Anti-Shia mass mobilization in Indonesia’s democracy: godly alliance, militant groups and the politics of exclusion

M Khusna Amal

Abstract


This article examines violence against religious minorities, especially Shia groups in the democracy of Indonesia, focusing particularly on the case of the 2016 anti-Milad Fatimah (Fatimah Birth Commemoration) mass mobilization performed by IJABI (The all-Indonesia Assembly of Ahlul Bait Associations) in Bondowoso, East Java, Indonesia. This article finds that the anti-Milad Fatimah mass mobilization involved alliances and conspiracy between Godly Muslim groups with a varied agenda. Sunni militant groups from the Nahdlatul Ulama (NU), FPI (Islamic Defenders Front), Wahabi/Salafi, and Hizbut Tahrir Indonesia (HTI) groups, which merged into FOKUS (Ahlus Sunnah Wal Jama'ah Communication Forum), were the main protagonists who played a key role in driving mass mobilization. Unlike previous studies that understood the anti-Shia movement merely as a form of affirming Islamic orthodoxy, this study finds evidence that there were wider agendas than the theological ones. Excluding the Shia from capturing Islamic public space, and challenging religious authority and local power which was dominated by moderate Muslim groups, were the socio-political agendas which contributed to the anti-Milad Fatimah mass mobilization. The involvement of radical Islamist groups such as the activists of the Tarbiyah and HTI is a sign that there is a strong political agenda behind mass mobilization. However, the ultimate goal of applying Islamic Sharia will never fade from the religious movements of Islamist groups.

Studi ini mengkaji kekerasan terhadap minoritas agama khususnya kelompok Shia di Indonesia era demokrasi. Tulisan memilih kasus aksi mobilisasi massa anti-Milad Fatimah yang dilaksanakan oleh IJABI (Ikatan Jama’ah Ahlul Bait Indonesia), Bondowoso, Jawa Timur pada 2016. Tulisan ini memeroleh temuan yang menarik bahwa aksi mobilisasi massa anti-Milad Fatimah, melibatkan aliansi longgar di antara kelompok-kelompok Godly Muslim dengan agendanya yang tidak tunggal. Kelompok-kelompok militant Sunni dari kalangan NU, FPI, Wahabi/Salafi dan HTI, yang menggabungkan diri ke dalam FOKUS (Forum Komunikasi Ahlus Sunnah wal Jama’ah), merupakan aktor-aktor utama yang berperan penting dalam memobilisir aksi massa tersebut. Berbeda dari kajiankajian yang umumnya memahami gerakan anti-Shi’ah sebagai bentuk peneguhan ortodoksi Islam atupun homogenisasi Islam Indonesia, studi ini mendapati temuan yang jauh lebih besar dan kompleks dari sekedar agenda teologis itu. Mengekslusi Shi’ah dari ruang public Islam dan menantang otoritas keagamaan dan kekuasaan local yang didominasi oleh kelompok-kelompok Muslim moderat merupakan sejumlah agenda sosio-politik yang turut mewarnai aksi massa itu. Keterlibatan kelompok-kelompok Islamisme radikal seperti aktivis Gerakan Tarbiyah dan Hizbut Tahrir Indonesia (HTI), menjadi sinyalemen cukup kuat adanya agenda politis di balik aksi massa. Bagaimanapun, imaginasi dan citacita penerapan syari’at Islam tidak akan pernah pudar dari gerakan keagamaan kelompok-kelompok Islamis.


Keywords


Sunni; Shia Mass Mobilization; Religious Militants; Democratization

Full Text:

PDF

References


Akmaliah, Wahyudi. “Kekerasan dan Pengusiran Atas Nama Agama Pasca Rejim Orde Baru: Studi Kasus Konflik Syi’ah Sampang”, Maarif: Arus Pemikiran Islam dan Sosial, Volume 10, Number 2, (Desember 2015): 221-242.

Al-Amin, Ainur Rofiq. Membongkar Proyek Khilafah Ala Hizbut Tahrir di Indonesia. Yogyakarta: LKiS, 2012.

Ansor, Muhammad. “Post-Islamism and the Remaking of Islamic Public Sphere in Post-Reform Indonesia”, Studia Islamika, Volume 23, Number 3, (2016): 471-515.

Asy’ari, Suadi. “Managing Islamic Public Sphace: Responses of Sumantran Malay Muslim Toward Neo-Anti Bid’ah Movement”, Journal of Indonesian Islam, Volume 7, Number 2, (December 2013): 217-245.

Asy’ari, Suadi. “Incorporating Islamism into Secular Education System, An Attemp of Gradual Islamization of the State and Society by an Indonesian Tarbiyah Movement in Jambi”, Journal of Indonesian Islam, Volume 11, Number 1, (2017): 29-58.

Ayubi, Nazih. Political Islam: Religion and Politics in the Arab World. London: Routledge, 2004.

Azra, Azyumardi, “Islamic Thought: Theory, Concept, and Doctrines in the Context of Southeast Asian Islam”, in K.S. Nathan & Muhammad Hashim Kamali (eds.), Islam in Southeast Asia: Political, Social and Strategic Challenges for the 21st Century. Singapore: ISEAS, 2005.

Azra, Azyumardi, “The Ahl al-Sunnah wa al-Jama’ah in Southeast Asia: The Liteature of Malay-Indonesia ‘Ulama’ and Reforms”, Heritage of Nusantara International Journal of Religious Literature and Heritage, Volume 2, Number 1, (2013): 1-21.

Bruinessen, Martin van (ed.). Contemporary Developments in Indonesian Islam: Explaining the Conservative Turn. Singapore: ISEAS, 2013.

Fauziah, “Potret Kerukunan Hidup Umat Beragama di Kabupaten Bondowoso, Jawa Timur”, Harmoni Jurnal Multikultural & Multireligius, Volume X, Number 3, (September 2011): 647-661.

Fealy, Greg, “Bukan Sekedar Ahok: Menjelaskan Aksi Massa pada 2 Desember”, Indonesia At Melbourne, Melbourne University, 12 Desember, 2016.

Fealy, Greg, “Islamic Radicalism in Indonesia, The Faltering Revival?”, Shoutheast Asean Affairs, (2004): 104-121.

Formichi, Chiara, “From Fluid Identities to Sectarian Labels, a Historical Investigation of Indonesia’s Shi’i Communities”, Al-Jami’ah: Journal of Islamic Studies, Volume 52, Number 1, (2014):101-126.

Hasan, Noorhaidi. Laskar Jihad: Islam, Militansi dan Pencarian identitas di Indonesia Pasca Orde Baru. Jakarta: LP3ES dan KITLV, 2008.

Hasan, Noorhaidi. Islamizing Formal Education: Integrated Islamic School and New Trend in Formal Education Institution in Indonesia. Singapore: S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, 2009.

Hasan, Noorhaidi, “Islamist Party, Electoral Politics and Da’wah Mobilization among Youth, The Prosperous Justice Party (PKS) in Indonesia”, Journal of Indonesian Islam, Volume 06, Number 01, (2012):17-47.

Hasim, Moh, “Syi’ah: Sejarah Timbul dan Perkembangannya di Indonesia”, Jurnal Analisa,Volume 19, Number 02, (December 2012):147-158.

Hefner, Robert W, “Religious Resurgence in Contemporary Asia: Southeast Asian Perspectives on Capitalism, State, and the New Piety”, The Journal of Asian Studies, Volume 69, Number 4, (2010): 131-47.

Hefner, Robert W, “Globiolence and Indonesian Muslim Politic”, American Anthropoligist, Volume 104, Number 3, (2002):754-765.

Hilmy, Masdar, “Radikalisme Agama dan Politik Demokrasi di Indonesia Pasca Orde Baru”, Jurnal MIQAT, Volume XXXIX, Number 2, (2015): 407-425.

Hilmy, Masdar, “The Political Economy Sunni-Shi’ah Conflict in Sampang Madura”, Al-Jami’ah: Journal of Islamic Studies, Volume 53, Number 1, (2015): 27-51.

Hilmy, Masdar. Islamism and Democracy in Indonesia Piety and Pragmatism. Singapore: ISEAS, 2010.

Hilmy, Masdar, “The Politics of Realitation: The Backlash of Radical Islamists to Deradicalization Project in Indonesia”, Al-Jami’ah, Volume 51, Number 1, (2013): 129-158.

Ichwan, Nur, “The Local Politics of Orthodoxy The Majlis Ulama Indonesia in the Post-New Order Banten”, Journal of Indonesian Islam, Volume 06, Number 01, (2012): 166-194.

Ichwan, Nur, MUI, “Gerakan Islamis, dan Ummat Mengambang”, Maarif, Volume II, Number 2, (2016): 87-104.

Kaptein, Nico J.G., and Kees van Dijk (ed.). Islam, Politics and Cahnge, the Indonesian Experience after the Fall of Suharto. Leiden University Press, 2016.

Latief, Hilman, “The Identity of Shi’a Symphatizer in Contemporary Indonesia”, Journal of Indonesian Islam, Volume 2, Number 2, (December 2008): 300-355.

Makin, Al, “Homogenizing Indonesian Islam: Percution of the Shia Group in Yogyakarta”, Studia Islamika, Volume 24, Number 1, (2017): 1-31.

Menchik, Jeremy, “Productive Intolerance: Godly Nationalism in Indonesia”, Comparative Studies in Society and History, Volume 56, Number 3, (2014): 591-621.

Mauladdawilah, Abdul Qodir Umar. 17 Habaib Berpengaruh di Indonesia, Malang: Bayan & Pustaka Basma, 2010.

Miichi, Ken. Minority Shi’a Groups as a Part of Civil Society in Indonesia, 2016. http://www.mei.edu/content/map/minority-shi-groups-civil-society-indonesia?print=

Mudzhar, Mohammad Atho. Fatwa-Fatwa Majelis Ulama Indonesia: Sebuah Studi Pemikiran Hukum Islam di Indonesia 1975-1988. Jakarta: INIS, 1993.

Mustamir, Khoirul, “Agama Menegara: Potret Pembajakan Kekuasaan Negara dan Masa Depan Syi’ah di Jawa Timur”, Ma’arif, Volume 10, Number 2, (Desember 2015): 268-296.

Rahim, Lily Zubaidah, “The Road Less Travelled: Islamic Militancy in Southeast Asia”, Critical Asian Studies, Volume 32, Number 2, (2003): 209-232.

Rahmat, M. Imdadun. Ideologi Politik PKS, Dari Masjid Kampus ke Gedung Parlemen. Yogyakarta: LKiS, 2008.

Rijal, Syamsul, “Internal Dynamics within Hadrami Arabs in Indonesia From Social Hierarchy to Islamic Doctrins”, Journal of Indonesian Islam, Volume 11, Number 1, (2017):1-28.

Setara Institute. Negara Harus Bersikap: Tiga Tahun Laporan Kondisi Kebebasan Beragama/Berkeyakinan di Indonesia. Jakarta: Setara Institute, 2010.

Sidel, JT. Riots, Programs and Jihad: Religious Violence in Indonesia. New York: Cornell University Press, 2006.

Sofjan, Dicky, “Minoritization & Criminalization of Shia Islam in Indonesia”, Journal of South Asian and Middle Eastern Studies, Volume XXXIX, Number 2, USA: Villanova University, 2016.

Suryana, A’an, “Discrepancy in State Practices The Case of Violence against Ahmadiyah and Shi’a Minority Communities during the Presidency of Susilo Bambang Yudoyono”, Al-Jami’ah, Volume 5, Number 1, (2017): 71-103.

Syaukani, Imam, “Konflik Sunni-Syi’ah di Bondowoso”, dalam Harmoni Jurnal Multikultural-Multireligius, Volume VIII, Number 31, (2009): 85-87.

Syarif, Dede, Iskandar Zulkarnain, Dicky Sufjan, “Anti-Shi’ism in Indonesia: Geneology, Development, and Methods”, Harmoni: Jurnal Multikultural & Multireligius, Volume 16, Number 1, (2017): 24-37.

Tibi, Bassam. Islam dan Islamisme. Bandung: Mizan, 2012.

Turmudi, Endang dan Riza Sihbudi (ed.). Islam dan Radikalisme di Indonesia. Jakarta: LIPI, 2005.

Al-Qurtuby, Sumanto, “Arab and “Indo-Arabs” in Indonesia: Historical Dynamics, Social Relations and Contemporary Changes”, International Journal of Asia Pasific Studies, Volume 13, Number 2, (2017): 45-72.

Wahid, Abdurrahman (ed.). Ilusi Negara Islam: Ekspansi Gerakan Islam Transnasional di Indonesia. Jakarta: Gerakan Bhinneka Tunggal Ika, the Wahid Institute dan Maarif Institute, 2009.

Wahid Institute. Laporan Kebebasan Beragama/Berkeyakinan dan Toleransi 2010. Jakarta: Wahid Institute, 2010.




DOI: https://doi.org/10.18326/ijims.v10i1.25-48

Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.


Copyright (c) 2020 M Khusna Amal

License URL: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/


Indonesian Journal of Islam and Muslim Societies indexed by: