Indonesian Islam Down Under
Kilbirnie Mosque, Wellington
Here’s a
message for Indonesian Muslims who feel their faith is flagging: Move to a country where you’re a minority.
“It can be
a challenge and there may be downsides, but after ten years in New Zealand I’m
more pious than I was in Jakarta,” said Agam Jaya Syam (above, right), chairman of the
Indonesian Community Association in Wellington.
“Back home
I accepted a lot of things uncritically, but here we find our beliefs and
values being challenged. For example my
son Fachry asked why we can’t eat pork.
In the past I would have said it’s forbidden. Now I’ve had to add the reasons why, explaining how pigs feed and
their digestive system works.”
There’s
another plus: Worshippers with conflicting views on how their faith should be
practised bury divisions when faced with the reality of being the few among the
many.
“When
you’re in a minority – and a very small minority – you tend to overlook little
things,” said Fawzan Hafiz (above, left) , a past president of the International Muslim
Association of NZ (IMAN).
“Differences
don’t seem to matter so much. The
larger the group, the less the compromise.
That’s when history, culture and custom come into play.
“In NZ we
have a multi-cultural, multi-ethnic community. More than 40 nations are
represented in the congregation at the Wellington mosque. The beauty of Islam is that it can adapt.”
A few
Chinese Muslims arrived in NZ during the South Island gold rush about 150 years
ago. However they had little influence
in an overwhelmingly Christian nation, for by 1950 there were only 150
throughout the whole country.
Eleven
years later the number hadn’t even doubled.
Then Indian Muslims started coming from Fiji. Students from Asia began
to arrive, along with refugees from the Middle East.
Islam also
began attracting locals disillusioned with other faiths. Now ten per cent of Muslims in NZ are Maori
and Western.
Today NZ
has around 40,000 Muslims. They worship
at 35 prayer centers and mosques, including one in Invercargill, which at
latitude 46’42” may well be the world’s most southerly – and coldest.
About 150
of the 400 Indonesians in Wellington use the local mosque and a central city
room in a shop for Friday prayers.
The mosque,
a printing warehouse converted with local funds and money from Malaysia, can
accommodate more than 1,000 worshippers.
It was opened just after Muslim terrorists slammed two commercial jets
into New York’s World Trade Center, releasing a global cloud of Islamophobia.
Though
little across NZ, according to Fawzan.
There had been some graffiti and a broken window, but these were
examples of vandalism by street kids and not linked to bigotry.
When The Jakarta Post visited at 7 am on a
cold Sunday the outside gate was open and the doors unlocked. No guards were present. Later, on a Saturday afternoon, the rooms
were full of Somali children and their moms in colourful ankle-length ethnic
dress. A few headed for the shops
wearing black burqa.
“The
atmosphere here is different,” said Fawzan. “NZ is generally pretty tolerant.
The people are good – there’s no religious prejudice.”
But then
there’s not much religion in the South Pacific nation of 4.25 million.
Census
statistics show one third of the population indifferent to religion. Church attendances have tumbled and Sunday
service pews in the traditional denominations grow thinner and greyer every
year.
The present
Prime Minister John Key is not religious though his mother was Jewish. His
predecessor Helen Clark, like Australian PM Julia Gillard, is also an
atheist. Laws on the separation of
faith and state prevent the government from funding religion or having a
Ministry of Religion.
An absence
of piety doesn’t indicate immorality or lack of compassion. A George Washington
University survey of 208 nations called How Islamic are Islamic Countries? ranked
NZ number one for implementing policies in keeping with Islamic values. Indonesia was number 140.
When Kiwi
businessman Tim Mackay was killed in a 2009 Jakarta terror bombing the RI Embassy
in Wellington offered unqualified public apologies and sympathies.
Agam Syam wrote in the local press that he
felt “betrayed and ashamed” by terrorists, adding: “If we cannot create peace
and instead make trouble and take human lives, that is not Islam.”
“It would
be impossible for an Indonesian president not to be Muslim,” said Nourina
Djamal who has spent seven years in NZ after a similar period in Australia.
“However we
must differentiate between those born Muslim and those who want to be Muslim. If our politicians were truly Muslim there’d
be no corruption and there’s be care for the poor.
“I’m happy
that there’s no official religion in NZ and I don’t think that causes
problems. People don’t ask about
religion and it’s illegal to question faith when applying for a job.
“However I
don’t like the sex education in schools – I think there’s too much information,
it’s too extreme.”
Nourina
wears a headscarf in her job at a supermarket, but her 20-year-old student
daughter does not – although she did at school.
Agam’s wife
Silviana Dewi Warli (left) works for NZ Post.
In the street she dons a headscarf – but not in the office. “I’m not ready for that yet,” she said.
The couple
have been wondering whether to send their son back to Indonesia for Islamic
schooling because there’s only one Muslim school in NZ – in Auckland, 700
kilometers north of Wellington
Both women
claimed neither they nor their children had suffered discrimination or abuse
but were sometimes greeted in the street by others who recognised fellow
Muslims.
However
stories of casual racism are often reported in the media. Human Rights Commissioner Joris de Bres
reported that although race relations were “relatively healthy” prejudice
existed, with Asians the principal target.
Asians are
expected to overtake Maori as the second largest ethnic group in NZ by 2026.
The
Wellington mosque administration appears to have made earnest efforts to merge
into the wider society. Every year it
holds an Open Day, inviting visitors and questions, and offering a wide variety
of foods from Islamic countries.
Leaders are
involved in inter-faith groups and the Koran has been read from lecterns in
some progressive churches.
There are
no loudspeakers atop the minaret and even if noise abatement laws didn’t exist
there’d still be no broadcast calls to prayer, according to Fawzan.
“Why should
we disturb local residents who aren’t Muslims?” said Fawzan. “That doesn’t help improve relations with
the community.”
(First published in The Jakarta Post 30 July 2012)
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