By
Rizky Alif Alvian
June 28,
2020
Indonesian
groups considered as political Islam include the Islam Defenders Front (FPI),
the National Movement to Safeguard the Indonesian Ulema Councils Fatwa
(GNPF-MUI), Hizbut Tahrir Indonesia and factions in the country’s largest
Muslim organisations, the Nahdlatul Ulama and Muhammadiyah. They all have the
desire to rule the society with ideals derived from interpretations of Islam.
This has prompted political Islam to put forth its aspirations, generally
perceived as undemocratic, through democratic ways.
Previously,
political Islam had little participation in Indonesian democracy. On several
occasions, these groups even campaigned for ideas opposing democracy. For
example, in 2013, FPI leader Rizieq Shihab rejected the idea of general
elections, telling Muslims that supporting democracy was as bad as eating pork.
Political
Islam had almost always been on the fringe of Indonesia’s politics. Its
inability to build a coalition of Muslims from all walks of life and persistent
internal fragmentation had rendered political Islam incapable of mobilising
significant influence.
After the
fall of Indonesia’s New Order, or Reformasi, researchers have observed the rise
of the conservative turn. The aspiration to expand the influence of Islamic law
in the public sphere has been voiced more frequently and gradually garnered
more support.
However,
the rise of the conservatives does not necessarily end the exclusion
altogether. Even after Reformasi, political Islam in Indonesia still
experiences political exclusion. Political Islam has often been portrayed by
the media, pro-democracy activists, analysts and political rivals as a group
that harms democracy and pluralism.
Research
has found the group attracted stigma because of its beliefs. The state,
scholars and civil society often treat followers of political Islam as citizens
whose behaviours and ideas are problematic, thus needing correction. Moreover,
it is not easy for political Islam to get access to formal political
institutions.
Amid the
prevailing democracy and diversity narratives post-Reformasi, these portrayals
have made political Islam look like a bunch of deviant people with unreasonable
demands. On the other hand, political Islam harbours great suspicion of the
narratives of democracy, tolerance and nationalism.
Last year
and this year signified a new turn. Indonesia saw a string of large
demonstrations called Defend Islam Action (Aksi Bela Islam), where political
Islam gained momentum and huge public sympathy. This has pushed more
established actors in the democracy arena — legislators, political parties,
elected politicians, bureaucrats and businesspeople — to take them into account
and regard their demands seriously.
To overcome
the exclusion, political Islam utilised democratic claims. When its supporters
rallied to voice their demands, political Islam expanded its repertoire to
include freedom of expression. Another is “everyone is equal before law”, which
gives justification for political Islam to pursue its interests using legal
avenues.
Political
Islam has also appropriated the state ideology, Pancasila, and nationalist
jargon to defend itself from rivals’ accusations of harming Indonesia’s unity.
These
manoeuvres allow political Islam to pursue greater participation in Indonesia’s
political arena. Its members acknowledge the rules of the democratic system in
the hope of getting recognition as legitimate political actors in the country.
Nonetheless,
their compromise in embracing democracy contains ambiguity. The decision to
abide fully by democracy requires them to forget about some of their
conservative ideas. But without entering the democratic arena, political
Islam’s aspirations would not get much support.
Consequently,
political Islam tries to construct specific interpretations to connect
democracy, tolerance and nationalism with conservative aspirations.
For
example, they interpret the campaign against Shiites as an attempt to protect
Indonesia’s unity. And the campaign against gays and lesbians is seen as
protecting the society’s morality.
Amid this
changing political landscape, attempts to counteract the conservative turn need
a new formula. But it seems the government and other democratic powers have
failed to respond intelligently to this development.
They are
doing what they have been doing: controlling political Islam by excluding them.
They do this by reproducing negative depictions of political Islam:
anti-democracy, favouring violence, and threatening the national ideology.
These
portrayals provide justification for the government to limit political Islam
movements. It disbanded Hizbut Tahrir Indonesia without trial using a
government regulation that could also affect other mass organisations.
Limiting
political Islam is understandable because many see its involvement in democracy
as a mere strategy to infiltrate democracy. But such exclusion risks a failure
to see political Islam’s willingness to compromise with democratic rules. How
far will this compromise go? We must wait and see.
Pro-democracy
agents need to learn more to develop a better strategy in this new landscape.
It is clear that moves to treat political Islam as a fringe actor tend to be
counterproductive.
It would
likely harden political Islam’s feelings of exclusion despite having shown
willingness to follow democratic rules. This could stunt political Islam’s
commitment to get involved in democracy, and in turn might open more paths to
radicalisation.
Negative
labelling of political Islam, therefore, should be ended. This is not only
because it fails to delegitimise political Islam in the eyes of society, but it
also gives followers reason to unite and harden their identity.
Instead of
treating political Islam’s followers as people who do not have any place in
democracy, the government, democracy activists and researchers should think
about how to encourage political Islam to compromise further and accept
democratic ideals.
Make democracy
the sole domain where political decisions are deliberated, so political Islam
does not have any choice except to enter and compromise. Or instil democracy
deeper in the society so citizens are not easily lured by actors that promote
undemocratic ideas.
Original
Headline: Political Islam Navigates and Changes Indonesia’s Democratic
Landscape
Source: The Goodmen Project
URL: https://newageislam.com/radical-islamism-jihad/political-islam-utilises-democracy-promote/d/122248
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