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INDONESIA: The War On Christianity [from our friends in the religion of peace]
StrategyPage.com ^ | June 4, 2007

Posted on 06/04/2007 5:08:56 AM PDT by 68skylark

In West Java, Islamic terrorists have forcibly closed another Christian church. Typically, a mob of Islamic militants will invade a church, during services, and desecrate the place, drive the worshipers out, and attack any clergy, all the time shouting Islamic slogans. When the police investigate, none of the known Islamic militant groups will take credit for the attack. In the last three years, at least 30 Christian churches have been forced to close in West Java.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: ac; islam; islamicviolence; muslims; muslimviolence; persecution; rop
I'm sure it's just a tiny minority of Muslims who would support this kind of thing.
1 posted on 06/04/2007 5:08:58 AM PDT by 68skylark
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To: 68skylark
We have a new ambassador to Indonesia who wrote a glowing report on Indonesia's progress and would like us to up our contribution of AID to that country ~ Im not so sure he is up to the challenge.

Challenges Ahead For Cameron Hume

2 posted on 06/04/2007 5:13:32 AM PDT by expatguy (http://laotze.blogspot.com/)
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To: 68skylark

http://www.libforall.org/about-us-patron.html

His Excellency Kyai Haji Abdurrahman Wahid
Serves as LibForAll Foundation’s
Patron and Senior Advisor

Popularly known as Gus Dur, H.E. Kyai Haji Abdurrahman Wahid was Indonesia’s first democratically-elected president and long-time head of the Nahdlatul Ulama, the world’s largest Muslim organization, with nearly 40 million members. He was also the recipient of the 2003 Friends of the United Nations Global Tolerance Award.

For over thirty years, Gus Dur has used his position to advocate religious tolerance, pluralism and democracy. On many occasions, he has sent members of his Muslim organization to defend Christian churches and congregations—with their lives, if necessary—from attack by radical Islamists.

These photographs show a crowd of over 10,000 Indonesian Christians praying for this powerful Muslim leader, who has dedicated his life to defending the right of everyone to worship God in his or her own way.
Click here to watch a video clip of this event. (Flash video for broadband, 4.7 Mb.)

In addressing Muslim audiences, Gus Dur invariably reminds his listeners of their sacred duty to respect others’ beliefs, and to avoid any form of discrimination or intolerance towards those who worship differently
from themselves.

LibForAll founder, Chairman & CEO Holland Taylor and co-founder/board member Kyai Haji Abdurrahman Wahid roaring with laughter, as they share a light moment in Wahid’s office. Together, they help define LibForAll’s strategy.
Click here to read an interview with Kyai Haji Abdurrahman Wahid.

Defeating Islamist Extremism
http://www.libforall.org/news-BG.html#But_there_is_no_doubting_Wahids_commitment_to_interfaith_harmony._He_tells_Indonesian_Muslims_that_

By Jeff Jacoby | January 22, 2006

‘’I HAVE been called ‘Chrislam’ because I am so close to Christians,” Abdurrahman Wahid is saying. ‘’When I was criticized by a certain Muslim preacher for not being harsh enough against the ‘kaffir’ [infidels] — for being too close to Jews and Christians — I told him to read the Koran again. Because when the Koran speaks of ‘infidels,’ it means idolaters,” not monotheists.

Wahid, the former president of Indonesia, is speaking to me by phone from his office in Jakarta. With him is C. Holland Taylor, an American entrepreneur who fell in love with Indonesian culture en route to making a fortune in the telecom industry. After the 9/11 terrorist attacks, Taylor created the LibForAll Foundation, a nonprofit organization dedicated to fighting Islamist extremism by promoting a culture of liberty and tolerance in the Muslim world; Wahid is the foundation’s patron and senior adviser.
With 200 million residents, Indonesia is the world’s largest Muslim nation, and Wahid — popularly known as Gus Dur — was not only its first democratically elected president but the longtime chairman of its largest Muslim organization, the 35 million-member Nahdlatul Ulama. A revered religious scholar who studied in Cairo and Baghdad, Wahid is a longtime champion of a moderate, progressive, and nonpolitical Islam. As a result, he has frequently clashed with militant fundamentalists whose growing influence, fueled by Arab/Wahhabi oil money, is undermining Indonesia’s traditional religious pluralism.

Last year, Wahid spearheaded the opposition to a series of 11 reactionary fatwas, or religious decrees, issued by a high-ranking council of Indonesian Muslim clerics. The fatwas condemned any Islamic teaching based on liberalism and secularism, banned interfaith prayers not led by a Muslim, and even prohibited the answering of ‘’amen” to a non-Muslim prayer. Wahid and LibForAll promptly organized a group of religious leaders into an ‘’Alliance Toward a Civil Society,” which denounced the fatwas as unworthy of decent Muslims and improper under Indonesia’s constitution.
‘’Gus Dur went on TV and radio to insist that the fatwas had no legitimacy and called on Muslims to ignore them,” Taylor says. ‘’Because of his genuine scholarship, his criticism carried great weight. This is a model of how to defeat radical Islam worldwide.”

Wahid and Taylor are convinced that the impact of Islamist fanaticism can best be blunted by promoting leading Muslims who endorse moderation, pluralism, and democracy. One member of the LibForAll board is rock star Ahmad Dhani of the band Dewa. Some of Dhani’s hits have been aimed at undercutting Islamic militants. For example, one album is called ‘’Laskar Cinta” (’’Warriors of Love”) — a play on the name of a terrorist group, Laskar Jihad (’’Warriors of Jihad”). By harnessing his music and popular following to the cause of peace and interfaith tolerance, Dhani aims to inoculate young Indonesian Muslims against the extremism and violence of the Islamists.

While all of LibForAll’s work to date has been in Indonesia, Wahid and Taylor hope to begin operating in other Muslim nations soon. On the drawing board now: a project to translate ‘’Laskar Cinta” into Arabic and then arrange for an Egyptian pop star to perform and record it at a concert in Cairo. Wahid intends to meet with Egyptian clerics and opinion leaders, to press his view that Islam requires openness toward other religions and that Islamist terrorists and their supporters must be resisted and discredited.

Taylor argues that because of Indonesia’s long tradition of pluralism, and because of Wahid’s great following, Indonesia is the ideal base from which to launch an intellectual and cultural assault against the jihadists’ ideology. The ‘’essence” of Islam, he and Wahid maintain, is summed up in the words of the Koran (Sura 109:6): ‘’For you, your religion; for me, my religion.” But whether such a message will resonate in the Arab world remains to be seen. After all, jihadists quote the Koran too, and the verses they cite are as intolerant and supremacist as Wahid’s is pacific and humane.

But there is no doubting Wahid’s commitment to interfaith harmony. He tells Indonesian Muslims that they can learn from Christianity and Christian life, and has dispatched armed members of Nahdlatul Ulama to protect Christian churches from Islamist violence. Not long ago, one of Wahid’s Muslim adherents was killed when he discovered a bomb in a church and used his body to shield the Christian worshipers from its blast. That stunning act of selflessness is a powerful reminder that Muslims no less than non-Muslims have a great deal riding on the defeat of the Islamofascists, and that we will not win the war against radical Islam without Muslim allies like Wahid.
Jeff Jacoby’s e-mail address is jacoby@globe.com.


3 posted on 06/04/2007 5:17:41 AM PDT by Valin (History takes time. It is not an instant thing.)
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To: 68skylark

“I’m sure it’s just a tiny minority of Muslims who would support this kind of thing.”

I think I’ll puke if I hear one more politician or news jerkie state that again.


4 posted on 06/04/2007 6:23:53 AM PDT by milford421 (U.N. OUT OF U.S.)
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