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How the daily lives of Indonesian youth can tell us why they become more conservative

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How the daily lives of Indonesian youth can tell us why they become more conservative
  • Ben K. C. Laksana-
Jakarta / Tue, March 3, 2020 / 04:33 pm

2017_06_20_28853_1497924510._large.jpg

Every verse: A student reads the Quran. (JP/Sigit Pamungkas)

Indonesia, the world’s largest Muslim population, is still often promoted as an example of a modern and moderate Islamic democracy.

However, various reports have indicated growing levels of Muslim conservatism.

Among them is last year’s Indonesian Muslim Report by research firm Alvara.

Based on interviews with 1,567 respondents in 34 provinces, the report suggests the country’s young generation is becoming more conservative. The report indicates that both generation Z (aged between 14 and 21 years old) and young millennial (22-29) respondents dominate within those who identify as “puritan & ultra-conservative”, accounting for almost 60 percent.

Those are significant figures as Indonesia’s young generation accounts for almost a quarter of the country’s population, or around 63.8 million individuals.

While these reports give cause for great concern, the numbers reveal little about how young people navigate daily encounters with religious difference.

My research on the everyday lives of Indonesian young people and their religious interactions may help shed light on why they are becoming more conservative.

Everyday practices

In 2013, I interviewed 20 people between the ages of 16 and 19 from three different high schools in the nation’s capital, Jakarta: a private, public and a public-run Islamic high school. These three schools use the national curriculum, but the Islamic school has an additional curriculum on Islam.

I also conducted focus group discussions with these young people.

I found these youth do not simply learn about tolerance from grand concepts taught in class. They also learn from their direct experiences with religious diversity.

This is contrary to what the government believes.

The government believes a tolerant society comes from decades-long teaching of tolerance from the New Order regime. This teaching forbids debates on religions, races and tribes among its citizens to avoid conflicts.

Yet although young people are conditioned to avoid discussing religions in public, my research shows everyday experiences of religious diversity influence their views.

One of my respondents, a 16-year-old from an Islamic high school, shared that he came to an understanding about tolerance and how to practice it from his daily experience with non-Muslim friends in his neighborhood.

This not only confirms the importance of the everyday experience for learning tolerance, but my interviews also show young people need access to spaces and opportunities that encourage inter-religious relationships in their everyday lives.

In the above case, my respondent has access to building amicable, close and daily relationships with his non-Muslim neighbors.

But now we see the mushrooming of exclusively Muslim housing complexes such as in Yogyakarta.

Read also: Muslims only: Exclusive Islamic housing comes with loss of tolerance

These exclusive spaces are the result of a combination of growing conservatism, capitalist interests and the lack of an inclusive vision of the city’s spatial planning.

This may result in young people having more limited access to others from different religious backgrounds, further generating their conservative views.

This does not mean the existence of Muslims-only housing becomes the only factor behind the rising conservatism among youths.

But it does suggest it’s important to understand and acknowledge that day-to-day experiences influence young people’s lives and views.

The need for further studies

By focusing on young people’s everyday interactions, my research aims to help us understand the social contexts shaping their attitudes and values, including their religious views.

Social contexts play a significant role in providing spaces and opportunities for promoting tolerance in the lives of Indonesian youths.

An analysis of social, political, economic and cultural structures will give us a bigger picture. This will avoid simplifying the issue by putting the blame on the youth alone.

However, this kind of research is still limited.

Rising conservatism among Indonesian youth requires a structural analysis of the social and political contexts in which they live. We need to understand the roles of government, educational institutions, media, families and religious leaders in these young people’s lives, as well as how economic inequalities affect their religious views.

Thus, the question of why Indonesian youth is becoming more conservative remains open and demands further investigation of their everyday lives.

***

Ben K. C. Laksana, Lecturer, International University Liaison Indonesia

https://www.thejakartapost.com/acad...ell-us-why-they-become-more-conservative.html
 
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God bless Indonesia! Inshallah soon you ban those western hoes wearing bikinis in Bali, alcohol and couples intermingling. Liberal disease must stop.
 
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Look like the writer try to mislead, after reading the report I just found that 57 percent of the respondent are considered as moderate Muslim, the rest are conservative (25.5 %) and ultraconservative (11 percent).

There is no report which breakdown the founding into how much generation Z (14-21 years old) are considered as conservative or ultraconservative. Unless the writer has close relationship with the survey organization and have seen the number. Despite so I doubt any people with age about 14-21 are considered as ultraconservative. Despite so I welcome the increase conservatism among young generation if the finding is true. It means political Islam has great potential in future Indonesian politics.
 
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Look like the writer try to mislead, after reading the report I just found that 57 percent of the respondent said they are moderate Muslim, the rest are conservative (25.5 %) and ultraconservative (11 percent).

There is no report which breakdown the founding into how much generation Z (14-21 years old) consider themselves as conservative or ultraconservative.

I doubt they view themselves as ultraconservative as the term itself has negative tone on the people mind.

The entire world is turning more conservative including Europe and America...

As global resources dwindle with increasing global climate crisis;. As debt based fiat based currency exposes crony capitalism; as global over population exposes increased concerns over immigration and failed multiculturalism; and as people struggle to make ends meet....

Conservatism and nationalism increases
 
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The entire world is turning more conservative including Europe and America...

As global resources dwindle with increasing global climate crisis;. As debt based fiat based currency exposes crony capitalism; as global over population exposes increased concerns over immigration and failed multiculturalism; and as people struggle to make ends meet....

Conservatism and nationalism increases

The conservatism that is measured in this survey is in relation with religion. If we try to calculate that into Western world I think American and European have become more liberal. It can be measured by seeing the percentage of them who favor legalizing gay marriage, euthanasia, abortion, sex before marriage etc. Clear majority of German public for instant are favoring to give the right for euthanasia.

If we use the same measure into Muslim group, so even moderate Muslim will still be considered as conservative in Western world standard. For example almost all Indonesian Muslim being surveyed are against gay community, promiscuity (like kissing, hugging, sex before married), prostitution, etc. And I believe almost 90 percent Indonesian Muslim is also against abortion and euthanasia, similar percentage I believe also true for other Muslim nations.

Only 0,4 percent of Indonesian Muslim on the survey dont do 5 times daily prayer. 74 percent women wear hijab @jamahir .The number is quite surprising since 31 percent people being surveyed are generation Z (14-21 years old).

The number of Indonesian women wearing hijab voluntarily should give some lesson for Taliban, Saudi, and Iran who force their woman to wear hijab.
 
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There is religious revival all over the world in very short of time before the Armageddon.

Not just the Muslims in Indonesia, but also Christianity in Russia, Buddhism in China, etc.
 
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The writer actually try to make conservatism as something bad and try to relate conservatism as group of people that has lacked of tolerance. The survey though reveals the opposite since generation X who are viewed as ultraconservative by the writer (I said it because the report doesnt break down the data and reveal the actual number) has better tolerance on people with different religion.
 
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More knowledge of Islam results in less radicalism and less terrorism. These groups prey on those who don't have knowledge of Islam.

Conservatism is not the same as radicalism.

Indonesians are becoming much more Islamic, I can tell from conversations with my colleagues.
 
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The conservatism that is measured in this survey is in relation with religion. If we try to calculate that into Western world I think American and European have become more liberal. It

Not true for America. Most Middle America has grown more "religious" over the last decade.

European...yes... From.. Their context is from more nationalism, cultural or racial conservatism. However, even racial/cultural conservatism is in itself a "religion"... A humanist atheist religion... A worship of one oneself.
 
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Basically they were trained to be conservatives when they are young? I think the only way they can break this would be to play PC games which will moderate anyone because it force them to think of their situation which kind of works for the rest of the world.
 
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Not true for America. Most Middle America has grown more "religious" over the last decade.

European...yes... From.. Their context is from more nationalism, cultural or racial conservatism. However, even racial/cultural conservatism is in itself a "religion"... A humanist atheist religion... A worship of one oneself.

Americans are adopting religion more as an identity than a belief system. It comes coupled with white-ness in the US. Those colored people who are Christian Right, many think it elevates them in the hierarchy to the same level as whites, but it doesnt.

Privately though many are professed atheists, agnostics, or simply have no regard for religion other than labels to relate to or hate.

Identity politics in the US are very toxic.

Basically they were trained to be conservatives when they are young? I think the only way they can break this would be to play PC games which will moderate anyone because it force them to think of their situation which kind of works for the rest of the world.

Lol.
 
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It's becoming really suffocating to be honest... everything here is viewed mostly through the lens of religiosity nowadays... Practicality, skill, capability, culture and sometimes even common sense are becoming secondary to religiosity... and when I say religiosity, it means Islamic religiosity... The more extreme elements simply wants Indonesia to adopt the "Caliphate" system.. the slightly less extreme wants to turn us into an Islamic Republic of sorts.. the more "moderate" wants to adopt more shariah laws into the national or local laws... Hell, they are even drafting a new national legislation to regulate the roles of husband and wife.. and also what is permissible in a married couple's "bed activities". :fie:

Hijabs are practically mandatory in a lot of public schools.. technically they are not.. but expect to be pressured or even bullied if one doesn't wear and conform to the majority.. Recently there was a minor uproar when it became known that some student organizations (in some state universities) begins blurring out the pics of their female colleagues or replacing them with drawings...

I don't know how far this religious conservatism will go from here... But I fear this will only increase the segregation within our society to the detriment of our national unity... I don't really mind seeing people becoming more conservative or more religious... but it becomes a problem when they began forcing this conservatism onto others and stop mingling with those they deemed "different".. I worry that Indonesia's formerly rich cultural diversity will slowly turn into a barren desert of homogeneity if this goes unchecked... :(
 
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Americans are adopting religion more as an identity than a belief system. It comes coupled with white-ness in the US. Those colored people who are Christian Right, many think it elevates them in the hierarchy to the same level as whites, but it doesnt.

Privately though many are professed atheists, agnostics, or simply have no regard for religion other than labels to relate to or hate.

Identity politics in the US are very toxic.



Lol.

True ..
Accurate analysis on the American Christian Right
 
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Only 0,4 percent of Indonesian Muslim on the survey dont do 5 times daily prayer. 74 percent women wear hijab @jamahir .The number is quite surprising since 31 percent people being surveyed are generation Z (14-21 years old).

Yes, in India the number of burqa-wearers among the young has gone up in the last 10 to 15 years. My older relatives tell me that 10 to 15 years ago, none among my relatives used to wear the burqa, but now... boom.. we see the burqa.

I have seen Indonesian and Malaysian Muslim young women ( studying in India ) wear a thick hijab ( headscarf ) that comes down over the chest.

Among the men in India, I have seen the Deobandi-type beard ( without mustache ) become more and more among the youth. This goes side by side with more youth joining the Tableeghi Jamaat, Popular Front of India ( PFI ), Campus Front of India ( student wing of PFI ), Social Democratic Party of India ( SDPI, also connected to PFI ) and such other mullah / "religious" groups.

All this is different from earlier decades when many Muslim youth were not "religious" and were participating in Progressive / Socialist movements. Please read this thread I had posted in 2016. It is an article by the Pakistani journalist Nadeem Paracha about Modern Socialist activism among Muslims and in Muslim-majority societies, from Indonesia to Somalia to Pakistan and many others, in the last many decades.

As for Indonesia, Google gives this - "The Communist Party of Indonesia was a communist party in Indonesia during the mid-20th century. It was the largest non-ruling communist party in the world before its eradication in 1965 and ban the following year."

In South Asia, we see burqa gangs who sometimes go out in protests with banners that say "The hijab is not my compulsion, it is my pride". :lol:

This is how others see it :

i-saw-her-standing-there-and-i-told-her-she-25323152.png


God bless Indonesia! Inshallah soon you ban those western hoes wearing bikinis in Bali, alcohol and couples intermingling. Liberal disease must stop.

I too don't like women openly going about in bikinis ( especially skeleton-thin ones - they are an eyesore ), alcohol and public display of affection ( PDA ). There should be freedom but there should also be a social line that cannot be crossed.
 
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I too don't like women openly going about in bikinis ( especially skeleton-thin ones ), alcohol and public display of affection ( pda ). There should be freedom but there should also be a social line that cannot be crossed.
I think that Indonesia should absolutely ban white people altogether. They bring nothing but degeneracy, immorality and vulgar thoughts to the society. Such elements of corruption have no place in the holy nation of Indonesia so I am 100% behind Indonesia's drive to be conservative. May Allah bless Indonesia.
 
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