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  1. #1
    Thailand Expat misskit's Avatar
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    Saudi Arabia Quietly Spreads its Brand of Puritanical Islam in Indonesia

    JAKARTA —
    When Ulil Abshar-Abdalla was a teenager in Pati, Central Java, he placed first in an Arabic class held at his local madrasa. The prize was six months of tuition at the Institute for the Study of Islam and Arabic (LIPIA), a Jakarta university founded and funded by the Saudi Arabian government. At the end of six months, LIPIA offered him another six. He stayed on.

    After that, it offered him four more years of free tuition to obtain a bachelor’s degree in Islamic law, or shariah. He accepted that too. In 1993, after five years at LIPIA, he was offered a scholarship to continue his studies in Riyadh. He finally said no.

    “Once you accept that, you’re on their payroll for life,” Abshar-Abdalla told VOA. “But they made it awfully easy to stick around. I’m from a poor family, and it was quite tempting… I think they managed to pull a few good minds from my generation that way.”

    Since 1980, Saudi Arabia has been using education to quietly spread Salafism, its brand of puritanical Islam, in Indonesia, the world's most populous Muslim nation. The two main arms of this effort are LIPIA and scholarships for higher education in Saudi Arabia.

    Salafism is an ultra-conservative reform movement that advocates a return to Koranic times. LIPIA teaches Wahhabi Madhab, a strain of Salafi Islam expounded by the medieval Sunni theologian Ibn Taimiyah.

    “Saudi alumni” are now visible in many arenas of Indonesian public life, holding positions in Muhammadiyah, the Prosperous Justice Party, and the Cabinet. Some have also become preachers and religious teachers, spreading Salafism across the archipelago.

    The effects of Saudi Arabia’s massive soft power exercise on the Indonesian citizenry are just starting to become clear.

    'The most important post in Jakarta'

    The nexus of Saudi educational diplomacy is the religious attaché, a special office affiliated with its embassy in Jakarta. The office grants scholarships for students to study in Saudi Arabia, although the current attaché, Saad Namase, refused to confirm how many students were involved.

    “We don’t really work with the Indonesian government,” said Namase. “We just try to strengthen cultural ties between our two countries by, for example, holding Quranic recitation competitions.” On the topic of scholarships, he said many countries, including the Netherlands and the U.S. offer scholarships to Indonesian students and the Saudi program was just one among many.

    “The Saudi religious attaché is the most important post in Jakarta,” said Abshar-Abdalla, who now runs the Liberal Islam Network. “It is the portal for all Saudi efforts to influence Indonesian culture.”

    The attaché’s office also pays the salary of prominent Salafi preachers and supplies Arabic teachers to boarding schools across Indonesia, according to Din Wahid, an expert on Indonesia Salafism at the Syarif Hidayatullah State Islamic University in Jakarta.

    Beyond the attaché’s office, several Saudi Arabian universities directly offer scholarships to Indonesian students.

    One reason the Indonesian government is unlikely to present roadblocks to Saudi cultural expansion is its precarious annual Hajj quota, according to Dadi Darmadi, a UIN researcher who focuses on the annual pilgrimage to Mecca.

    “We were just granted 10,000 extra Hajj permits this year, which is still a drop in the bucket considering Indonesia’s population of 203 million Muslims,” said Darmadi, “I think Indonesia would hesitate to antagonize Saudi Arabia and prompt cuts to that hard-won quota.”

    Divergent paths

    Hidayat Nur Wahid, a member of Indonesia’s House of Representatives and a leader of the right-wing Prosperous Justice Party (PKS), is one of the most prominent national politicians who have passed through Saudi universities. He studied, through a series of scholarships, for an undergraduate, master’s and doctorate degree in theology and history of Islamic thought at the Islamic University of Medina.

    “The majority of Islamic texts are in Arabic, which is why I wanted to study in Saudi Arabia,” Nur Wahid told VOA. “Plus, the spirit of the Prophet Muhammad animates Medina. I enjoyed my years there.”

    Nur Wahid said he was not exposed to radicalism or "anti-social" teachings in Medina. “We just learned how to be good Muslims. And it’s a misconception that everyone who studies in Saudi Arabia becomes a preacher or religious teacher. Many graduates become officials or politicians like me.”

    “Since it is the place where Islam originated, many students think that Saudi Arabia represents authentic Islam,” researcher Din Wahid.

    Saudi theology had the opposite effect on Abshar-Abdalla, who gradually grew disenchanted with the Salafi movement during his five years at LIPIA.

    “Although I had some short-lived enthusiasm for that simplistic theology, I found it to be puritanical at its core,” said Abshar-Abdalla. Instead, he started to read various other Islamic texts on his own, including Sufi and Shia ones, and eventually founded the Liberal Islam Network (JIL) in 2001.

    Ironically, he himself was once recruited for the student movement that would develop into PKS. “I was invited for a rafting trip in Bogor one weekend at university, and I realized they were trying to get me to join Tarbiyah, the embryo of the current PKS party,” said Abshar-Abdalla. “I sort of ran in the opposite direction.”

    Extremist connection

    Although Saudi-educated preachers in Indonesia might be causing a subtle rightward shift in national ideology, a more immediate concern is whether Salafi teachings encourage terrorism or extremism.

    “By and large, I think not, because official Salafism is quietist, or apolitical, in order to preserve the authority of Saudi royalty in its homeland,” said Wahid. “That being said, when this ideology migrates back to Southeast Asia, all bets are off.”

    One prominent example of non-quietist, or jihadist, ideology is the Salafi-influenced Ngruki pesantren in Solo, Central Java, which has incubated a number of known Indonesian terrorists.

    And Zaitun Rasmin, a graduate of Medina Islamic University, was one of the chief organizers of the hardline demonstrations against the governor of Jakarta in late 2016. “He’s an example of an Indonesian Salafist who is unconcerned with being ‘apolitical,’” said Wahid.

    Wahid’s point is that, for all the resources Saudi Arabia is directing towards Indonesian students, it remains to be seen how exactly Salafi ideology evolves in its new Southeast Asian context. “There are three ‘flavors’ of Salafi ideology: quietist, political, and jihadist. We don’t know what exactly it looks like in Indonesia. All we know is that it’s here, and it’s growing.”

    Saudi Arabia Quietly Spreads its Brand of Puritanical Islam in Indonesia

  2. #2
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    American protect Saudi spread Wahabism with the Quincy treaty, they just extended it for another 60 years or so, and continue keep it very secret.

    Saudi go to holidays in Indonesia, buy a poor girl, marry her, abuse her, make her pregnant, divorce her before they return to their sacred homeland.
    Many Indo women protest in front of Saudi Embassy in Jakarta to adress the problem but nothing is done to hear and help them get in touch with the Fathers or to stop this sex holiday abuse...

    The World is very much fed up of behavior of American and Saudi Governments...
    Monday,Tuesday, then it goes WTF !

  3. #3
    Thailand Expat
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    Thanks for the article, OP.

    And there are Wahhabi schools in the East Coast of the US.

  4. #4
    I am in Jail
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    Quote Originally Posted by forreachingme View Post

    The World is very much fed up of behavior of American and Saudi Governments...
    Indeed!...

    And that's not even mentioning the relentless and systematic poisoning of the planet with petro-industry.

  5. #5
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    They have reportedly spent over 100 billion dollars exporting their filthy beliefs to other counties building mosques and Schools and filling them with hate preachers

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    Thailand Expat VocalNeal's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Thai3
    They have reportedly spent over 100 billion dollars exporting their filthy beliefs to other counties...
    Oh The Mormons?

  7. #7
    Thailand Expat Jesus Jones's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by forreachingme View Post
    American protect Saudi spread Wahabism with the Quincy treaty, they just extended it for another 60 years or so, and continue keep it very secret.

    Saudi go to holidays in Indonesia, buy a poor girl, marry her, abuse her, make her pregnant, divorce her before they return to their sacred homeland.
    Many Indo women protest in front of Saudi Embassy in Jakarta to adress the problem but nothing is done to hear and help them get in touch with the Fathers or to stop this sex holiday abuse...

    The World is very much fed up of behavior of American and Saudi Governments...
    And the queen of womens rights, Hillary Clinton happily accepts gifts and donations from them!

    Fank Fuk she didn't get in!

  8. #8
    Thailand Expat tomcat's Avatar
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    Some Saudi women have managed to escape their men, their culture and their country:
    The Saudi women who are afraid to go home - CNN.com

  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by Thai3 View Post
    They have reportedly spent over 100 billion dollars exporting their filthy beliefs to other counties building mosques and Schools and filling them with hate preachers
    They spend widely on Islamic stuff in other countries, it is true. That massive investment often comes with strings, such as Sharjah going dry in the late Eighties in return for a beautiful mosque and gold souk.

    Sharjah is now a boring backwater dormitory with low rents and low economic prospects. Could have been different if they had followed Dubai's path next door.

    As to hate preachers, plenty of those are "Christian".

    Kill someone and your God will love you, not my God.

  10. #10
    god
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    Quote Originally Posted by BKKBanger View Post
    As to hate preachers, plenty of those are "Christian".
    Whereabouts, other than USA, which has a few?

    Anyone trying that on in UK would quickly get arrested.

  11. #11
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    Saudis are bastards from the stone them age


  12. #12
    Thailand Expat
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    The Quincy pact makes US protector of Saudis to spread the Wahabism.

    Let's see how Trump will deal with this Quincy pact that was re agreed i guess in 2006 for the next 60 years, second term.

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