A banner with a picture of a young, bespectacled Christian man is draped in front of the mosque, a fiery noose around his neck and the words: “This man deserves the death penalty!”
Churches are shut down. And an Islamic youth militia prepares for its first day of training.
Though the events all occur less than 10km from Indonesia’s bustling capital, making headlines in local papers and dominating chats on social networking sites such as Facebook, they’ve sparked little public debate in the halls of power.
PHOTO: AP
“I really see this as a threat to democracy,” political analyst Arbi Sanit said, noting leaders never like to say anything that can be perceived as “un-Islamic,” because they depend heavily on the support of Muslim parties in parliament.
“Being popular is more important to them than punishing those who are clearly breaking the law,” Sanit said.
Indonesia, a secular nation with more Muslims than any other in the world, has a long history of religious tolerance, though a small extremist fringe has gotten more vocal in recent years. Members of the Islamic Defenders Front (FPI), have been known to smash bars, attack transvestites and go after minority sects with bamboo clubs and stones.
Now, they are targeting Christians in the fast-growing industrial city of Bekasi.
Outsiders have steadily poured into the Jakarta suburb in search of work, bringing with them their own religions, traditions and values. That has made conservative Islamic clerics nervous. Some have used sermons to warn their flock to be on the lookout for signs of proselytization.
So, when 14 busloads of villagers arrived on June 30 at the home of Henry Sutanto, who heads the Christian-run Mahanaim Foundation, rumors quickly spread that he — and Andreas Sanau, the condemned man, whose face appears on the mosque banner — were planning a mass baptism.
A spokeswoman for the group, Marya Irawan, insisted the crowds were invited as part of efforts to reach out to the poor.
The FPI was not convinced. Video footage provided by the hard-line group shows hundreds of people getting off buses and entering the residential complex, many of them women in headscarves holding babies in slings, and milling about the pool. When the questioner thrust the camera in their faces, demanding to know why they came, most just looked bewildered.
“Someone asked if I wanted to come,” one woman said with a shrug.
Others accepted a ride into the city because they were bored, and thought they would at least get a free lunch out of it.
When the questioner found Sanau, who had one ear to the phone, he asked if baptisms would be taking place. The 29-year-old Christian’s brow furrowed. He shook his head, “no, no.” Asked if he had an ID card, Sanau flashed it at the interviewer, who zoomed in on his home address. The house has since been abandoned.
“He should be executed!” said Murhali Barda, who heads the Bekasi chapter of the FPI. “He tried to carry out mass baptisms!”
Days later, his hard-line group joined nine others in recommending at a local congress that Bekasi mosques help set up youth militias to act as moral police and to intimidate Christians who are trying to convert Muslims.
Barda said more than 1,500 volunteers came forward. They were scheduled to start training yesterday, he said, stressing the men would not be armed.
“We’re doing this because we want to strike fear in the hearts of Christians who behave in such a way,” he said. “If they refuse to stop what they’re doing, we’re ready to fight.”
Indonesian Muslim Forum regional leader Bernard Abdul Jabbar said about 100 of the mosque’s young activists in Bekasi attended the first day of training early yesterday, with a mission to oppose conversions to Christianity.
Jabbar said youths, mostly wearing martial arts uniforms, were given physical training and taught about Islam.
“They will guard Islamic faith and preach the right path to the people,” he said.
Priest Andreas Yewangoe, chairman of the Communion of Indonesian Churches, said the militia will only create fear, nervousness and unrest in the nation.
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