Tuesday 2 February 2010

indonews 2010: I believe in Indonesia

This is my opinion, therefore, it has to be considered as such..

Being the 4th world population, one of the G20 countries and the biggest Muslim country in the world, I believe Indonesia has a major role in the future.
I advise everybody that has never been to a Muslim country to go to Indonesia. Actually, I advise everyone to go there for the friendly people, outstanding landscapes, varied art, and so many other things..just discover your own Indonesia!

In Indonesia, Islam is a tolerant religion, even if the rise of extremism is unavoidable.
The perceived (by the west) fundamentalism is not an Indonesian question. It is rather what Edward Said stated in the book Orientalism: what we understand as resurging and emergence of Islam derives from Islam's own divisions (yes, Islam is not all equal), its current debate and need to make a new definition of Islam itself.

After Suharto's fall in 1998, suddenly everyone in Indonesia had the right to express an opinion. Extremists included.
Like the Buddhists say, everything has a good and a bad side!

Mimis Katoppo told me something very interesting: that in Indonesia Islam is considered a NEW religion.
In Portugal, Islam is so old that we hardly feel the traces of it's past existence, that ended around the 13th century.

It arrived in the archipelago through sea trade, in the period between the 14th-16th centuries (if I am not wrong).
Due to the fragility of the Majapahit Empire (Hindu-based), Islam entered slowly, but surely this geographical area.

Everything arrived in this archipelago through sea-trade: Christianity, Buddhism, Hinduism, food, words (3000 are Portuguese!), ethnicities... Like everything else, Islam also stayed.
I refer to Java (and the area between Sumatra and East-Timor) as a "sponge", that absorves everything.

Agung Kurniawan told me this is what he calls "syncretism", a concept related to the theory of Homi Bhabha in his Location of Culture. For further reading, I googled some articles and essays

But as I arrive in Jakarta, Aristides Katoppo (with whom I stayed in the last days), and who happens to be himself an intellectual and very cultivated person (he introduced me me in 2 hours about all the aspects of batik, back in 2006, not being himself a specialist!), and referred in the book South East Asian Images - Towards a Civil Society? (I read it instantly, it's very nice), as a careful optimist towards Indonesia, told me Indonesia's situation goes a bit further: its not SYNCRETISM, it's not SINTHESIS, it's rather SYNERGY. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synergy

SYNERGY is what makes THIS 17000-island-archipelago, with 300-different-languages and even more ethnicities together.

Indonesia is all the religious beliefs, colours of skin, ornamentation, textiles, languages.....TOGETHER.
Together, strong and in peace.

The contrast with the neighbouring Malaysia is very big: there is no synergy in Malaysia. They forget what was there before and change for something new. The Indonesians don't do that. They know that before Islam or Christianity, there was Budhism and Hinduism. This is why we recently saw churches in Malaysia being burnt and bombed: because Christians use the word Allah to refer to God and there is no tolerance among the different beliefs.

I believe in Indonesia.

Salam, noor

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hi Noor, well said and well written!
Happy New Year
Salam
Lucien

liliana_lourenço said...

Olá Leonor!

Só há pouco reparei no rodapé do teu e-mail.. :)

Vou-te acompanhando por aqui.
Já reparei que tenho muito que ler e muitas fotos para ver também. :)

Beijinhos e pensamento positivo! ;)

**

Unknown said...

GOOD TO KNOW YOUR BLOG!...good writing,....riyas komu.

Unknown said...

Quando é que escreves um livro prima escritora? bejinhos diogo

Hugo Lopes said...

Hi Noor, i got inspired by your 'call' to visit Indonesia. Will follow your blog(s) from now on.
Cheers!
PS - Got your link after seeing your comment to Q! on Facebook on the 9th day before :-)