FAITH IN INDONESIA

FAITH IN INDONESIA
The shape of the world a generation from now will be influenced far more by how we communicate the values of our society to others than by military or diplomatic superiority. William Fulbright, 1964

Thursday, October 10, 2024

THIS GEN GAP IS TOO WIDE FOR COMFORT

 


CAN THIS ODD COUPLE SURVIVE?                  

Before debating with Democrat VP candidate Tim Walz, the Republican nominee JD Vance  said the contestants’  views matter little because voters go for the top of the ticket, not the bottom.

That may be right in the US, though not in Indonesia.

This is anecdotal but when contacts blushingly admit to voting for cashiered former general and alleged human rights abuser Prabowo Subianto, they reason by adding they wanted Gibran Rakabuming.

Although the Constitution says VPs are the spare tyre, in reality they’ve been proxies for a voter bloc.  The current VP Ma’ruf Amin, 81, was an esteemed Muslim cleric selected as a crutch when in 2019 President Joko ‘Jokowi’ Widodo’s advisors detected a religious limp.

This year the age has dropped. In the February poll the wrinkle-free 37-year-old eldest son of once hyper-popular Jokowi became the bait to snare new gen voters the oldies can’t understand.  He spoke prokem (Javanese street slang) looked fresh, seemed cool.

In brief, someone young electors found relatable. 

Prabowo, the plump pensioner atop the ticket is already on borrowed time, five years beyond the average life expectancy for Indonesian men.

During the campaign he tried to appeal to teens with hair dye, silly dances and adopting a cuddly cartoon character; it looked forced, flawed and squirmingly embarrassing.

Odd couples can sometimes thrive, though difficulties expand when each party comes from a different background.

Gibran, a small-town mayor, said little during the campaign, as the label ‘son of Jokowi’ was enough. Voters backed him not for his achievements but as a drop site for their expectations.  A prime prayer from the electorate has been for politics without corruption.

A tough call: Indonesia ranks 89 out of 180 countries in Transparency International's Corruption Perception Index.  One estimate reckons it’ll take a century of reform before the Republic sheds the curse, and that’s going to need brave and committed leaders. They’ve yet to appear.  

Over half the 205 million registered electors this year were millennials (born in the 1990s) and Gen Zs (created this century). 

First time voters knew little of the autocratic Orde Baru (New Order) administration of the late President Soeharto – 32 years of repression. But his one-time son-in-law Prabowo was happily embedded in that era and appears to want it returned.

Gibran couldn’t muster a backstory in the pesantren - Islamic boarding schools that are supposed to instil morality - or the military that reckons it’s the custodian of national duty.   Instead, like a middle-class lad, he’d been schooled in Singapore learning business management and English.

Dad suggested he take over flogging furniture – but the scion wanted to sit on his own stool.  His Chilli Pari catering service rapidly garnered more than AUD 2.2 million, exceeding the value of Papa’s trade.

Perhaps this displays great business acumen though the mean-spirited suggested he profited by association – a nepo baby.

 When Jokowi won the 2014 election, family photos showed Gibran looking surly, more like a petulant teen than a mid-20s adult.  At the time he professed disinterest in politics.

When Gibran did venture a public opinion he got his lips burned by suggesting pregnant women  swig sulphuric acid to prevent stunted babies.  He meant folic acid.

We know he likes soccer (so does almost every man in Indonesia) and supports Barcelona – but that's the limit of the profundities he’ll share.

Like most Indonesians Jokowi’s son played with social media, allegedly using the alias Fufufafa. Long before he became VP-in-waiting, the account was posting unfavourable comments about his Dad’s rival.

The slanders from Prabowo’s camp included claims that Jokowi was secretly a Christian and his father a Communist.

Fufufafa  hit back, reportedly writing:  "Soldiers are dismissed, divorced, children are waving, supporters are radical, coalition parties do not support all out."  This cryptic sentence is supposed to refer to Prabowo’s past.

He was cashiered in 1998 and divorced from Soeharto’s daughter Titiek the same year.  Their only son Didit Hediprasetyo, 40, is a fashion designer in Europe and whispered to be gay.  Populist Indonesian politicians have been urging for laws against homosexuality.

Prabowo has stayed single and seems indifferent to women so there’s no First Lady – a great disappointment in a culture where family loves and feuds are essentials in everyday chat.

By contrast Gibran married local Catholic Selvi Ananda who renounced her faith to marry.  They have two kids.  Attempts by your correspondent to interview the family have been ignored.

The other confusing comments in the online posting are interpreted as references to Prabowo getting Islamic groups to back his earlier campaigns; that support wasn’t sought this year.

Gibran has appeared to deny ownership of the Fufufafa account and tried to flick away the controversy, but the Twittersphere is not so simply dusted.  When Soeharto was boss public critics of the government feared a door-kick by police or army boots.

Not so easy now when the anonymous publishers of scuttlebutt thrive on social media.  So Prabowo has dashed back to his mentor's policies by scrapping Jokowi’s impromptu media conferences. 

There'll be occasional formal events where the prez will select approved questions from chosen reps of partisan publishers.

Prabowo’s spokesperson Hasan Nasbi explained the new system is part of “a greater scheme to limit access provided to journalists ,,, and that the president-elect would only make official statements when necessary.

"For instance, if the President is on a visit to a wet market and he is subjected to questions from reporters, he may not be ready with an answer. We don't want to create confusion."

Hasan also said his boss would need to prepare responses and that he’d only “speak to the press in routine press briefings and only on matters that have been confirmed.”

Maybe the VP is happy with this deal because he’s disclosed little and seems to have an ideology of the same magnitude.  Easier to tag along for the fame and business boost and hope the old fella doesn’t cark it in the next five years.

There’s no marshal’s baton in this neophyte’s knapsack.  Nor any spray can of charisma.

He once stood up to his gentle Dad.  Can he do the same with his fearsome boss?  Will he dare? 

First published in Pearls & Irritations, 10 September 2024: https://johnmenadue.com/can-this-odd-couple-survive/

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



Tuesday, October 08, 2024

 

INDONESIA’S MEDDLESOME PRIEST PASSES                         Duncan Graham






(Credit:  Erlinawati Graham)

 

“Religion is being used as an instrument of power in Indonesia, manipulated by the State and big business. Politicians are continuing to use religion for their own ends and consequently risking harmony.”

The words are those of Antonius Benny Susetyo best known as Romo (Father) Benny and probably the most recognisable Catholic priest in Muslim-majority Indonesia. He was frequently on TV vigorously advocating rational inquiry and pluralism, and in demand for public debates.

In one campaign he unsuccessfully supported scrapping religious affiliation from ID cards, later telling this writer: “It will be some time before Indonesians can accept the idea that the state and religion should be divorced.

"The important things are not the number of places of worship, but the creation of a life of togetherness. We have to become better educated and intellectually more mature.”

The stirring has stopped: The prominent social activist died last week aged 55 from complications with diabetes leaving a gulf in the never-ending debate about religions in the Republic.

 Indonesia’s leading daily Kompas headlined his passing  by describing him as the ‘Pro Common People Clergyman and Critic of the Catholic Church’. The hundreds of wreaths came from all religions and political leaders, including President Joko ‘Jokowi’ Widodo.

Benny fell ill while lecturing in Pontianak, the capital of West Kalimantan.  His job was Stafsus (special staff) with the national Badan Pembinaan Ideologi Pancasila (Pancasila Ideology Development Agency. His topic was The Fragility of Ethics.

Founding president Soekarno helped create Pancasila (five principles) to counter radicals' demands that the new nation be a theocracy.

The tenets are belief in the one and only God, a just and civilized humanity, the unity of the Republic, democracy led by wisdom in deliberation / representation, and social justice for all.

About three per cent of the population (less than 9 million) is Catholic with the faith dominant only in Flores and other Eastern Islands.  Its temporal work includes non-discriminatory hospitals, schools and universities.

Benny has not been apolitical, favouring the Partai Demokrasi Indonesia Perjuangan (Democratic Party of Struggle – PDI-P) led by fifth President Megawati Soekarnoputri (2001-2004).

His brother Andreas is a member of the Dewan Perwakilan Rakyat (House of Reps) with the PDI-P. It holds most seats but doesn't govern. Gerindra, run by president-elect Prabowo Subianto has formed a majority coalition and will take office on 20 October,



Benny was buried in Malang, East Java where he was born and educated in theology and philosophy.  After graduating, the Church tasked him to seek common ground with Muslims.

His mission was rapidly tested by fire – literally, as mobs started fighting non-Muslims and torching churches in the chaos following Soeharto quitting office,

A decade ago he was interviewed by this journalist. There’s no evidence Benny shifted his philosophies since, though last year he retired from diocesan duties to focus on advocacy.

 It’s a priest’s calling to be concerned with souls, to teach the Gospel.  How do you justify your involvement in politics?

“A priest’s job is also to speak out on issues concerning the people’s welfare, morality and ethics, to be concerned for humanity, peace and justice. That’s the teaching of Catholicism; these are the values of all religions.”

Brother Andreas


Are you in danger of putting off Muslim voters by expecting Protestants and Catholics to vote for Jokowi (then the PDI-P candidate)?

“I’m not trying to cause divisions and wish religion wasn’t part of politics.  Jesus was a politician because he advocated for the poor and weak against the rulers – but he wasn’t a member of a political party.

“Many religious people don’t understand politics, so need information, to have issues explained. That’s my role. A priest must also follow his conscience.”

Has that got you into strife?

“With a few, though not the Vatican. Pope Francis has spoken out against inequalities caused by bad economic policies.”

(In 2008 Benny was bashed by thugs believed to be from the radical Front Pembela Islam (Islamic Defenders’ Front) attacking peace marchers in central Jakarta. He spent five days in a Singapore hospital.

The Christian press claimed Benny was the victim of a planned assault by fundamentalists trying to fracture Indonesian pluralism. The victim said he didn’t know why he was bashed and had forgiven his assailants. “Maybe they were after my handphone,” he joked.


Isn’t this all academic?  Non-Muslims are such a small minority with little influence.

“Every non-Muslim is still part of our Republic. Everyone has influence, whoever they are, irrespective of their religion.”

In the UK you’ve spoken on ‘Pluralism in Peril in Indonesia’. What do you mean?

“All the evidence shows intolerance is growing and spreading beyond the original pockets.

 What do you expect from the next president?

“To stamp out corruption, that’s number one. He should uphold Pancasila and strengthen the rule of law. He must stop the abuse of power and care for the poor.” 

 Many argue Indonesia needs a strong leader so the president should be a military man.

“The Indonesian people don’t need a dictator. We want honest leaders with rational policies, not populist slogans. If you interview me in five years, I hope that religious issues won’t be part of the campaign.”

How do you feel about the future of democracy in Indonesia?

“Optimistic if the people are rational in their approach to politics, but not if we continue following the culture of the elite.

"We need a new paradigm for religious teaching that will interpret the texts in accordance with modern usage.

"Take off your exclusive glasses and start looking at the world in an inclusive way. The dialogue must be about life. The challenge for religion is to take sides with the downtrodden, the poor, migrant workers – and advocate on their behalf.

"Plurality should be the main issue in the development of our national character."

First published in Indonesia at Melbourne, 8 October 2024:

https://indonesiaatmelbourne.unimelb.edu.au/obituary-romo-benny-indonesias-meddlesome-priest-dies-at-55/

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Friday, October 04, 2024

DON'T FEAR JOURNOS - THEIR ONLY WEAPONS ARE WORDS

  

LIKE KNIVES, WORDS WOUND. BEST BAN THEIR USE                    




To call a former general anywhere a coward would be a great insult and might push her or him into taking revenge. 

So let’s observe from afar that disgraced former general Prabowo Subianto, Indonesia’s next president after inauguration on 20 October, seems frightened. Not of invaders - he’s never met any - but unarmed local professionals doing their job.

Prabowo’s imagined foe is the labourers in the fourth estate, working alongside the legislature, executive and judiciary to hold politicians accountable.  Or as Okkers  say, “keep the bastards honest.”

Journalists don’t just believe in freedom – we’re its custodians.

Prabowo claims he’s into democracy yet loathes reporters.  He’s told rallies that journos want to manipulate democracy and aren’t to be trusted.

The Polish-British writer Joseph Conrad (Heart of Darkness) offered a more respectful view:  "My task, which I am trying to achieve is, by the power of the written word, to make you hear, to make you feel-- it is, before all, to make you see."

Prabowo won’t experience these emotions because he’s put himself in quarantine; he’s closing the impromptu press conferences the current civilian President Joko ‘Jokowi’ Widodo has been using to reach the people.

Instead, there'll be occasional formal events where Prabowo will select approved questions from chosen reps of partisan publishers.  Nothing spontaneous. AI could be used - and maybe will.

His spokesperson Hasan Nasbi has told the media the shut-out is part of “a greater scheme to limit access provided to journalists ,,, and that the president-elect would only make official statements when necessary.

"For instance, if the President is on a visit to a wet market and he is subjected to questions from reporters, he may not be ready with an answer. We don't want to create confusion."

Correct – it would be dangerous anywhere to confuse a faction of politicians with a shiver of sharks.

Hasan also said his boss would need to prepare responses and that he’d only “speak to the press in routine press briefings and only on matters that have been confirmed.”

That’s equally reasonable: A seasoned commander leading troops in bitter guerilla wars in East Timor and West Papua that have reportedly taken thousands of lives would obviously fumble curveballs. 

Reporters’ camcorders and notebooks are no physical threat to the one-time commander of special forces fighting fellow Indonesians last century.

Even if an unhinged imposter tried to stab the 73-year-old with a ballpoint pen the prez’s safari suit would deflect the thrusting plastic.  No black ink would stain the khaki.  No fear here.

The terror is how skilled wordsmiths might spear through the lies, distractions and obfuscations to reveal what manner of man will lead the world’s fourth most populous nation.

Historians think studying the past is essential in considering the future and preventing repeats. So do scribes.

Australian researcher Pat Walsh has asked whether Prabowo is  “fit and proper” to run the world’s third largest democracy – even though he’s been formidably endorsed by 58.6 per cent of voters in the three-way February poll. 

The turnout was almost 82 per cent - 66 per cent in the US in 2020. Voting is not compulsory.

Walsh still answers – “no”.  Young electors knew little of the candidate’s past; they were amused by a harmless grandpa cartoon image suggesting fun times ahead. 

More significantly he was endorsed by the once popular Jokowi whose son Gibran Rakabuming, 37, has become VP in a deal so dirty Machiavelli would have sent a smiley emoji.

Unreal, according to award-winning American investigative journalist Allan Nairn, who once interviewed Prabowo, labelling him as “the worst of the massacre generals, and the closest US protege in the Indonesian military.

“He’s still someone who imagines himself in the role of the fascist dictator. There’s every reason to think that he will … go after his opponents massively.”

He has the dough and clout to do that: During his exile, he started businesses in Indonesia with the help of his US dollar-billionaire younger brother Hashim Djojohadikusumo.

A decade ago Prabowo’s estimated wealth was US$140 million plus assets in 26 companies, mainly mining and plantations. His backers own five top TV stations reaching more than 40 per cent of viewers.

Last century second president Soeharto ran a 32-year military-backed autocracy (Orde Baru – New Order) that violently crushed independence movements.  Prabowo was his muscle and his son-in-law through a failed marriage to the boss’s daughter Siti.

Does he have blood on his hands? That’s a robust reporter’s question to any leader allegedly involved in human rights abuses.  Prabowo rubbishes the allegations although they were credible enough for Washington and Canberra to deny visas for many years.

Another one, Sir: Where are the 13 pro-democracy students your troops kidnapped in 1998?  Their families demonstrate every Thursday in Jakarta wanting to know, but no one tells.

Finally, to get the record straight: You’ve never been charged in court but why were you cashiered in 1998 and why did you run away and hide in Jordan for eight years?

Thank you, Sir; apologies if our questions got you trembling.

The inquirers take no position – they just want answers from whoever knows the truth. The chance of getting honest responses diminishes daily along the road to Palace propaganda and a retreat from the free world.

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 First published in Independent Australia, 3 October 2024: 

https://independentaustralia.net/politics/politics-display/president-prabowo-faces-new-nemesis-press-accountability,19031