Christianworshipers have been forced to pray in the open air in a town in Indonesia'sWest Java province after the town's majority Muslim population opposed thebuilding of a church.
Showing posts with label Churches. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Churches. Show all posts
Sunday, September 4, 2011
Indonesian mayor resists building of church
Christianworshipers have been forced to pray in the open air in a town in Indonesia'sWest Java province after the town's majority Muslim population opposed thebuilding of a church.
Afterlosing all legal battles, including a verdict from country's highest court, themayor says he cannot allow a church to be built on a street with an Islamicname.
Thenational ombudsman has given the mayor two more weeks to implement the supremecourt's decision and let the congregation build its church.
Thestandoff is being seen as a national test case of religious tolerance, withrecent research showing a growing number of Muslims are against the presence ofa church in their neighbourhood.
AlJazeera's Step Vaessen reports from Bogor, in West Java.
Friday, June 24, 2011
Bogor Mayor Takes Teenager as His Fourth Wife
Jakarta Globe, June 24, 2011
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Indonesia’s most controversial mayor, Diani Budiarto, 56, has found himself at the center of a new scandal — taking a teenager as his fourth wife.
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Indonesia’s most controversial mayor, Diani Budiarto, 56, has found himself at the center of a new scandal — taking a teenager as his fourth wife. (Photo courtesy of Kotabogor.go.id) |
The Bogor mayor, who continues to thumb his nose at Indonesian law by refusing to allow the GKI Yasmin church to reopen, remains married to three other woman, including his first wife, Fauziah, who is in hospital.
Even though Law No 10/1983 strictly forbids civil servants from practicing polygamy, Bogor municipal spokesman Asep Firdaus said Diani had not broken any rules by marrying the 19-year-old.
“Even though he is a mayor, he retired as a civil servant four months ago,” Asep was quoted as saying by news portal Detik.com. “Hence, he did not violate Law No 10/1083. Nothing is wrong, the woman is an adult and they got married legally,” he claimed.
That was news to Irianto, head of Bogor-based nongovernmental organization the Law Monitoring Front (BMH).
He alleged that Diani had had breached the law because he got married “without the permission of his [other] wives.”
Diani is serving his second term as the mayor of Bogor. He was reelected in 2009 and received support from a number of parties, including the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P), Golkar and the Islam-based Prosperous Justice Party (PKS).
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Tuesday, February 8, 2011
Churches Ablaze in Protest in Central Java
Jakarta Globe, Candra Malik | February 09, 2011
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Temanggung, Central Java. Roving mobs of Muslims on Tuesday attacked and vandalized five buildings, including two churches, in the small Central Java town of Temanggung following the sentencing of a man on trial for contempt of Islam.
Judges at the district court in Temanggung on Tuesday sentenced Antonius Richmord Bawengan, 58, to five years in jail, as the prosecutors had requested.
The verdict angered members of hard-line Islamic groups, who thought it was too lenient, setting off the spasm of violence.
Two churches, a school and two police stations were vandalized by the mobs and a number of cars and motorcycles were set on fire. Nine people were injured in the violence, most by thrown stones, police said.
The defendant and the judges and prosecutors had to be rushed out of the courtroom by police officers after hundred of people rushed toward them amid shouts of “Allahu Akbar” after the verdict was announced.
Djoko Suyanto, the coordinating ninister for political, legal, and security affairs, said President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono condemned the violence, which came just days after a violent attack on an Ahmadiyah community in Pandeglang, Banten, that left three people dead and five injured.
“The Central Java Police have been instructed to immediately find the perpetrators of the anarchy and deal with them through the legal process,” Djoko said in a written statement.
National Police Chief Gen. Timur Pradopo said shortly after returning from Temanggung that one person had been arrested. “We have arrested one suspect and may name more as the investigation continues,” he said. “We will uphold the law against whoever breaches it.”
He said that like many of the others involved, the suspect was not from Temanggung, which he said pointed to the violence being orchestrated by outsiders.
The rioting ended some five hours after it started when hundreds of police reinforcements arrived from other regions.
Antonius, a resident of Manado, North Sulawesi, who holds a Jakarta identity card, was convicted of distributing a book titled “Ya Tuhan, Tertipu Aku” (“Oh My God, I Was Fooled”) and leaflets titled “Selamatkan Diri Dari Dajjal dan Kiamat” (“Save Yourself from the Antichrist and Doomsday”).
They were distributed in Kranggan village in Temanggung in October.
The book said the Kaaba, Islam’s holiest shrine, is a symbol of the female genital organ while the Jamrah pillar — another significant object in Islam — is the male equivalent. The texts also described Islam as violent.
Siti Mahanim, who prosecuted the case, said Antonius was guilty of violating the Criminal Code on insulting Islam and recommended the maximum sentence for the offense, five years in jail.
“I regret my deeds and plead guilty. To the religious people, especially Muslims in Indonesia, whose hearts were hurt by my actions, I apologize,” Antonius said in court. With the admission, the judges immediately announced their verdict.
The Temanggung Police had deployed more than 400 officers in and around the court building, and limited the number of people allowed inside the courtroom, police spokesman Adj. Comr. Marino said.
Police fired three warning shots and tear gas canisters outside the court but the mob then split up and attacked a Pentecostal church, St. Peter and Paul Catholic Church and the Shekinah school in the complex of Bethel Indonesia Church. They burned vehicles and later set fire to two police trucks.
Benny Susetyo, head of the Indonesian Bishops Conference (KWI), told the Jakarta Globe that reports from Temanggung indicated the rioters were probably not locals. “Our team reported that they were transported to the locations in trucks. It seems like they were from outside the district,” he said.
Benny called on the government to “arrest the perpetrators, whoever they are and whatever their motivation was.”
Additional reporting by Farouk Arnaz, Dessy Sagita, Markus Junianto Sihaloho & Hartono

Blasphemy effect: (Krisna Krisna Sumargo/Tribunnews)
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Thursday, February 3, 2011
‘Imlek’ celebrated in the spirit of pluralism
Andi Hajramurni and Slamet Susanto, The Jakarta Post, Makassar/Yogyakarta | Fri, 02/04/2011
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Festive mood: A Church congregation joins a Chinese-themed Mass at Tebet Catholic Church in South Jakarta on Thursday. The celebration is part of Chinese New Year festivities. JP/Damar Harsanto |
Chinese New Year, or Imlek, is not only celebrated by Indonesian-Chinese, but also ethnic Indonesians in a number of large cities.
In Makassar, South Sulawesi, hundreds of residents joined in the revelry on the eve of Imlek on Wednesday night.
For them, Imlek is a much-awaited time when they can enjoy the festive fireworks, lanterns, lion dances and bright temple lights in the Chinatown area pervaded by the scent of joss sticks.
On Wednesday night, hundreds of residents from Makassar and surrounding areas crowded on Jl. Sulawesi to witness the festivities. The street is home to two large temples and is where the Imlek festivities are concentrated. Police closed the road to traffic.
Residents waited until midnight to watch the colorful firework display.
Ethnic Chinese residents had since the afternoon flocked to the temples to pray. They burned joss sticks and prayed to deities for themselves and for the peace and security of the country.
An ethnic Chinese resident in Makassar, Yuli, expressed hope that the country and its people would face a better year and would be protected from disasters and upheaval.
“I pray for myself and for the country. Hopefully, there would be no disasters and riots this year, so we can live better and peaceful lives and the economy can improve,” he said.
On the resort island of Bali, an acculturation of Balinese and Chinese traditions colored the celebrations on Thursday.
Indonesian-Chinese marked the first day of the Year of Rabbit in the spirit of pluralism, as they flocked to houses of worship to pray for blessings for the year ahead.
In Jakarta, Governor Fauzi Bowo made a pledge that he would end discrimination against Indonesian-Chinese.
During a visit to the Chinese neighborhood in Rawa Kompeni in Kalideres, West Jakarta, the governor said he had made efforts to end such discrimination including repealing a policy that required Jakartans of Chinese descent to inform of their ethnic background on their identity cards.
Fauzi said Chinese culture had become part of the indigenous culture of Jakarta. “The Chinese culture is an inseparable part of Jakarta. It is now part of its culture and I am proud of that,” he said.
In Yogyakarta, the Indonesian-Chinese community held the week-long Chinese Cultural Week (PBT) festival as a mark of solidarity with survivors of the recent Mount Merapi eruptions by showcasing the traditions of residents living on the slopes of the volcano.
The PBT this year lacked the glamor of previous years. “This is our way of mourning the Merapi disaster,” Yogyakarta Mayor Herry Zudianto said.
Yogyakarta has long been renowned as boasting a diverse culture. The Imlek festivities also showcased various groups and religions in Yogyakarta. “We organized this year’s Imlek celebrations to promote tourism in Yogyakarta,” Herry said.
In Palangkaraya, West Kalimantan, Imlek celebrations took place at Avalokitesvara temple on Jl. Tjilik Riwut.
While they prayed, local youth engaged in lion dances.
In Semarang, Central Java, the Imlek celebration was highlighted by the Imlek Semawis Market.
Thursday, December 23, 2010
Muslim youths guard Christmas celebration in Kupang
Antara News, Friday, December 24, 2010
Kupang, E. Nusa Tenggara (ANTARA News) - Muslim youths in Kupang, East Nusa Tenggara, joined security personnel to secure Christmas and New Year`s eve celebrations, a police spokesman said.
A total of 530 security personnel consisting of policemen, servicemen and members of the society, including Muslim youths, had been deployed to guard the celebrations, Kupang police chief Adjunct Senior Commissioner Bambang Sugiarto said here Friday.
Those involved in this joined security scheme had agreed to set up security checks in 14 security-prone locations with each secured by four guards, he said.
Besides this, 116 churches in the East Nusa Tenggar province`s capital of Kupang would also be secured by policemen and servicemen to ensure that they were free from security disturbance, he said.
The security personnel would effectively work from Friday to December 31, he said.
"This security measure has been taken in response to the national police chief`s order," he said.
The security threats and situation that need to be anticipated included acts of terrorism, conventional crimes, traffic jams, use of fire crackers, and natural disasters, he said.
The same security procedures were also taken by policemen in the West Java town of Cirebon.
Each church in the town would be guarded by ten policemen to secure Christmas eve and celebrations, Cirebon police chief Adjunct Senior Commissioner Herukoco said.
At least 600 security personnel had been deployed to secure Christmas and New Year holidays in the city, he said.
In Tasikmalaya, West Java, 17 churches were also secured by 481 security personnel ahead of Christmas eve.
The presence of policemen and servicemen was expected to create a secure and peaceful condition for church goers, Tasikmalaya district police`s spokesman Commissioner Yono Kusyono said.
Indonesia has been fighting terrorist cells since 2000. On December 24, 2000, a string of attacks on churches were carried out by terrorists on Christmas eve in several Indonesian cities.
The attackers targeted a number of churches in the Indonesian cities of Batam, Pekanbaru, Jakarta, Sukabumi, Pangandaran, Bandung, Kudus, Mojokerto, and Mataram.
Two years after the Christmas eve bombings, terrorists attacked Bali Island in 2002, claiming 202 lives, including 88 Australian holiday makers.
The latest deadly incident happened on July 17, 2009 when two suicide bombers attacked JW Marriott and the Ritz-Carlton hotels in South Jakarta.
Tuesday, December 14, 2010
FPI Promises No Disruptions Over Christmas in Indonesia
Jakarta Globe, Zaky Pawas & Ulma Haryanto | December 15, 2010
Jakarta. In a surprise move, the head of the hard-line Islamic Defenders Front on Tuesday said Christians should be allowed to celebrate Christmas in peace and happiness.
Rizieq Shihab, who heads the organization better known as FPI that has been behind attacks on churches and minority sects in the past years, also gave the assurance that his followers would not disturb or disrupt Christmas celebrations.
“I think, let Christians celebrate Christmas in merriment and happiness. That is their right of worship, right of faith that should be respected by all of the Indonesian nation,” Rizieq said at the Jakarta Police headquarters.
However, he said that guarantee of peacefulness came with the conditions that the celebrations should avoid controversy.
“As in the past years, we are calling on the Indonesian Bishop’s Council and the Indonesian Church Union to celebrate Christmas according to the procedures and rules; there should nothing that invites controversy,” he said without giving details.
Rizieq said the conflict between the FPI and believers of other faiths was not over acts of worship but rather had to do with the building of houses of worship that did not follow the rules.
“I call on believers of other religions not to violate the SKB,” he said, referring to the joint ministerial decree that regulates the building of houses of worship.
The regulation demands that houses of worship be built in areas where their religion is the dominant one.
They require a host of approvals from residents and officials.
Rights activists have lashed at the decree as being discriminative and restricting the right to worship as guaranteed by the Constitution.
Rizieq acknowledged that the Constitution guaranteed the right to worship, but added: “Do not forget that the Constitution is implemented through the SKB.”
Ramlan Hutahaean, national secretary general for the Batak Christian Churches (HKBP), with which FPI has clashed, said he expected religious tolerance all the time, not only during Christmas.
He also bristled at Rizieq’s used of the word “controversial” during Christmas celebrations.
“I don’t think there’s anything controversial during Christmas. It’s a celebration of peace. From his statement it seems that he simply does not want his Christian brothers to celebrate Christmas,” he said.
“In this world we don’t live alone. We have to sit down with others who might not have the same faith. It’s the essence of living in a pluralistic society. If he can’t accept someone from a different faith, that shows the quality of his own,” Ramlan added.
Jakarta Police Spokesman Sr. Comr Baharudin Djafar said Jakarta Police Chief Insp. Gen Sutarman took the initiative to meet with the FPI at the headquarters.
“This is an important form of coordination so that we can together work for a conducive situation,” Baharudin said.
Between 10,000 and 20,000 police personnel would be deployed to safeguard churches during Christmas and New Year, he said.
Saturday, November 27, 2010
Muslims working in churches? No problem
Irawaty Wardany, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Sat, 11/27/2010
Edy Supandi finishes cleaning the service hall of the Ekklesia Church in Kalibata, South Jakarta, on a Saturday afternoon.
After making sure that everything was clean and in order and that the pulpit cloth had been changed into green one for Sunday service, he finally had some time to rest.
Edy, a Muslim, is quite aware that the cloth should be green, the liturgical color, for Sunday services, purple for weeks of Advent (the season including the four Sundays preceding Christmas), red for Christmas, and white for Holy Communion celebrations.
He has been working in the church since 2002, despite hailing from a Muslim family.
In the beginning, he ran a small stall selling cigarettes in front of the church before someone from the church organization offered him a job.
“I was asked to clean the church and prepare things for services,” he recalled.
“At the time, I had no second thoughts about accepting the offer considering the income from my stall was not enough to feed my family,” the 36-year-old father of three said.
Edy said he never thought having a different belief from those who worshipped at the church would be an obstacle.
“I don’t think this has anything to do with religion. What I do is work, so as long as it is halal [sanctioned by Islamic law], why not?” he said.
At first many people including some in his family, objected to his working in a church, but he told them that his faith would not be easily shaken just because he worked in a non-Muslim house of worship.
“I was raised in a quite devout Muslim family in Kuningan, West Java,” Edy said.
After a while, he said, he noticed that people began respecting differences automatically when both sides eliminated all suspicion toward each other, and “just mind your own religion”.
Edy says this was clear in daily interactions when colleagues in the church often reminded him about his religious obligations, for example on Fridays when Edy was asked whether he had gone to Friday prayers at the mosque yet.
During the Idul Fitri holiday following the Muslim fasting month, people from the church collected money for Edy, and in return he visits them at home on Christmas.
Daroji, a Muslim who works at the Muara Karang Indonesian Christian Church (GKI) in North Jakarta, said he also learned that working in a non-Muslim house of worship did not sway his faith, but instead helped grow a better understanding of something previously unfamiliar.
“When I first started working here nine years ago, I was criticized by my family, who believed that working in a church is haram [forbidden by Islamic law],” he told The Jakarta Post recently.
“I told my family that it was better to work in a church than to abandon my children and wife because I didn’t have a job.
“I think that would be a greater sin,” Daroji said.
“Besides, faith is something that you hold strongly in your heart, not where you work,” he added.
So far, he, church leaders and the congregation are able to live in harmony based on respecting each others’ faith.
“If the church hosts an event, they let me know beforehand what food I can eat and can’t eat,” Daroji said, referring to non-halal ingredients.
In return, he sometimes reminds church ministers about the liturgical color for the religious services should the preachers forget.
Even though he does not understand the meaning of each color, he has memorized the order.
“Purple is for [the weeks before] Christmas, red is for holy matrimony,” he recited.
Commenting on a recent spate of interreligious violence in the city, Daroji said he could not understand what drove people to attack those of different faiths, “My religion does not teach me to create conflict and I don’t believe other religions do so,” he said.
The Mahanaim Church and Al-Muqarrabien Mosque share more than just a wall.
(Photo courtesy of Asia Calling)
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Wednesday, September 22, 2010
Residents accuse hard-liners of breaking peace
The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Wed, 09/22/2010 9:14 AM
Denying claims by hard-line groups, many residents from the Pondok Timur Indah housing complex in Bekasi, West Java, say they do not object to the religious activities conducted by the HKBP Protestant Church in the area.
“For dozens of years we have never had any problems with the congregation,” Ery, a Muslim who has lived in the area for about 20 years, told The Jakarta Post on Tuesday.
She said the busy housing complex started to lose its peaceful atmosphere last year when dozens of men in traditional Muslim attire began protesting near the church located on Jl. Puyuh Raya on Sundays, demanding its closure.
“They were clad in long, white robes. Some wore turbans. I don’t know where they came from. They just showed up out of the blue,” said the 49-year-old woman, who runs a food stall in her yard.
Claiming to represent local Muslim residents, hard-line groups called for the closure of the HKBP church — established in the area a year after Pondok Timur Indah opened in 1989 — saying it did not have a permit to conduct religious activities.
Earlier this year, the Bekasi administration sealed off the Jl. Puyuh Raya site, which had been used for Sunday service since 2005. The congregation, however, refused to move, so in July, the building was again sealed off.
After moving to an empty field three kilometers away on Jl. Asem Raya in mid-August, the congregation has been the target of repeated attacks by mobs of hard-liners calling themselves the Islamic Community Forum (FUI).
The harassment came to a peak on Sept. 12 when two HKBP church officials were assaulted on their way to a Sunday service in the field.
Police have named 10 suspects, including the former leader of the local branch of the hard-line Islam Defenders Front (FPI), in the incident.
Utik, who lived in a house a few meters away from the sealed-off church for almost 15 years, said, “Even though I was born a Muslim, it has always been fine for me to have people of different faiths around me as I believe that choosing a religion is each person’s right.”
However, she said, not all Muslims were like her as some could not accept that they lived in a country with many cultures and faiths.
The Indonesian Communion of Churches (PGI) said at least 11 churches and Christian institutions in Greater Jakarta were either destroyed or sealed off between January and August this year.
“How can we fight these hard-line groups? The administration holds the key to solving such problems,” Utik told the Post.
Sukemi, who lives near the church construction site on Jl. Asem Raya, said she did not object to a church in her neighborhood, as long as the congregation had permission to conduct services in the area.
“We were told the church broke the law because it did not have any permit,” she added.
“My neighbors feel sorry for me. They wonder why it is so hard for me to practise my faith,” Christina, a member of the HKBP congregation, said. (rch)
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Indonesia: The Mahanaim Church and Al-Muqarrabien Mosque share more than just a wall.(Photo courtesy of Asia Calling)
Sunday, September 12, 2010
Church Elder Stabbed in Attack on Christian Worshipers in Bekasi
Jakarta Globe, Ulma Haryanto | September 12, 2010
Bekasi, Indonesia. A church leader was stabbed in the stomach and a reverend beaten during an attack on a group of Christians forced to pray in a field in Bekasi on Sunday morning.
Saor Siagian, a lawyer representing the Batak Christian Protestant Church (HKBP) Pondok Timur Indah congregation, told the Jakarta Globe an elders was stabbed by an unknown motocyclists on Sunday morning.
“Penatua [congregation elder] Sihombing was leading the congregation for Sunday mass when he was stabbed by someone riding a motorcycle,” Saor said.
Also targeted was Rev. Luspida Simandjuntak, who was assaulted.
The hard-line Islamic Defenders Front (FPI) and Bekasi Mayor Mochtar Mohammad have prevented the group from holding services in their church, which has been sealed, forcing the group to hold Sunday services in a field in Ciketing, Mustika Jaya village.
Last month, a group identifying itself as the Mustika Jaya Moslem Forum (FUI) attacked the group, injuring eight.
“Since then members always go in groups for Sunday prayers,” Saor continued. “Sihombing was leading one of the groups when the stabbing occurred.”
Sihombing has been taken to Mitra Keluarga Hospital in Pengasinan, Bekasi. His condition is believed to be serious.
Two people have reportedly been arrested.
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Friday, August 13, 2010
Governor guarantees freedom to worship
The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Fri, 08/13/2010 10:33 AM
Amid criticism of the city authorities’ friendly gestures towards Muslim hard-line groups, Governor Fauzi Bowo guaranteed Thursday the freedom to worship in Jakarta as part of his commitment to pluralism.
“The city administration is fully committed to pluralism and religious harmony and will not take even a step back from this commitment. Jakarta was built on diversi-ty,” Fauzi said at the City Hall following a meeting with members of the Indonesian Communion of Churches (PGI).
He said he was satisfied with the state of religious harmony in the city in the last five years.
PGI Jakarta secretary Manuel E. Raintung echoed the governor’s statement, saying that the Interfaith Communication Forum (FKUB) in the city always held a weekly meeting involving religious figures from the six religions officially recognized by the government: Islam, Protestantism, Catholicism, Buddhism, Hinduism and Confucianism.
“The communication between religious leaders is good and the FKUB members also have good relations with the city administration,” Manuel said.
However, he said, FKUB still faced problems communicating with the grass roots.
“We try to reach the people to inform them about religious harmony once a month,” Manuel said.
He said that at its upcoming plenary meeting, held once every five years, the PGI would discuss, among others, the creation of a democratic, fair and peaceful community.
The issue of religious intolerance has become a key topic for public discussion following several attacks on religious minorities by members of some Islamic mass organizations.
In the latest attack, hundreds of local residents and members of the Islamic Community Forum (FUI), an affiliate of the Islam Defenders Front (FPI), assaulted the congregation of the HKBP church in Pondok Timur Indah housing complex at Mustika Jaya subdistrict, Bekasi, eastern Jakarta, last Sunday.
A day earlier, Fauzi and Jakarta Police chief Insp. Gen. Timur Pradopo attended the FPI’s 12th anniversary celebrations.
Last Monday, city police invited several hard-line groups to a ceremony where evidence that had been confiscated during a recent operation against vice, piracy and narcotics crimes was destroyed.
Public Order Agency head Effendi Anas clarified Thursday that no mass organizations would be involved in city security issues including in raiding entertainment establishments during the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan.
“There are only three institutions with the authority to monitor entertainment venue: the Public Order Agency, the Jakarta Tourism Agency and the Jakarta Police,” Effendi said, adding that the administration would not allow mass organizations to take part in raids.
Public order officers will monitor entertainment centers in the city from 10:30 p.m. to 1:30 a.m. every day. (not)
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