News

Move to use 'pesantren' to counter Islamism

Rabu, 26 Maret 2008 | 08:00 WIB

Jakarta, NU Online
Ulema have agreed to promote civil nationalism within and outside their Islamic boarding schools (pesantren) to help protect all citizens from different religions and ethnicities.

They also agreed to foster the reinterpretation of Koranic verses that are often used by extremist groups campaigning for an Indonesian Islamic state to justify violence in the name of Islam.<>

The decision was made at a three-day seminar aimed at stopping religious-based violence, which ended here Tuesday (25/3).

In attendance were around 35 leaders of traditional Islamic boarding schools affiliated with Nahdlatul Ulama, the country's largest Muslim organization.

"We call on clerics from all pesantren to refresh their nationalistic points of view," the participants said in a joint statement issued after the event which was co-hosted by the Wahid Institute and Spring Foundation.

"They should also study the history of the ulema, who struggled to establish and defend the Unitary State of the Republic of Indonesia (NKRI)," the statement added.

The clerics, from major Indonesian islands like Java, Kalimantan, Sulawesi and Sumatra, said they were resolute to conduct deeper studies into some Islamic terms commonly used to legitimize violence in the name of Islam.

They said such terms as jihad (Islamic holy war), dzimmi (non-Muslims living in Islamic states) and kafir (infidel) need to be reinterpreted so as to be in accordance with the current Indonesian context.

The reinterpretations would help stop violence committed in the name of religion, the ulema said.

The seminar also agreed to "include fiqh ad-dawlah (civic education) in the curricula" of Islamic boarding schools.

The clerics also urged the government to punish any groups involved in religious attacks.

Prominent cleric, poet and senior NU leader Ahmad Mustofa Bisri on Monday criticized pesantren for doing next to nothing to prevent such violence.

The clerics gathered at the forum here "because they can't stand the stereotyping that ulema support violence", he said.

Mustofa blamed the Indonesian Ulema Council for fueling such attacks on mosques and the homes of several Islamic sects, with its fatwa declaring them "heretical".

"The clerics attending the seminar didn't feel the MUI is representing them," he said. (jp/dar)