ADMINISTRATION OF ISLAM IN INDONESIA Deliar Noer MONOGRAPH SERIES (Publication No. 58) Cornell Modern Indonesia Project Southeast Asia Program Cornell University Ithaca, New York 1978 Price: $4.50 SEAP Publications^1^ ^ ^ile C°P!t Do not remove from room 213 640 Stewart AvenueADMINISTRATION OF ISLAM IN INDONESIA Deliar Noer MONOGRAPH SERIES (Publication No. 58) Cornell Modern Indonesia Project Southeast Asia Program Cornell University Ithaca, New York 1978Cornell Modern Indonesia Project 1978CONTENTS INTRODUCTION ................................... 1 Chapter 1. THE MINISTRY OF RELIGION.................. 8 2. ISLAMIC RELIGIOUS EDUCATION ............. 24 3. ISLAMIC LAW AND COURTS..................4 2 4. ADMINISTRATION OF THE HAJ.................53 5. MAJLIS ULAMA (COUNCIL OF ULAMA) .... 65 6. CONCLUSION................................75 GLOSSARY........................................79 iiiIVPREFACE With the size of its Muslim population greater than in any other country--an overwhelming majority of its 135 million people regarding themselves as adherents of Islam--it is natu- ral that for Indonesia serious questions should arise as to the position of Islam within the state. Indeed that has been the case, and ever since the country proclaimed its indepen- dence there has been an ongoing tension between the attempts of Muslims to shape society in conformity with the tenets of Islam and the efforts of successive governments to control that religion as a political and social force. Although an increasing number of scholarly studies have been concerned with the endeavors of Muslim leaders to influence the course of Indonesia's social and political development, very little has been written about the other side of this equation--the politics of the government for controlling and regulating Islam. In this essay Deliar Noer has broken important new ground by providing significant insights into this badly ne- glected aspect of the relationship. For this task Noer brings to bear strong credentials-- extensive research on the political and social history of Is- lam in twentieth-century Indonesia, a solid training in polit- ical science and an intellectual integrity that has won him respect abroad as well as in Indonesia. He is the author of The Modernist Muslim Movement in Indonesia: 1900-1942 (Oxford University Press, 1973) and of numerous scholarly articles. After securing his Ph.D. in Political Science at Cornell Uni- versity, he served as a lecturer or professor of political science at the University of North Sumatra, the Jakarta IKIP, where he was also Rector, the University of Indonesia, and at Griffith University in Australia. Under both the Sukarno and Suharto regimes he has won the reputation of being a princi- pled scholar unwilling to compromise his honesty and objectiv- ity- -despite the pressures exerted by government. It was because of such pressure that in 1974 he was prevented from delivering his professorial address, "Partisipasi Dalam Pem- bangunan" (Participation in Development). This was a valuable contribution to the pool of ideas relevant to his country's development, and for this infringement of academic freedom his country is the poorer. Those concerned with understanding contemporary Indonesia are sure to be grateful to Noer for this present study. George McT. Kahin Ithaca, New York January, 1978 vVIINTRODUCTION There has been considerable disagreement among scholars concerning the position of Islam in Indonesia. Some of them considered Islam's position to be important not only because of the substantial majority of Muslims in the country, but also because of the role Islam played throughout history--in many of the traditional kingdoms as well as during the period of the nationalist movement. Muslim kingdoms flourished in various parts of the archipelago, and it was their leaders who organized the most severe resistance against colonial en- croachment. Likewise, in the modern period it was also the Muslims who started the first mass-based political party, Sarekat Islam (founded 1911), which dominated the political scene in Indonesia at least until the 1920s. The Dutch gov- ernment recognized the importance of the position of Islam by appointing successive advisers for Islamic and "native" affairs, men who in general were experts in Islam. C. Snouck Hurgronje, the first and best-known Dutch adviser, studied Islam and the Indonesian Muslims in Mecca in 1885, using the name Abd al-Ghaffar and thereby disguising himself as a Mus- lim. Other Dutch officers who were connected with the office of the adviser were all Islamic experts, e.g., D. Rinkes and G. F. Pijper, who greatly contributed to our understanding of Islam in Indonesia. They all belonged to those groups of prewar scholars which realized the importance of Islam. Among the postwar scholars, Harry J. Benda and George McT. Kahin can be categorized as of this group. Although Kahin did not discuss Islam in Indonesia as such, his Nationalism and Revolution certainly points to this perspective. Because of the role of the Masjumi leaders in the revolution of 1945- 1949, Kahin laid more stress on the significance of reformed Islam, while Snouck Hurgronje and Pijper referred more to traditional Islam. Another group of scholars, however, believed that this first group assigned too great an importance to the position of Islam. These scholars claimed that in spite of Muslims being in the majority in Indonesia, they could not be con- sidered as constituting a single group. There were both traditionalists and the group known as modernist or reformist. These divisions were reflected in differences in opinions, attitudes, inclinations, and political alignments within the Muslim community which weakened its position and unity. There were also Indonesian Muslims who did not care much 12 about religion or who were more influenced by ideas and rituals of the pre-Hindu and Hindu-Buddhist periods. Al- though these people were called Muslims, they were so only nominally. They were Muslims in a statistical sense, but they were more a liability than an asset to the position of Islam in Indonesia. This latter group was not only neutral toward religion, they could become--and more than a few demonstrated this attitude--hostile to Islam. Clifford Geertz, in pointing to these differences between Muslims, has given the impression that he considered the position of these abangan (less devout) Muslims more important than that of the santvi (devout) Mus- lims. Harry J. Benda has stated that the position of Islam in Indonesia became important mainly as a result of the Japa- nese occupation. Others, like Anthony Johns, have laid empha- sis on the role of sufism, which tended to incorporate a more tolerant attitude towards other ideas and beliefs and which therefore was more consonant with the syncretic pattern. It is not my intention to assess the views of these groups of scholars on Indonesian Islam. They certainly had reasons for their respective viewpoints, which can perhaps be questioned or justified. In general, in Indonesia there have indeed existed Islamic-oriented people who champion Islamic ideals in individual life, society, and government. These people played an important role in the struggle for indepen- dence, beginning in the colonial period; they continued their work in later efforts to develop the country. They were con- vinced of the need for Islam to play a leading role, for they believed that only Islam and its teachings could alleviate the ills of society, not only in Indonesia, but also those of what they thought was a morally declining world. They there- fore championed the implementation of Islamic teachings in individual as well as social life; both government and society were held to be responsible for this implementation. In con- stitutional matters they were champions of the introduction of Islam as the basis of the state, as is reflected in the de- bates at the Committee for the Investigation into Indonesia's Independence in 1945, and later in 1957-59 in the debates on the same question in the elected Constituent Assembly. Their minimal demand was formulated in the so-called Jakarta Charter which was signed by nine leaders who were supposed to repre- sent the nationalist, Muslim, and Christian communities. This Charter stipulated that it was the "obligation for the Muslims to carry out the Syari'at" (Islamic law). However, this for- mulation was abandoned on August 18, 1945, when the Constitu- tion of the Republic of Indonesia was finalized. It was never reintroduced in any other constitution of Indonesia, and the efforts of the Muslims to include it in 1959, when the 1945 Constitution was about to be reapplied, failed.3 This struggle in constitutional matters was a struggle between politicians and reflected the controversial issue of the position of Islam in Indonesia. The Islamic-oriented people considered the issue important because of their con- victions about Islam as well as the fact that the majority of the Indonesian people were and are Muslim. Non-Islamic-oriented people, however, non-Muslims as well as nominal Muslims, held an opposing view. Their differences were not confined to constitutional matters, but extended to other areas such as education; legal problems, especially those concerned with personal laws and the question of the haj (pilgrimage to Mecca); and in general the responsibility of the government for the fulfillment of all-important reli- gious obligations by Muslims. Because of this concern, the Islamic-oriented Muslims had been demanding since prewar days that an independent department entrusted with handling Islamic affairs should be established in any future government of Indonesia. Traditionalist and modernist Muslims agreed to this demand. However, their ideas concerning its implementa- tion differed, especially regarding recruitment of personnel for the department. Since the founding of the Ministry of Religion in 1946, the two groups have competed for control, not only in filling the ministerial post, but also in recruit- ment for lower positions, even in various educational insti- tutions. At one time (1952) this competition was the factor precipitating the withdrawal of Nahdlatul Ulama, a tradition- alist organization, from the Masjumi-- Indonesia's largest Islamic party. After a vote in a meeting of its executive committee, the Masjumi had assigned the Religion portfolio to a Muhammadiyah leader. Muhammadiyah was a reformist organi- zation founded in 1912, one of whose goals was to combat traditional, non-Islamic practices of Indonesian Muslims. It is easy to conclude that varying interests, personal or organizational, caused differences between traditionalist and modernist Islamic organizations which led to competition for various posts in the ministry. Each organization wished to gain benefits for its own membership, possibly including more subsidies for its own schools and institutions, and in general sought rewards for its own members. The fact that Indonesian society had a paternalistic character to a certain extent makes this conclusion understandable. However, it should be remembered that ideals were also important. Leaders and organizations which emerged during the prewar days in Indonesia still maintain their ideas and ideals, to the detri- ment of possible material gain; this has also been the case with Islamic leaders and organizations. Since the beginning of this century, and becoming more obvious in the 1920s, tra- ditionalist and modernist ideas have been in competition. Although after the period 1935-40 the two philosophies have4 often been reconciled, since independence they have also often been at odds with each other, mainly for political reasons. Viewed from this perspective, the question of control of the Ministry of Religion during the independence period is at least in part an issue of conflict between modernist and tra- ditionalist followers of Islam. However, the problem of Islam in Indonesia has not been that simple. I have noted above that there were (and still are) many Muslims in Indonesia who maintain beliefs and prac- tices related to pre-Islamic tradition. These people are often suspicious of Islamic-oriented people, for the possi- bility exists that their practices would be banned if devout Muslims ruled the country; not a few are therefore hostile towards Islamic people and towards Islam in general. Indeed, in the history of Java, there was at least one king, Amang- kurat I (1645-77), who ordered some 5,000 ulama (Islamic scholars) in Java killed because of their efforts in cham- pioning pure Islamic teachings. Amangkurat was said to be a strong adherent of syncretic Islamic-Hindu beliefs. In spite of the fact that there were quite a number of kings in Java who were inclined to accept the principles of Islam in a more purified form, among certain sections of the population the syncretic attitude has been upheld strongly. After the Dutch introduced and developed secular education in the nine- teenth century, the ranks of those religiously neutral or religiously hostile to Islam were strengthened by a number of graduates from Dutch schools. They included such leaders as Sukarno (the first president), Supomo (who played an important role in drafting the Constitution), and in general those affiliated with the Indonesian Nationalist Party and other nationalist organizations, including the Indonesia Party (Partindo), the Indonesian Movement (Gerindo), and the Greater Indonesia Party (Parindra). This does not mean that the Is- lamic movement was led entirely by graduates of religious institutions, for many of the Western-educated elite also joined as its leaders, but it does point to the widening gap between Islamic-oriented people, on the one hand, and the religiously neutral--if not hostile--people, on the other. In the nationalist movement in prewar Indonesia the two wings competed with each other for leadership. To borrow the termi- nology of Snouck Hurgronje, the Dutch, through education, had indeed been successful in "emancipating’1 part of the Indone- sian Muslims from their own religion. These Western-educated people held the view that religion should be confined to per- sonal matters, that it was up to the individual concerned whether or not he wanted to practice the teachings of Islam, and that government should be separate from religion. The distinction between religion and government was copied from the West, where the separation of Church and5 State was already accomplished by the end of the Middle Ages. However, when this view is applied to Islam, the questions arise (1) whether Islam recognizes a Church, in the form of an organized religion with a hierarchical structure of priests; and (2) whether Islamic teachings can be confined to personal and individual matters. Debates ensued among leaders of the nationalist movement on this issue, in the 1920s between Haji Agus Salim (of the Islamic party PSII) and Sukarno, and in the 1930s between Mohammad Natsir (of Persa- tuan Islam) and Sukarno. These people survived into the inde- pendence period, and in fact they all played important roles in national leadership. Sukarno became Indonesia's first president, Haji Agus Salim was foreign minister several times, and Mohammad Natsir was a minister several times and once prime minister. Natsir also led the Masjumi party from 1950 to 1958. It can therefore easily be understood that the pre- war ideas which had never been completely settled continued to survive and be debated during the independence period. The question of the position of religion was often re- lated to nationalism. What does nationalism entail? Should it be based on race, culture, religion, or something else? The racial considerations were in general dismissed in Indo- nesia, while culture, language, and religion were accorded a significant role in developing the nation. However, what was considered more important, surpassing any other considera- tion, was the "will" of the people to consider themselves as one nation and to continue to live as one nation in the future. Certainly the historical past and memories contrib- uted greatly toward the creation and nurturing of this will, but the will itself was regarded as more important than the other factors. This "spiritual" aspect of nationalism which the Indonesian leaders adhered to was influenced by Ernest Renan's theory of nationalism, which they had read during their student days. The leaders of the Indonesian Nationalist Party--to name only the most important religiously neutral party--stressed this will. The Islamic-oriented leaders also stressed its importance, but with a slightly different empha- sis. They laid more stress on the will of the Muslims, who they claimed wanted to base nationalism on their religion. Islam, they said, had tied them together through the ages and would continue to tie them together in the future. It did not mean, they added, that non-Muslims could not join them in building a national state, for in any national state there was always a majority and a minority, even in religion. The point was that nationalism could be based on Islam, and this was what they wanted to see established. In addition, there were relatively few non-Muslims participating in the indepen- dence movement. The problem of the basis of the state as debated in 1945 and 1957-59 was therefore a continuation of the prewar problem.6 As has been noted, the problem spread to other fields as well, and in these fields the question was not merely confined to ideas but also to their implementation. What kind of people should the educational system produce? What kind of subjects should children and youth be taught? Was it necessary for the schools to offer religion as a subject of instruction, or should the matter be left to parents and guardians? Some aspects of Islamic laws had been imposed in Indonesia by traditional sultanates as well as by the Dutch government. Religious courts were also recognized by the colonial rulers. Would these practices be continued in the independence period? How? Would the religious courts have the same powers as in prewar days or should they be changed? Certainly with independence a national law and a national court were pre- ferred. But what did this entail? It had been the wish of the Muslim people since prewar days that facilities for practicing the Islamic faith, espe- cially those connected with the haj, be furnished by the gov- ernment . During the Dutch period Muslims also planned to buy their own ships to transport pilgrims to Arabia. They there- fore expected that in the independence period their wish would be realized. How could and should this be done? An important decision regarding the pilgrimage was whether its operation should be trusted to private companies or to govern- ment agencies. Organizing travel to Mecca could create enor- mous profits, and if this enterprise was trusted to private companies (certainly Muslim companies were preferred by the pilgrims as compared to religiously neutral or non-Muslim companies), would it not produce profits for the various Is- lamic parties? Or would not the various organizations indoc- trinate the pilgrims with their own ideas which might run counter to those of the government in power? The Dutch gov- ernment sent its ablest scholar, Snouck Hurgronje, to inves- tigate the conditions and attitudes of Indonesian pilgrims in Mecca, and it always kept the pilgrims under surveillance in Arabia to prevent them from any possibly undesirable contacts. Would it therefore not be necessary to continue such activi- ties during independence? Thus the question of the haj was related to the wider issue of political as well as religious freedom. Another issue was that of government subsidies for edu- cational and religious institutions. Subsidies to schools and prayer-houses were in principle granted by the government and were given to Christian and Hindu institutions as well. The problem was to determine just proportions for the various religious communities; because of the variety of Muslim organizations, another problem was the just proportion grant- ed to each Muslim organization.7 All of these issues can be viewed from the perspective of administration, hence the title of this monograph "Admin- istration of Islam in Indonesia." I shall also focus on the much-debated issue as to whether there should be a Ministry of Religion. Christians have claimed that there has been discrimination in the Ministry, for indeed, if only because the majority of the population is Muslim, the Ministry has had to pay more attention to Muslims than to other religious groups. This bias has also been reflected in the budget and in personnel. The Ministry is expected to be able to cooper- ate with, if not control, the local ulama. However, this task has not been easy, for ulama gain their respected and revered position in society irrespective of their relation- ship with the government, while officials of the Ministry of Religion are part of the bureaucracy. In terms of unofficial authority and power, many of the officials are therefore relatively insignificant, especially because of the fact that the ulama's position in society is life-long, while that of the officials eventually terminates at their retirement. It is because of the Ministry of Religion's inability to control the ulama, or minimally cooperate with them on an equal basis, that the Indonesian government has established at various times a Council of Ulama (Majlis Ulama). The present Suharto government has had much to do with this council, even more than the Sukarno government. A discussion of the role of the Majlis Ulama is therefore included below. The information and the analyses contained here are not exhaustive, but I hope that this study will contribute toward greater under- standing of the situation of Islam in Indonesia.CHAPTER 1 THE MINISTRY OF RELIGION Religious matters in Indonesia are officially adminis- tered by the government through the Ministry of Religion, a ministry unique to Indonesia. It administers not one reli- gion, but all five religions recognized in the country--Islam, Protestantism, Catholicism, Hinduism, and Buddhism. It has been established in spite of the fact that Indonesia is con- stitutionally not a religious state. Unlike Egypt, for exam- ple, Indonesia’s government is not based on religion (Islam), and unlike Malaysia she has no official state religion. But Indonesia’s constitution is based on Panaa Sila (Five Pil- lars), of which the first is Ketuhanan Yang Maha Esa (Oneness of God, Divine Omnipotence).1 This principle has been re- garded as justifying the existence of the Ministry of Reli- gion. Officially, the establishment of the Ministry was based on Article 29 of the 1945 Constitution,2 which says that "the state is based on the Oneness of God" and that the state "guarantees the freedom of every inhabitant to embrace his own religion and to carry out services according to his reli- gion." However, the founding of the Ministry was initially hampered by the drafters of the constitution themselves. It can justifiably be said that the establishment of the Minis- try constituted an accommodation to the wishes of the Muslim majority. The Ministry was founded on January 3, 1946 in accordance with a proposal to the central Komite Nasional Indonesia (Indonesian National Committee) on November 11, 1945 by Kiyahi Haji Abudardiri, Kiyahi Haji Saleh Su'aidy, and M. Sukoso Wirjosaputro, who were all members of the com- mittee representing the Banyumas area. Abudardiri himself was head of the Religious Office of Banyumas Residency. The proposal, which found support from Mohammad Natsir, Dr. Muwardi, Dr. Marzuki Mahdi, and M. Kartosudarmo (all members 1The other four pillars include humanitarianism, national unity, people's sovereignty (or democracy), and social justice. Indonesia has had three constitutions: the 1945 Constitution, the Federation Constitution of 1949, and the Provisional Constitution of 1950. The 1945 Constitution was reintroduced in 1959. 89 of the committee), was approved by the Provisional Legisla- tive Assembly.3 4 The Muslim desire to establish such a Ministry was rooted in the Dutch colonial period and was nurtured during the Jap- anese occupation. Under the Dutch regime, religious affairs were handled by various government offices: Islamic education and the haj were supervised by the Department of Home Affairs, religious courts came under the Department of Justice, reli- gious movements were under the control of the Office for Native and "Mohammadan" affairs, and religious services were under the Department of Education. Many Muslims in Indonesia believed that this dispersed administration of religious affairs had been devised deliber- ately to control and inhibit the spread of Islam. It was not expected that the colonial government would promote Islam, but this dispersed administration was considered an indica- tion of the neglect of Islam by the Christian Dutch govern- ment. Moreover, most Indonesian Muslims experienced confusion concerning the particular kinds of problems each office han- dled. In 1941 the Islamic federation Majlis Islam A'laa Indonesia championed the suggestion that a Department of Islamic Affairs be established in a future Indonesian govern- ment . Muslims felt discriminated against by the Dutch colonial government. Recognizing this and the role of Islam in Indo- nesia vis-a-vis her former colonizers, the Japanese appealed to the Muslims by administratively abolishing attitudes of discrimination towards them; and in many cases they gave them much more favorable positions, at least in comparison with their role during the Dutch period. Toward the end of the Dutch period, the Dutch government in its efforts to reform the administration of Indonesia had dealt only with the religiously neutral group of the Indone- sian independence movement. It discounted the appeal made by the Islamic group that they too be consulted. Perhaps it can be said that the Japanese exploited this disappointment of the Islamic group with the Dutch.1* In addition, the Japanese may have been suspicious of the nationalists, who during the Dutch rule expressed disagreement with and condemnation of Fascism on many occasions, even warning the people of the 3"29 Tahun Departemen Agama," Panji Masyarakat, 17, 167 (January 15, 1975), pp. 9-10. The central Indonesian National Committee acted as the Provisional Legislative Assembly. 4See the author's The Modernist Muslim Movement in Indonesia (Kuala Lumpur: Oxford University Press, 1973), pp. 271-75.10 danger of the Fascists, whom they considered more suppressive than the Dutch colonizers. On the other hand, the Indonesian Islamic movement seemed to capitalize on the presence of the Japanese in the country to enhance their position vis-sl-vis other groups. During the Japanese occupation the only national organi- zation recognized by the Japanese (in Java) was the Majlis Islam A'laa Indonesia (MIAI). This Indonesian Supreme Islamic Council of the Dutch period was later (in 1943) replaced by the Madjelis Sjur O •H P O •H U* H H ^ o c rH Cd to o 10 o cd u H3 O CJ o W U a* a* Source: Decree of the Minister of Religion No. 2 1185/K.J., Novem- ber 20, 1946. Starting from this simple structure, the Ministry has now been divided into five directorates general, for the guidance of Muslim, Protestant, Catholic, and Hindu-Buddhist societies respectively, and for handling the haj. Recently an Inspector General has been established within the Ministry, thereby bringing the structure of the Ministry into line with that of all other ministries in Indonesia. Because of the small num- ber of Christians and Hindu-Buddhists, the volume of activi- ties of these separate directorates general clearly cannot match that of the Directorate General for the guidance of Mus- lims . It was for this reason that affairs related to the 22In 1958 there were 26,868 officials working for the Ministry of Religion, and in 1963, 34,832—a relatively sharp increase. The 1963 figure places the Ministry fourth highest in number of employees among the 25 ministries in existence at that time.21 Protestant, Catholic, and Hindu-Buddhist communities had pre- viously been handled by sections of the Ministry called bureaus. During the 1950s, the haj was handled by an office of this type. The upgrading of these sections to the level of directorates general can therefore be considered an en- largement of the bureaucratic network of the Ministry, a process which raised problems of efficiency. The reorganization of the non-Islamic sections into sepa- rate directorates general was motivated by the idea, prevalent from the early 1960s, that all recognized religions in the country were equal and enjoyed the same rights and privileges. The recognized religions should thus have similar and non- discriminatory treatment within the Ministry, embodied in their respective Directorate General.23 As Diagram 2 shows, there are more divisions in the Directorate General for the guidance of the Muslim community than for non-Islamic commun- ities . Islamic law (as covering matters of personal or private character such as marriages, divorces, and inheritance) is still recognized and followed by almost all Muslims in Indo- nesia; hence the existence of religious courts which are supervised by a special directorate. There are no religious courts for Christians and Hindu-Buddhists. In such matters they are subject to regulations under the jurisdiction of ordinary courts. While the Christian communities organize their own theo- logical schools, the Muslim community feels that the govern- ment should establish educational religious institutions from the elementary to tertiary level. The planning and supervi- sion of Islamic institutions of higher learning have been entrusted to a special directorate (naturally absent from non-Islamic directorates general). Special schools for Hindu teachings have been established in Bali and these are super- vised by the Directorate of Hindu Religious Education. There are also Protestant teacher training schools. Two other sections have been established in the Ministry, the Council for Religious Books and the Council for the Super- vision of Spiritual Matters or Currents. The Council for Religious Books has the task of examining religious publica- tions, authorizing the printing of the Quran, translating, writing, and publishing religious books, and organizing and 23For the development of the structure and organization of the Ministry of Religion see Keputusan Presiden (Presidential Decree) No. 170/1966, August 1, 1966; Keputusan Menteri Agama (Decision of the Minis- ter of Religion) No. 56/1967, May 30, 1967; Keputusan Menteri Agama No. 114/1969, No. 14/1972, and No. 36/1972.DIAGRAM 2 CURRENT STRUCTURE OF THE MINISTRY OF RELIGION Source: Keputusan Menteri Agama No. 114/1969, 14/1972, 37/1972.23 supporting libraries. In examining religious publications, it has not been the intention of the Council to act as a censor- ship body, but rather to examine and evaluate the publications concerned for references needed by the Ministry and other government offices. The printing of the Quran had been jealously guarded by Muslims for centuries in order to avoid errors. In prewar Indonesia such tasks were done voluntarily by all ulama, but since independence the work has been en- trusted to the Council. However, ulama still guard the cor- rect printing and publication of the Quran, and any possible errors are brought to the attention of the government. The Council for the Supervision of Spiritual Matters (kebatinan) is designed to guide the various spiritual cur- rents, in order that they be accommodated within their respec- tive religions, and to cooperate with other agencies in efforts to encourage peaceful relations among religious groups. There have been many spiritual currents in Indonesia, ranging from the internationally known Subud to the notorious leftist group led by Mbah Suro.24 To prevent potential dis- turbances by various kebatinan groups, the Ministry has estab- lished close cooperation with the Attorney General's office. In the last few years kebatinan groups have been requesting that the government recognize kebatinan or kepevoayaan (lit- erally, "belief") as one of Indonesia's recognized religions. The groups have also requested that a special section in the Ministry of Religion be created which would handle kebatinan affairs, a section comparable to the directorates general of the other recognized religions. On the whole Muslims have strongly objected to such recognition. 240n kebatinan, see R. E. Djumali Kertorahardjo, Bebevapa Hal Ten- tang Agama dan Ativan Kebatinan di Indonesia (Jakarta: Departemen Agama, 1972); Matevi Aliran-Alivan Kebatinan di Indonesia (Jakarta: Departemen Agama, n.d.).CHAPTER 2 ISLAMIC RELIGIOUS EDUCATION One of the most important tasks of the Ministry of Reli- gion is to organize religious education. As many officials, especially those recruited from the time of the revolution and the 1950s, were originally religious teachers themselves, this assignment is appropriate for them. I will not discuss the problem of religious education in Indonesia in its general context. What will be described are the activities, views, and policy of the Ministry of Religion, and in general of the government, concerning religious education. During the Dutch period and the Japanese occupation, Islamic education was organized by Muslims themselves through founding private schools and training centers. The Dutch government was willing "to permit religious education to be carried out in the people's (primary) schools (volkssoholen) when the people wish for it,"1 but this was never real- ized. The idea of including Islamic religious schools in the state education system, considered to be "an understandable state interest," was also accepted in principle by the Dutch government but never actually developed.2 Presumably, the religious schools and centers originally had no formal connection with each other, each school being organized and run by an independent kiyahi or ulama. Often the school closed following the death of the kiyahi concerned, especially when the abilities of his successors--usually the kiyahi’s son or son-in-law or another close relative--were in- ferior to those of the deceased teacher. Spiritual relationships, however, existed among the madrasah and the pesantren. There also existed a common tra- dition concerning the subjects taught. In particular, basic religious training for the early years of childhood followed a fairly uniform pattern. It included the recitation of the Quran (without necessarily understanding it), learning the 1A. D. A. de Kat Angelino, Staatkundig Beleid en Bestuurszorg in Nedevlandsoh Indie, vol. II (The Hague: Nijhoff, 1930), p. 226. 2I. J. Brugmans, Gesohiedenis van het Onderwijs in Nedevlandsoh Indie (Groningen: Wolters, 1938), p. 210. 2425 main principles of Islamic teachings such as iman (devotion), tauhid (the unity of God), the general regulations of salat (prayer), sawn (fasting), and often also zakat (charity tax, at least the zakat fitrah tax, paid after the end of the Rama- dan fast), and marriage--in general, all the requisite Muslim practices. Greater diversity in the religious subjects taught was found for those who continued with religious studies to their teens, principally because of the absence of a curricu- lum and any graded system. The diverse interests of the individual teachers also contributed to the variety in sub- jects taught. There existed a kind of free study which led to the students' progress being dependent on their own indus- try and diligence. Thus although teachers were very strict and intolerant of differences of opinion, they served primar- ily as guides. With the introduction of modernist ideas in the early twentieth century, a new system of education was introduced. Some of the Indonesian Muslims began to recognize the impor- tance of organization and initiated organized teaching them- selves, with a more or less set curriculum. Learning by understanding rather than by rote was introduced. The per- sonalized supervision of religious education began to develop into an impersonalized teaching system. The schools and training centers were organized by societies or foundations, although the role of individual teachers was still important. The organized schools were usually called madrasah whether they followed traditionalist madzhab lines or modernist ideas.3 In general, the madrasah in pre-independence Indonesia were divided into elementary (ibtidaiyah) and secondary (tsanawiyah, also wustha) levels. Training at the elementary level lasted 5-7 years, at the secondary, 3-5 years. The names of the secondary level institutions differed, particu- larly if they were modernist organizations, e.g., Normaal Islam (Padang and Amuntai) and the Islamic College (Padang). There were also Muhammadiyah-organized teacher training schools for boys {mu'allimin) and for girls (mu’allimat) in Yogyakarta, Solo, and Jakarta.4 30n the introduction and development of modernist Islamic education see D. Noer, The Modernist Muslim Movement, Ch. 1 and 2; Taufik Abdullah, Schools and Polities: The Kaum Muda Movement in West Sumatra (1927-1938) (Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell Modern Indonesia Project, 1971); on traditional religious education see I. J. Brugmans, Geschiedenis, pp. 2-9. 40n the Muhammadiyah see Alfian, "Islamic Modernism in Indonesian Politics: The Muhammadiyah Movement During the Dutch Colonial Period (1912-1942)" (Ph.D. Thesis, University of Wisconsin, 1969); Mitsuo Naka- mura, "The Crescent Arises over the Banyan Tree: A Study of the Muhamma- dijah Movement in a Central Javanese Town" (Ph.D. Thesis, Cornell University, 1976).26 It was only after the growth of religious schools using modern teaching methods and accommodating themselves to the government educational system that the Dutch began to offer subsidies to these schools.5 This trend began only in the 1930s. The Dutch government was only interested in con- trolling those religious schools which remained more indepen- dent. At one time or another the Dutch government endeavored to exercise stricter control, an effort which brought protest from the Muslim community. The Dutch goal was to keep poli- tics out of the schools. Teachers were often screened, espe- cially in the 1920s and 1930s, when many modernist-inclined persons were prohibited from teaching and even exiled. The Dutch concern was therefore in supervising and controlling rather than in developing religious education, at least as far as Islam was concerned. In Dutch language secondary schools, such as MULO (junior high school) and AMS (senior high school), religious lessons were also part of the subjects taught. This started toward the end of the 1930s. Usually modernist Islamic teachers were entrusted with the instruction, which was given once a week as an extracurricular subject. Attendance was not com- pulsory. The lesson was given in the afternoon so that stu- dents had to make an extra effort to attend, for the normal school day ended at 1:00 p.m. Usually all interested students in a school gathered in one room to attend the religious lesson. The atmosphere was more like a public meeting than an ordinary class lesson. No major changes in religious education were observed in the period of the Japanese occupation, except that in many cases some guidance was given by officials of the religious offices who had been recruited mostly from the ulama group, or by those active in the religious movement during the Dutch period. Religious instruction at secondary schools was given in the morning hours, although it was still an extracurricular subject. The contents of the lessons depended entirely on the particular teacher concerned; there was no coordination among the teachers. No religious instruction was given in the "general" elementary schools. A discussion of the pre-independence religious education system serves to clarify further the problem of religious education in the independence period, for the religious educa- tional problems of independent Indonesia found their origin in the colonial period. From the above description, it is clear that Indonesia recognizes two kinds of education: reli- gious, which in the colonial period had been the task of 5Brugmans, Gesohiedenis, pp. 210, 360-61.27 Muslims themselves, and "general" (Indo. umum) of a neutral character with respect to religion. Schools founded by Christian missionaries and organizations, although having a Christian religious slant, can for purposes here be included in the latter category. Schools organized by religiously neutral nationalists belong to the same category. For sim- plicity's sake this system can be called the Western educa- tional system as opposed to the Islamic educational system. There were also Islamic schools which followed the Dutch model, in which general subjects were stressed. These schools were founded by Islamic organizations such as Muhammadiyah and Persatuan Islam. However, since the schools were run by Islamic-oriented organizations and thus were based on Islam, they should not be included with the Western-system schools. The difference between the "general" schools founded by Islamic organizations and those founded by non-Islamic or religiously neutral societies, including the government, was that the former hoped to create an Islam-conscious population. According to Indonesian Muslims, graduates of non-Islamic schools generally became estranged from their own religion, and at least indifferent, if not hostile, towards Islam. They pointed out that the religiously neutral nationalists were examples of products of the Western system. When Indonesia proclaimed her independence on August 17, 1945, the prevalent educational concern among the Islamic- oriented people was how to produce persons capable of meeting the needs of the time but still devoted to and conscious of their religion. They wanted to fill the gap which had been created in the past by divergent Islamic and Western educa- tional systems. With the establishment of the Ministry of Religion, many of the Islamic-oriented people entertained the hope that the Ministry would be able to guide the madrasah and other Islamic schools in developing a sound educational system; to guide the "general" schools in the matter of instruction in Islam; and to establish schools of its own which might serve as models for both the Islamic and the "general" schools, while sharing with the Islamic community the burden of providing religious schools. Hopes were indeed high, for as we have seen, the staff of the Ministry came from the Islamic-oriented community it- self, many having served as teachers in the pre-independence period. In the past, lacking funds and equipment, these peo- ple had been able to spend much of their time and energy on Islamic education; it would be expected that by receiving28 government salaries they would be able to devote even more attention to it.6 The Muslims were also aware of the weaknesses of the prewar Islamic educational system. They hoped that the gov- ernment could eliminate these weaknesses, which in the colo- nial period could be blamed on the Dutch. One of the weak- nesses of the religious school system in the pre-independence period--referring here to the modernized system--was the fact that there was no common standard. Schools which were able to recruit well-trained staff members--and these were only a few--were able to organize a more or less accountable curric- ulum, but many schools were unable to achieve this standard. There were also no standard textbooks, and the books used ranged from those used in Dutch government schools to those intended for the schools in Arabic-speaking countries, classi- cal religious books of the Middle Ages, and books written by a few of the recognized Indonesian religious teachers. Often the teachers dictated their own lessons to the students. These factors resulted in graduates of these schools attain- ing different levels and kinds of education, although offi- cially their certificates were equal. Another weakness of the religious schools of the pre- independence period was their neglect of academic administra- tion. In general, the people who ran the schools had no knowledge of administration except that gained by experience. They were careless about administration; perhaps they did regard a sound administrative system highly, but achieving such a system was beyond them. They joined a religious school more to teach religion than to work for a living. They be- lieved that administrative skills were not necessary to achieve their aim and that their graduates could still be of use to society. Students at religious schools were given the impression that what was important was the ability to talk, to deliver speeches and sermons. Indeed, graduates as a rule were able public speakers and enjoyed debating. They were skilled in oral communication, and some could even write well.7 I have noted that the Ministry of Religion performed administrative work poorly. This was understandable, for many of its officials were graduates of the pre-independence religious schools. 6Even in 1962, seventeen years after independence, there were still 45,000 private religious schools with some 3.5 million pupils who re- quested guidance from the Ministry of Religion. See Abdul Rachman Saleh, "Pendjelasan Sekitar Perkembangan Perguruan Agama di Indonesia," Laporan Penelitian dan Seminar Pendidikan Agama pada Perguruan Agama (Jakarta: Departemen Agama R.I., 1970-71), p. 288. 7Some of the weaknesses are elaborated in ibid., pp. 27-29.29 After independence, some of the Islamic leaders in Suma- tra seemed to be more able to pay immediate attention to the improvement of religious education than those in Java. Haji Mahmud Junus, a Cairo graduate who had headed the Normaal Islam of Padang in the Dutch period, developed an educational plan when he was head of the Islamic section of the provin- cial religious office there. It included a 6-year course ibtidaiyah, a 4-year junior tsanawiyah, and a 4-year senior tsanawiyah, later called aliyah, in which general subjects were also taught; these were comparable to the 6-year elemen- tary, 3-year junior secondary, and 3-year senior secondary schools in the secular system. This plan was put into effect by the Religious Office of Lampung Residency in 1948, when three junior tsanawiyah and several ibtidaiyah schools were founded.8 Other areas of Sumatra, however, were not able to realize this plan since they had to face military attacks by the Dutch. Aceh, however, apparently did organize its religious schools, many of the originally private institu tions being transferred to government control, or at least receiving government subsidies. Mahmud Junus also suggested that religious instruction be given two hours a week at all government "general” schools from elementary to senior high school. The participants at a conference of Sumatran educational officers in Padang Panjang March 2-10, 1947, agreed with this suggestion, and from then on all schools in Sumatra offered religious courses. To im- prove the quality of Islamic teaching, the provincial Reli- gious Office organized special courses for teachers at Pema- tang Siantar, then capital of Sumatra, in June 1947. One religious teacher from every district of that island partici- pated. The course was led by Mahmud Junus. The participants in this course were instructed to organize similar courses in their respective regions in order that other teachers might share what they had learned.9 However, the teachers were kept from carrying out their duties properly by the first military operation of the Dutch on July 21, 1947. In the beginning, the religious teachers in Sumatra were appointed by the Education Office, not by the Religious Office. The Religious Office was merely concerned with the content of the courses for which it gave guidance.10 Only in 1951, following instructions from the Ministry of Religion, were religious teachers administered directly by the Ministry itself; this change created some tension with regular teach- ers, who were placed under the jurisdiction of the Ministry of Education. 8Mahmud Junus, Sedjarah Pendidikan Islam di Indonesia (Jakarta: Pustaka Mahmudiah, 1960), pp. 115-17. 9Ibid., p. 113. 10Ibid., p. 114.30 In 1948 Mahmud Junus also designed a plan for teaching Islam at the "general" junior secondary school level. His interest in this field drew favorable response from the pro- vincial government, which appointed him inspector of Islamic courses at the provincial Education Office; at the same time he retained his position as head of the Islamic section of the provincial Religious Office.* 11 In the revolutionary period, when everyday life and gov- ernment administration were disrupted, the schools received little guidance in organizing their religious courses. Much depended on the teachers themselves. Junus's efforts, however, are one indication of the importance of the question of reli- gious education in independent Indonesia. Several junior tsanawiyah schools based on Junus*s plan were established in West Sumatra in 1949 with the approval of the Minister of Religion (Teuku Mohammad Hasan) of the emergency government;12 however, these schools remained privately organized after the Ministry of Religion objected in 1950 to their transformation into state-operated institutions.13 Although the central government in Java was unable to establish religious schools of its own during the revolution- ary period, it was not ignoring the goal of religious educa- tion. The executive of the Central Indonesian National Committee (Badan Pekerja Komite Nasional Indonesia Pusat, or KNIP) as early as December 1945 urged that education in ma- drasah be continued; it also urged that the government give material assistance to the madrasah.14 In mid-1946 a government educational research committee headed by Ki Hadjar Dewantara stated as one of its findings that education in pesantren and madrasah needed improvement and modernization as well as material assistance, as the KNIP had recommended. The Ministry of Religion soon set up a special section charged with the task of organizing "education 11Ibid., p. 117. 12Since Sukarno, Hatta, and many of the members of the central gov- ernment were captured by the Dutch following the second military action in December 1948, Sjafruddin Prawiranegara, who was then Minister of Prosperity (and in Sumatra at that time), took the initiative to create an emergency government. 13Mahmud Junus, Sedjarah Pendidikan, p. 119. For Junus*s descrip- tion of the syllabus, see ibid., p. 120. 11*H. Arso Sosroatmodjo of IAIN Sjarif Hidayatullah, Jakarta, to the Seminar of Education at Religious schools, Tugu June 1-5, 1971, Laporan Penelitian dan Seminar Pendidikan Agama pada Perguruan Agama, p. 456.31 and instruction in the Islamic and Christian religions," over- seeing the "appointment of religious teachers," and supervis- ing religious education.15 The Ministry was also able to provide some guidance for instruction in Islam at the "gener- al" elementary schools--instruction which, unlike that in Sumatra, was given only beginning with the fourth class.16 A two-week training course was organized in Yogyakarta in Decem- ber 1946 for ninety candidate teachers from Java, of whom forty-five were afterwards certified as teachers.17 Another plan to establish a two-year and a four-year teacher-training course for religious teachers was developed. This plan was realized in 1948 with the founding of a Sekolah Guru dan Hakim Islam (Teacher and Judge Training School) in Solo. The school was moved to Yogyakarta in December, where it was forced to close down following the second Dutch military action on December 18, 1948 and the capture of that city by the Dutch a few days later. The school was not reopened until 1950.18 Immediately after the revolution, an attempt was made to coordinate the religious schools, not only for Java and Suma- tra but for all of Indonesia. For this purpose a special Religious Educational Section was established in the Ministry of Religion. It was stated in the Educational Act of 1950, and stressed again in 1954, that "education at a religious school which finds recognition (pengakuan) from the Minister of Religion is regarded as having fulfilled the compulsory edu- cation."19 However, a law on religious education as stipu- lated by the 1950 act20 has never been promulgated. Regula- tions concerning religious education have therefore been instituted by ministerial decrees, with the result that changes have been frequent, depending on a minister's parti- cular policy. These changes reflect on the one hand the ex- tent of government concern about religious education and its 1sLaporan Survey dan Seminar Pendidikan Agama pada Perguruan Umum (Jakarta: Departemen Agama, 1969-70), p. 6. 16Mahmud Junus, Sedjarah Pendidikan, p. 308. 17Arso Sosroatmodjo, "Laporan Survey Pendidikan Agama pada Perguruan Umum," Laporan Penelitian dan Seminar Pendidikan Agama pada Perguruan Umum, p. 7. 18Ibid., p. 8. 19Act No. 4, 1950 and No. 12, 1954 on general education, Art. 10 Sub. 2. Compulsory education, however desirable, has not yet been real- ized in Indonesia. When mentioned in an act such as the above, it re- flects desire rather than fact. 20Act No. 4, 1950 Art. 2 Sub. 2.32 eagerness to make improvements, and on the other hand its inability to find a sound plan for religious education which might fill long-range needs. The school structure was divided into a 6-year ibtidai- yah, a 4-year tsanawiyah, and a 3-year aliyah. Religious teacher-training schools and schools for religious judges were established as well. The schools for religious teachers, at first called Sekolah Guru Agama Islam, gave 5-year courses for those who had finished the "general*' elementary schools or the ibtidai- yah, or 2-year courses for those from the "general" junior or the tsanawiyah. The schools for religious judges, called Sekolah Guru dan Hakim Agama Islam, offered 4-year courses after students had passed the tsanawiyah or the "general” junior secondary schools. As the name indicates, these schools produced religious teachers as well as teachers for arts and science subjects. These schools for religious teachers and judges, planned by Abdullah Sigit, a Dutch uni- versity graduate who headed the Religious Education Section of the Ministry in 1950, were confined to Java until 1950. Under different names, viz., Pendidikan Guru Agama (PGA) and Sekolah Guru Hakim Agama (SGHA), they were established all over Indonesia beginning in 1951.21 The two kinds of schools again underwent a change in 1953 when Haji Mohammad Arifin Tamiang, a graduate of a Dutch teacher training school (Hogere Kweekschool), became head of the Educational Section of the Ministry of Religion. The PGA was then transformed into a 6-year training school, divided into a 4-year junior PGA and 2-year senior PGA. The SGHA was completely abolished in 1954 and was replaced by the Pendidi- kan Hakim Islam Negeri (State Educational Institute for Is- lamic Judges), a 4-year course recruiting students from the junior PGA. The Ministry of Religion thus confined itself to training religious teachers and judges, while training arts and science teachers at secondary level PGAs was abolished. When State Institutes of Islamic Religion (Institut Agama Islam Negeri) were established in the late fifties, English language teachers were trained there. Although statistical records on the number of religious schools are poor, it can safely be said that the number of religious schools established by the Ministry of Religion was far less than those organized privately. The number of madra- sah in 1954 is shown in Table 1; it includes all registered madrasah, private and public. The number of government madrasah in 1971 is shown in Table 2. The number for 1971 21Mahmud Junus, Sedjarah Pendidikan, pp. 311-12.TABLE 1 NUMBER OF MADRASAH AND PUPILS--1954 Elementary Junior Secondary Senior Secondary Total No. Province Number of Madrasah Number of Pupils Number of Madrasah Number of Students Number of Madrasah Number of Students Number of Madrasah Number of Students 1 Aceh 494 40,260 46 3,338 - - 540 43,598 2 North Sumatra 1,125 96,937 64 7,294 1 43 1,190 104,274 3 Central Sumatra 1,001 116,492 235 25,131 9 1,243 1,245 142,866 4 South Sumatra 340 28,346 36 2,870 2 275 378 31,491 5 Jakarta 128 30,387 5 630 - - 133 31,017 6 West Java 5,059 872,107 57 6,986 - - 5,116 879,093 7 Central Java 1,947 313,206 109 15,962 - - 2,056 329,168 8 Yogyakarta 156 20,361 36 5,067 1 103 193 25,521 9 East Java 1,807 296,845 73 8,933 - - 1,880 305,778 10 Kalimantan 262 33,640 19 3,095 - - 281 36,735 11 Sulawesi 516 58,375 76 6,982 3 217 595 65,574 12 Nusa Tenggara 145 15,442 18 1,494 - - 163 16,936 13 Maluku 77 5,379 2 150 - - 79 5,529 13,057 1,927,777 776 87,932 16 1,881 13,849 2,017,590 Source: Mahmud Junus, Sedjarah Pendidikan, p. 339.34 TABLE 2 NUMBER OF GOVERNMENT AND PRIVATE MADRASAH, 1971 Kind of School Government Private Ibtidaiyaha 460 356 16,074 15,300 Tsanawiyah 144 180 1,215 1,220 Aliyah 41 42 272 300 PGA 4-years 90 120 902 825 PGA 6-years 90 105 173 185 PGA puteri (girls)0 0 c Pondok pesantren 2,776 2,800 Places for religious instruction 15,961 ^wo sources have been used for these figures: H. Mahmud Usman, "Pendje- lasan Sekitar Penelitian dan Seminar Pendidikan Pada Perguruan Agama," Laporan . . . Perguruan Agama, p. 27; and Abdul Rachman Saleh, "Pendjela- san Sekitar Perkembangan Perguruan Agama di Indonesia," ibid., p. 290. Both claimed to use the Directorate General of Religious Education of the Ministry of Religion as their source. The left-hand figures of the "gov- ernment" and "private" columns are from Usman, the right-hand figures from Saleh. ^These are exclusively for girls. Many of the madrasah are coeducational, although there are also madrasah for boys only. Traditional institutions, like pesantren, are not coeducational. Pesantren for girls are very few. cPondok is originally the place where students in a pesantren spend the night. It is like a hostel, where students can also cook their own meals. ^In Indonesian, tempat pengajian. Less formalized instruction in religion would be offered at such places, usually Zanggar (prayer houses smaller than mosques and usually not used for Friday prayers) or private homes.35 has been considered too low. One writer has claimed that there were at least 104,000 madrasah in Indonesia at that time.22 Religious education has also been given at the tertiary level. While a private university (Sekolah Tinggi Islam) was founded as early as 1945, a few months before the Japanese surrender, the Ministry of Religion took its first step in 1951 with the founding of an Islamic state university called Perguruan Tinggi Agama Islam Negeri (PTAIN). It consisted of the faculty of the University of Islamic Indonesia (Universitas Islam Indonesia), a private institution which was a transfor- mation of Sekolah Tinggi Islam. An Academy of Religion was founded in Jakarta in 1957. It offered a three-year course with two sections, religion and Arabic literature, and was intended only for Ministry officials and teachers. These two schools, PTAIN and Akademi Dinas Ilmu Agama, were integrated into an Institut Agama Islam Negeri (State Institute of Islamic Religion) in 1960, a full-fledged univer- sity with campuses in Yogyakarta and Jakarta. They each had two faculties, ushuluddin (theology) and Syari'at (law) in Yogyakarta, and tarbiyah (education) and adab (humanities) in Jakarta. The branches have now become separate institutions, each with a number of faculties. Now there are IAIN in more than a dozen major cities throughout the country (see Table 3) We have seen that the Ministry of Religion is also con- cerned with religious instruction in "general" schools. I have mentioned the efforts of Mahmud Junus in drawing up a syllabus for these schools in Sumatra during the revolution and the activities of the Ministry of Religion to recruit teachers of Islam for the "general" schools in Java in the same period. After the recognition of independence late in 1949, re- newed efforts were made to develop a syllabus for the "general' schools. In 1951 the Sumatra and Java plans were both re- placed by a new plan which seemed to be a compromise between them. Religion was to be taught in the elementary schools beginning with the fourth grade. However, in "extraordinary areas," i.e., where warranted, religious instruction could be given beginning with the first grade. A new consultative council for the teaching of religion was founded in 1953. The great need for religious teachers for "general" schools could not be met by the existing supply and the new graduates of schools for religious teachers. As an emergency 22Laporan Survey dan Seminar Pendidikan Agama pada Perguruan Umum, p. 9.TABLE 3 STATE INSTITUTE OF ISLAMIC RELIGION (IAIN), 1970 Name Location Year Established Number of Faculties Number of Preparatory Schoolsa 1. IAIN Sunan Kalijaga Yogyakarta, Central Java 1960 9 7 2. IAIN Sjarif Hidayatullah Jakarta, West Java 1963 12 5 3. IAIN Raden Fatah Palembang, South Sumatra 1964 5 6 4. IAIN Alauddin Ujung Pandang, South Sulawesi 1965 11 3 5. IAIN Sunan Ampel Surabaya, East Java 1965 11 9 6. IAIN Sultan Thaha Saifuddin Jambi, Central Sumatra 1967 5 2 7. IAIN Imam Bonjol Padang, West Sumatra 1966 6 3 8. IAIN Ar-Raniry Banda Aceh, North Sumatra 1963 6 10 9. IAIN Antasari Banjarmasin, South Kalimantan 1964 6 2 10. IAIN Sunan Gunung Jati Bandung, West Java 1968 4 0 11. IAIN Raden Intan Tanjung Karang, Lampung 1968 5 0 12. IAIN Walisanga Semarang, Central Java 1970 4 0 13. IAIN Sultan Syarif Kasim Pekanbaru, Riau 1970 3 0 Source: Daftar Alconat Institut Agama Islam Negeri Seluruh Indonesia (Jakarta: Departemen Agama, 1970). aThe preparatory schools were one- to two-year courses to help potential students matriculate.37 step, the Ministry recruited new teachers by holding examina- tions in religious teaching proficiency (called Ujian Guru Agama) for tsanawiyah graduates who had had teaching experi- ence.23 Thousands of new government religious teachers were recruited through this system. This combination of factors-- the great need on the one hand, and the great influx of new or candidate teachers on the other--meant that many incompetent new teachers were appointed, resulting in a lowering in the quality of education. Malpractices were also reported, and unqualified candidates still managed to pass the exam.2<* The demand for teachers increased following successive decisions by the (Provisional) People's Consultative Assembly (Majlis Permusyawaratan Rakyat) in 1960 and 1966.25 While according to the Joint Ministerial Decree of 1954, religious education was to begin in fourth grade and was not to be given at universities, the 1960 decisions of the People's Consultative Assembly provided that religious instruction should be given "from the state elementary schools to the universities." There was an additional stipulation that students were exempt from attending religious courses should their parents or guardians so wish, but the 1966 MPR deci- sion abolished this exemption. Religious instruction became a requirement for promotion. Satisfactory performance in religious lessons was also required for graduation from elementary and secondary schools. The development of religious instruction at "general" elementary and secondary schools was affected by differences over the position of religion in general from the Dutch period on. The overriding question concerned the compatibility of Islam with the needs of modern times. Some Westernized intel- 23Abi Sjamsuddin Makmun, "Perumusan Tujuan dan Pembinaan/Penyeleng- garaan Madrasah Dalam Masa Pembangunan," Laporan Survey dan Seminar Pen- didikan Agama pada Perguruan Agama, p. 427. 2t*Laporan Survey dan Seminar Pendidikan Agama pada Perguruan Urrtum, p. 10. In 1970 there were already 58,856 teachers recruited through this special examination system; see K. Dangkua, "Masalah Guru Agama pada Perguruan Umum," Laporan Survey dan Seminar Pendidikan pada Perguruan Umum, p. 415 . 25The increasing need for more religious teachers can be seen from a report drawn up by the Religious Guidance and Training Service of the Ministry of Religion on April 20, 1970 which states that elementary schools alone needed 57,857 religious teachers, junior secondary schools 533 teachers and senior secondary schools 284 teachers. Considering the annual increase in Indonesia's population (2,000,000), an additional 8,000 religious teachers are needed annually. See A. Ghozali, "Beberapa Masalah Guru Agama Bagi Perguruan Umum," Laporan Survey dan Seminar Pen- didikan Agama pada Perguruan Urrtum, pp. 424-25.38 lectuals--and these people exercised great influence in, even dominated, the development of education in independent Indone- sia- -cons idered religion, i.e., Islam, incompatible with modern needs. They wanted to confine religion to the indi- vidual realm and took Western concepts concerning the separa- tion of Church and State as their model. Their negative attitudes towards the Ministry of Religion seem to have ex- tended to the field of religious education: the government should not meddle in the affairs of religious education. These leaders argued that if society needed religious educa- tion, it should be organized independently of the school system. Some of the intellectuals considered that instruction in codes of behavior (akhlak, budi pekerti) should be given rather than instruction in religion. All students could then attend such classes, whereas with classes on religion, non- Muslim pupils and students left the classroom when Islamic instruction was given, and Muslim students did other work when Christian or Hindu-Buddhist instruction was given. There would thus be a simpler organization of classes; and it would be easier to find teachers. An ordinary class teacher might give instruction in codes of behavior, while specially trained religious teachers were needed for each religion. Such a plan would therefore be less costly. It was also felt that some discrimination was inevitable in religious instruction. A devout Muslim principal would pay more attention to Islamic instruction than to other reli- gions, while a Christian principal would neglect Islamic in- struction. The chance of this bias gaining expression was all the greater because religious teachers usually taught part time, being regularly employed by the Ministry of Reli- gion and the local Religious Office, or by Islamic organiza- tions; and in the case of Christian religions, by church organizations. In addition there has always been competition, even rivalry, among the various religious communities in Indo- nesia, especially between Muslims and Christians. What was more important in the case of Islamic instruc- tion was the fact that there had not been a uniform religious teacher training school in the past; teachers of Islamic reli- gion came from a variety of institutions, modernist as well as traditionalist. In the Dutch colonial period, teachers of religion in the "general" secondary schools were recruited from modernist organizations. At that time there were no problems with the subject matter or the quality of teachers, for there were not many schools and the content could be con- fined to general topics. After independence more teachers were needed, particularly since the number of schools had in- creased tremendously. Teaching religion for more than twelve39 years' schooling demanded a well-organized curriculum, which was difficult to develop and standardize. The teachers had different backgrounds, coming from traditionalist or modernist schools, or having been trained abroad; and the extent of their religious training varied considerably. Many had asso- ciated only with members of religious groups, and these teach- ers in particular encountered difficulties; when they became teachers in a "general" school they had to relate to other teachers whose religious knowledge was extremely limited. They might face students who had previously had no religious instruction at all. The teachers might also have to interact with parents from quite different backgrounds than their own. All these factors contributed to dissatisfaction on the part of the teachers of religion. And indeed, many of them com- plained about their position. They often could not understand the attitudes of some of their colleagues, the students, and the parents. On the other hand, the religious teachers were often considered conservative, backward, and not keeping pace with modern development--whatever these words meant. For many religious teachers, contact with other people has often been confined to those of the same background. In the religious schools in which they had been trained, they might not have received any instruction in fields such as psychology or teaching methods. Their knowledge of teaching was based largely on experience, especially for those who became teach- ers through UGA special examinations. It was this situation which many people argued the Minis- try of Religion should remedy. The Ministry itself, which similarly lacked experience in tackling the problem, relied on trial and error. The consecutive decrees on religious in- struction, each decree superceded by another in the space of a few years, reflected this trial-and-error approach. The Ministry has not been able to learn from the experiences of other countries, for the problem has indeed been unique. The result is that the Ministry must accept the blame for any lack of improvement in religious education. Whether justifiable or not, its approach gave support to the opinion held by part of the Indonesian community that the Ministry was a waste. One of the remedies which the Islamic community and the Ministry attempted was to found an educational faculty at the IAIN (Institut Agama Islam Negeri, State Institute of Islamic Religion). Graduates were to be trained in teaching methods for instructing secondary school students and perhaps also university students. Whether IAIN will be successful in this matter still remains to be seen. While it has been difficult to find the right teachers in religion for the "general" elementary and secondary schools, it is even more difficult to find qualified lecturers in reli-40 gion at the "ordinary" universities. Religion has been con- sidered a compulsory subject at the tertiary level institutions since 1960, and the rule has been enforced especially since the Communist Party's attempted coup in 1965. The universities themselves have had to recruit lecturers in consultation with the Ministry of Religion and the Ministry of Education. In 1963 the Ministry of Education established a body for the development of religious education at universities, the Lem- baga Pembina Pendidikan Agama, in order to find ways to re- cruit lecturers and to draw up a suitable syllabus. Seminars have been held to discuss the syllabus, but no uniform pattern has been formulated.2® Bandung Institute of Technology and the Jakarta Teacher Training Institute (Institut Keguruan dan Ilmu Pendidikan), for example, have for some years been exper- imenting with upgrading religious teachers who in most cases are graduates of the institutes themselves. The two institutes have also drawn up their own syllabuses. Sometimes criticism has been voiced against having spe- cial religious schools at the elementary and secondary levels. Indeed, the existence of this type of school indicates the presence of dualism in education in Indonesia. There has thus been no comprehensive national system of education. It has also been considered in some circles that education at religious schools is a waste, especially when viewed from the perspective that everyone's energies are needed for developing the country, while graduates of religious schools are "only able to chant the Quran, recite the Hadits and reiterate fatwa of ulama."27 Especially in the era of development, so they argue, everyone should be productive, productive economically. On the other hand, those in favor of religious education claim that no graduates of the religious schools are unem- ployed. They have all been able to find work, not only as religious teachers, but also in farming, small industries, or trade. While statistics are not available, the arguments of the people in favor of religion can often be substantiated by observation. Religious education has always been a kind of community education, especially where tradition is still strong, for the relationship between religious schools and the community has often been so close that students have been able to take part in community activities. Unlike graduates of the "general" schools, graduates of religious schools have not be- come estranged from the community and are ready to do the work of the ordinary villagers. 26See, for example, Kurikulim Tavip (Jakarta: Departemen Perguruan Tinggi dan Ilmu Pengetahuan, 1955) . 27These are expressions commonly voiced by critics and often heard in conversations as well as speeches.41 In spite of this fact, the Ministry of Religion, espe- cially since the appointment of Abdul Mukti Ali as Minister, has introduced instruction in handicrafts and various other economically productive skills into the curriculum of the religious schools in order that students receive syste- matic training in these subjects. Although given some atten- tion in the past, such training had not generally been incor- porated into the curriculum, not even as extracurricular subjects. It had been acquired in casual ways through students associating with the community. This was especially true for government schools. We now find religious schools, government as well as private, engaged in projects such as raising chick- ens . Economically productive training has been introduced in line with Suharto's policy of boosting productivity in the economic field.28 To what extent curriculum innovation in the religious schools will reach its aim remains to be seen. The task of the Ministry of Religion in religious education is indeed enormous. Society's expectations are high, perhaps too high to be met in a short period. 280n the various versions of development in Indonesia, see the author's Partisipasi Dalam Pembangunan (Jakarta, 1974). This was the writer's intended address at the Jakarta Institute for Teacher Training and Education (IKIP) in June 1974; however, it was banned by the Minister of Education before it was delivered. A Malaysian version under the same title was published by Angkatan Muda Belia Islam in Kuala Lumpur in 1977.CHAPTER 3 ISLAMIC LAW AND COURTS One of the institutions of utmost importance in Islam is its law, or Syari'at, which is even regarded by some as Islam itself. Observing how Islamic law is applied in society might help to assess the position of Islam; however, since this paper is concerned with the administration of Islam, the fol- lowing discussion of law will be confined to Islamic courts, even though the role of Islamic courts in Indonesian society (or in any Muslim society for that matter) will not be an ade- quate measure of the influence of Islam. Many teachings of Islam have been practiced by Muslims without thought being given to how a court would react to them. The aspect of Islamic law which concerns relationships between people {mu'amalat) is important for this discussion. Laws that are incumbent upon a Muslim but are concerned with individual practice will not be considered here. Unlike the courts in some parts of Malaysia, Islamic courts in Indonesia do not handle matters of salat (prayer), saum (fasting), and zakat (religious tax). Of the laws concerning mu'amalat only those relating to family matters such as marriage, divorce, and reconciliation (ruju') and to a certain extent favaidh (inheritance), have an important place in the Islamic courts. All the Islamic courts in Indonesia have jurisdiction in matters of marriage, but only in the islands outside Java do the Islamic courts have jurisdiction over inheritance and other matters such as hadhanah (custody and support of children), waqf, hibah (gifts), and baitul mat (community funds). The Islamic courts in Java can hear inheritance cases for consultation purposes only. All other laws concerning human relationships, such as trade, land laws, and criminal offenses, have been promulgated without reference to Islamic law. Regulations on Islamic courts in Indonesia originated during the Dutch period. The number of courts increased after independence, and they spread from Java to the other islands as of 1957, but there has been no change in matters coming under their jurisdiction. A discussion of contemporary Is- lamic courts in Indonesia should therefore start with a review of their function and role in the Dutch period. 4243 Islamic courts, at first wrongly called priestly courts (pries terraad), were established for Java and Madura in 1882.1 Prior to this time, regents in Java and Madura had been in- structed to refer what were considered religious disputes, such as questions of inheritance, to ulama. According to the regulations of 1882, an Islamic court was headed by a penghulu (not to be confused with a Minangkabau penghulu, who is an adat [traditional] chief, or a Malay penghulu on the east coast of Sumatra, who is a village head). The court had from three to eight members. Three members, including the chair- man, constituted a quorum, and the chairman was empowered to break a tie vote. The members of the court were not paid. The chairman, however, received a salary as penghulu of the civil (secular) court, where his duty was merely to administer the oath to persons appearing before the court. The Islamic courts had jurisdiction over family law such as marriage and inheritance and also over waqf. However, decisions of Islamic courts could only be executed after the civil court had given its affirmation (executoir verklaard) . This relationship made it possible for the ordinary court to nullify decisions of an Islamic court if it considered that the latter had overreached its jurisdiction. In 1937 the Dutch Indies government promulgated a regula- tion which narrowed the jurisdiction of Islamic courts. From that year on, inheritance and waqf disputes were referred to civil courts, which based their decisions on adat rather than Islamic law.2 A higher Islamic court of appeal was established the following year.3 Previously, all appeals had been directed to the Governor General, who usually did not pay any attention to them. In those areas outside Java and Madura where there were Muslim princedoms, religious affairs were handled by sultanate courts (pengadilan swapraja) . Where there were no sultanates (as in the cities of East Sumatra where the sultanate govern- ments had no jurisdiction) the application of Islamic law was left to the Muslim society at large. Muslims living in these cities who were not subjects of the sultans (and had generally migrated from other areas) often disregarded the sultanate marriage officials, and officiated at marriages themselves, con- ducting them in accordance with Islamic regulations. It can therefore be concluded that Islamic courts in the Dutch colonial period had very limited power and jurisdiction. 1Staatsblad 1882 No. 152. 2Staatsblad 1937 Nos. 116 and 610. 3Staatsblad 1937 No. 610.44 Even on matters of inheritance, a very important part of Is- lamic law, the Islamic courts were subject to decisions of the secular courts. In the Dutch period Muslims were very criti- cal of this arrangement. Many considered it a manifestation of the Dutch policy to reduce and if possible to eliminate the use of Islamic law, thereby encouraging pre-Islamic adat law;4 5 for in this matter of inheritance faraidh could be applied only if it had been reconciled with adat law.3 During the Japanese period the position of Islamic courts remained unchanged. Although Japanese terminology was intro- duced for the court and the positions of its officials, the functions and jurisdiction were the same. After independence, Islamic courts, which previously had been administered by the Ministry of Justice, came under the jurisdiction of the Ministry of Religion. The change was an- nounced in 1946. Sultanate courts outside Java and Madura were abolished in 1951, resulting in confusion about how reli- gious disputes should be settled. The confusion was resolved only in 1957, when a government regulation was promulgated® stipulating the establishment of religious courts in areas outside Java and Madura with more extensive jurisdiction than the religious courts on those two islands. According to the regulation, the religious courts outside Java and Madura, for instance, have jurisdiction over inheritance matters. The composition of the Islamic courts has been similar to that of the Dutch period. The chairman and secretary, however, are 4Many books written by Western scholars often contrast adat with Islam. Indonesians themselves seem to adopt this trend of thought; see Mohammad Radjab, Perang Paderi di Swnateva Barat (1803-1838) (Jakarta: Perpustakaan Perguruan Kementerian PP dan K, 1954) . What is overlooked is the fact that adat and Islam have blended. There are indeed parts of adat which are not compatible with Islamic teaching, but in many cases no dis- tinction can be made as to which customs belong to adat and which to Islam. Such a distinction is particularly difficult if one premise of Islamic teaching is considered, i.e., to recognize any teaching as Islamic as long as it is not contrary to Islamic laws. It is on this basis that one can speak among the Minangkabau or in Aceh of "adat bersendi syara*, syara* bersendi kitabullah" (adat based on Syari'at, and Syari'at based on the Quran). An analogy is found in the tendency of many Western writ- ers to contrast santri and dbangan as if abangan Javanese were not Muslims. Taufik Abdullah suggests that one should consider adat and Islam together as an embodiment of the whole structure and way of life; there should be no dichotomy between these two ways of life. See his "Adat and Islam: An Examination of Conflict in Minangkabau," Indonesia, 2 (October 1966), pp. 1-24. 5This was called the "reception theory." ®Peraturan Pemerintah No. 45/1957.45 now on the government payroll, while the vice-chairman and other members receive an honorarium only when the court is in session. The higher Islamic court of the Dutch period contin- ues to serve as an appellate court for Java and Madura, while in the other areas this function is fulfilled by the respec- tive provincial religious courts. All members of the appel- late courts are on the government payroll. The development of the Islamic court system--its mainte- nance in Java and Madura and its expansion to the other islands-- was not without difficulties. During the Japanese occupation Indonesian law experts had already considered the possibility of abolishing the Islamic courts. This idea was entertained by none other than the adat expert Professor Dr. Raden Supomo, adviser to the then Justice Department, who seems to have been antagonistic to Islam and who exercised great influence in the preparations for the introduction of the constitution. What Supomo championed was the revival of adat law vis-d-vis Islam.7 Adat law experts on the whole were indeed opposed to the application of Islamic law. It should be noted that positions in the Department of Justice and the civil courts have gener- ally been filled with graduates of Dutch law schools in which Islamic law constituted only a small fraction of the curricu- lum. The content of the courses on Islam and Islamic law as taught at Dutch law schools was confined mostly to the estab- lished Syafi 'i madzhab as applied by traditionalists in Indo- nesia. They did not encourage students to investigate the basic teachings and philosophy of Islam. In general, these graduates were not recruited by the Islamic courts. Their training prepared them to fill positions in the civil courts. This situation caused them to feel estranged both from Islam itself and from the desires of part of the Muslim community to see religious law practiced. The Islamic courts in the colonial period had consequent- ly been run by ulama, who on the whole were traditionalists whose knowledge of Islamic law was confined to the traditional 7The conflict between adat and Islamic law in Indonesia dates from the Dutch period and was especially aggravated after colonial law experts in the Netherlands "discovered" adat law at the beginning of this century. Previously, the Dutch had assumed that since most of the population was Muslim, most of the regions of Indonesia used Islamic law. The discovery of adat law led the Dutch to revive the application of adat law in various aspects of personal law, thereby diminishing the influence of Islamic law. See C. van Vollenhoven, Het Adatreoht van Nedertands Indie, 3 vols. (Lei- den: Brill, 1918-33) . R. Supomo, Politik Hukum Adat di Indonesia (Jakarta, Djambatan). On Supomo's attitude see Daniel Lev, IsZamio Courts in Indo- nesia (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1972), pp. 20, 35.46 Syafi'i madzhab. Although devout, they had not followed the development of Islamic law in the modern period in other Is- lamic countries, let alone the philosophy and ideas of Dutch secular law as it had been introduced by the Dutch in Indone- sia. Even their knowledge of adat law had been obtained through experience, not through systematic study. A gap thus arose between two kinds of law experts in Indonesia, one trained by the Dutch, the other trained along traditional lines in the pesantren, and in some cases also in Mecca. The Muslim modernists who had been trained in madrasah and other schools with a modern orientation and who championed ijtihad (the right of individual interpretation; exerting one- self to form an opinion in a case or as to the rule of law) and condemned taqlid (adopting the already established fatwa and practices as final and as having an authoritative charac- ter; fatwa, a decision of religious character, given by a recog- nized ulama) in general remained outside the Islamic judicial bureaucracy. They were distrusted by the Dutch as well as by indigenous leaders. They also disdained government service, preferring to work as muballigh or to join the independence movement. The situation during the Japanese occupation was much the same. The Islamic courts in Java continued their usual activ- ities, handling marriage disputes and sometimes advising on matters of inheritance. As has been noted above, the Islamic courts in Java had no jurisdiction over inheritance; despite protests from many Muslim elements, including the organization of Islamic judges (Perhimpunan Penghulu dan Pegawainya), the ordinary civil courts had dealt with inheritance problems in the Dutch colonial period. The Islamic courts under the vari- ous sultanates in the islands outside Java and Madura still had broader functions which included settling inheritance dis- putes . The situation during the Japanese period was thus one of preserving the status quo. However, top Indonesian leaders in Jakarta were considering the issue of Islamic courts and their powers. In June 1944, Supomo submitted a report on Islamic courts in which he recommended abolishing them. His proposal was ignored, probably for fear it might give cause for protest by the Muslims, something which the Japanese pre- ferred to avoid. The question was raised before the board of Indonesian advisers to the various Departments in Jakarta in the same year. Not one Islamic law expert participated. Only six of the eleven members of the board, a narrow major- ity, agreed that there was a need for Islamic judges. But considering the overwhelmingly secular nationalist majority47 on the board, the ratio was not too disappointing for Mus- lims .3 * * * * 8 The number of Islamic courts increased only slowly because of the conflicting attitudes among Indonesian law ex- perts toward the existence of Islamic courts and toward Is- lamic law in general, and also because of the widespread debate concerning the position of Islam in the state.9 It was therefore understandable that development of the Islamic courts in the independence period did not run as smoothly as had been expected, in spite of the various de- crees issued by the Ministry of Religion. Even Professor Hazairin, who is regarded as an expert in both Islam and adat, expressed disagreement at one time with having Islamic courts. Hazairin himself rejected the reception theory (that only those laws of Islam which had been accepted by adat were to be used). He called this theory a "theory of the devil," and when an Islamic court was established in Palembang he opposed its existence.10 It is probable that Hazairin's disagreement arose from his concern over the poor administration and work procedure of the Islamic courts in general and not with the content of Islamic law itself. Indeed, Hazairin was one of those few Dutch law graduates who were sympathetic to Islamic law and made attempts to reformulate it in terms of Indonesian needs.11 Another Dutch-trained lawyer with a similar attitude is Pro- fessor Notosusanto, one-time secretary to the Mahkamah Islam Tinggi, the Islamic appellate court. Notosusanto complained about the rigidity of Islamic judges who adhered to Syafi'i madzhab tradition and did not admit the possibility of 3The members included Abikusno Tjokrosujoso, Sukardjo Wirjopranoto, Samsi, Woerjaningrat, Suwandi, Mohammad Hatta, R. Singgih, Ki Hadjar De- wantara, Buntara Martoatmodjo, Abdul Rasjid, and Sartono. Only Abikusno can be regarded as belonging to the Islamic group, although Rasjid and Hatta were devout Muslims. On Supomo's paper see Lev, Islamic Courts, pp. 35-36. On the opin- ions of the members of the board of advisers, see ibid., p. 38. Only Abikusno and Rasjid believed that the Islamic courts should have juris- diction over inheritance and waqf. The other members preferred the status quo. 90f the projected number of Islamic courts in the islands outside Java in 1959, only 50 percent could be established. Their creation was based on Government Regulation No. 45/1957. 1°Lev, Islamic Courts, p. 88. 11See his Hukum Kekeluargaan Nasional (Jakarta: Tintamas, 1962) and Pergolakan Pengesuaian ’adat kepada Hukum Islam (Jakarta: Bulan Bintang, 1952) .48 applying other madzhab traditions which might be more suited to a particular case. In his study of other Islamic countries he found out that such possibilities existed.12 Hazairin's rejection of Islamic courts but acceptance of Islamic law (at least part of it, i.e., personal law) is typi- cal of some Indonesian lawyers who still consider Islamic law important. These lawyers believe that the realization of Islamic law does not depend on the existence of Islamic courts but on the fact that it can also be applied by civil courts, either by a section of the civil court or by particular judges on particular cases. Objections from the Islamic side ranged from practical economics to ideology. The Islamic judges and many of their supporters certainly were against personal law being adminis- tered in ordinary courts, partly for economic reasons and partly for reasons of prestige. They had been officials for a long time, independent of secularly trained administrators. Islamic judges had been under the direction of the Directorate of Religious Courts of the Ministry of Religion, and the staff, whether traditionalist or modernist, had had religious training. Together with the Islamic judges, they all had a common background, understood each other's ways of thinking, and, more important, trusted one another. Although the Direc- torate had occasionally interfered in the work of the Islamic courts, the judges did not consider such acts as interference by the Executive in the Judiciary, but as a guide to realizing justice. The principle of the separation of powers, in this case between the Executive and the Judiciary, seemed not to play a very important role in Islamic law as applied in Indo- nesia.13 Interference by the secular-trained lawyers in the 12See his Organisasi dan Jurisprudensi Pevaditan Agama di Indonesia (Yogyakarta: Gadjah Mada, 1963) . 13The functions of the Directorate of Religious Justice include ad- ministrative work, guidance to Islamic courts in order that a uniformity of decisions can be attained, advice on legal problems to the Ministry and the other government offices, and officially reviewing national legisla- tion for conflicts with Islamic law, in which case the Directorate would consult the Ministry of Justice. See Lev, Islamic Courts, p. 95. The Directorate even has review powers. The decision of the Minis- ter of Religion No. 19/1963, dated February 2, 1963, states: "The Head of [Directorate of] Religious Justice is authorized to examine and determine whether or not a decision of a religious court, in the first and second instance, the conditions and rules laid down by statute, and also to declare such a decision invalid." According to the decision of the Minister of Religion No. 56, dated May 20, 1967, the Directorate of Religious Justice has the tasks of admin- istering religious courts, organizing court sessions, reconciling religious49 civil courts or the Ministry of Justice would not be tolerated by the Islamic judges in the Islamic courts not only for rea- sons of prestige. More important was their distrust of the secular-trained officials. The unsympathetic attitude toward Islamic courts arose in part from the poor quality of the Islamic judges, attribu- table to their restricted education, and their limited asso- ciation with other people. The poor quality of the judges has been demonstrated in various cases; two recent examples are discussed below. These two cases, interestingly enough, involved two daughters of former President Sukarno, Megawati and Rachmawati. I. Megawati was married by the penghulu of Sukabumi (Hadji Mohammad Cholil) to an Egyptian, Hasan Gamal, a former staff member of the Egyptian Embassy in Jakarta, on June 27, 1972. Previously she had been married to an air-lieutenant, Sukin- dro, whose plane crashed in Irian Jaya on January 22, 1971. The remains of his body were never found; he was declared "missing in action" by the Indonesian Air Force Command. According to Islam, a widow is allowed to remarry after her 'iddah period, i.e., four months and ten days after the death of her husband. Perhaps anticipating disapproval from her family, she ran away and married Gamal in Sukabumi. However, she seemed unable to endure the separation from her child by her first marriage and returned to her mother’s home in Jakarta a few days later. Shortly thereafter, Guntur Sukarnoputra, Sukarno's eldest son, claiming to be his sister's wali (guardian),14 filed a suit at the religious court in Jakarta to nullify the marriage of his sister to Gamal. The judge at the court, who was reported to have summoned the court session in January 1973 at the suggestion of the Ministry of Reli- gion, complied with the request of Guntur and annulled the marriage. In addition, on the basis of evidence produced by Guntur, the judge declared that Megawati had to wait for another four years before remarrying in order to allow time for ascertaining the fate of Sukindro. disputes, planning holidays for government offices, supervising religious courts, and doing research on religious aspects of Indonesian law. 14There are contradictory opinions as to whether Guntur can still be regarded as his sister's Wald. Many consider that a widow is free to act on her own behalf.50 The decision attracted strong criticism from Indonesian Islamic law experts. The well-known ulama Hamka supported the Sukabumi penghulu and considered the marriage valid. Hasbullah Bakry, a popular police official in charge of (Islamic) spiritual affairs, pointed out defects in the pro- cedure of the Sukabumi penghulu in contracting the marriage as well as in that of the religious court in Jakarta.15 II. Another daughter of Sukarno, Rachmawati, was married to Dr. Martomo Marzuki and was divorced by her husband on February 17, 1973. Rachmawati did not want a divorce and filed her case with the religious court in Jakarta. Previ- ously the religious office in the Menteng district of Jakarta had tried unsuccessfully to reconcile the couple. At its session on June 6, 1973, the court ratified the divorce without giving either Rachmawati or her lawyer an opportunity to present her objections.16 Although asked to do so by the court, Dr. Marzuki did not wish to disclose his reasons for seeking a divorce. It seems that the court did not know the reasons for the respective stands of either husband or wife. What the court did was merely to ascertain the validity of the divorce. Another matter which illus- trated irregularities in the court was the fact that the decision was not read by the judge during the court's ses- sion but by the clerk in the presence of the judge. In spite of their weaknesses, however, the Islamic courts have partially been able to fulfill their functions, particu- larly in reconciling many marriage disputes. For many of the people, especially villagers, who are not acquainted with laws and legal procedures, consultations have always been useful, and these have been provided by the Islamic courts as well as local religious offices. Perhaps such work does not belong to a court's work in the ordinary sense, for the judge does not hand down decisions in these matters. The function of consul- tation would certainly not be assumed by an ordinary civil court, whose judges as a rule make judicial decisions only.17 15"Masalah Hukum Disekitar Kasus Pernikahan Megawati--Hasan Gamal," Harian Kami, July 31, 1972. See also M. H. Semendawai, "Suatu Koreksi Pengadilan Agama dan Humas Depag," ibid. 16The court's decision was based on I'anat al-Thalibin, 2, p. 27, and Muhazzab, 2, p. 82. 17In various religious offices throughout the country an advisory committee on marriages and the settlement of divorces (Badan Penasehat Perkawinan dan Penyelesaian Perceraian) has been set up. Islamic judges often act as an advisory body in areas where there is no BPPPP.51 No one, including Islamic-oriented people and the Islamic judges themselves, will deny that the courts need improving. That the judges recognize the need for improvement is evi- denced by their willingness to accept guidance from the Direc- torate of Religious Justice. The founding of the secondary level religious law schools and later the faculties of Syari'at at the Islamic institutes of higher learning (IAIN) constituted attempts toward improvement. In-service training of judges and officials of the Ministry of Religion was another attempt. However, all these efforts have not yet been sufficient to meet the needs of society. This has partly been the result of the enormous task which the Ministry faces. Insufficient planning in the past to improve the quality of the Ministry officials, including the judges, is another reason; other ministries have also had similar experiences. Mutual distrust between "Islamic” lawyers and those of the Ministry of Justice also constituted a handicap for joint efforts for improvement, with the result that no great prog- ress has been made. As mentioned earlier, the political cli- mate has retarded attempts at finding solutions to the marriage law problem. Ideological considerations have indeed compli- cated the matter, as has been the case with religious educa- tion and the overall position of Islam in the state. In Indo- nesia everything involving Islam seems to be intertwined with politics . It would be too large a task to discuss the development of the present national marriage law which was enacted in January 1974 after being passed by Parliament in December 1973. A few comments may be made, however. Attempts to promulgate a national marriage law began in 1950 with a special committee headed by former governor of Sumatra, Teuku Mohammad Hassan. This committee originally wanted to draft a national law that would be applied to all citizens irrespective of religion. In 1952, in response to demands from interest groups, especially the Muslim community, it had to abandon this aim and formulate separate laws for each religious community in the country. In March 1954 the committee completed work on a draft for Islamic marriages. This draft was not discussed in Parliament until 1958, togeth- er with a counterdraft submitted by members of the religious- ly neutral nationalists under the leadership of Mrs. Sumari of the PNI. The result was a deadlock in the parliamentary debates, and both were tabled. The same thing occurred in 1973 when the Catholic faction in Parliament declined to par- ticipate in a debate on a draft based on Islamic law. In fact two drafts were introduced, the first in 1967 and the second in 1968. The 1967 draft was intended for the Muslim community52 exclusively and was based on Islamic law; the 1968 draft was to serve as the basic marriage law and mentioned the particu- lar Islamic draft. Although the Catholics had only a very small number of representatives (8 out of some 500 members), they were able to cause a deadlock; for according to the rules of Parliament, any decision should be based on the mufakat or consensus system. The government had to withdraw the two drafts; a new draft was submitted on July 31, 1973. A lengthy discussion would be needed to analyze this draft adequately, but for purposes here it is sufficient to state that the draft met with much opposition from Muslims. Once the Minister of Religion was forced to stop his speech on the draft which he was delivering to Parliament because a few hun- dred religious school students, including many primary school pupils, shouted at the Minister and sat in the seats of mem- bers of Parliament. When the draft was finally approved by Parliament in December 1973, it incorporated almost all the demands of the Islamic group and no longer reflected the idea and spirit of the first draft.18 The success of a marriage law depends inter alia on the quality and the powers of the courts concerned, in this case the Islamic courts. The quality of the courts depends on per- sonnel, and in this area the Ministry, with a well-planned program, can do much. The courts have no authority to execute decisions. They depend on the ordinary courts, and the issue involves the Ministry of Justice and the Home Affairs Ministry as well as the police. Government national policy is there- fore highly significant. 180n the development of the marriage law in Parliament the writer is indebted to Mr. Ismail Hassan Metareum, M.P., who kindly made his notes on this question available to the writer. On the marriage act, see Undang- Undang Perkawinan Berikut Penjelasannya (Jakarta: Badan Penerbit Alda/ Pentja, n.d.) .CHAPTER 4 ADMINISTRATION OF THE HAJ To make the haj has always been a strong desire of de- Muslims. It is one of the pillars (rukun) of Islam, although it is only obligatory for those who are financially and physically able. Among the non-Arab Muslim countries, Indonesia has always had a great number of pilgrims. In prewar days the peak year was 1926/27, when some 52,000 people went to Mecca.1 Although this figure has only been exceeded in the last few years, number of pilgrims has been increasing rapidly, the wish of Muslims to go to Mecca has never diminished. The number of pilgrims from 1950 to 1975 is given in Table 1. In the last ten or fifteen years, top-ranking offi- cials of the Indonesian government, including Ministers, have also made the haj. That many people want to do so can also be concluded from the number of action haji ("candidate pil- grims"--those who express their wish to do the Mecca pilgrim- age by registering themselves with the government agencies concerned) from 1950 to 1969. Not all of them could go, as their number far surpassed the quota. Thousands of people see their friends and relatives off at the port of departure, all of them hopeful that they too might someday go to the Holy Land. Since the colonial period, it has also been the wish of Indonesian Muslims to organize the pilgrimage themselves, using their own ships. In spite of individual contributions, this wish had never been realized in the Dutch period. After independence efforts were continued. In 1950 a foundation called Yayasan Perjalanan Haji Indonesia (PHI, Foun- dation of the Indonesian Haj Pilgrimage) was founded in Jakar- ta. It was headed by the late Haji Sudjak who in the Dutch period invited all interested Indonesian Muslims to join to- gether in setting up a haj shipping company. (The plan could not be realized because of the outbreak of World War II.) The foundation was empowered by the government to help administer 1Jacob Vredenbregt, "The Haddj," Bijdragen tot de taal-, land- en volkerikunde, 118 (1962), p. 149. 5354 TABLE 1 INDONESIAN HAJ PILGRIMS AFTER INDEPENDENCE Year Candidate Pilgrims Quota Number of Pilgrims MPH (Haj Leaders) RKI (Medical Team) By Sea By Air 1950 20,135 10,000 9,892 _ 27 14 1951 22,079 1,853 1,843 - 6 15 1952 11,398 11,870 9,502 - 24 20 1953 39,777 14,031 14,031 293 32 28 1954 30,146 10,154 10,085 82 27 25 1955 113,662 10,400 10,436 240 30 43 1956 108,538 12,348 12,333 288 36 23 1957 105,163 13,111 13,184 240 36 28 1958 102,069 6,841 6,842 - 24 23 1959 96,828 10,413 10,411 146 24 35 1960 89,767 10,738 10,738 - 24 34 1961 79,273 11,613 11,613 32 34 1962 99,866 7,850 7,820 - 32 38 1963 125,724 10,000 10,000 - 60 34 1964 396,879 15,000 15,000 - 60 109 1965 245,400 15,004 - 60 108 1966 305,028 15,000 - 60 104 1967 456,595 15,585 364 60 102 1968 474,961 16,316 633 60 102 1969 493,663 - 15,350 1,188 53 82 1970 - - 12,845 1,229 43 78 1971 - - 19,781 2,511 47 118 1972 - 16,039 6,192 47 94 1973 - 16,505 23,449 49 97 1974 - 15,396 53,752 51 128 1975 - 9,719 45,140 111 200 Source: Figures for 1950-64 are from Pevanan Departemen Agama Dalam Revo- lusi dan Pembangunan Bangsa (Jakarta: Departemen Agama, 1965), pp. 242-43. Also Lapovan Kerdja Koovdinatov Madjelis Pimpinan Hadji, 1389H-1969/70 M. (Jakarta: Direktorat Jenderal Urusan Haji, Foreword, 1970) . Figures for 1965-69 from ibid. Figures for 1970-75 from Public Relations, Directorate General of Haj Pilgrimage, Department of Religion, Jakarta. Since 1969 the government has withdrawn its subsidies for the haj. Therefore there has been no arrangement made for a quota since then. The writer has not been able to obtain the exact quota figures for 1965-68, but 15,000-16,000 would not be too much far off as an estimate.55 and organize the haj. It established a bank, Bank Haji Indo- nesia, and a shipping company, Pelayaran Muslimin Indonesia (Musi). However, after ten years of operation the shipping company still acted only as an agent for chartering vessels from other (foreign) companies and had no ships of its own. Until two or three years ago, going on the pilgrimage from Indonesia was much more difficult than it is now. One had to sign up with the local government, for which the neces- sary forms were supplied by PHI. A committee consisting of representatives of the local government, the local religious office, the local police, and the PHI selected the candidates on the basis of financial ability and health. Selection was necessary because of the lack of space available on the ships as well as the fact that the government granted subsidies to cover the pilgrimage costs. Medical examinations were per- formed by a local physician who was assisted by PHI officials. Payment of the pilgrimage cost was made through PHI offices, which deposited the funds in Bank Haji Indonesia. The cost involved was calculated jointly by the Ministry of Religion and PHI. The latter also arranged for passports and visas. As mentioned above, transportation from Indonesia to Arabia was handled by the Musi company, which chartered the necessary vessels. This procedure was followed until 1962, when Musi was frozen by the government, probably for politi- cal reasons. Local transportation to the respective ports of embarkation was the responsibility of PHI, which made arrange- ments with the assistance of local governments. Hostels were provided by PHI at various ports of embarkation. A committee called the Majlis Pimpinan Haji (Haji Lead- ership Council) was formed for the training of the pilgrims in pilgrimage rituals and guidance during the trip. A certain number of members were appointed each year by the Ministry of Religion. They usually consisted of prominent men from vari- ous Muslim organizations as well as officials from various Ministries. Favoritism was not unusual in such appointments, for the MPH members also had the opportunity to go on the pil- grimage without cost to themselves. Each member of the coun- cil was assigned responsibility for a given number of pilgrims. In addition to acting as leaders, they also became contact persons with ship's officers. After arriving in the Holy Land, the pilgrims came under the care of Arab syaikh, for according to the regulations of the Saudi Arabian government,only licensed Arab syaikh are allowed to organize the administration of pilgrims in Saudi Arabia. The costs for this service were already included in the fees paid by Indonesian pilgrims before they left home.56 The PHI also established the Rombongan Kesehatan Indone- sia (RKI, Indonesian Medical Group), which consisted of a number of doctors and nurses, to look after the pilgrims' health. The members of this medical group, in spite of their responsibilities, were able to participate in the haj rituals and become hag'i. For political reasons--many members of the PHI belonged to the former Masjumi party--the PHI foundation was frozen in 1961.2 As a result, illegal practices increased. As stated above, pilgrimage costs were not entirely covered by payments made by the pilgrims themselves, and the government granted subsidies to defray expenses. This subsidy was connected with the regulation of foreign exchange, which was tightly con- trolled by the government. Each year the government had to decide on the number of pilgrims, based on a quota system. Selections had to be made by drawing lots. This situation created opportunities for mismanagement, for, as can be seen from Table 1, the number of people desiring to go on the pil- grimage far exceeded the quota. The haj official often de- manded additional sums of money from a haj candidate. The higher the sum, the greater a candidate’s chances of being accepted. This graft constituted one of the serious weak- nesses of the government, especially of the Ministry of Reli- gion and its local offices. It often happened that a candi- date pilgrim had to wait for a'number of years before being given an opportunity to go on the pilgrimage, especially when he was not prepared to pay the additional expenses or when he had no contacts inpositions of power. Many became victims of such practices. In 1961, a new body which included a number of ministers was established to find ways to improve the haj. Although two years later the PHI was again invited to participate in managing the haj , the establishment of this body was the begin- ning of direct government involvement in the pilgrimage organ- ization, which became a government monopoly in 1970.3 A new shipping company, Perseroan Terbatas "Arafat," was founded, its capital coming from contributions made by pilgrims and candidate pilgrims. The candidate pilgrims were lured into buying Arafat shares with the promise that they could later go on the pilgrimage at special rates. 2Pandg’i Masgccrakat, IV, 15 (September 1, 1965) . After the intro- duction of the new spelling in 1972, Pandg'i Masgccrakat became Pangi Masyarakat. 3The decision to monopolize the handling of the haj was stipulated in Presidential Decree No. 22, 1969.57 In 1964 the committee for the improvement of the haj be- came the Dewan Urusan Haji (Council of Haj iAffairs).4 It was this committee which invited the PHI to participate once more in managing the haj. A new policy was formulated. Responsi- bility for the departure of the pilgrims now rested with the local governments. The members of MPH and RKI were given im- proved guidelines, and training for the pilgrims before depar- ture as well as on board the vessels was intensified. But, in addition to the usual training in the necessary rituals, the training now included political indoctrination as well. This modification was in line with the government policy at that time to secure loyalty from its citizens; political in- doctrination was in fact fashionable during the height of the Sukarno regime.3 But all efforts for improvement were not successful. After the fall of Sukarno in 1966, private organizations also began to participate in organizing the haj. Many pilgrims became victims of more than a few of these agents they either could not depart for Mecca or were neglected during the trip. This was one of the reasons for the government monopoly, which began in 1970.® No opportunities were given to private com- panies to participate in organizing the haj, regardless of their past records. One of the private organizations which had been able to handle the haj successfully was Himpunan Usahawan Muslimin Indonesia (Association of the Indonesian Muslim Businessmen, often referred to as Husami), headed by Sjafruddin Prawirane- gara, who was former governor of the of Indonesia (Bank Indonesia) and who had served several times as a minis- ter. Not only were pilgrims satisfied with Husami's arrange- ments, but the fees were below what the government charged. There was also satisfaction in the fact that the haj could be completed without relying on government facilities. It should be remembered that Prawiranegara was a member of the central board of Masjumi and in 1948-49, when many members of the central government in Java were captured by the Dutch, following their second military action, established the emergency government, which he himself headed. Later he was one of the leaders in Central Sumatra who organized revolts against Sukarno in 1958, serving as president of the rebel PRRI government from 1958 to 1961. Thus, there was suspicion ^Presidential Decree No. 112, 1964. 5Hamba, "Perbaikan Perjalanan Haji Indonesia," Gema Islam, II, 31 (May 1, 1963), pp. 7-10; and 32 (May 15, 1963), pp. 11-12. Also H. Musjaffa Basjir, "Sekitar Penyelenggaraan Haji th 1964: Kesungguhan P3H," ibid., Ill, 49 (May 1, 1964), p. 21. ®Presidential Decree No. 22, 1969.58 on the part of the government that political loyalty to Sjafruddin, and to former Masjumi leaders in general, might be enhanced by Husami's efforts.7 In any case, the government did not allow Husami to con- tinue operating, in spite of its success. Presidential Decree No. 22 of 1969 stipulated that Mall handling of the haj should only be carried out by the government" (Article 1). The in- structions which followed stipulated that "private companies and individuals are not allowed to carry out activities on the handling of haj affairs."8 This policy and the manner in which it has been carried out have been criticized from many quarters. Sjafruddin Prawiranegara has tried to show how much in- justice the government has done to pilgrims in particular, and to Muslims in general. He claims that the government regulation contravenes existing laws. The government monopoly was understandable when there were government subsidies and when the number of pilgrims per year was limited, although this policy still meant limiting the opportunity for Muslims to perform the haj. But now that subsidies have been with- drawn and the quota system eliminated, Sjafruddin feels that the government monopoly is completely out of place. Sjafruddin believes that any monopoly easily becomes a source of corruption and inefficiency. According to him, the government sees the weaknesses and deficiencies of private organizations without recognizing its own faults, as illus- trated by the mismanagement and corruption in the government administration of the pilgrimage. The government monopoly deprives Muslims of a choice of agents who might offer better service at lower cost. Sjafruddin would prefer that private organizations be allowed to compete, although private com- panies could certainly be supervised by the government. He also notes that because of the monopoly system the Ministry of Religion does not regard itself as a public utility agent but as a commercial enterprise. According to Sjafruddin, who has been strongly anti- communist throughout the postindependence period, the prohibi- tion against private companies handling the haj implies a socialist-Marxist orientation and violates the constitution. The regulation gives the impression, he feels, that only the government is "good" and that private agents are "bad" and 7The present government in general is suspicious of former Masjumi leaders; many of them were not allowed to become candidates during the 1971 and 1977 general elections. Presidential Instruction No. 6, 1970.59 "capitalist." He points out that constitutionally the "state guarantees the freedom of every inhabitant to embrace his own religion and to carry out services according to his own con- viction and belief."9 The injustice felt by the Muslims de- rives from the fact that non-Muslims are free to make their own choice regarding travel bureaus or agencies, as when Catholics perform pilgrimages to Rome and other places in Europe. The Husami chairman also criticizes the fact that the pilgrims are issued a special passport valid only for Saudi Arabia and that regular passports of Muslims who go abroad are stamped "not valid for travel to Saudi Arabia dur- ing the haj season."10 Another matter which Sjafruddin raises is the cost involved. He states that the government calcula- tions for both sea passage and air fares are too high. He quotes an alternative cost, lower than that of the government, at which Husami would be able to handle the haj.* 1 11 Husami’s calculation of expenses, however, was contested by the Arafat shipping company, which monopolizes sea trans- portation of pilgrims (Garuda Indonesian Airways monopolizes air transportation). Arafat said that, although on paper Husami's calculation was lower than government figures, it was in fact higher. For Husami's pilgrims were allowed only Rials 450 (about US$150) in Saudi Arabia for living expenses, while the government allowed for Rls 700. Besides, the govern- ment calculation also included contributions to various gen- eral needs of the Muslims, such as for continuing construction of Istiqlal mosque in Jakarta and for assistance to madrasah, which according to Husami should not be calculated as pilgrim- age costs . Arafat commented that as far as transportation costs were concerned, its fare was about Rp. 10,000 below that of Husami (US$1 = about Rp. 415).12 9Article 29, 1945 Constitution. 1°Husami pointed out that ordinary passports were used for the haj from 1950 to 1969 and that only since 1969 have special passports been issued for this purpose. This practice, according to Husami, restricts one's ability to go on the haj. The special passport can only be ob- tained after payment of pilgrimage costs to the government. 11Sjafruddin Prawiranegara, "Tanggapan Husami Tentang Persoalan Haji," I -111, Abctdi May 12-14, 1969. Also "Mengapa sedikit pendaftaran orang naik Haji?" Pedoman August 12, 1969. The writer spoke with Sjafrud- din Prawiranegara at various times in 1970 and 1971 regarding his views on this matter. 12"Perbandingan Husami dan Arafat: Komentar P.T. Arafat atas tulisan Sdr. Sjafruddin Prawiranegara," Abadi July 6, 1970. It should also be noted that the government-stipulated expenses per pilgrim are increasing annually:60 The government itself considered it necessary to refute Husami's allegations. In a booklet published in 1970 by the Minister of People's Welfare, it accused Husami of obtaining a sum of Rp. 12,000 from every pilgrim who went by sea and Rp. 77,000 from every pilgrim who went by air.13 This alle- gation was denied by Husami, which pointed out that among other things the booklet itself admitted that the government received between 450 and 500 million rupiah by administering the haj in 1969/70. Husami pointed out that the profits which the government accumulates annually from its monopoly have not been deposited in the state treasury. The public is not informed of how this money is spent. According to Husami, which gave specific calculations of pilgrimage costs, government profit per individual was Rp. 13,500 above the figure which the government claimed was Husami's profit; the government profit was therefore Rp. 25,000 per pilgrim. This amount was in addition to the "unofficial taxes" (pajak-pajak tidak resmi), which amounted to Rp. 68,000. Husami admitted that the government's costs for air travel were Rp. 7,000 less than Husami's, but pointed out that the government used its own extensive facilities, while pri- vate agents like Husami had to pay for their own organization and agents. Sjafruddin also mentioned the possibility for riba (usury) for government benefit. Riba is strictly forbidden by Islam, but in modern times riba has been given several in- terpretations. Sjafruddin used A. Yusuf Ali's interpretation and stated that a percentage of the government calculation could be categorized as riba.14 The Husami leader also 1967 - Rp. 27,500 1968 - Rp. 62,500 1969 - Rp. 165,000 1970 - Rp. 347,000 (air pilgrimage Rp. 382,500) 1971 - Rp. 336,000 (air pilgrimage Rp. 380,000) The 1967-68 cost was relatively much lower than the cost in the succeed- ing years because of government subsidies. The 1975 cost came to about Rp. 700,000, the 1976 cost almost Rp. 1 million. 'i3Pokok2 Pendjelasan Penjelenggaraan Urusan Hadji Tahun 1970/71 (Jakarta: Menteri Negara Kesra, 1970), pp. 32-33, 40-41. 1t*Riba is mentioned in the Quran 2:275. On this question Yusuf Ali said: "The definition I would accept would be: undue profit, not in the way of legitimate trade, out of loans of gold and silver, and salt (according to the list mentioned by the Holy Apostle himself). My61 regretted the "secrecy" of the publication of the government booklet, which he said seemed to serve as a confidential guide for those officials arranging the haj. He protested against this secrecy for two reasons. First, since the haj is a con- cern of the society at large, anything to do with it should be available for public surveillance. Second, since the booklet criticized Husami's handling of the pilgrimage, even to the point of accusing Husami of profiting from it, it would only be fair, he said, if a copy of the booklet were sent to him if "the pembuat buku [publisher or writer] is a Muslim."1® On April 14, 1970, before the publication of the booklet, Sjafruddin Prawiranegara made an appeal to the President to permit him to participate in managing the haj. He explained his viewpoint in hopes that the government would lift its monopoly. In addition to providing calculations of costs, which he maintained Husami could handle at a lower rate than the government, he also suggested that: 1. The pilgrimage should be regulated by an act of Parliament, not by presidential decree. He used the decision of the Provisional People's Representative Council of 1966 to support his view. He stated that the monopoly system as con- tained in the presidential decree violated existing laws. 2. Etatism, as reflected by the government monopoly in handling the pilgrimage, should be abandoned, as this is not in line with the state philosophy. 3. Any monopoly which is harmful to the people should be lifted. He pointed out that the government monopoly in han- dling the pilgrimage was harmful to the people, or at least was not in the best interests of the people. The letter in which the appeal was made also thanked the President for his help in solving the problem of those pil- grims on the ship Gambela. These were pilgrims who had been able to avoid the government monopoly. This was a unique definition would include profiteering of all kinds, but exclude eco- nomic credit, the creature of modern banking and finance." Sjafruddin calculated that for the 1970/71 pilgrimage season, a total of Rp. 56,000 per person was riba. Although this payment was "sound" (to be used, for instance, for Islamic da'wah), the government pilgrim has no alternative than to pay Rp. 56,000 on top of real costs. The "addition is therefore riba." Sjafruddin's explanation of riba in connection with the pilgrimage was dated May 28, 1970; it was mimeographed and distributed widely. 15Sjafruddin stated that he tried to obtain the booklet through nor- mal channels, but no one would give him a copy.62 story in the history of the haj in Indonesia, and it also in- volved Husami. In 1970, the year in which the government monopoly of the pilgrimage began, Husami attempted to circumvent the regula- tion, not by organizing pilgrims directly but by helping them make their own arrangements. Some 1,200 people wanted to par- ticipate, but only about 800, including 712 who went by sea, actually made the trip. The reasons why these people acted as a group were largely psychological and political: the pil- grims were almost all members or sympathizers of the former Masjumi party. Their action constituted overt criticism of the government policy, which they believed hindered rather than facilitated making the haj. The pilgrims who went by sea encountered difficulties during their departure as well as during their arrival back in Indonesia; their experiences became headline news. The pilgrims had acquired Indonesian passports which were origi- nally valid all over the world, except Israel, but, since it was pilgrimage season, the passports were stamped with the special limitation "not valid for Saudi Arabia in the haj season." The pilgrims came from various parts of Indonesia, including Bima, Lombok, South Sulawesi, South Kalimantan, Java, and Sumatra. They did not travel directly from Indone- sian ports to Saudi Arabia, for their ship was prohibited from entering Indonesian waters. They went to Singapore to board the Gambela, but there, too, they were prevented from boarding by the Singapore government. Luckily at Port Swettenham, a har- bor on the west coast of Malaysia, they were allowed to board, and the trip was uneventful. In Jedda they received a grand wel- come, not only from their co-religionists but also from the Saudi Arabian government. In line with the tradition which says that pilgrims "are the guests of the King and of Allah," the leaders of the Gambela pilgrims were even entertained by the Saudi authorities in the name of their king. But on the return trip, the Gambela was not allowed to enter Indonesian ports. It had to lie at anchor at Penang, where Dato Raos, the Malaysian Minister for Pilgrimage, vis- ited the pilgrims on board the vessel. By coincidence, Presi- dent Suharto paid an official visit to Kuala Lumpur during this time. Probably an appeal to Suharto by the Malaysian government had some effect, for the Gambela was eventually allowed to enter the harbor at Jakarta. But when the ship docked, on March 26, 1970, the returning pilgrims were met by sixty prosecutors. They had prepared forms which were to be signed by the pilgrims, forms requesting "forgiveness" from the Indonesian government. It was a formality in order that the government should not lose face.63 Sjafruddin Prawiranegara, who felt responsible for the Gambela pilgrims, welcomed them at the dock. After a short welcoming speech, he instructed the returning pilgrims to sign the forms which the prosecutors had prepared for them. He said there was no need to read the forms first, adding that the procedure was necessary "not because of legal needs, but because of Muslim brotherhood." By this he meant that the pilgrims had done nothing wrong "from the national as well as the international legal point of view."16 The Indo- nesian government, Sjafruddin pointed out, had condemned the unusual procedure of performing the haj, and because the gov- ernment was headed by President Suharto, who was a Muslim, the government request for signing the forms could and should be viewed from the co-religionist point of view. In recogni- tion of his authority, the instructions of Sjafruddin were obediently followed by the pilgrims. Even the few who refused to comply were allowed to return home. The Gambela affair attracted the attention of the Indone- sian press. Many editorials urged the government to discard its policy of monopolizing the pilgrimage. Some of them con- sidered that the government should confine itself to super- visory and controlling actions and that organizations like Husami, which had proven themselves competent, be allowed to assume their former responsibilities.17 The government was in an awkward position. In terms of its own regulations it should have taken action against those who had violated them. However, these people had found moral support from the Saudi Arabian and Malaysian governments as well as from many sectors of Indonesian society itself. In addition, taking all of the pilgrims to court would only in- crease attention given to the affair and aggravate existing social tensions. All the Gambela pilgrims seemed to be satisfied with their trip in spite of their difficulties. They all felt like mujahid, those who have fought along the path of Allah. Sja- fruddin and Husami felt that they gained credibility with the success of the Gambela trip, although it was said that they lost some Rp. 3 million on the venture. Certainly the moral victory belonged to them and the mujahid. 16H. A. Yasin, "712 Mujahid Gambela yang Menggemparkan" (Malang: U. B. Milan, 1971 [?]) . 17Some of the comments made by the Indonesian press included those in Indonesia Raya January 28, 1970, Suluh Mavhaen January 31, 1970, Nusantara January 27, 1970, Harian Kami January 31, 1970 and March 27, 1970, and Merdeka April 10, 1970. Also "Antara Prinsip Agama dan Poli- tik," Panji Masyarakat, IV, 51 (February 1970), pp. 3-4.64 One might ask why the government has remained adamant in retaining its monopoly. Much thought has been given to the question of the haj, especially by the Ministry of Religion, yet the government's reputation has not been improved. On the contrary, it has been condemned for its policy and man- agement . One of the reasons for this adamant attitude is probably that the government had been able to realize a profit. Pil- grims must pay fees above and beyond the actual costs of the pilgrimage. The extra funds are intended to subsidize various government sponsored Muslim activities such as the construc- tion of the Istiqlal mosque in Jakarta and the development of various educational institutions. In the latter case, dis^ crimination has not been unusual; political considerations are a decisive factor in deciding which institutions receive subsidies. Another reason has political overtones as well. The haj was always viewed with suspicion by the Dutch. This attitude justified sending Snouck Hurgronje to Mecca in the 1880s. His task had been to investigate the activities of pilgrims as well as find out what influences they were exposed to in the Holy Land. Mecca is still a city which attracts many Muslims from Indonesia, not only for the haj but also for education. Be- sides performing the haj rituals, Muslims also attend lec- tures . They associate with people from other countries as well as with Saudi Arabians. A few of them even stay behind when the pilgrims return home. They do not have the necessary permits but nonetheless have been able to travel in Arabia, some becoming syaikh, or Islamic teachers. Many of the syaikh in Mecca are descendants of Indonesians. The pilgrims are also exposed to new ideas, not only in the Holy Land, but also throughout the entire process of be- coming haji. As noted earlier, MPH council members train the pilgrims in haj rituals before they leave for Mecca, and dur- ing the Sukarno regime the pilgrims were given political in- doctrination. It would thus not be strange to expect other people to provide other kinds of training and indoctrination. The selection of MPH members has therefore been jealously guarded by the government. As far as Husami activities on the question of pilgrimage were concerned, it should be remem- bered that they were former members or sympathizers of Masjumi whose efforts to find recognition from the government for the party's rehabilitation were rejected. Being together for sev- eral weeks or months during the pilgrimage under their own trusted leadership might enhance their hope for the realiza- tion of their own ideals and would strengthen their mutual loyalty. Here again we find an aspect of Islam intertwined with politics.CHAPTER 5 MAJLIS ULAMA (COUNCIL OF ULAMA) One means for administering Islam in Indonesia has been through government efforts in organizing ulama. Beginning in the Sukarno period, Majlis Ulama (Councils of Ulama) have been established in various parts of the country as well as in Ja- karta. Indeed, ulama still have much influence in many re- gions; their advice is widely sought. A government program, especially if it is related to religion in any way, can only be successful if supported by the ulama. Cooperation with, and, if possible, support from them is necessary to realize government policies . A Council of Ulama was first established in West Java on July 12, 1958, when such a step appeared necessary for secur- ity reasons. At that time, the Darul Islam movement in the area was a continual threat to the government, which also had to deal with the PRRI-Permesta revolt in Sumatra and Sulawesi. The fact that the ex-officio head of the West Java council was the regional military commander clearly showed the motiva- tion for its establishment. The council originally served security needs, and security was the responsibility of the military commander. He ordered that similar councils be set up in the districts and subdistricts of the province, each under the leadership of the local military official. However, the council in West Java has also been active in areas not directly linked to security matters. This was espe- cially so after security had returned to the area. In Septem- ber 1967 it still discussed questions related to the 1965 Gestapu coup attempt, but in May the following year it turned its attention to da'wah (missionary work) by holding a seminar on how Islamic teachings could be spread to everyone. In this seminar lectures were given by nationally-known Muslims such as Mohammad Natsir. The seminar also sought to define what was meant by da'wah, and what its function was, as well as how to ensure its success. In addition it discussed effective means for training cadres. The next year, June 1969, the council paid attention to Islamic education and a conference was held for this purpose. It discussed ways and means to promote Islamic education in the area. Councils of ulama in the other provinces were set up much later, soon after the establishment of the Central Council of 6566 Ulama in October 1962, in accordance with instructions from the central government. According to the ministerial decree, the council was: ... to act as a contact body between the Muslim commun- ity, especially the ulama, and the government in efforts to realize and to give content to the Jakarta Charter as well as to execute reconstruction in the menal, spiri- tual and religious fields; to work out and solve all religious matters in society, especially in Muslim society; to act as a coordinating body for the development of Islam and the unity of Muslims.1 Motivation for the establishment of a Council of Ulama on a national basis can be found in the context of government control of all activities of importance within society at that time. Indonesia was then under the guidance of the "Great Leader of the Revolution," Sukarno, whose teachings were in- tended to penetrate all layers and sectors of the community. Indonesia was then also carrying out a confrontation policy (konfrontasi) with Malaysia, a Muslim country, so that support for this policy from Indonesian ulama was needed. Members of the committee of the central Majlis Ulama were mainly government officials and leading figures from various Islamic organizations, or, more precisely, from those organi- zations which supported Sukarno without reservation.2 The chairman was Kiyahi Fatah Jasin, Minister for Relations with Ulama, who was later succeeded by Deputy Minister Haji Marzuki Jatim; the secretary was Colonel Muchlas Rowi, head of the Islamic religious section of the army. The committee also in- cluded K. H. A. Wahab Hasbullah and K. H. Idham Chalid (Minis- ter Coordinator and Deputy Chairman of the Supreme People's Council) of Nahdlatul Ulama; 0. K. H. Abdul Aziz, Professor K. H. Faried Ma'ruf, and Mahmud Junus of the Ministry of Reli- gion; and Arudji Kartawinata (Minister Coordinator and Chair- man of Parliament) of PSII.3 The role of the Central Council of Ulama was, however, insignificant. It merely served to regiment support for the government from the ulama, whom it considered to be one of the ■•Ministerial Decree No. Kpts/003/V/MP AUL/62 dated June 13, 1962. The intent was similar to Article 4 of the constitution of the council, although the wording was somewhat different. According to Article 7 of the council's constitution, the council was to consist of representatives of Muslim organizations, ulama, Muslim leaders (zu’ama), and Muslim intellectuals. 3Antara October 1, 1962.67 most important groups in society. At the meeting of Indone- sian ulama in Jakarta on May 26-28, 1964, for example, the members decided to propose that the various ministers in- volved give a "scientific degree" to President Sukarno as a symbol of gratitude from the Muslims. They also expressed the opinion that the struggle to crush Malaysia through konfrontasi constituted a fardh 'ain, an obligation incumbent upon indivi- dual Muslims.4 That the central Majlis Ulama did not give any guidance at all to the regional ulama councils was deplored by A. K. Basuni, secretary of the West Java Majlis Ulama: "It should be very much regretted that the central Majlis Ulama, whether during the period [of office] of the Minister of Relations with Ulama, K. H. Fatah Jasin, or during the period [of of- fice] of the Deputy Minister for Relations with Ulama, K. H. Marzuki Jatim, almost never gives any guidance whatever to the Majlis Ulama in the regions."5 In general, it can be said that only after the decline of the Sukarno regime following the failure of the Communist coup in 1965 could increased activity be observed among the re- gional ulama, especially in Aceh, West Sumatra, West Java, and South Sulawesi--all strongly Islamic regions. In one way or another they gave advice to regional governments or military commanders on whatever problems they thought most merited attention. Directions from the government have been less sig- nificant . In West Sumatra the provincial ulama council has been headed since 1966 by Mansur Daud Datuk Palimo Kajo, former leader of Masjumi and one-time Indonesian ambassador to Iraq. The recognition by the regional government of his outstanding qualities as ulama only reflects the fact that Masjumi re- tains a great influence in the area, despite its having been banned and many of its leaders compelled to leave the province. Among other things, the West Sumatra Majlis Ulama has recom- mended that the provincial governor block the plans of the Baptist Church to build a hospital in Bukittinggi, arguing that the organization was motivated by proselytization rather 4Gema Islam, III, 52 (June 15, 1964), pp. 5, 10. 5Speech by A. K. Basuni to the Conference on Islamic Education organized by the West Java Majlis Ulama, Bandung, June 1969. Although his regrets were expressed in 1969, when the period of Guided Democracy had been succeeded by the New Order, they served as an indication of the discontent felt by some of the Muslims for the situation before 1966.68 than humanitarian concern. The effort was successful until 1975, when the hospital was finally built.6 The West Sumatra Majlis Ulama also demanded that the building of churches in the area should be regulated in such a way that no Muslim feelings would be hurt. It pointed out that the Christians built churches as provocations, e.g., in areas where there was no need for them. The council was par- ticularly referring to the Pasaman area, where transmigrants from Java had settled and where Christian missionaries were active. The demands of the ulama.council were echoed by those of the regional and central Dewan Da'wah Islam Indonesia (Indo- nesian Muslim Missionary Council), an organization chaired by Mohammad Natsir, the former chairman of Masjumi. The DDII's demands were the same as those of the Majlis Ulama, many of whose members in West Sumatra were also members of DDII. It should be noted that the members of the West Sumatran Majlis Ulama and DDII did more than just criticize the Baptists' activities. Through the Ibnu Sina Foundation they collected funds for building their own hospital in Bukittinggi. The effort was supported by all sectors of the population as well as by the local government.7 In Aceh, Teungku Daud Beureuh, the well-known rebel ulama, served as honorary chairman of the council in 1967, but he was removed from this position in 1969, probably be- cause he remained too independent in his relationship with the post-coup government (he had disassociated himself from the Sukarno regime as well) . However, in 1970, he was ad- viser to the ulama council of Pidi Regency, his home area. This role demonstrates his undiminished influence in Aceh. As was the case in West Java, the regencies in Aceh have also organized councils of ulama. But unlike the situation in West Java, the chairmen of the provincial and regency ulama councils in Aceh were all ulama. Aceh has indeed been known as the "porch of Mecca." Even its Regional Representative Council has occasionally de- manded social change directed toward realizing a more strictly Islamic society. For example, in 1962 the Representative Council decided that Islamic law should be applied in Aceh. This decision was rejected by the Supreme War Command (Pengua- 6The Baptist Church has demonstratively made efforts in Christian- izing people in West Sumatra. Panji Masyarakat, XVII, 183 (September 15, 1975), p. 20. 7"0perasi Keristen Baptis di Bukittinggi," Pandji Masyarakat, IV, 50 (January, 1970), p. 29.69 sa Perang Tertinggi) of Jakarta, which based its decision on the grounds that Islamic law in Indonesia, where the state was founded on Panca Sila, could not be applied automatically; Islamic law could only be applied if it was incorporated into a governmental act. The following year, the Aceh Regional Representative council stipulated certain conditions which were to be ob- served by society at large: all offices and shops should be closed during the time of Friday prayer, all entertainment and even activities such as film shows and meetings should be prohibited during the time of the maghvib (evening) prayer, and every person should observe the fasting month. The coun- cil also decided that any offense against these decisions would result in one month imprisonment or Rp. 1000 fine.8 The council in Aceh discussed various matters of impor- tance, including religious and social issues. Thus, for example, in November 1967 the council had a meeting on reli- gious affairs; it discussed the observance of various rituals, such as Jum’ah (Friday) prayer for women, and the number of raka'ah in tarawih prayer,9 social and political matters (such as zakat, baitul mal, challenges to Islam, the unity of Muslims, the realization of Islamic Syari'at in society), and the integration of religious and "general" education. It would be inappropriate to discuss these questions further here. They are mentioned in this context merely as examples of problems with which the ulama council was concerned. It should also be pointed out in this connection that the pro- vincial representative body and the Governor of Aceh jointly endorsed the decisions of the conference of ulama of November 1968. Unlike the position of the Council of Ulama in the other regions, where they made recommendations only, the ulama council in Aceh seems to have had a more or less decisive role .* 1 2 3 ° 9Gema Islam, I, 23 (January 1, 1963), p. 4; and II, 36/37 (August 1, 1963) . Although these stipulations have not been observed strictly, they certainly reflect the attitude and spirit of Aceh regarding Islam. 9Rakarah is one complete part of salat (prayer) ritual. Tarawih is night prayer in the month of Ramadhan. 10According to the decree of the Governor of Aceh No. 038/1968, the Ulama Council of Aceh has the following functions: 1. To act as an advisory and a consultative body for the regional government in religious and social affairs; 2. To act as a fatwa council of the regional government in reli- gious matters; 3. To unify the Muslim community.70 In South Sulawesi, the ulama have been organized through conferences with the military commander. A team of experts participates; they are mostly university people who have been assisting the commander in regional development. The provin- cial government realizes that development can only be success- ful if the ulama support, and participate in it. At the conference of ulama held in Ujung Pandang in September 1970, various questions dealing with education, economic develop- ment, and Islamic da'wah were discussed, each topic intro- duced by the heads of the local institutions of higher learn- ing--the rector of the local teacher training institute (IKIP Ujung Pandang), the rector of the local university (Universi- tas Hasanuddin), and the rector of the local Institute of Islamic Studies (IAIN Alauddin). Given the above examples, it should be clear that the role of the Majlis varies according to government needs and local conditions. There seems to be no nationwide uniformity. Another effort of the government to organize ulama was the establishment of the Pusat Da'wah Islam Indonesia (Center for Indonesian Islamic Da'wah Activities). From its inception on September 8, 1969, its committee has been headed by Lieu- tenant General Sudirman. It is a semiofficial organ in which leading Muslims from government circles, Muslim organizations, and scholarly circles are represented. It was founded as the result of a resolution made at a seminar on da'wah that was held in June 1969 at the Faculty of Theology of the Institute of Islamic Studies (IAIN) in Jakarta. Its purpose is to in- crease the number of activities relating to Islamic missionary work and to coordinate them by acting as consulting body and intermediary. According to K.H.M. Dachlan, the Minister of Religion at that time, the establishment of the new organiza- tion, as well as its membership, was approved of and warmly welcomed by the President. It was hoped, the Minister said, that this committee would constitute a manifestation of the unity of Muslims in Indonesia, a matter of concern to every Indonesian.11 11Speech by K.H.M. Dachlan at the founding ceremony on September 8, 1969. The Minister's official recognition of the organization was con- tained in a ministerial decree issued on September 4, 1969. At the invi- tation of the head of state, the members of the committee broke the fast together with the President on December 8, 1969. Afterwards, a meeting was head at Wisma Negara, an annex to the Presidential Palace, where guests of state are usually accommodated. At the meeting, the President stated that it was one of the duties of Pusat Da'wah Islam Indonesia to urge Muslims who were financially able to pay the zakat. He said that a weakness of the Indonesian Muslim com- munity lay in its limited financial resources; payment of zakat and71 It should be pointed out, however, that there already was a similar da'wah organization which had been set up indepen- dently of government initiatives. Mohammad Natsir, the former president of Masjumi who had been barred from participating in politics, did not wish to remain a mere spectator; he still wanted to participate in improving the welfare of his fellow Muslims. On May 9, 1967, with a few friends--all from the former Masjumi party--he established the Dewan Da'wah Islami- yah Indonesia with the goal of encouraging and improving Islamic da'wah within Indonesia. The founding of this body was welcomed in almost every region of Indonesia, and local representative bodies were soon established. Like the cen- tral executive committee in Jakarta, the regional bodies were overwhelmingly filled with former members of Masjumi or its sympathizers. Unofficially it soon became an organizational focus for former Masjumi activists. DDII established rela- tionships with international organizations, especially with the Rabithah Al-Alami al-Islamy (World Muslim League) of Mecca and the World Muslim Congress of Karachi. Natsir acted as vice-president of both. The establishment of the government-sponsored PDII cannot therefore be viewed separately from the activities of DDII, which could possibly evade government control. However, it is wrong to assume that these organizations are rivals. Mohammad Natsir, and also the late Prawoto Mangkusasmito (president of the Masjumi party after Natsir joined the rebels in Sumatra in 1958), were invited by the founders of PDII to sit on its consultative council, but they refused. Their disappointment with the government's attitude toward former members of Masjumi seemed to be the reason for their refusal. They had originally entertained the hope that they would be given freedom in political activities after Sukarno's fall. But both men were anxious that Pusat Da'wah Islam succeed. Nat- sir stated that the research which PDII planned to do would be very useful to all Islamic missionary organizations; he added that the new organization could serve as a "da'wah laboratory" in which all da'i (missionaries) would be able to improve their qualifications.12 The Dewan Da'wah Islamiyah still continues its activities without government support, but this does not mean that it is anti-government. It operates solely in the field of da'wah, additional "taxes" for making the haj could alleviate the problem. He added that from 1969 onwards government subsidies for the haj would be reserved for subsidizing Islamic activities. This sum amounted to Rp. 1,200 million annually. 12Speech by Mohammad Natsir on the occasion of the founding of Pusat Da'wah Islam Indonesia in Jakarta, September 8, 1969.72 in the broadest sense of the term; it organizes educational activities and trains and upgrades cadres. When Pusat Da'wah Islam was founded, the DDII expressed its willingness to co- operate. The existence of two central da’wah organizations, one sponsored by the government, the other quite independent and run by persons who on the whole have not been popular with those in political power, has therefore been brought about by political rather than religious conditions. In early October 1970, Pusat Da'wah Islam organized a national conference of ulama, during which various topics, including education, moral decadence, participation of ulama in the country's development, and factors related to the spread of Islam were discussed. A plan for the establishment of Lembaga Fatwa (Fatwa Institute) was considered; in fact, it became a topic of heated debate at the conference. This would be an institute consisting of selected Islamic scholars empowered to issue fatwa--decisions of a religious character. The government would rely on this institute whenever there a need for a fatwa, which would be binding on the society. With the support of the government, the implementation of the fatwa would be easy. However, there is a danger in- volved in this plan, i.e., the possibility that such an insti- tute would merely become a tool of the government. According to the Minister of Religion at that time, K. H.M. Dachlan, the concept of a Lembaga Fatwa reflected the government's views on the role of ulama. The government wanted to find ways of establishing better cooperation with the ulama, "for the government likes to consider ulama as its partners and as its most trusted friends in the development of the state and the nation."13 The Minister added that it was not the intention of the government to dictate to the ulama. Lieutenant-General Alamsjah, who was at that time State Secretary and who was also active as vice-chairman of the consultative council of Pusat Da'wah Islam, stated at the conference that ulama should understand government programs and should not always take the role of opposition (to the government), but that they should work to make government programs successful "for the sake of the Muslim community." The one-time head of the personal staff of the President urged the ulama to abandon a political approach in their thinking, for, he said, this would merely result in disunity among the Muslims .1 ** '[3Panji Masyarakat, IV, 66 (October 1970), p. 7; also Islam, Alim Ulama dan Penibangunan (Jakarta: Pusat Da'wah Islam Indonesia, 1971), p. 24. ',‘*Panji Masyarakat, IV, 66 (October 1970), p. 7; also Islams Alim73 The idea for establishing the Fatwa Institute did indeed originate with the government. But this idea did not meet with complete approval at the conference, and it was therefore abandoned, or at least tabled. Some of those present ex- pressed the opinion that the establishment of such an insti- tute was premature. Hamka, a well-known and influential ulama in Jakarta, said that it could easily be misused by people in power. He reminded the conference of an incident during the Dutch period, when several ulama issued a fatwa favoring a prayer of praise for the Queen of the Netherlands; during the Japanese occupation similar misuses of fatwa by certain ulama were also reported. Instead of the Fatwa In- stitute, Hamka was in favor of a mufti (an official who issues fatwa), or of having several mufti in Indonesia. This idea was not shared by many of the ulama present. They said that a mufti, like the Fatwa Institute, could also misuse his power. The conference finally decided that all opinions about this institute should be noted and presented to Pusat Da'wah Islam Indonesia so that a more serious and thorough study could be made. Indeed, on the particular question of Lembaga Fatwa, the conference did not achieve what the government wished it to. Decisions of a positive character were made on other matters, but on the whole the conference served more as a forum in which ulama were given the opportunity to exchange views which had no direct bearing on the government program. At the very least, many of them were able to meet together after losing contact with each other for several years, particularly since 1965 . In 1975 renewed efforts were made to establish a new- style Majlis Ulama. The efforts originated from the govern- ment which began to realize that development should also in- volve man's spiritual aspect, and therefore that participation of ulama in the development was needed. During the first few months of 1975 the ulama councils for all the provinces were established. The central Majlis Ulama was founded in Jakarta at a congress of representatives of the provincial councils on July 21-28, 1975. The new Majlis Ulama, which is headed by Hamka, has the functions to: Ulama dan Perribangunan, p. 35. Alamsjah also stated that because of the ulama's political approach the government had once prohibited an all- Indonesia Islamic conference that had been planned. This conference was to be organized by Muslim leaders themselves, where, it was hoped, Mus- lim unity would be realized.74 —Issue fatwa and advice on matters of religion and society to the government and the people within the framework of amar ma'vuf nahi munkar (enjoining the right, shunning the wrong). —Strengthen Muslim brotherhood and maintain peaceful rela- tionships with other religious communities. —Represent the Muslim community in any meeting with other religious communities. —Act as a liaison between ulama and government officials and interpret government development policies in such a way that they might be easily understood by the common people.15 It was also stressed at the congress that the Majlis Ulama should not participate in politics, nor should it duplicate the activities of existing Muslim organizations. Thus it should not build and maintain mosques and schools, and it should not collect zakat. The actual development and role of the new Majlis Ulama remain to be seen. 15Article 4 of Pedoman Pokok (Principal Guidelines) of Majlis Ulama. Keputusan Musyawarah Nasional Ke 1 Majelis Ulama Seluruh Indonesia (Ja- karta: Panitya Musyawarah Nasional Ke 1 Majelis Ulama Seluruh Indonesia, 1975), p. 5.CHAPTER 6 CONCLUSION I have reviewed the administration of Islam in Indonesia as reflected in the work of the Ministry of Religion. Four fields have been covered in detail--education, law and the courts, the haj , and the organization of ulama in the Majlis Ulama. The Ministry of Religion in Indonesia has an enormous task to fulfill. In a country with a population of some 130 million, of which about 90 percent are Muslim, its job has not been easy. Added to this is the fact that the country is still experiencing setbacks in development, setbacks which date from the time of the revolution and the failure of past Indonesian governments to fulfill people's needs for welfare and prosperity. In the field of education, pesantren and madrasah are still necessary not only to meet the emotional and spiritual needs of the children but also to help educate part of the school-age population which cannot be absorbed by ordinary schools. From this point of view, institutions like the ma- drasah and the pesantren are complementary to the "general" schools. Once this situation is acknowledged, the question is not whether madrasah and pesantren are needed, but rather how they can be improved. This involves curriculum develop- ment as well as upgrading and training teachers in religious and non-religious subjects. In the long run, the question which faces Indonesia in education is how to devise an educa- tional system in which the secular as well as the spiritual needs of children can be filled. However, there still exists a polarizing element in religious education in Indonesia. Some Indonesian leaders are in favor of including religious education in existing schools where the various religious communities receive religious instruction. But others con- sider religious education unnecessary. They believe that re- ligion is an individual or family matter and that it is the students' and parents' responsibility to obtain religious in- struction on their own. What the state should supply, they believe, is moral education, with the same courses for all pupils and students irrespective of their religion. There are disagreements between lawyers who have had a secular training and those who are Islamic-oriented with 7576 regard to Islamic religious law. Some of the latter still cling to the traditional fiqh (jurisprudence) and ignore re- cent ideas on Islamic law which have developed in response to present-day needs. Others among the Islamic-oriented group, while partially aware of such developments, have no influence in the bureaucracy, particularly within the Ministry of Reli- gion itself. Their careers have been in other fields, espe- cially politics, and they have given only slight attention to Islamic law and bureaucracy. Indeed, it seems almost as if they have dissociated themselves from the Islamic judicial bureaucracy in spite of their recognition of the importance of law in Islam. The long-term problem related to this issue concerns the training Indonesian lawyers receive. The nature of legal education depends on the philosophies of the country's lead- ers, in government as well as in society, on the question of law. Should it be based on adat law, which means a variety of laws for the individual regions, or should a national law be created? What does a "national" law imply? Does it mean abandoning any consideration of the question of religion, which, according to Islamic ideology, should also regulate mu'amalat problems, the relationship between man and man? Would this be acceptable to the Muslims in Indonesia? And if the influence of religion, that is of Islam, is recognized, to what extent should it govern the life of the individual and society? The crucial issue is the position of Islam within state and society. The problem is political, not only religious. Indeed, as noted earlier, political questions originally played an important role in the decision of the Indonesian government to monopolize the organization of the pilgrimage. Husami, the Muslim traders' association which attempted to convince the government of its reliability in managing the pilgrimage, exposed the political nature of the problem when it applied for approval to resume operating. It denounced the government's position, which it considered against the people's interests and discriminatory, especially as compared with the facilities non-Muslims enjoyed in their pilgrimages. All of these arguments are political. The establishment of councils of ulama in various regions, and for that matter the establishment of the new central Ulama Council in 1975, are certainly actions having a political character. It is hoped that the various councils will be able to aid government development programs. Simply hav- ing the ulama councils may be beneficial to the overall devel- opment of society, especially when one thinks of the important position of the ulama in the rural areas of Indonesia. Their role depends particularly on how powerful they are and on the77 attitude of the government, as well as society, toward them. In the past the councils have sometimes acted as spokesmen for the government, justifying its policies, as was the case with the central Majlis Ulama during the Sukarno regime; at other times their opinions were ignored because their views on the position of religion in state and society differed from those of the government. The decision of the Aceh represen- tative council on the application of Syari'at, which was re- jected by the central government, reflects these opposing views. Some of the difficulties encountered in the administra- tion of Islam originate from within the Ministry of Religion itself. In the past it became a battlefield for the aspira- tions of traditionalists and modernists. Attention was deflected from the real problems that needed to be solved. Moreover, the staff of the Ministry was on the whole poorly trained, since it had initially been recruited from pesantren and madrasah, where administrative ability was not emphasized. Later, the Ministry was able to recruit people with more ad- vanced training, including graduates from its own tertiary training institutions such as the Institut Agama Islam Negeri. However, the quality of these institutions themselves was, at least until a few years ago, steadily declining. This situa- tion was also apparent in the "general" schools, especially toward the end of the 1950s and during most of the 1960s, and has not yet been overcome completely. All of these factors resulted in a poorly organized and poorly run Ministry. With low pay for employees and a lack of funds for operational expenses, it was and still is a hard task for a Minister of Religion to meet the demands of the Muslim community. The entanglement of religious and political issues inevitably increases its difficulties. Yet another problem has arisen in the development of the administration of Islam in Indonesia. As was stated at the beginning of this paper, the Ministry of Religion was estab- lished by the government to meet the wishes of the Islamic- oriented people. At first, the Ministry cooperated closely with existing Islamic organizations, and it was particularly sensitive to the wishes of Muslims. In the last few years, however, a gap has developed between the Ministry and the Islamic people. For example, many of the latter do not under- stand, or cannot agree with the policy of the government in its monopolistic handling of the haj; in its handling of reli- gious education, in which the religious content of the courses has been cut considerably; in its proposal on marriage regula- tions, in which Islamic teaching was nearly discarded; and in its reaction to the da'wah activities of various ulama, where- by some of the ulama have been hampered in their work.78 The Islamic people also feel discriminated against as a result of what they consider to be the greater freedom en- joyed by non-Muslim communities in the propagation of their teachings. The Islamic people have hoped that the Ministry, even if unable to protect their own interests, would at least remain neutral in its attitude towards all religious communi- ties . This gap can only be filled if mutual trust and under- standing can be recreated between the government and the Islamic-oriented people. The government's general policy toward Islam will either promote or hamper the successful operation of the Ministry of Religion. Indeed, how Islam is administered in Indonesia, and for that matter in any Muslim country, depends very much on the overall relationship be- tween the government and the Islamic people.GLOSSARY abangan adab adat akhlak, budi pekerti aliyah amar ma'ruf nahi munkar baitul mal calon haji da'i da'wah executoir verklaard faraidh fardh 'ain fatwa fiqh hadhanah Hadits haj haji (also hadji) hibah ibtidaiyah less devout Muslims humanities tradition(al) codes of behavior senior-level tsanawiyah enjoining the right, shunning the wrong community funds "candidate pilgrim"--a person who registers himself with government agencies in order to be able to go on the pilgrimage according to government regulations propagandist, missionary missionary or propaganda activities directed at Muslims and non-Muslims affirmation by a civil court of a judgment made by a religious court so that it can be executed (Islamic) law of inheritance an obligation incumbent upon indivi- dual Muslims decision of religious character, given by a recognized ulcana jurisprudence custody and support of children Traditions; statements by or about the Prophet Muhammad pilgrimage to Mecca title usually used before one's name after one has performed the haj gift elementary-level madrasah 7980 1iddah ijtihad iman Jura'ah (also Jum'at) kebatinan kecamatan kepercayaan kiyahi (also kiyayi, kiai) konfrontasi langgar madrasah madzhab (also mazhab) maghrib Majlis Ulama (also Majelis Ulama) mu'allimat mu'allimin mu'amalat muballigh mufakat mufti mujahid Muqaddimah pajak-pajak tidak resmi Panca Sila waiting period for a widow following the death of her husband during which she is not allowed to marry (four months and ten days) the right of individual interpreta- tion; exerting oneself to form an opinion in a case or as to the ryle of law devotion (faith) Friday spiritual matters subdistrict belief (Islamic) religious teacher confrontation prayer house smaller than a mosque, not usually used for Friday prayers (Islamic) religious school school of thought sunset, evening Council of Ulama lit. lady teachers; here referring to teacher training school for girls lit. teachers; here referring to teacher training school for boys relationship between two people (Islamic) religious propagandist consensus an official having authority to issue fatwa those who fight along the path of Allah Preamble "unofficial taxes" Five Pillars (referring to the five ideological principles of the Indonesian state) lit. bookmaker; publisher or writer of a book pembuat buku81 Pembukaan pengadilan swapraja pengakuan penghulu pesantren priesterraad pondok raka'ah riba ruju' rukun salat santri saum Syafi'i madzhab syaikh Syari'at taqlid tarawih tarbiyah tauhid tempat pengajian tsanawiyah (also wustha) Ujian Guru Agama Preamble sultanate court recognition in Java: marriage official in Minangkabau: adat (traditional) chief on east coast of Sumatra: village head Islamic religious education center priestly court small house where students in tradi- tional pesantren spend the night and where they are able to cook their own meals one complete part of ritual in salat (Islamic prayer) usury reconciliation in marriage pillar, principle prayer devout Muslims fasting madzhab founded by Syafi'i (767-820) old man, leader. In the context of haj, syaikh are Arab pilgrims' guides in Mecca; they are responsi- ble for the board, lodging, and transportation of pilgrims during their stay in the Holy Land. Islamic law adopting the already-established fatwa and practices as final and as having an authoritative character nightly prayer during the month of Ramadhan education the oneness of God place for religious instruction secondary-level madrasah examination for religious teachers82 ulama umum ushuluddin volksscholen wali waqf (also waqaf, wakaf) zakat zakat fitrah zu'ama Islamic scholar general (Islamic) theology people's (primary) schools guardian property donated for religious or community use religious tax religious tax paid at the end of the Ramadhan fast Muslim leaders different from ulama