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Islam and Democracy in Indonesia : Tolerance without Liberalism

Nope again bro,

There is nothing wrong with Socialism, I am one of the defender of this idea, our culture like gotong royong is also part of it. My religion, Islam, and your religion, Christian has also socialism idea. Socialism even exist during Judaism period in which the people who are so religious make some kind of cooperation among the group. It is the most religious group. They are the people lived before Islam emergence. Better you learn this, as you are Christian, I bet you are quite familiar with it

Most of economic ideas are set up by Jews like David Ricardo and Karl Max. Even Psychology as modern knowledge also come from Judaism knowledge as psychoanalysis is close to Mysticism in all three Abrahamic religion (Judaism, Christian, Islam) as Alfred Adler is Jews.

Our economic grand plan is colored by Soemitro Joyohadikusumo thinking, a respected Economist and part of PSI (Indonesia Socialist Party). This party has nothing to do with our Communist Party during period of 1955-1965. Even Soemitro also has an idea similar like Bumiputera in Malaysia before that is somehow not implemented.

Look our economy which has huge state owned companies, and even we try to make it bigger and bigger, it is also part of socialism. Look at our social security policy like government insurance which is the largest in the world, even China and Vietnam which are Communist state dont have that, and Obamacare is also coming from Socialist agenda which is quite strong among the democrat party.

I never mention socialism is wrong.
Well I am talking the truth. You'll never heard anybody in our daily life talking about socialism.
Even in the university level we barely heard our college student having open discussion about it.
Because it's sensitive for what happened in the past and its proximity to communism.
And I do agree we live the socialism in our life. I did mention it in my previous comment.

Somehow I find it ironic to put Islam and tolerance in the same sentence.

Live with it and you'll find the real answer.
 
I never mention socialism is wrong.
Well I am talking the truth. You'll never heard anybody in our daily life talking about socialism.
Even in the university level we barely heard our college student having open discussion about it.
Because it's sensitive for what happened in the past and its proximity to communism.
And I do agree we live the socialism in our life. I did mention it in my previous comment.
.

Yeah, you might be right, I forget about whether I learned Socialism at school or university. I learned it by myself from book during my university time which is actually from my dad book. I think Indonesian students should not stick on what the university want them to study as University students have huge free time (for full time student).

Even in US, Democrat party members sometime are accused as Communist sympatizer by Republicans. Yup, ordinary people might not see the essence of socialism, but I believe most of our scholars understand it.

Both Capitalist and Socialist are derived from religion, as in religion, they have both ideas, particularly Judaism, Christian, and Islam. Communism in other hand is illogical, even China and Vietnam have abandoned it in practice.

Mixed economy with Socialism and Capitalism in a balance approach is the perfect blend. The ones who go for extreme will be the looser, Total Capitalism like in USA and Communist practice are something that are not preferred by Indonesians.

Communist movement in Indonesia is really against Muslim interest, so 1965-1966 is not about USA vs USSR.
 
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Democracies with Large Muslim Populations: Reflections on Indonesia, India, Senegal and Tunisia

 
When Gus Dur's 'Indonesian Islam' goes down the drain

opinion by Lailatul Fitriyah

Rome | Tue, November 8, 2016 | 11:24 am
In a July 1983 edition of Tempo magazine, Abdurrahman “Gus Dur” Wahid proposed his idea of Pribumisasi Islam (indigenous Islam). His idea was simple, that the local expression of Islam in Indonesia was just as authentic as the expressions of Islam from Hijaz, the heartland of the religion.

Gus Dur did two things by writing the piece: first, he effectively countered the critiques from orientalist scholars like Clifford Geertz who saw the Indonesian expression of Islam as Islamically inauthentic compared to the “High Islam” in Middle-Eastern countries.

Second, he substantially enshrined the cosmopolitan spirit of Islam by embracing the diversity of religious expressions and traditions in different contexts.

In short, Gus Dur rejuvenated the spirit of Islam while tackling the orientalist voices at once. You cannot be more “Islamic” than that.

Fast forward to 2016 and we find a large number of Indonesian Muslims desperately trying to emulate the Islamic expressions of their Middle-Eastern counterparts and tragically failing.

Be it due to the reaction against secularization and modernity, the success of Saudi Arabia-sponsored fundamentalist education programs, or the consumerist drive of the booming “Islamic market”, this Arabicization of Indonesian Islam brings more harm than good, and the ultimate victims of all of this are Indonesia’s pluralism and the Islamic cosmopolitan spirit.

Unlike the Arab-Islamic countries, neither race nor religion can possibly unify Indonesia. Hence, the single national identity was the way chosen by our founding fathers to establish the country.

The same realization came upon the two biggest Muslim organizations in Indonesia, Nahdlatul Ulama (NU) and Muhammadiyah, which have been deeply immersed in the nation-building process since the day of the Proclamation of Independence.

Alternative concepts of nationhood based either on ethnicity or religious affiliation were at best considered as fringe and have always been successfully sidelined, though they have consistently come up in different forms during the process of building of the nation.

Furthermore, Indonesia has always been a unique case among other Islamic-majority countries and Islamic countries for its harmonious combination of sharia and local wisdom.

The presence and embodiment of sharia in the daily life of Indonesian Muslims did not signify an embodiment of “imperial theology” of Islam that requires a rigid border between Muslims and non-Muslims.

In fact, Indonesian Muslim leaders like Abdurrahman Wahid, Nurcholish Madjid and Mustofa Bisri drew inspiration and wisdom from the principles of sharia to construct a peaceful framework for interreligious harmony.

The end results were a body of inclusive Islamic practices and fluid interreligious relations based on the principle of the common good for all.


The Nov. 4 protest, which was dominated by triumphalist fervor on the part of some Indonesian Muslims against the Christian governor of Jakarta, Basuki “Ahok” Tjahaja Purnama, was of course far from what these pluralist Muslim leaders envisioned for Indonesian Muslims.

The literalist understanding of the Quran and an absolute rejection of hard-line Muslims to the polyvalent perspectives about Islam as a living tradition turns the understanding of Indonesian Islam proposed by Gus Dur on its head.

In the hands of these Muslims, their majority position in the country, once a source of peaceful coexistence, becomes a political justification to subdue minorities.

Likewise, the cosmopolitan spirit of Indonesian Islam is crushed under the rigid doctrinal traditionalism that reduces Islam to categorical wordplay such as, kafir (infidel) and Muslim, and hell and heaven.

It would be an overstretch to say that the pluralist character of Indonesian Islam has been totally incinerated by the movements of hardline Indonesian Muslims.

However, it is also wrong to not be worried and mindful about the fact that such movements are gaining significant ground today.

It is horrifying to see how easy it is for an Indonesian Muslim today to invoke the blasphemy law and the spirit of offensive jihad just to establish his/her politico-religious supremacy over others.

It is also sad to see how Muslims who have used violence in the name of Islam are placed on a pedestal as mujahid and praised for their violent actions. Indonesia is neither Palestine nor Syria, but the acute victim complex that some Indonesian Muslims suffer from is significantly more severe than those who live in any war-torn country.

This misplaced and misunderstood notion of jihad combined with radical doctrinal traditionalism is a disaster for Indonesia’s role as the largest democratic Muslim majority country in the world.


With the current decay of the Middle-Eastern region, intractable turmoil in Turkey and long-lasting conflict in countries like Pakistan, Indonesia should be at the helm of progressive development in the Muslim world.

Hence, the problem of growing radicalism in some sections of the Indonesian Islamic community will not only affect the dynamics of interreligious life within the nation, but also influence the standing of the Muslim world in the international political arena.

A big part of the future of the Muslim world depends on how far Muslims in Indonesia can hold on to their cosmopolitan spirit and embrace the diversity within the nation. Thus, there is no option for us, Indonesian Muslims, other than to go back to the spirit of Indonesian Islam as conceptualized by Gus Dur, Nurcholish, Mustofa and other pluralist Muslim leaders.

It is in the spirit of diversity as sunnatullah (divine providence) that we must understand the notion of jihad not in its offensive form or in the invocation of religious supremacy that closes the way to dialogue.


http://www.thejakartapost.com/acade...urs-indonesian-islam-goes-down-the-drain.html
 
13 suspects arrested for rioting during Jakarta protest

27944846.jpg

Protesters use sticks to attack riot police during a clash outside the presidential palace in
Jakarta on Nov 4. On Sunday (Nov 6), Indonesian police named 13 suspects said to be
involved in a riot in north Jakarta. Photo: AP


President criticises politicians for inciting protesters after most had already gone home

PUBLISHED: 8:25 PM, NOVEMBER 6, 2016
UPDATED: 10:51 PM, NOVEMBER 6, 2016

JAKARTA — Indonesian police on Sunday (Nov 6) named 13 suspects said to be involved in a riot in north Jakarta, after a massive protest against Jakarta Governor Basuki “Ahok” Tjahaja Purnama on Friday.

Jakarta police spokesman Senior Commander Awi Setiyono told reporters the 13 were among 16 people arrested on Friday.

Four were believed to involved in the looting of a minimart, eight others were accused of attacking police officers, while one man was said to have burned a motorcycle during the riot. Three of those detained earlier were released without charge.

Mr Setiyono said the police are looking for 16 others who allegedly committed crimes during the protests that rattled the city’s ethnic Chinese community.

The protesters had accused Mr Purnama, the first ethnic Chinese to hold the position of Jakarta governor, of blasphemy after a video circulated online in which he joked to an audience about a passage in the Quran that could be interpreted as prohibiting Muslims from accepting non-Muslims as leaders. The governor has apologised for the comment and met the police.

He is standing for re-election in February, competing with two Muslims — including the son of former President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono — for the job.

Last Friday’s protest by tens of thousands of hardline Muslims was largely peaceful but in the evening the crowd grew restive and police restrained them with tear gas and water cannon fire.

One person died and more than 100 were injured in the violence, many of them police officers. Three vehicles were torched and 18 were damaged, national police spokesman Boy Rafli Amar told a news conference on Saturday.

Clashes broke out in a north Jakarta area where there are large communities of non-Muslims.

A spokesman for the Islamic Defenders Front, a group that led the protest, denied responsibility for the violence and said the “provocateurs” were the police who fired tear gas.

The group may organise another protest if the legal process against Mr Purnama for his Quran comments is not allowed to run its course, said Mr Munarman, who goes by one name. “If the law is ignored ... then we will call for similar action.”

Indonesia’s President Joko Widodo postponed a visit to Australia on Saturday after the incident.

He criticised politicians — whom he did not name — for inciting die-hard protesters after most had already gone home. “ ... we deplore the incident after the Isha prayers, when should have already disbanded but became violent. And, we see this was steered by political actors who were exploiting the situation,” said Mr Widodo.

Mr Purnama is a no-nonsense reformer with little patience for the corruption widely blamed for the chaos and dilapidated infrastructure of an overcrowded city of 10 million.

He remains popular despite efforts by Muslim groups to vilify him and is seen as the frontrunner in the election, though many voters are angry with him for evicting thousands from slums to modernise Jakarta.

Mr Purnama has vowed to continue his campaign for re-election despite the protest.

“If the country falls apart because of a person named Ahok, I am willing to be arrested and jailed but I am not willing to go to prison because of slander,” he said, adding that the video recording of his speech in Pulau Seribu last month had been edited to make it look like he had insulted Islam.

“I will not drop out of the election, I would rather go to jail if I have broken the law,” he said. AGENCIES
 
When Gus Dur's 'Indonesian Islam' goes down the drain

opinion by Lailatul Fitriyah

Rome | Tue, November 8, 2016 | 11:24 am
In a July 1983 edition of Tempo magazine, Abdurrahman “Gus Dur” Wahid proposed his idea of Pribumisasi Islam (indigenous Islam). His idea was simple, that the local expression of Islam in Indonesia was just as authentic as the expressions of Islam from Hijaz, the heartland of the religion.

Gus Dur did two things by writing the piece: first, he effectively countered the critiques from orientalist scholars like Clifford Geertz who saw the Indonesian expression of Islam as Islamically inauthentic compared to the “High Islam” in Middle-Eastern countries.

Second, he substantially enshrined the cosmopolitan spirit of Islam by embracing the diversity of religious expressions and traditions in different contexts.

In short, Gus Dur rejuvenated the spirit of Islam while tackling the orientalist voices at once. You cannot be more “Islamic” than that.

Fast forward to 2016 and we find a large number of Indonesian Muslims desperately trying to emulate the Islamic expressions of their Middle-Eastern counterparts and tragically failing.

Be it due to the reaction against secularization and modernity, the success of Saudi Arabia-sponsored fundamentalist education programs, or the consumerist drive of the booming “Islamic market”, this Arabicization of Indonesian Islam brings more harm than good, and the ultimate victims of all of this are Indonesia’s pluralism and the Islamic cosmopolitan spirit.

Unlike the Arab-Islamic countries, neither race nor religion can possibly unify Indonesia. Hence, the single national identity was the way chosen by our founding fathers to establish the country.

The same realization came upon the two biggest Muslim organizations in Indonesia, Nahdlatul Ulama (NU) and Muhammadiyah, which have been deeply immersed in the nation-building process since the day of the Proclamation of Independence.

Alternative concepts of nationhood based either on ethnicity or religious affiliation were at best considered as fringe and have always been successfully sidelined, though they have consistently come up in different forms during the process of building of the nation.

Furthermore, Indonesia has always been a unique case among other Islamic-majority countries and Islamic countries for its harmonious combination of sharia and local wisdom.

The presence and embodiment of sharia in the daily life of Indonesian Muslims did not signify an embodiment of “imperial theology” of Islam that requires a rigid border between Muslims and non-Muslims.

In fact, Indonesian Muslim leaders like Abdurrahman Wahid, Nurcholish Madjid and Mustofa Bisri drew inspiration and wisdom from the principles of sharia to construct a peaceful framework for interreligious harmony.

The end results were a body of inclusive Islamic practices and fluid interreligious relations based on the principle of the common good for all.


The Nov. 4 protest, which was dominated by triumphalist fervor on the part of some Indonesian Muslims against the Christian governor of Jakarta, Basuki “Ahok” Tjahaja Purnama, was of course far from what these pluralist Muslim leaders envisioned for Indonesian Muslims.

The literalist understanding of the Quran and an absolute rejection of hard-line Muslims to the polyvalent perspectives about Islam as a living tradition turns the understanding of Indonesian Islam proposed by Gus Dur on its head.

In the hands of these Muslims, their majority position in the country, once a source of peaceful coexistence, becomes a political justification to subdue minorities.

Likewise, the cosmopolitan spirit of Indonesian Islam is crushed under the rigid doctrinal traditionalism that reduces Islam to categorical wordplay such as, kafir (infidel) and Muslim, and hell and heaven.

It would be an overstretch to say that the pluralist character of Indonesian Islam has been totally incinerated by the movements of hardline Indonesian Muslims.

However, it is also wrong to not be worried and mindful about the fact that such movements are gaining significant ground today.

It is horrifying to see how easy it is for an Indonesian Muslim today to invoke the blasphemy law and the spirit of offensive jihad just to establish his/her politico-religious supremacy over others.

It is also sad to see how Muslims who have used violence in the name of Islam are placed on a pedestal as mujahid and praised for their violent actions. Indonesia is neither Palestine nor Syria, but the acute victim complex that some Indonesian Muslims suffer from is significantly more severe than those who live in any war-torn country.

This misplaced and misunderstood notion of jihad combined with radical doctrinal traditionalism is a disaster for Indonesia’s role as the largest democratic Muslim majority country in the world.


With the current decay of the Middle-Eastern region, intractable turmoil in Turkey and long-lasting conflict in countries like Pakistan, Indonesia should be at the helm of progressive development in the Muslim world.

Hence, the problem of growing radicalism in some sections of the Indonesian Islamic community will not only affect the dynamics of interreligious life within the nation, but also influence the standing of the Muslim world in the international political arena.

A big part of the future of the Muslim world depends on how far Muslims in Indonesia can hold on to their cosmopolitan spirit and embrace the diversity within the nation. Thus, there is no option for us, Indonesian Muslims, other than to go back to the spirit of Indonesian Islam as conceptualized by Gus Dur, Nurcholish, Mustofa and other pluralist Muslim leaders.

It is in the spirit of diversity as sunnatullah (divine providence) that we must understand the notion of jihad not in its offensive form or in the invocation of religious supremacy that closes the way to dialogue.


http://www.thejakartapost.com/acade...urs-indonesian-islam-goes-down-the-drain.html

(In the hands of these Muslims, their majority position in the country, once a source of peaceful coexistence, becomes a political justification to subdue minorities)

Since when the moslem subdue the minorities ?...
The author derailling the topic of the demo and blindly connect the movement with what occur in syria

We live in a law based country... The law said that if we insult a religion, we will receive a consequences uphold by the law... Everybody is equal upon the law...

Everyone have the right to practice their freedom of speech... Alone... Or together in numbers... In private places or in public places... it is their G9od given rights and the rights is acknowledge by the law

What the demostrator want is justice... They just want the police to pace up, dont stall the process... Let the system up and running as fast as it can, dont hold it back... It is just that simple

If the moslem want to forcefully want their demand to be fullfiled, the demo will tend to become a riot from the beginning... Not later... From 2 pm up to 6 pm is more than -enough time to start a riot

Last night a saw ILC at tv One...

The head of the armed forces and the head of the police said that they were surprised that the movement flew smooth and peacefull... They were gratefull that the religious leader were able to control their religious follower...

By their own words they said, they admitted that the riot was not started by the demonstrans... The demonstrans were about to leave the area in a calm and orderly manner... A big part of the demonstrans were already leaving the area

They saw a bunch of provocators and their company started the riot

It is also said by one of the religion leader that the moslem even helped a christian couple that about to get married in front of the chatedral... The moslems worry that the street will made a stain in the brides wedding dress tail... So the moslem helped to sweep, to clean the street... they were carrying brooms at the moment...

News like this tend to divide our unity... Nope I am wrong... This article is dividing our country... It is ruining our unity
 
Whether it is a fact or not, outsiders perceive Indonesians as discriminating their minorities.

I strongly suggest that Indonesia arrest all the trouble makers and put them in jail with a long sentence.

These useless people are damaging the reputation of Indonesia.
 
(In the hands of these Muslims, their majority position in the country, once a source of peaceful coexistence, becomes a political justification to subdue minorities)

Since when the moslem subdue the minorities ?...
The author derailling the topic of the demo and blindly connect the movement with what occur in syria

We live in a law based country... The law said that if we insult a religion, we will receive a consequences uphold by the law... Everybody is equal upon the law...

Everyone have the right to practice their freedom of speech... Alone... Or together in numbers... In private places or in public places... it is their G9od given rights and the rights is acknowledge by the law

What the demostrator want is justice... They just want the police to pace up, dont stall the process... Let the system up and running as fast as it can, dont hold it back... It is just that simple

If the moslem want to forcefully want their demand to be fullfiled, the demo will tend to become a riot from the beginning... Not later... From 2 pm up to 6 pm is more than -enough time to start a riot

Last night a saw ILC at tv One...

The head of the armed forces and the head of the police said that they were surprised that the movement flew smooth and peacefull... They were gratefull that the religious leader were able to control their religious follower...

By their own words they said, they admitted that the riot was not started by the demonstrans... The demonstrans were about to leave the area in a calm and orderly manner... A big part of the demonstrans were already leaving the area

They saw a bunch of provocators and their company started the riot

It is also said by one of the religion leader that the moslem even helped a christian couple that about to get married in front of the chatedral... The moslems worry that the street will made a stain in the brides wedding dress tail... So the moslem helped to sweep, to clean the street... they were carrying brooms at the moment...

News like this tend to divide our unity... Nope I am wrong... This article is dividing our country... It is ruining our unity
Please understand that when the author said "these moslem" the word "these" refer to those hardliner (the one that the author mention on her previous paragraph) not moslem in general. The author did not derailing things here. Your post, however, might be used to derailed her opinion.

One thing for sure, I as a moslem who live in Indonesia never liked FPI when they did their things long time ago and might never be.
 
@kaka404... Allow me to quote her first...

( The nov. 4 protest, which wa dominated by triumphalist fervor on the part of some Indonesia Muslim against Christian governor of Jakarta, Basuki 'Ahok' Tjahaja Purnama, was of course far from what these pluralisst Muslim leaders envisioned for Indonesian Mulim )

The statement above will have a true value.... IF AND IF ONLY... The demonstration act does not regulated by the law...

First of all, my friend... The law allow acknowledge them to gather up and speak up their mind...freedom of speech...

Second, there is no contradiction between those pluralist leader visions and the act to protest, since the protest has a place in our rights as a countryman... I am sure you dont meant that when it is a christian it is oke to protest and when it comes to moslem, we quickly labelled it anarchy... I am sure you dont mean that...

Third, the protest was carried out in a peacefull way... The key word is PEACE... If you dont believe me, then why did the chief of armed forces and the chief of the police whom witnessed it first hand said so last night... I am sure when moslem carry out a peacefull act than means it is sinchronized with those pluralist Islamc Leader vision you mentioned earlier...

She..., i mean the author... Cant make a general conclusion by using yesterday protest a basic argument... Because her word was contradicted to the fact...

If she meant that some other moslem, in the past (not referring to yesterday protest) has gone rogue, has done violence to enforce their belief... For example the sweepings that was carried out by FPI... Than the statement is correct...

But to make accusation about moslem act and attitude towards minorities base upon yesterday protest... Is a wrong statement to begin with

And I am not derailling, my dear friend... I am just simply put the fact on the table... The fact that is an acknowledgement by our leaders, not just our religion leader, but acknowledgement by the chief of armed forces and the chief of the police...

A discussion about FPI is an entirely far from related with our discussion right now

And the funny thing is, those FPI which you mentioned about was also among the protesters and they to carried out a peacefull protest...

And yes.... She is derailling... She gave moslem a bad mark base upon a good deed done by those moslem... Giving a bad word for a good act is absurd...
 
Whether it is a fact or not, outsiders perceive Indonesians as discriminating their minorities.

I strongly suggest that Indonesia arrest all the trouble makers and put them in jail with a long sentence.

These useless people are damaging the reputation of Indonesia.
Yes. Very bad image.
Those riot photos felt like ISIS fighters fighting
 
Yes. Very bad image.
Those riot photos felt like ISIS fighters fighting

Put a scarf and turban made them like ISIS, nice jokes

Riot happened in most large scale demonstrations, not exclusively owned by Indonesian hardliner Muslim fella though

635657690494638138-AP-APTOPIX-Suspect-Dies-Baltimore-001.jpg

maxresdefault.jpg

paris-riots-IT.jpg
china-620.jpg

riots-in-china-over-island-gas-reserves.jpg
 
That's scary, I hope all the foreigners in indonesia is safe from harm from those protesters.
 
That's scary, I hope all the foreigners in indonesia is safe from harm from those protesters.

The last photos were not from Indonesia... Miss Madokafc is giving us an example of riots all over the globe... The protest action in Indonesia was a peacefull one
 
Secularism key for Indonesian growth
By Ding Gang
Source: Global Times Published: 2016/11/9

f0a2515f-9ef6-42db-99f6-65625abe97aa.jpeg


Illustration: Liu Rui/GT

Tens of thousands took to the streets of Indonesian capital Jakarta in a massive demonstration against Governor Basuki Tjahaja Purnama on Friday last week after accusations of blasphemy. Clashes broke out between police and protesters, leaving one dead and several injured.

Earlier, Purnama criticized his opponents for using references to the Koran to urge the public not to vote for non-Muslims. Muslim hard-liners led by Islamic Defenders Front (FPI) demanded Purnama be prosecuted for insulting Muslims.

As an ethnic Chinese descent and Christian, Purnama's identity is quite sensitive in Indonesia. In the world's most populous Muslim nation, Christians are relatively vulnerable to being attacked by extremists.

It seems that the event is closely related to the election and is an attempt by Muslim hard-liners to control the nation's politics. But in nature, the protests showed conservative Muslims' strong reactions to the course of secularization in Indonesia.

Purnama is in the minority. His being elected as governor shows that ethnic boundaries are blurring in Indonesia's societal life. This, however, has squeezed the traditional political and economic space for Muslims and their social position.

In many Muslim nations, secularization in political and social fields brought by globalization and modernization is being resisted by hard-liners and extremists. The resistance becomes more intense amid the sluggish world economy, and can easily turn into dissatisfactions and hatred against minorities.

After the Jakarta protests, many Chinese worry that the massacres the country saw in 1965 and 1998 may reoccur.

In late July, riots broke out in Tanjung Balai, North Sumatra, and at least 14 Buddhist temples were burned down. As a result, many local Chinese fled to Malaysia or Singapore.

The conflicts between Muslims and Christians are also frequently seen in Indonesia. Chinese Indonesians only account for about 3 percent of the total population, but 70 percent of them are Christians.

Southeast Asia is home to a great deal of ethnic variety. In the context of expanding globalization, different ethnic groups have more contact and meanwhile, increasing conflicts due to their differences in culture, customs and adaptability to economic changes.

In a society where Muslims coexist with other ethnic groups, the conflicts will become more acute and sophisticated when Muslims get relatively isolated and economically marginalized.

Policy support toward religious groups that make up the majority population means discrimination against those who are more able to adapt to and promote economic development. This will definitely jeopardize fairness.

But the current system combining a free market economy and democratic elections will benefit minorities who are more adaptable to social changes, and therefore enlarge the gap between the rich and poor. This is a key reason for the plight that Southeast Asian countries are facing in their development.

Above all, if Muslims cannot figure out the reason why they are marginalized by globalization, make reforms through secular measures and eliminate the soil in which extremism grows, the conflicts may exist for a long time.

The Indonesian government is facing tough challenges as well. Indonesia has more Muslims than any other country in the world, and has long separated the religion from politics. How the Indonesian government will curb the radical moves of Muslim hard-liners and completely keep religion away from politics will be an inspiring example for other Islamic countries.

The author is a senior editor with People's Daily, and currently a senior fellow with the Chongyang Institute for Financial Studies at Renmin University of China.
 
Yes. Very bad image.
Those riot photos felt like ISIS fighters fighting
Why? Just because they don't want any Chinese to climb to a position of power in Indonesia? I am a secular Muslim therefore I don't support this particular protest but many Indonesian citizens - real Indonesians - feel uneasy about the Chinese minority in their country. These people simply doesn't belong to Indonesia. Can't they legally migrate back to their homeland? Do they receive any help from the Chinese government?
 

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