anggota PNS atau anggota TNI ingin
cepat naik pangkat dan dilimpahkan banyak fulus harus ganti agama jalan
suci. Amin!!*


https://www.facebook.com/4bright.indonesia/photos/a.
811741068873836.1073741829.809380215776588/1725696727478261/?type=3



Viral: Charity offers free electricity to members of Baduy community that
converted to Islam

By Coconuts Jakarta <https://coconuts.co/profile/Coconuts%20Jakarta> Feb.
2, 2018

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The banner reads ” “Giving free electricity aid to Badui Muslim converts”
and below that it says PT PLN (Persero) South Banten. A PLN spokesperson
said the banner was mistaken and the aid money was not given by PLN but by
a charity made up of PLN employees. Photo: Kang H Idea / Facebook

So, you may remember a story from earlier this week about a church charity
event in Yogyakarta that was shut down on Sunday by Islamic hardliner
groups accusing the church of “Christianization”
<https://coconuts.co/jakarta/news/hardline-islamic-groups-shut-church-charity-event-yogyakarta-citing-fears-christianization/>
(a local term for conspiratorial attempts by Christians to convert Muslims)
since the event involved selling low-priced packages of food staples to
low-income families.

Wonder what those groups would call this?


<https://www.facebook.com/4bright.indonesia/photos/a.811741068873836.1073741829.809380215776588/1725696727478261/?type=3>

This viral picture shows men holding a banner that says “Giving free
electricity aid to Mualaf Baduy” and below that it says PT PLN (Persero)
South Banten.

The Baduy are a traditional Bantenese community
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baduy_people> that have long been largely
isolated from the rest of Indonesian society and followed their own
indigenous spiritual beliefs known as Agama Sunda Wiwitan.

Mualaf is a term used to describe those who wish to convert or have
recently converted to Islam.

PLN is Indonesia’s state-run electricity utility operator.

Put that together, and it kinda looks like a state-run company is offering
citizens free electricity to change their religion.

But, according to PLN, that is not the case and the banner in the above
viral photo is simply mistaken.

“It’s just that banner is mistaken, so it’s become a commodity on social
media and been misinterpreted,” said PT PLN corporate communication head I
Made Suprateka to *CNN Indonesia*
<https://www.cnnindonesia.com/nasional/20180202083013-20-273336/listrik-gratis-bagi-mualaf-baduy-pln-akui-salah-bawa-spanduk>
today.

According to Suprateka, the electricity aid money was indeed given to
members of the Baduy that had converted to Islam, but that money did not
come from PLN. Rather, the money was dispersed by Yayasan Baitul Mal (YBM),
a charity established by employees of PT PLN in ​​South Banten.

Suprateka said that PLN as an institution would never favor any ethnic or
religious group over another but defended the donation by the PLN employee
charity as a pure form of *ibadah *(worship) to empower Baduy who had
converted to Islam.

According to media reports
<https://news.okezone.com/read/2018/02/01/340/1853416/masuk-islam-warga-badui-dapat-bantuan-ratusan-juta>,
the charity gave a total of IDR351 million (US$24.500) to Baduy converts to
cover electricity payments in addition to assistance in installing
electricity into their homes and businesses and agricultural seeds.

“The distribution of aid was given to Baduy citizens who have converted to
Islam so they can live independently and are able to manage their
businesses,” said Feyza Ulufiyah, the head of Wantisari Village in the
subdistrict of Lebak, as quoted by *Tempo*
<https://bisnis.tempo.co/read/1056580/program-listrik-gratis-bagi-mualaf-suku-badui-ini-kata-pln>
..

Even if it wasn’t PLN that gave the money to the Baduy converts, are
Indonesians really okay with charities giving people financial incentives
to convert to Islam? (The difference between this and the Yogyakarta church
charity event that got shut down by Islamic hardliners are hopefully
obvious to all.)

Followers of Indonesia’s indigenous religions only recently won the right
to declare their faith on their official state ID cards’ mandatory religion
category
<https://coconuts.co/jakarta/news/constitutional-court-decision-allows-followers-indigenous-faiths-officially-declare-beliefs-id-cards/>
(as opposed to declaring themselves a member of one of Indonesia’s six
officially recognized religions or leaving it blank). While many considered
it a victory for religious freedoms, others have been concerned that it
could ultimately lead to greater persecution of religious minority groups
<https://coconuts.co/jakarta/news/indonesian-ulema-council-official-says-recognition-indigenous-faiths-regression-stone-age/>
..

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