Holocaust Museum in Indonesia highlights stakes in a battle for the soul of Islam
By James M. Dorsey
Controversy over the opening of Southeast
Asia’s first Holocaust museum highlights differences in the Muslim
world over the limits of religious tolerance and Muslims’ ability to debate
those limits.
The controversy over the museum in Minahasa, North
Sulawesi, home to one of Indonesia’s two known synagogues, comes as the United
States and American Jewish groups have pressured the world’s largest
Muslim-majority democracy to recognize Israel. Indonesia's
minuscule Jewish community is estimated to number about one hundred.
US and Israeli officials believe that recognition of
Israel by Indonesia, or one of Asia's other largest Muslim-majority countries,
would allow Saudi Arabia, the custodian of Islam's two holiest cities, Mecca
and Medina, to follow the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain in establishing
diplomatic relations with the Jewish state. The two smaller Gulf states
established relations with Israel in 2020.
The controversy over the museum at the Shaar
HaShamayim Synagogue also erupted as autocratic Arab countries sought to rebuild
ties to their erstwhile Jewish communities in a bid to
project themselves as beacons of religious moderation and tolerance.
Crackdowns on freedom of expression in countries like
the UAE and Bahrain have allowed the two countries to portray an image of near-unanimous
public support for their burgeoning relations with Israel.
However, the crackdowns have not
stopped expressions of anti-Jewish sentiment in countries
like Kuwait.
“Is this who we have become in a country whose
heritage prides itself on coexistence? What a pity. What a loss for us. How
heartbreaking for our forefathers, a few of whom were Jews who lived here
alongside us,” said Kuwait-based poet and writer Nejoud Al-Yagout.
Ms. Al-Yagout spoke out after the US
embassy in Kuwait was accosted last November on social media
for wishing Jews a happy Hanukkah feast.
By contrast, the controversy in Indonesia has focused
more on the condemnation of Israeli policy towards the Palestinians than on
anti-Jewish sentiment. It highlighted sharp divisions among Indonesian Muslims
in dealing with the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and their ability to put their
differences on public display.
The controversy was fueled by the fact that the
Holocaust museum became a reality because of support from Yad Vashem, Israel's official
memorial to the Jewish victims of the Nazi Holocaust. A Yad Vashem executive
participated by video link in last month's inauguration of the museum on
International Holocaust Day.
Yad Vashem's role sparked speculation that the museum
was a backdoor to furthering Israeli-Indonesian relations.
"The Indonesian government should act decisively
and immediately demolish the museum because it is provocative and its
presence is not welcomed among many in this country," said
Muhyiddin Junaidi, deputy chairman of the advisory board of the Indonesian
Ulema Council (MUI), the country’s top body of Islamic scholars.
Echoing Mr. Junaidi’s remarks, Sudarnoto Abdul Hakim,
the group’s deputy chairman for foreign affairs, insisted that “Jewish
communities and the descendants of Jewish people everywhere, including in
Indonesia and North Sulawesi, should…see fairly, clearly the brutal acts that
have been perpetrated by Israeli Zionists against the Palestinian people since
1948.”
Mr. Abdul Hakim suggested that Jewish leaders meet
with the Council “to prevent things that are not desirable… I think this is a
good step to resolve the issue in a persuasive way."
Mr. Abdul Hakim’s potentially ominous remarks and Mr.
Junaidi’s call for the museum's destruction contrasted starkly with statements
by Yahya Cholil Staquf, the newly elected chairman of Nahdlatul Ulama, the
world’s largest civil society movement that has an estimated following of up to
90 million people.
A proponent of humanitarian Islam, Mr. Staquf, joined
global leaders in commemorating the United Nations International Holocaust
Remembrance Day last month.
"Holocaust remembrance serves as a memorial and
vivid reminder of the cruelty, violence, and suffering that so many human
beings… have, for thousands of years, inflicted upon others. Today, in
remembrance of the Holocaust and its millions of victims, Nahdlatul Ulama and I
wish to raise our voices in a simple, heartfelt call: Let us choose
compassion,’” Mr. Staquf said in a virtual event co-hosted by the Los
Angeles-based
Simon Wiesenthal Center founded to honour one of the world’s foremost
hunters of Nazi criminals.
Unlike the Indonesian council and the US embassy in
Kuwait’s detractors, Mr. Staquf did not shy away from recognizing the genocide
against the Jews while at the same time demanding justice for the Palestinians.
Mr. Staquf made that clear, not only in his call for
compassion but also by speaking at an event hosted at about the same time by
the Palestinian embassy in Jakarta.
“Palestinian
self-determination is a humanitarian mandate. All parties, including Hamas,
Fatah, and the world community at large, must set aside their subjective
interests and focus upon improving the lives of the Palestinian people. For the
fate of the Palestinians is the fate of humanity,” Mr. Staquf said. He was
referring to the Islamist group that controls the Gaza Strip as well as the
party that governs the West Bank.
The
divergence in approach between Mr. Satquf and the Indonesian Council spokesmen
is about much more than the Palestinian issue. It is about what the essence of
Islam should be in the 21st century, an Islam that looks backward
and nurtures grievances or an Islam that seeks to reach out, build bridges, and
find solutions.
A video version of this story is at https://youtu.be/gKow_T9YXZ0
A podcast version available on Soundcloud, Itunes, Spotify, Stitcher, TuneIn, Spreaker, Pocket Casts, Tumblr, Podbean, Audecibel, Patreon,
and Castbox.
Dr. James M. Dorsey is an award-winning
journalist and scholar and a Senior Fellow at the National University of
Singapore’s Middle East Institute.
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