The Tawhid and Human Rights By Musdah Mulia
Musdah Mulia is one of those scholars who relentlessly combines activism, politics and academia. She has been Senior Advisor of the Minister of Religious Affairs of the Republic of Indonesia and the head of the Research Division of The Council of Indonesian Ulema. She regularly lectures at both Indonesian as well as international universities. Currently much of her attention goes to the Indonesian Conference on Religion for Peace, an independent organization dedicated to advancing and promoting interfaith dialogue, democracy and peace in Indonesia. Musdah’s direct experience of the social and political discrimination of women in Indonesia have always given her work a strong focus on human rights and gender equality. In 2004, for example, she was the coordinator of the state endorsed Gender Mainstreaming Team. The eventual results of the team’s research weren’t easily accepted, however, as many factions deemed them to liberal. Nevertheless, Musdah’s approach can also count on much support within the Indonesian as well as international circles of Muslim scholars. People often forget that Indonesia is the country with the highest population of Muslims in the world even though it’s not an Islamic state. Indeed. Eighty-five percent of the Indonesian population is Muslim but our founding fathers and mothers didn’t make Islam the state ideology. They realized that there are too many differences in interpretation, so they settled on the Pancasila instead. This Pancasila is a combination of five general principles that could create a common ground: spirituality, humanity, unity of the country, democracy and justice. Pancasila incorporates many of its values because when you talk about the first principle of spirituality, you talk about a spirituality that touches on love, compassion and mercy. You talk about a spirituality that goes to the essence of all faiths and religions. Yet, although the Pancasila offers a lot of room to build a spiritual society, sadly enough this does not seem to suffice for some more radical groups that would like to implement a purely Islamic khalifat. Indeed. Indonesia has its fair share of reactionary groups. Yet we must be aware of the fact that the rise of more radical groups coincides with the advent of democracy. As everybody knows, the Suharto regime was a very repressive regime but once it fell and democracy found its way, it was also used and abused by radical Islamic groups. In the Suharto era they would simply have been repressed but now they are given the public space to spread their views. So yes, many Muslim leaders – and certainly feminist Muslims like me – are faced with the growth of radicalism.