Lawrence Pintak

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The Release Valve of Muslim Democracy: Southeast Asia’s Emerging Model

 

Global Dialogue Journal, Vol. 5, No. 3-4, Summer/Autumn 2004

 

Lawrence Pintak

University of Michigan

Even as militant Islamists from Europe to the Philippines command headlines and the Bush administration feeds extremist sentiment with its effort to reinvent the “Greater Middle East” in America’s image, proponents of Southeast Asia’s pragmatic blend of religion and politics are quietly but effectively developing a template for democratic governance infused with Muslim values.

The landslide victory in March by Malaysia’s new prime minister, Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, and the free-wheeling campaign for Indonesia’s first direct presidential elections, are vivid reminders that not all Muslims are extremists and not all democracies need be “Made in America.”

Abdullah vanquished the main Islamist political party, Parti Islam Se-Malaysia (PAS), which ran on the promise that it would bring Islamic law to those states where it won control of the local government. In the two states where PAS was already in charge, and where shari’a was already in force, voters also rebelled. PAS garnered less than 16 percent of the vote nationwide and gave up all but six of the 27 seats it had held in the previous parliament. Even its top leader lost his seat.

Across the Strait in Indonesia, the world’s largest Muslim-majority country, overtly Islamist parties won about 20 percent  of the vote in parliamentary elections that served as a precursor to the country’s first direct presidential elections in July, but the tally had more to do with the anti-corruption image of the big winner, the Prosperous Justice Party (PKS), than its Islamist agenda.

Yet even as he was loudly proclaiming his “forward strategy of democracy”[1] and circulating the draft of his administration’s plan for the “Greater Middle East Partnership,” a massive blueprint to promote “democracy and good government,”[2] President Bush had not a word of congratulations for Malaysia’s new prime minister or the Indonesian electorate. In fact, a search of the White House archive in late April revealed no mention of Malaysian politics since the president chastised outgoing Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohammed for his advice to fellow Muslims that they should learn from the political influence of the Jews. The Bush comments reflected the deep disconnect in perceptions between the U.S. and the Muslim world. Widely interpreted in the West as an anti-Semitic slur, Muslims saw Mahathir’s speech as a bold slap at ineffective Muslim leaders.

The fact that Mahathir was, at the same time, voluntarily relinquishing power in a manner that epitomized the very democratic change the White House was demanding, went largely ignored in the din. Nor, by late April, had the president or his spokespersons used the words “Indonesia” and “democracy” in the same sentence since Bush left Bali the previous October.

But, in a twisted way, this just might work in the favor of the forces of democratic change in those countries – and, ultimately, for the rest of us. Being identified with the U.S. is the kiss of death. It is a key reason political leaders in the two countries have played politics with the terror issue. But the resulting short-term frustration on the part of the U.S. officials may well produce long-term gains for the world.

The power of the home-grown Muslim democracies of Malaysia and Indonesia as they are now evolving lies in the fact that they are inclusive not exclusive. Islamist parties are a part of the political process, not sidelined from it, epitomized by the fact that most of the leading presidential contenders in Indonesia have chosen as running-mates politicians with strong Islamic credentials.

The world has learned the painful lesson of what happens when individuals and groups are barred from political engagement. It is in the face of hegemonic political systems that radical Islamism flourishes. That has been evidenced from Iran, where Washington’s belated push for democracy came long after the forces of Islamism had consolidated their role as primary voice of the opposition; to Lebanon, where the marginalization of the Shi’ites created the conditions that led to the rise of Hizbullah; to Algeria, where the country’s dramatic opening to democracy in 1989 followed three decades of autocracy, during which the Islamists consolidated their position as the symbol of opposition.

Much the reverse is also true. This has been witnessed in those nations that foster an inclusive system in which the Islamists are given a seat at the proverbial table. As Daniel Brumberg of Georgetown has observed, “States that promote competitive or dissonant politics will tend to feel surer that Islamist ambitions can be limited and so will be more willing to consider accommodating opposition.”[3]

Jordan is a case in point. Though King Abdullah holds ultimate power to dissolve parliament if it gets too far out of line – a prerogative exercised by his father – the fact that Islamist parties sit in parliament has contributed to the fact that the monarchy has not faced the kind of violent opposition at which the Islamists of Hamas have proven themselves adept across the border a few dozen miles away.

Participatory politics thus provides a release valve through which the frustrations of those who might otherwise support violence are vented. In the emerging Southeast Asian model, the values of conservative Muslims are safeguarded, the political goals of the Islamists are acknowledged, and the small fringe of violent radicals are marginalized, since their actions now threaten the good of the whole.

As Dale F. Eickelman has observed, “the proliferation of voices arguing in open debate about the role of Islam in the modern world and in contemporary society contributes significantly to defusing terrorist appeals.”[4]

In what has been called the “grey zone” regimes of the Arab world, liberalized autocracies clothed in pseudo-democratic garb exist in place of inclusive democratic systems. There, Islamist parties are, at best, manipulated, and frequently subject to periodic rounds of repression. Even the more liberal elements of the Islamist movement are frequently shut out of the process. In Egypt, for example, El-Wasat, an Islamist party that advocates a pluralistic vision of Islam, has repeatedly been denied government certification to take part in elections, while opposition voices such as human rights advocate Saad Eddine Ibrahim have been jailed.

Meanwhile, in places like Malaysia and Indonesia, Islamist parties have been welcomed into the system and allowed to complete. This certainly has not eliminated terrorism – Jemaah Islamiyah and its offshoots remain among the world’s most dangerous terrorist groups – but it has meant that what has been called “the cultural ground for violence,”[5] in the form of broader public sympathies, is largely denied them as the energies of the majority of the public are funneled into political expression.

As has become clear in the post-9/11 era, the real threat posed by Osama bin Laden lies not in his personal ability to plan operations, but in his power to inspire others. Even as the U.S. has rounded up known leaders of al-Qaeda and localized factions like Jemaah Islamiyah, the universe of terror cells has expanded. The result is a Hydra-like “swarming effect” that has produced a plethora of militant groups around the globe that subscribe to bin Laden’s philosophy and seek to emulate his lead.

“Just as Hercules needed the help of his nephew Iolaus to kill the Hydra,” terrorism expert Scott Atran wrote in The New York Times, “the United States will not conquer the Islamic terror without the popular support of its allies.”[6]

Perhaps even more critical is the influence of conservative Muslims who oppose both U.S. policy and the actions of the militant extremists. There is no better example of their importance than in the emerging democracies of Southeast Asia.

 

The Democracy Debate

Many barrels of ink and endless hours of broadcast airtime have been expended on the debate over whether Islam and democracy are even compatible. While some Islamic jurists argue that democracy usurps the sovereignty of God, many Western commentators adopt racist tones in asking whether Muslims are “ready” for democracy.

“What is there about the culture and the people and so on where democracy just doesn’t seem to be something they strive for and work for?” demanded Democratic Congressman Christopher Shays at a Capitol Hill hearing on relations between the U.S. and Muslim world.

Others are broadly dismissive of existing political systems across the great crescent of Muslim societies from West Africa to Southeast Asia, as in this comment from Miles Benson, a columnist for the Newhouse News Service:

In countries where Muslims are the dominant religious group, politics comes in two primary flavors: theocratic totalitarianism and klepto-authoritarianism, where rulers are enriched at the public expense and corruption trickles down.[7]

These stereotypes and clichés belie the reality that democracy is already an increasingly important form of government in the Muslim world.

Poll after poll reveals the same conclusion: Muslims favor democracy. The World Values Survey found that at 87 percent, support for “democratic ideals” was marginally higher in Muslim countries surveyed (which did not include Saudi Arabia) than in the West, with some countries polling as high as 99 percent, ten points above the U.S. The Pew Global Attitudes project[8] and surveys by pollster John Zogby[9] have found much the same thing.

“The people of the Muslim world overwhelmingly want democracy,” concluded researchers Pippa Norris and Ron Inglehart, after examining data from 100,000 individuals in 72 countries.[10]

In fact, a majority of the world’s Muslims now live under governments that came to power through at least nominally democratic elections. This reflects the reality that only 15 percent of Muslims live in the Arab world, with well over half concentrated in four countries – Indonesia, Pakistan, Bangladesh and India – headed by elected leaders.

A study by Alfred Stephan and Graeme B. Robertson found that while a democracy gap prevails in the Arab world, the 31 non-Arab Muslim-majority countries “form the single largest bloc of all those countries that ‘greatly overachieve’” in terms of competitive elections versus other countries with similar GDP levels, with 12 of the 31 demonstrating “relatively high levels of political rights for at least three consecutive years” through 2002.[11]

That does not mean the majority of non-Arab Muslim countries are democracies. The Polity Project and Freedom House identify only eight non-Arab Muslim governments – led by Senegal, Indonesia and Turkey they report actually came to power through a process that meets “the minimum standards of relatively free and fair elections.”[12] The rest fall well down on Polity IV’s 21-point scale of democracy (only Saudi Arabia and Qatar score lower than non-Arab Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan). What it does indicate is that a higher number of these countries perform better than other countries with similar economies.

Nor do the findings mean that those countries which did make the list represent paragons of democracy. Far from it. Nigeria’s 1999 elections were chaotic and deeply suspect and the Albanian government has yet to even extend its writ to the entire country.

 

Template for Muslim Democracy?

Malaysia actually ranked below Nigeria on Polity IV’s democracy scale. But that position is based on a year 2000 assessment. Much has changed since. After 22 years at the helm of what could, at best, be described as a guided democracy characterized by the jailing of opposition figures and a compliant media, Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamed last October retired from politics, handing over control of the ruling UMNO party to his hand-picked successor, Abdullah Ahmad Badawi.

The son of a respected Islamic scholar, Badawi immediately took on the Islamists, who had tripled their presence in parliament in the previous election and imposed shari’a law in the two states they controlled. The main Islamist party, PAS, ran on a platform that called for the amputation of the limbs of thieves and death by stoning for adultery.

“Those who rally behind Islam are also those who want to live under divine laws laid down by Allah,” PAS spiritual leader Nik Aziz Nik Mat proclaimed during a campaign appearance. “And naturally, they will go to Heaven for choosing an Islamic party, while those who support un-Islamic parties will logically go to Hell.”[13]

Abdullah, flexing his Islamic credentials, quickly moved to deny the Islamists the moral high ground.

“This is an issue that we have to face. We cannot put it aside,” the prime minister declared after a meeting with 2,000 Muslim scholars. “We have to have answers, explanations for the people. Otherwise, there will be views and edicts that are unsuitable that will influence Muslims, if left unanswered.”[14]

When it was all over, the Islamists had been vanquished. And while there were charges that Abdullah’s coalition (which grouped the ruling UMNO party with those representing the ethnic minority Chinese and Indians) had denied the Islamists equal access to the government-controlled media, there were – for the moment – no demands for revenge or denunciations from the ulema, and the Islamists took their remaining seats at the table of power.

``It was all up to God,'' said Zaihan Mohamed Daud, a senior PAS official. ``But it doesn't matter. Our reward is in heaven.''[15]

That kind of direct engagement with the hard edge of Islamist politics demonstrates the power of a political process that involves all aspects of Muslim society and draws on the religious authority of conservative Muslim politicians.  Some scholars, like Muqtedar Khan of Brookings, have argued that “democracy is an ally of Islamists” and “will lead to Islamization.”[16] Malaysia and Indonesia would appear to prove otherwise.

Of course, definitions are critical in this discussion. The proponents of political Islam – broadly defined for the purpose of this essay as those who seek to build political structures based on Muslim values – are very different from the strict Islamists, whose goal is the imposition of an Islamic state or implementation of all aspects of shari’a law. 

Abdullah carries strong Islamic credentials. So too, do Indonesia’s Abdulrahman Wahid and Amien Rais, long-time leaders of two of the largest Muslim civil society organizations in the world, the Nahdlatul Ulama (NU) and Muhammadiyah. Both men were at the forefront of the movement to overthrow former President Suharto, bringing Islam back into the Indonesian political process after decades in political exile. Each is considered an “Islamist” by Western journalists and scholars, but each has voiced opposition to Islamic rule.

"Implementing Islamic teachings is more important than establishing Islamic state," Wahid, known locally as Gus Dur, told supporters at a pre-election rally.[17]

The respected Islamic scholar, who served a brief term as compromise president before being impeached for what amounted to administrative incompetence, demonstrates that the most critical political struggle in Indonesia today is not between secular nationalists and Islamists, nor – importantly – is it between what Americans might call “radicals” and pro-Western “moderates.” Rather, it is a debate between the literalists – Islamists who seek the implementation of shari’a in its most literal sense – and the vast majority of Muslim pragmatists who want their religion to inform their politics.

Amien Rais, a deeply conservative Muslim who, as speaker of the constitutional assembly, or MPR, successfully blocked efforts to make Indonesia an Islamic state or impose shari’a law, says, "You can see on the surface and below the surface that mainstream Indonesian Muslims are not for shari’a."[18]

In fact, on the surface, it would actually appear otherwise. A quick glance at Indonesia is likely to leave the casual observer with the impression that the country is being “radicalized:” a noticeable increase in the number of women wearing the traditional jilbab headscarf, increased programming about Islam on television, and frequent appearances by politicians at pesentren religious schools. Even the most secular of politicians wear their religion on their sleeve.

This seeming radicalization of Islam in Indonesia stems in part from the fact that after decades during which it was sidelined from politics, Islam is again playing an active political and cultural role in the post-Suharto era. But perceptions – particularly as reflected through a Western eye – can be misleading.

A recent survey by political scientists Saiful Mujani and R. William Liddle found that while more than 70 percent of Indonesians support the concept of shari’a “in the abstract,” when asked about specific aspects of Islamic law, such as requiring women to wear the veil or banning women from politics, support drops off dramatically.

 “While many Indonesian Muslims appear to be Islamists in the broadest construal of the term (they believe that laws should somehow be basically in accord with Islam), relatively few support policies advocated by Islamist activists,” the researchers reported.[19]

Although 67 percent of Indonesians surveyed said they wanted a government led by Islamic authorities and based on the Qur’an and Sunnah, and 71 percent thought shari’a should be obligatory, the picture changed when they were asked if they favored specific aspects of Islamic law. Only about a third of Indonesians supported a requirement that women wear headscarves or that the hands of thieves be cut off, 21 percent thought only Islamist parties should take part in elections, 26 percent opposed a woman president, and just eight percent believed women should be banned from serving in parliament.

The findings are bolstered by a survey by the International Foundation for Election Systems (IFES) that reported 41 percent of those questioned said religion should not play a role in politics,[20] while the Asia Foundation found that most voters with an opinion of the Islamist political parties associated them with the promotion of religion and morality, not Islamic laws.[21]

 “If we look at the popular understanding of shari’a among laymen, it means merely an installment of Islamic morality in the public life, especially the morality that relates to the sexual conduct and relationship between men and women,” explains Ulil Abshar Abdallah, a leader of the Liberal Muslim Network.[22]

That conclusion is in synch with the relatively modest support Islamist parties received in the last two Indonesian elections – levels that mirror Malaysia – and would seem to indicate that while there is an increased sense of Muslim identity and politicization, the historically moderate approach to Islam among Muslims of the Malay archipelago has not fundamentally changed.

This fact is not lost on the region’s politicians, such as Indonesian Vice President Hamzah Haz, the leader of his country’s largest Islamist political organization, the United Development Party (PPP). Haz has a long track record of hard-line views – and of cynically exploiting what is locally known as “the Islam card.” He opposed the election of Megawati Sukarnoputri on the grounds that a woman should not serve as president, and, prior to the Bali bombings, publicly flirted with Abu Bakar Ba’asyir, the spiritual leader of Jemaah Islamiyah. Yet in the weeks leading up to the April parliamentary election, Haz went out of his way to promise that he would not try to turn the country into an Islamic state, declaring his support for the country’s inclusive Pancasila ideology, which enshrines religious freedom. “The first principle, belief in God the almighty, is enough evidence that Indonesia is a religious country,” he told a rally.[23]

But it is important not to be misled: Islam plays an important part in shaping the self-identity of Muslims in Indonesia and Malaysia, as across the Muslim world.

 

Identity Politics

Numerous surveys have found a dramatically heightened sense of Muslim identity among citizens of non-Arab Muslim nations in the post-9/11 era. However, that does not mean the majority has been radicalized into supporting the Islamist goal of reviving the trans-national Darul Islam, or Islamic civilization of the Caliphate. Muslim identity remains but a veneer on the structures of nationalism and ethnic identity that continue to shape nation-states. Nowhere is that truer than in Southeast Asia, where Islam comes in many shades and includes a syncretic blend of Islamic teachings and indigenous mores.

The shaping of this uniquely localized Islamic identity forms the subtext to much of the work of Muslim thought-leaders in the Malay archipelago. For Indonesia’s Wahid, culture is a defining element of what it means to be an Indonesian Muslim. “The difference between Islam in Saudi Arabia and Indonesia is that the former does not know the difference between Islam and its culture,” says the former president.[24]

What is an Indonesian Muslim? Even the Indonesians themselves have always disagreed. Jalaluddin Rakhmat, a leading Muslim intellectual, insists there is no single definition: “Indonesia’s Islam is not an ummatan wahidah (united/one community) – as described by the Qur’an – but an ummat that ‘you think they are united while in fact their hearts are divided.’”[25] With more than 300 language groups scattered over some 3,000 inhabited islands, there are, as another Indonesian commentator observed, “many ‘Islams’ in Indonesian politics.”[26]

Historically, there have been a host of readily-identifiable dividing lines among Indonesian Muslims; between the so-called santri (“purists”) and abangan (“nominal” Muslims), between traditionalists and modernists, between Islamists and secularists. But as the nation, its religion and its politics have evolved, each of these internal dividing lines has become less relevant. Perhaps most germane to any current discussion of democratic versus Islamist impulses in modern Indonesia is Rahkmat’s differentiation between those who seek “the Islamization of Indonesia” and those who practice “Indonesianized Islam.” In the political context, that might be further reduced to a distinction between Islamist literalists or revivalists and Indonesian Muslim nationalists, for whom religion and nationality together shape identity.[27]

Some, like Muhammed Qodari of the Indonesian Survey Institute, go so far as to claim that radical Islamists, such as the military leader of Jemaah Islamiyah, the group responsible for the Bali bombings, are no longer truly part of the imagined community of Indonesian Muslims:

Hambali was born an Indonesian, lived in Malaysia, fought against the Soviets in Afghanistan, and was captured in Thailand while holding a Spanish passport … Hambali is stateless. If he believes in the ummah, he may have decided not to "subscribe" to any citizenship … To him, his main and foremost identity is not as an Indonesian born from a Sundanese mother in West Java; his identity is not "national" but "universal", a "citizen" of the ummah … It is likely that only very few Muslims hold such beliefs.[28]

Underlining this Othering is the fact that many of the leaders of the most hard-line of the Islamist organizations are of Arab descent.

It is in this struggle for the political soul of Southeast Asian Islam that conservative Muslim politicians like Malaysia’s Abdullah, Indonesia’s Wahid and Rais and a variety of others play a critical role, offering mainstream Muslims a powerful alternative to the Islamists who favor the strict imposition of shari’a, and to their violent offshoots. Their support, along with that of a variety of powerful Muslim organizations that share their views, also provided religious cover to the government when, in the wake of the Bali bombings, the centers of power recognized that they, too, were threatened by the rise of the militants and moved to crush them.

The commitment of these politicians – and the majority of the ulema – to secular government, is informed by an equally deep commitment to protecting the conservative Muslim values they share with the majority of their countrymen, and by a pragmatic recognition that their societies also include significant numbers of non-Muslims whose rights must be protected. In other words, a dedication to a set of intersecting “shared values;” just a different set of values than George Bush had in mind.

For like the literalists, these politicians, who might best be called Muslim pragmatists or religiously devout nationalists, share with Southeast Asia’s Muslim body politic a growing disdain for U.S. policy. Indonesian and Malaysian Muslims may not have been “radicalized” in the sense that some in the West have portrayed them, but that does not mean the region has seen any softening of the anti-Americanism that has swept across the Muslim world in the post-9/11 era. Poll after poll shows that in Southeast Asia as elsewhere, the U.S. is viewed as an arrogant nation bent on an imperialistic crusade against Islam.

Among the many tragedies of the Bush administration’s policy toward the Muslim world, none is greater than the fact that even as it correctly identifies the lack of democracy as an underlying cause of terrorism, its policies are turning against the U.S. the very Muslims who strive to build democratic structures.

In Indonesia, according to a Pew survey, America’s favorability rating has dropped from 65 percent in 2002 to just 15 percent in 2003. Central to that antipathy is U.S. policy toward Israel and the Palestinians.

“There is no greater symbol or stronger self-identification for Muslims worldwide than the plight of the Palestinians,” according to Jusuf Wanandi of Jakarta’s Center for Strategic and International Studies.[29]

In February 2004, the U.S. launched a $62 million satellite channel, al-Hurra (the Free One), designed to win the hearts and minds of Muslims. The futility of that effort was underlined when, in the wake of the assassination of Hamas founder Sheikh Yassin, the Bush administration declared that “Israel has the right to defend itself,” thus unleashing a torrent of anti-American vitriol across the Muslim world that included condemnations in the Indonesian media.

The invasion of Iraq, meanwhile, has left many Indonesians convinced the Bush administration is paying only lip service to the concept of democracy.

“The U.S. is not a good friend in democracy,” Wahid said on the popular Lativi television channel. “It will push you aside, threaten you, and harm you if you don’t follow its line.”[30]

“U.S. boasting about its mission for democracy and human rights has become a laughing stock among Indonesian Muslims,” adds political observer Riza Sihbudi.[31]

It should thus come as no surprise that the Pew survey found that Indonesia was one of only two non-Arab Muslim countries where those polled rejected the notion that Western-style democracy “can work well here.”[32] But it is critical to differentiate between form and substance. Indonesians may say they don’t want “Western-style” democracy, but the IFES survey found they are almost universally-aware of their new-found rights to free speech, freedom of religion and freedom to vote. A clear majority said they believed the 2004 elections would be free and fair. Equally telling are their areas of concern – all indicators of a vibrant and open political system:

In all issues except one, more Indonesians are dissatisfied with the government’s reform efforts than are satisfied: democracy (47% satisfied, 39% dissatisfied); autonomy and decentralization (34%, 43%); law enforcement (30%, 57%); clean governance (25%, 62%); economy (20%, 72%); and eradication of KKN (19%, 70%).[33]

KKN is the Indonesian acronym for Korupsi, Kolusi dan Nepotisme, the legacy of 30 years of crony capitalism under Suharto, who, with an estimated family fortune of $15 billion to $35 billion, was recently named by Transparency International as the most corrupt world leader in recent history, beating out Ferdinand Marcos and Mobuto Sese Seko, who stashed away mere tens of millions.

Opposition to korupsi was a key battle cry of reformasi, the reform movement that forced Suharto’s resignation and was led by the very Muslim politicians who are today keeping the radical Islamists in check. However, in the wake of allegations of corruption in Wahid’s regime, the issue has, to a large degree, been usurped by the Islamists

 

Flawed Democracy

By any measure, Indonesia’s democracy is deeply flawed.

Crony capitalism still dominates the economy. The country still ranks near the top of Transparency International’s list of most corrupt countries. And, in many ways, it is still business as usual. One of the leading presidential contenders crisscrossing the country this spring was the Akbar Tanjung, the speaker of parliament (known as the DPR), who remained free while appealing his three-year prison sentence for corruption.

“What we don’t have in Indonesia is rule of law, transparency,” says Indonesian businessman Rudy Pesik.[34] It is, as one observer grimly observed, a “zero-trust society.”[35]

There is a strong argument to be made that the current appeal of the Islamists lies less in their views on the role of Islam in government than in their criticism of this endemic corruption that continues to characterize the Indonesian state. “Their representatives in parliament are clean, they are well-organized and they are idealistic,” Goenawan Mohammed, Indonesia’s most respected newspaper editor, says of the Prosperous Justice Party (PKS), which made impressive gains in the recent election.[36]

That image is precisely what the Islamists hope to build on. In late April, as other parties jockeyed for position in the future government, the Prosperous Justice Party announced it would not join any coalition.

"The party will be in opposition and will act as a constructive opposition party in the Indonesian Parliament," PKS president Hidayat Nur Wahid told a press conference in Jakarta. An earlier attempt to form a coalition of Islamist parties failed when the others joined forces with the large mainstream parties. The move could put PKS – and the Islamists – in a strong position for the 2009 election, making them the only alternative if the new government continues the pattern of corruption, collusion and nepotism.

As in other countries in the developing world where a few dynasties have held power since independence, such as the Philippines and India, regime change in Indonesia has meant little more than a rearrangement of the chairs. President Megawati Sukarnoputri is the daughter of the country’s first president, Sukarno. Suharto’s daughter Tutut is among her rivals. The former strongman’s own Golkar organization remains the dominant political party.

“Indonesia’s democracy serves powerful interest groups, many of them gathered around President Megawati Sukarnoputri’s Indonesian Democratic Party for Struggle (PDI-P) and Golkar,” observed the Far Eastern Economic Review, which quoted former attorney-general Maruki Darusman as saying, “It’s the elite looking after its own.”[37]

Muslim-Christian clashes in Ambon and Poso have claimed scores of lives, the army left behind a bloodbath as it withdrew from East Timor, and secession movements continue to simmer at either end of the vast archipelago as Jakarta’s writ wears thin. Then there is a crumbling economy that has yet to recover from the Asian economic collapse of 1997, largely because foreign investors have little confidence in the country’s long-term stability. The combination has left some Indonesians exhibiting nostalgia for the days when there was a strong hand at the helm. That is reflected in the fact that two of the leading presidential candidates, the controversial former military chief and Suharto protégé Gen. Wiranto, who is under indictment for war crimes in East Timor, and former Security Minister Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, a four-star general, carry with them echoes of the authoritarian past.

“It is not the hope of the Indonesian people to put human rights as absolute,” says Yudhoyono, who quit Megawati’s cabinet to throw his hat into the presidential ring. “There must be a balance between liberty and security, between freedom and order, between rights and responsibility.”[38]

All this led one academic to dismiss the 2004 elections as “much ado about nothing.”[39] Such a view badly misses the central point.

Indonesians are organizing politically; they are engaged in raucous debates about the country’s future; they are voting. Democracies do not rise overnight. It was almost 200 years before the U.S. had universal suffrage. Democratic transitions among Indonesia’s Asian neighbors have taken decades. It could easily be argued that America’s former colony in the Philippines is only marginally farther down the road than its Indonesian neighbor, even though strongman Marcos was overthrown in 1986.

The very fact that the April parliamentary elections represented what Ian Wall of the IFES called “the largest, most complex single day election held anywhere in the world”[40] speaks volumes about the import of the event. The figures alone tell the story: 450,000 candidates for 15,276 seats in the National Legislature, the new Provincial Legislature (similar to the U.S. Senate), and the Local Councils.

A massive voter education effort helped the average Indonesian understand this highly complex process and the turnout – some 120 million people – eclipsed anything the United States has ever managed.

“A lot of people take a snapshot and say ‘this country doesn’t fit my ideal of democracy,’” the Asia Foundation’s director of democratization and election programs, Tim Meisburger, told The Washington Post. In fact, he says, Indonesia “is the most democratic Muslim country in the world.”[41]

 

A Muslim Roadmap to Democracy

“There is an Islamic term,” democracy scholar Abdelwahab El-Affendi has written, “that can be regarded as a precise equivalent of the Western term ‘citizen’ (in the sense of being a full member of the political community with both a right and an obligation to participate in public affairs).”

The term, he says, is “‘Muslim.’”[42]

The citizens of Indonesia, and their Malaysian cousins, are today experiencing that term in the fullest spectrum of its meaning; developing, in the words of one of Indonesia’s leading Islamic thinkers, “a new vocabulary and mode of politics which is universal and yet allows us to maintain our specific group and collective identities.”[43]

It is a difficult undertaking fraught with confusion and peril, but it is a path the citizens of Southeast Asia are blazing for themselves. In the process, they are creating a roadmap not to some idealized future charted in Washington, but to a true blending of faith, values and participatory governance that just might one day help their co-religionists elsewhere in the Great Crescent to find their own way.

 

References

 

Abdallah, Ulil Abshar. "In Search of 'New' Islam: The Islamic Discourse of Authenticity in Indonesia." Paper presented at the Center for Southeast Asian Studies, Ann Arbor, MI, Oct 10 2003.

Aceh Introduces Islamic Law CNN.com, 2002 [cited Mar 29 2004]. Available from http://edition.cnn.com/2002/WORLD/asiapcf/southeast/01/02/aceh.sharia/.

Azhar, Syed. Nik Aziz: Pas to Harp on 'Heaven' Issue The Star, Mar. 6, 2004. Available from http://thestar.com.my/election2004/story.asp?file=/2004/3/6/e2004_news/7467893&sec=e2004_news.

Beng, Phar Kim. Indonesia: Radicals Steal the Spotlight Asia Times, 2003 [cited Mar 20 2004]. Available from http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/EE28Ae02.htm.

Benson, Miles. "To Grow Muslim Democracies Requires Putting Strategy Behind Vision." Newhouse News Service: 1.

Brumberg, Daniel. "The Trap of Liberalized Autocracy." Journal of Democracy 13, no. 4 (2002): 56.

Bush, George. Remarks at the 20th Anniversary of the National Endowment for Democracy The White House, 2003 [cited March 20 2004]. Available from http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2003/11/20031106-2.html.

"Democracy in Indonesia: A Survey of the Indonesian Electorate 2003." edited by Tim Meisburger, 274. Washington, D.C.: The Asia Foundation, 2004.

Diehl, Jackson. "Indonesia's Partway Democracy." The Washington Post, Jan 19, 2004, A.21.

Djalal, Dini. "Looking for a New President." Far Eastern Economic Review, Nov 6, 2003, 24.

Effendy, Bahtiar. Without Trust, Democracy Would Not Be Sound [Radio interview]. Radio namlapanha Jakarta, Apr 8, 2003 [cited Mar 21. Available from http://islamlib.com/en/page.php?page=article&id=439.

Eickelman, Dale F. "The Public Sphere, the Arab 'Street' and the Middle East's Democracy Deficit." Paper presented at the Media and Public Debate, New Delhi, March 11-12 2002.

El-Affendi, Abdelwahab. "Muslim or Citizen?" CSDBulletin 8, no. 1 (2001): 3-5.

Greater Middle East Partnership The White House, 2004 [cited Mar. 24 2004]. Available from http://www.al-bab.com/arab/docs/international/gmep2004.htm.

Inglehart, Ronald, and Pippa Norris. "The True Clash of Civilizations." Foreign Policy, no. 135 (2003): 62.

"Issues and Challenges Facing the 2004 Elections." Van Zorge Report on Indonesia VI, no. 4 (2004): 34.

Khan, Muqtedar. "Prospects for Muslim Democracy: The Role of U.S. Policy." Washington, D.C.: Brookings Institution, 2001.

McBeth, John. "The Betrayal of Indonesia." Far Eastern Economic Review, Jun 26, 2003, 14.

Mohamad, Goenawan. "Interview with Author." Apr 2 2004, Interview with the author.

Mujani, Saiful, and R. William Liddle. "Politics, Islam, and Public Opinion." Journal of Democracy 15, no. 1 (2004).

"National Public Opinion Survey 2003." Washington, D.C.: International Foundation for Election Systems, 2004.

Noor, Farish A. "Democracy and the Universalism of Islam: An Interview with Nurcholis Madjid." In New Voices of Islam, 35-41. Leiden: International Institute for the Study of Islam in the Modern World, 2002.

Pesik, Rudy. Nov 10 2003.

PPP Won't Bring Indonesians into Islamic State: VP Hamzah Haz AFP, 2004 [cited Mar 20 2004]. Available from http://www.gusdur.net/english/english_detail.asp?catName=Berita&contentOID=559#.

Qodari, Muhammad. "Islam, National Identity and Democracy." The Jakarta Post, Sep 8, 2003, 1.

Sadiq, Jahabar. "Role of Islam Dominates Malaysian Election." Reuters, Mar 7 2004.

Singh, Bilveer. "The 2004 Presidential Elections in Indonesia: Much Ado About Nothing?" Contemporary Southeast Asia 25, no. 3: 431.

Stepan, Alfred, and Graeme B Robertson. "An 'Arab' More Than 'Muslim' Electoral Gap." Journal of Democracy 14, no. 3 (2003): 30.

Sukma, Rizal. "Islam and Foreign Policy in Indonesia: Internal Weaknesses and the Dilemma of Dual Identity." In The Asia Foundation Working Paper Series, 65. Washington, D.C.: The Asia Foundation, 1999.

Sullivan, Rohan. "Secular Government Wins Malaysia Election." Guardian, Mar 21 2004.

"Views of a Changing World: The Pew Global Attitudes Project." edited by Andrew Kohut, 136. Washington, D.C.: The Pew Research Center for the People and the Press, 2003.

Wahid, Abdulrahman. Implementing Islamic Teachings, 2004 [cited Mar 29 2004]. Available from http://www.gusdur.net/english/english_page.asp.

Waisbord, Silvio. "Journalism, Risk, and Patriotism." In Journalism after September 11, edited by Barbie Zelizer and Stuart Allan, xviii, 268. London ; New York: Routledge, 2002.

Wanandi, Jusuf. "Curbing Radical Muslims." New Straits Times, Dec 5, 2002, 10.

———. "Part 2 of 2 : How Bush Could Recover Muslims' Support." The Jakarta Post, Dec 15, 2003, 7.

Yamin, Kafil. View of Us Double Standards Sharpens in Indonesia Inter Press News Service, Apr 24, 2004 [cited Mar 21 2004]. Available from http://www.ipsnews.net/interna.asp?idnews=17764.

Zogby, James J. "What Arabs Think: Values, Beliefs and Concerns." Washington, D.C.: Zogby International, 2002.

Zorge, James Van. "A Preliminary Assessment of the Legislative Elections." Van Zorge Report on Indonesia XI, no. 5 (2004): 4-12.

 


 

[1] George Bush, Remarks at the 20th Anniversary of the National Endowment for Democracy (The White House, 2003 [cited March 20 2004]); available from http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2003/11/20031106-2.html.

[2] Greater Middle East Partnership (The White House, 2004 [cited Mar. 24 2004]); available from http://www.al-bab.com/arab/docs/international/gmep2004.htm.

[3] Daniel Brumberg, "The Trap of Liberalized Autocracy," Journal of Democracy 13, no. 4 (2002).

[4] Dale F. Eickelman, "The Public Sphere, the Arab 'Street' and the Middle East's Democracy Deficit" (paper presented at the Media and Public Debate, New Delhi, March 11-12 2002).

[5] Silvio Waisbord, "Journalism, Risk, and Patriotism," in Journalism after September 11, ed. Barbie Zelizer and Stuart Allan (London ; New York: Routledge, 2002).

[6] Scott Atran, “A Leaner, Meaner Jihad,” The New York Times, Mar 16, 2004, A27.

[7] Miles Benson, "To Grow Muslim Democracies Requires Putting Strategy Behind Vision," Newhouse News Service.

[8] "Views of a Changing World: The Pew Global Attitudes Project," ed. Andrew Kohut (Washington, D.C.: The Pew Research Center for the People and the Press, 2003).

[9] James J. Zogby, "What Arabs Think: Values, Beliefs and Concerns," (Washington, D.C.: Zogby International, 2002).

[10] Ronald Inglehart and Pippa Norris, "The True Clash of Civilizations," Foreign Policy, no. 135 (2003).

[11] Alfred Stepan and Graeme B Robertson, "An 'Arab' More Than 'Muslim' Electoral Gap," Journal of Democracy 14, no. 3 (2003).

[12] See Polity IV Project at www.bsos.umd.edu/cidcm/insc/polity; and Freedom House at www.freedomhouse.org.

[13] Syed Azhar, Nik Aziz: Pas to Harp on 'Heaven' Issue (The Star, Mar. 6 2004 [cited); available from http://thestar.com.my/election2004/story.asp?file=/2004/3/6/e2004_news/7467893&sec=e2004_news.

[14] Jahabar Sadiq, "Role of Islam Dominates Malaysian Election," Reuters, Mar 7 2004.

[15] Rohan Sullivan, "Secular Government Wins Malaysia Election," Guardian, Mar 21 2004.

[16] Muqtedar Khan, "Prospects for Muslim Democracy: The Role of U.S. Policy," (Washington, D.C.: Brookings Institution, 2001).

[17] Abdulrahman Wahid, Implementing Islamic Teachings (2004 [cited Mar 29 2004]); available from http://www.gusdur.net/english/english_page.asp.

[18] Aceh Introduces Islamic Law (CNN.com, 2002 [cited Mar 29 2004]); available from http://edition.cnn.com/2002/WORLD/asiapcf/southeast/01/02/aceh.sharia/.

[19] Saiful Mujani and R. William Liddle, "Politics, Islam, and Public Opinion," Journal of Democracy 15, no. 1 (2004).

[20] "National Public Opinion Survey 2003," (Washington, D.C.: International Foundation for Election Systems, 2004).

[21] "Democracy in Indonesia: A Survey of the Indonesian Electorate 2003," ed. Tim Meisburger (Washington, D.C.: The Asia Foundation, 2004).

[22] Ulil Abshar Abdallah, "In Search of 'New' Islam: The Islamic Discourse of Authenticity in Indonesia" (paper presented at the Center for Southeast Asian Studies, Ann Arbor, MI, Oct 10 2003).

[23] PPP Won't Bring Indonesians into Islamic State: VP Hamzah Haz (AFP, 2004 [cited Mar 20 2004]); available from http://www.gusdur.net/english/english_detail.asp?catName=Berita&contentOID=559#.

[24] Phar Kim Beng, Indonesia: Radicals Steal the Spotlight (Asia Times, 2003 [cited Mar 20 2004]); available from http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/EE28Ae02.htm.

[25] Rizal Sukma, "Islam and Foreign Policy in Indonesia: Internal Weaknesses and the Dilemma of Dual Identity," in The Asia Foundation Working Paper Series (Washington, D.C.: The Asia Foundation, 1999).

[26] Jusuf Wanandi, "Curbing Radical Muslims," New Straits Times, Dec 5, 2002.

[27] That said, there has yet to emerge a label that truly captures the spectrum of thought among Indonesian Muslim politicians who do not subscribe to the Islamist approach. “Liberals vs. literalists” is one alliterative dichotomy that has been suggested, but, like “progressive,” “modernist” and similar labels, it is a loaded term that carries Western baggage.

[28] Muhammad Qodari, "Islam, National Identity and Democracy," The Jakarta Post, Sep 8, 2003.