26 January 2010
RI wins US praise for religious tolerance
Indonesia’s religious tolerance has won
praise from the US government and civil society groups despite
concerns that the country may tilt toward more radical Islamic
ideas, with several regions enacting sharia-based bylaws and
hardliners reportedly trying to stifle pluralism.
Indonesia and the US kicked off a three-day interfaith
dialogue Monday in Jakarta to deepen bilateral cooperation
and cultural relations.
The 20-member US delegation is led by Pradeep
Ramamurthy, senior director for global engagement of the White
House National Security Council.
The Indonesian delegation comprises 30 people
from religious organizations, including Nahdlatul Ulama and
Muhammadiyah, and is headed by Andri Hadi, the Foreign Ministry’s
director general for information and public diplomacy.
A member of the US delegation, William F. Vendley,
who is the secretary-general of Religions for Peace, said
the American perception of Indonesia was positive, with people
increasingly aware Indonesia was the country with the largest
Muslim population in the world.
“The US government is enormously impressed
with both the Indonesian government’s and the people’s
commitment to pluralism. Although the majority of the population
is Muslim, they welcome diversity... They see Indonesia as
a model for a religiously diverse society functioning in a
harmonious and peaceful fashion.”
Vendley said the American community did not see
the enactment of sharia-based bylaws and hardliners’
recent moves to ban Muslim pluralist activities as a looming
threat to diverse religious life as “there is deep confidence
that there is a profound [national] commitment to Pancasila”,
the country’s ideology that defends freedom of religion.
“Educated Americans are alert to the shape
of Islam globally actually look to Indonesia as a bridging
country... well-positioned to understand pluralism, which
is very characteristic of the US, and at the same time a country
that is uniquely positioned to function as a faithful interlocutor
and partner with other countries that have less pluralism,”
he said.
Under the regional autonomy system, several local
administrations in Indonesia have enacted sharia-based bylaws
that require Muslim women to wear a hijab or put them under
restrictions at night in relation to outdoor activities. Moderates
have also been alarmed by hardliner groups attempting to impose
harsh restrictions on the way women may dress and perform
on television broadcast shows, especially under the pornography
law, as well as recent attacks on minority places of worship.
“We haven’t focused so much on these
issues and what we want to emphasize is that Indonesia is
diverse and embraces diversity...” said Darcy Zotter,
deputy political counselor of the US Embassy in Jakarta.
Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa said the idea
of the interfaith dialogue was floated by then foreign minister
Hassan Wirajuda during a visit to the US to meet US Secretary
of State Hillary R. Clinton last June.
“Today, we convene to... implement the
commitment to strengthen the voice of moderation and foster
dialogue for cooperation as one way to address today’s
critical challenge,” Marty said.
The interfaith dialogue is part of US-Indonesia
cooperation covering a range of areas from education
to counter terrorism to sanitation that have been established
in the context of a comprehensive bilateral partnership.
Source
: the Jakarta Post
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