The Battle for the soul of Islam: A game of seduction.
By James M. Dorsey
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Two recent high-profile
Arab events honouring Indonesia’s Nahdlatul Ulama, the world’s largest and most
moderate Muslim civil society movement, highlight a subtle tug-of-war over who
will define ‘moderate Islam’ in the 21st century.
A giant Nahdlatul Ulama flag is unfurled in the East Java city of
Sidoarjo on Feb. 2, 2023, the movement’s 100th anniversary. Photo:
NU Online/Saiful Amar
At the core of the
tug-of-war is whether Islam in the 21st century will foster
religiously and politically pluralistic societies or advocate autocracy.
The war pits autocratic,
socially more liberal definitions of Islam that assert a religious obligation
of ‘absolute obedience to the
ruler’ and are propagated by Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Egypt’s Al Azhar, the Cairo-based
1,054-year-old citadel of Islamic learning, against Nahdlatul Ulama’s
pluralistic concept of Nusantara or Humanitarian Islam that advocates adherence to human rights
Autocrats’ religious
moderation is designed to meet economic diversification requirements and cater
to youth aspirations for a less publicly restrictive and less ritualistic
religious experience while maintaining tight political control.
In contrast to the Middle
Eastern states’ version of religious moderation, Nahdlatul Ulama’s concept
stresses religious and political pluralism and the unambigious endorsement of
the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
To anchor its concept,
Nahdlatul Ulama argues that Muslim jurisprudence needs reform to remove what
the movement calls ‘outdated’ or ‘obsolete’ provisions that, among others,
would remove notions of supremacy and the caliphate and introduce categories such
as the citizen with equal rights and the nation-state.
The Middle East-Asian tug
of war takes on added significance with pressure on Muslim-majority states
since the 9/11 Al Qaeda attacks in New York and Washington, the rise of the
Islamic State a decade later, and energy-rich Gulf states’ efforts to diversify
their economies, to embrace a vague, and undefined notion of ‘moderate Islam.’
For much of the last
decade, autocrats chose to ignore Nahdlatul Ulama, the potentially most potent
challenger to their ‘moderate,’ politically restrictive interpretation of the
faith.
In 2018, Mohammad
Al-Issa, secretary general of the Muslim World, dismissed a suggestion by an
American interlocutor that he meet Nahdlatul Ulama leader Yahya Cholil Staquf
in Mecca.
Mohammed al-Issa, the secretary-general of the Muslim World League.
Photo: Screenshot: American Sephardi Federation
The League is Saudi Crown
Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s main vehicle to project the kingdom as religiously
moderate and tolerant.
"As for the
Indonesian Imam Pak Yahya, I have never heard of him before… I regret to inform
you that it would be difficult for me to meet with Pak Yahya due to an
extremely previous busy schedule of meetings with international Islamic
personalities,” Al-Issa said.
The cleric’s
standoffishness stemmed as much from refusing to acknowledge Nahdlatul Ulama’s
challenge as from an ingrained perception that Arabs hailing from Islam’s
cradle were real Muslims unlike syncretic forms of the faith like those
prevalent in Indonesia.
“It’s religious racism,”
said Azyumardi Azra, an Islamic scholar.
Since then, the League and the UAE have
realised that ignoring Nahdlatul
Ulama with its 90 million followers in the world’s largest Muslim-majority
state and democracy, a political party represented in President Joko Widodo’s
government, a religious authority of its own, access to the world’s corridors
of power, a widespread educational infrastructure, and a five-million strong
militia, would not neutralise the challenge posed by the group.
As a result, to counter
the threat, the League and the UAE opted to engage with Nahdlatul Ulama in a bid to co-opt it,
while at the same time competing with the group through the organisation of rival events and
exerting influence in the world’s corridors of power.
Mr. Al-Issa secured a win
when in 2022, the League co-hosted with Nahdlatul Ulama the Religion Forum 20,
a summit of religious leaders in Bali on the eve of the Indonesia-chaired Group
of 20 gathering of the heads of the world’s largest economies.
The League basked in the
spotlight as a “non-government” promoter of inter-faith dialogue and tolerance
although it is a wholly government-controlled organisation.
Even so, the League had
hardly any visible impact on the Forum’s proceedings, much of which adhered to
Nahdlatul Ulama’s agenda that is anathema to Mr. Al-Issa’s ambitions and those
of his political master.
That has not stopped
autocrats from attempting to co-opt Nahdlatul Ulama with little, if any,
visible success.
Nahdlatul Ulama officials
insist that engagement with their rivals does not come at the price of
compromising on principles.
On the contrary, they
argue, gestures like awarding the group a prestigious Emirati prize in February and Al Azhar’s earlier honouring
of Nahdlatul Ulama’s beloved and legendary Al-Azhar-educated leader,
Abdurrahman Wahid, Indonesia’s first post-dictatorship democratically, enhance
Nahdlatul Ulama’s prestige in the Muslim Middle East and beyond.
“I would…like to take
this opportunity to invite people of goodwill of every faith and nation to join us in building a global
movement to foster the emergence
of a truly just and harmonious world order founded upon respect for the equal
rights and dignity of every human being,” Mr. Staquf said as he accepted the
Zayed Award for Human Fraternity.
Mr. Staquf was referring
to a grassroots movement for shared civilisational values that Nahdlatul Ulama
through its Center for Shared Civilisational Values hopes to inspire. The
movement’s envisioned values extend beyond the advocacy of lofty principles the
UAE professes to embrace.
Alongside Nahdlatul
Ulama, the award was also awarded to Muhammadiyah, Indonesia’s second largest
Muslim civil society movement, cardiac surgeon Magdi Yacoub, and Sister Nelly
Leon Correa, who supports women in prison.
Photo: civilizationalvalues.org
Days earlier, Al-Azhar
honoured the life and legacy of Mr. Wahid who inspired Humanitarian Islam and
the notion of shared civlisational values, even though senior Al-Azhar figures
attending Nahdlatul Ulama conferences in recent years refrained from endorsing,
if not rejected some of the
group’s key initiatives such as
a call for the abolishment of the concept of a caliphate.
Photo: civilizationalvalues.org
Unlike Al-Azhar
luminaries that declined invitations to discuss the caliphate’s fate at a
conference in Surabaya Mr. Al-Issa, the head of the Muslim World League, chose
to ignore Nahdlatul Ulama's proposition in his remarks on video after
cancelling his attendance.
Given Saudi practice, Mr.
Al-Issa had good reason to ignore Nahdlatul Ulama’s initiatives to reform
Islamic jurisprudence to ensure it upholds human rights and mitigates against
discrimination irrespective of ethnicity, creed, or belief.
“The Saudi religious tradition is
very sectarian. It refuses
to recognise other Muslims… (They) are regarded as outside true Islam and
should be Islamised… The Shiites like others were not regarded as true Muslims
theologically,” said Saudi scholar and dissident Madawi al-Rasheed.
“The war in Yemen exposed
that Saudi Arabia cannot get rid of its religious nationalism all together. It
cannot get rid of the sectarianism of (its) religious nationalist narrative
that excluded other Muslims who did not subscribe to the Wahhabi tradition,”
Ms. Al-Rasheed added.
She noted that Mr. Bin
Salman invited the kingdom’s religious scholars to visit the Saudi border to
inspire Saudi troops, by advising them that they were waging jihad against the
rafidah, a derogatory ultraconservative Sunni Muslim reference to Shiites, whom
Saudi conservatives view as heretics. Yemen’s Houthi rebels are Zaidis, a
Shiite Muslim sect.
In February, authorities
arrested ten soccer fans and summoned 150 other supporters of Saudi First
Division club Al Safa FC for chanting Shiite Muslim slogans
and songs during a match against
Al Bukayriyah FC in the city of Safwa in the kingdom’s Shiite-majority Eastern
Province.
Saudi authorities
asserted that fans’ chants were “sectarian.”
The sports ministry
dissolved Al Safa’s board immediately after the incident for failing to adhere
to the kingdom’s laws and regulations.
In addition, the Saudi
Football Federation’s Disciplinary and Ethics Committee ordered Al Safa to pay
a US$53,300 fine. It also banned club fans from attending the team’s next five
league matches.
The committee asserted
that the fans had chanted slogans and songs that “violated the provisions of
the disciplinary and ethics regulations.”
Speaking before the
latest soccer incident, Ms. Madawi noted that Mr. Bin Salman’s brand of Saudi
nationalism that emphasises a Saudi than an Arab or Muslim national identity
has reinforced, not replaced, religious minorities’ and regional sub-identities.
“It generates a reaction,
namely a revival of sub-identities,” particularly among groups who feel they
have been excluded from Mr. Bin Salman’s effort to recast Saudi identity,” Ms.
Al-Rasheed said.
Dr. James M. Dorsey is an Adjunct Senior
Fellow at Nanyang Technological University’s S. Rajaratnam School of
International Studies, and the author of the syndicated column and podcast, The Turbulent World with James M. Dorsey. ‘The Battle for the Soul of Islam’ is James’
forthcoming book.
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