Behind lofty declarations, major Muslim and Hindu groups compete for power
By James M.
Dorsey
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As Indonesia
passed the chairmanship of the Group of 20 (G-20) to India earlier this month,
major Muslim and Hindu organisations, some backed by their governments, are
battling to define the role of religion in global politics and whether the
world's significant faiths need reform to harness the power of their
convictions.
The battle's
outcome could determine what constitutes religious moderation, the state's role
in defining what religion stands for, and whether notions of reform will
involve significant jurisprudential and doctrinal reforms aimed at erasing
concepts of supremacy and enhancing principles of pluralism and greater
freedom.
The stage
for the battle was set at the Religion Forum-20 (R-20), a gathering of
religious leaders in Bali, earlier this month in advance of a
summit of the Group of 20 that brought together leaders of the
world’s major economies.
Like the
summit that positioned Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim-majority
country and the world’s largest Muslim democracy, as a rising power, the
religious gathering positioned Nahdlatul Ulama, the world’s largest and most moderate
major Indonesian Muslim civil society organisation, as a leading force in
defining moderate Islam and promoting concepts of genuine religious reform not
only of Islam but also of other major faiths such as Hinduism.
From
Nahdlatul Ulama’s perspective, jurisprudential reform of religious law is the
key to positioning religion “as a source of solutions, not problems.”
Nahdlatul
Ulama puts forward a strong proposition that it hopes will inspire other faith
groups as the world continues to grope for a socially and politically
pluralistic version of Islam in the wake of the 9/11 Al Qaeda attacks on New
York and Washington.
The movement
promotes what it dubs Humanitarian Islam, that in contrast to state-driven attempts at
moderation in autocracies such as Saudi Arabia, home to Islam's two holiest
cities, Mecca and Medina, and the United Arab Emirates, unambiguously embraces the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights as well as the principle of religious and political pluralism.
Moreover, Nahdlatul
Ulama advocates reform of what it terms “obsolete” elements of Islamic
jurisprudence.
On the back
of being a grassroots movement with an estimated 90 million followers, 18,000
religious seminaries, 44 universities, tens of thousands of Muslim scholars
that constitute a religious authority independent of traditional centers in the
Middle East, and a political party that is part of Indonesian President Joko
Widodo's coalition government, Nahdlatul Ulama throws down a gauntlet for
proponents of a state-controlled, autocratic Islam as well as religious
nationalists in other faith groups.
Its
proposition was bolstered in 2019 when the group took the first step towards
jurisprudential reform with a ruling issued by 20,000 religious scholars that
eliminated the category of the kafir or infidel in Islamic law.
Nahdlatul
Ulama had hoped that gathering religious leaders in advance of this month's
G-20 summit would position reformist religious leaders as an institutionalised
engagement group of the world’s most powerful political leaders and spark a
movement that based on shared civilisational values would promote moderate and
pluralistic expressions of religion across faith groups.
Less than a
month after the religious gathering, that is proving to be easier said than
done.
Rather than
creating real buy-in from other major Muslim organisations, like Saudi Arabia's
state-controlled Muslim World League, whom Nahdlatul Ulama invited to co-host
the religious summit, and Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), the right-wing
Hindu nationalist group, that constitutes the ideological cradle of Indian
Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), the
summit appears to have sparked a subtle power struggle below the semblance of a
common goal.
The RSS and
the BJP are widely seen as attempting to hollow out Indian democracy and
secularism while instigating anti-Muslim sentiment in India, which is home to
200 million Muslims, the world's largest Muslim minority.
Chipping
away at Indonesia's designation of the Religion Forum-20 as an official G-20
engagement group with a permanent secretariat hosted by Nahdlatul Ulama's
Jakarta and North Carolina-based Center for Shared Civilization Values (CSCV),
Mr. Madhav was non-committal in his first public remarks after
returning from Bali to India.
Mr. Madhav
expressed a personal preference for maintaining the Religion Forum with the
caveat that it remained unclear whether the gathering would be allowed to retain
its official G-20 status.
“The
(Indian) government will take an appropriate decision," Mr. Madhav said in
a television interview.
Mr. Madhav
dodged the issue of religious reform, insisting that the “R-20 per se is not
necessarily about religion, it’s about humanity.”
Spinning the
R-20’s slogan of ensuring “that religion functions as a genuine and dynamic
source of solutions, rather than problems,” Mr. Madhav suggested that religion
could help solve global problems such as climate change and tackle what he
described as “woke” issues “like LGBTQ; issues related to family, marriage,
even gender;” rather than exercise introspection to eliminate problematic
religious tenants as advocated by Nahdlatul Ulama.
"This
forum was intended to discuss...global issues. In that sense, the focus of
this…religious forum was and will not be religions alone… It will be not
religion-centric but humanity-centric. So, an effort to bring religions
together on larger issues,” Mr. Madhav said.
Similarly,
the Muslim World League has used the R-20 to tout its own horn while paying lip
service to lofty values Mr. Bin Salman would like to be identified with but has
yet to embrace wholeheartedly.
“Leaders
participating in the #R20Summit express their appreciation of the
great efforts and quality work of the Muslim World League, under the leadership
of His Excellency the Secretary General, Sheikh Dr. @MhmdAlissa, the
founder of R20, whose efforts contributed to its success,” the League said in a tweet that falsely took credit for an
initiative that belonged wholly to Nahdlatul Ulama.
The
Indonesian group invited the League after the Saudi government asked Indonesia
to assist in carving out a role at the summit for Mr. Bin Salman’s chief
propagator of a socially less restrictive but autocratic interpretation of
Islam that demands absolute obedience to the ruler.
The
invitation fit into a bold but risky strategy that also underlies Nahdlatul
Ulama’s engagement with Hindu nationalism.
In the
League's case, Nahdlatul Ulama hopes the alliance will undercut Saudi and
League support for an Indonesian political party associated with the Muslim
Brotherhood, the Prosperous Justice Party (PKS).
Some
analysts and pundits believe that a PKS-backed candidate could do well in the
presidential elections scheduled foR-2024.
Moreover,
like in the case of the Hindu nationalists, Nahdlatul Ulama aspires against all
odds to persuade the League to adopt a genuinely moderate vision of Islam
rather than one that serves Saudi Arabia's autocratic rulers. However, that is
a long shot, if not pie in the sky.
Instead, the
League has since the religious summit capitalized on Nahdlatul Ulama’s dubious recognition
of the Saudi government vehicle as an allegedly non-governmental organisation.
Furthermore,
the League presumably seeks to prevent Nahdlatul Ulama from becoming a serious
competitor for hearts and minds in the Muslim world through a policy of
cooptation that fits into a broader Saudi and UAE effort aimed at seducing Indonesia with financial
incentives.
In the
latest move, Mr. Bin Salman last week offered to fund the restoration of the Jakarta
Islamic Center after
the large dome of the complex’s mosque suffered fire damage during renovation
work.
Saudi
Islamic Affairs Minister Abdullatif Al-Asheikh made no bones about the purpose
of the funding. Mr. Al-Sheikh, according to Arab News, said the funding was in
“the Kingdom’s interest in serving Islam and Muslims, based on its leadership
in the Islamic world.”
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Dr. James
M. Dorsey is an award-winning journalist and scholar, an Adjunct Senior Fellow
at Nanyang Technological University’s S. Rajaratnam School of International
Studies, and the author of the syndicated column and blog, The Turbulent World of
Middle East Soccer.
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