en.wikipedia.org
Indonesia Hospital (
Arabic: المستشفى الإندونيسي) is a hospital located in
Bait Lahia,
North Gaza Governorate,
Gaza Strip,
Palestine.
Construction of the hospital began in 2011 on 16,000 square meters of land donated by the
government of Gaza.
[1][2] The project cost
IDR 126 billion and was funded by donations from
Indonesian people and organizations such as the
Indonesian Red Cross Society and
Muhammadiyah, collected through the Indonesian humanitarian organization Medical Emergency Rescue Committee.
[3][4] Indonesian
Vice-president Jusuf Kalla inaugurated the hospital on January 9, 2016.
[1]
Muhammadiyah is second largest Islamic organization in Indonesia, older than state of Saudi Arabia. Muhammadiyah leaders for long have always become Indonesian Education Ministers (only exception is on second Jokowi administration where he picked Gojek founder as Minister of Education) , while the biggest Islamic organization in Indonesia, NU, has always become the ministers of religious affairs and manage huge stated madrasah and Islamic state university
Indonesian Armed Force Commander during Revolution war comes from Muhammadiyah, General Soedirman
Muhammadiyah (
Arabic: محمدية,
romanized:
Muḥammadiyyah,
lit. 'followers of
Muhammad'); officially
Muhammadiyah Society (
Indonesian:
Persyarikatan Muhammadiyah) is a major
Islamic non-governmental organization in
Indonesia.
[2] The organization was founded in 1912 by
Ahmad Dahlan in the city of
Yogyakarta as a
reformist socioreligious movement, advocating
ijtihad - individual interpretation of
Qur'an and
Sunnah, as opposed to
Taqlid - conformity to the traditional interpretations propounded by the
ulama.
[3] Since its establishment, Muhammadiyah has adopted a reformist platform mixing religious and secular education,
[4] primarily as a way to promote the upward mobility of
Muslims toward a 'modern' community and to purify Indonesian Islam of local
syncretic practices.
[4] It continues to support local culture and promote religious tolerance in Indonesia, while a few of its higher education institutions are attended mostly by non-Muslims, especially in
East Nusa Tenggara and
Papua provinces. The group also runs a large chain of charity hospitals,
[2] and operated 128 universities as of the late 1990s.
[5]
en.wikipedia.org
Yusuf Kalla is regarded as respected Islamist leader in Indonesia, Vice President for Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono (first term) and Joko Widodo administration (first term).