
In Indonesia, Songs Against
Terrorism
By Kyai Haji Abdurrahman Wahid and C. Holland
Taylor
Friday, October 7, 2005
The latest suicide bombings on the resort island
of Bali appear to have been carried out by young Indonesian Muslims
indoctrinated in an ideology of hatred. Once again the cult of death
has proved its ability to recruit misguided fanatics and incite them
to violate Islam’s most sacred teachings in the very name of God. The
only way to break this vicious cycle is by discrediting the perverse
ideology that underlies and motivates such brutal acts of terrorism.
One of us, Abdurrahman Wahid, was Indonesia’s
president when tragic violence inundated the eastern region of Ambon
and the Malukus six years ago. A seemingly trivial argument between a
Christian bus driver and a Muslim passenger in early 1999 triggered a
bloody religious war that eventually claimed 10,000 lives and drove a
half-million Christian and Muslim inhabitants from their homes.
Radical Muslims from throughout Indonesia flocked to the region to
wage jihad on Indonesian Christians, backed by powerful Islamist
generals and plenty of money.
The largest such group was Laskar Jihad
(“Warriors of Jihad”), led by an Indonesian of Arab descent, whose
ancestors came from the same province in Yemen as those of Osama bin
Laden. Jaffar Umar Thalib is a veteran of the Afghan jihad and knows
bin Laden personally. Backed by spiteful generals close to the
disgraced Suharto regime, Thalib sounded the call to jihad, and
thousands of young Muslims flocked to his green banner to slaughter
Indonesian Christians in the name of God.
Enjoying such powerful clandestine support,
Laskar Jihad had actually established a military training camp less
than 60 miles from the capital, Jakarta. When national police broke up
the camp, Thalib promptly announced that Laskar Jihad would sail for
Ambon and wage jihad there. I (Wahid) ordered the army generals in
East Java to prevent them from sailing and ordered the navy to
intercept them if they did. I also ordered the governor of East Java
to guard the docks and prevent Laskar Jihad from boarding. But these
presidential orders were ignored by a military that refused to accept
civilian control in the newly democratic Indonesia. An unholy alliance
of fundamentalist jihadists, Islamist generals and people close to the
Suharto family ensured that thousands of Laskar Jihadists poured into
Ambon and the Malukus.
Once there, they spread out in the Muslim
communities and launched devastating raids on neighboring Christian
enclaves, burning and desecrating churches; destroying homes; and
slaughtering thousands of men, women and children.
All of Indonesia knew what was happening. It was
in the news day and night. Laskar Jihad became a symbol and a byword
for the suffering inflicted upon that region. The goal of Laskar
Jihad’s clandestine backers – and those in parliament itself – was to
create chaos and block the reform that desperately needed to occur in
the Indonesian government. They succeeded; the process of reform
ground to a halt.
Then came the first Bali bombing in 2002, with
jihadists incinerating a popular tourist club and over 200 people,
mostly foreign tourists. Although that attack was the work of a
different jihadist group, Jemaah Islamiah, it was obvious that the
military – now in the hands of “red,” or nationalist, generals allied
to my successor, Megawati Sukarnoputri – would crack down on all
active jihadist groups. Immediately afterward, Thalib announced that
Laskar Jihad had served its purpose, and he recalled its warriors to
Java. Thousands of battle-hardened jihadists returned to Java’s towns
and villages to await his further call.
One of the people watching this tragedy unfold
was a brilliant young musician named Ahmad Dhani. Leader of the
immensely popular rock band Dewa, Dhani began to use his musical
platform to influence millions of fans in Indonesia, Singapore and
Malaysia to resist the tide of religious extremism.
In response to Laskar Jihad’s atrocities, and to
discredit the appeal of fundamentalist ideology, Dhani composed the
best-selling album called “Laskar Cinta” (“Warriors of Love”).
Released in November 2004, it quickly rose to the top of the charts as
millions of young Indonesians embraced its message of love, peace and
tolerance.
Ahmad Dhani and the other members of Dewa have
presented Indonesia’s youth with a stark choice, and one easy for the
vast majority to answer: Do they want to join the army of jihad, or
the army of love? In response, numerous radical groups have accused
Dhani – who is a devout Sufi, or mystically-inclined Muslim – of being
an infidel, an apostate (code words inciting violence) and a Zionist
agent. They have hauled him into court on charges of defaming Islam
and seek to ban his use of rock music to promote a spiritual and
progressive interpretation of Islam that threatens the appeal of their
own Wahhabi-inspired extremism.
Yet rather than be intimidated, Dhani recently
announced to the Indonesian press his plan to launch yet another
“ideological smart bomb” – in the form of a song that uses the
revelatory tone of the Koran to declare: “Truth dwells in the hearts
of those who love and are free of hatred; the hearts of those who
hate… are possessed by Satan.”
Ahmad Dhani and his group are on the front lines
of a global conflict, defending Islam from its fanatical hijackers. In
a world all too often marred by hatred and violence committed in the
name of religion, they seek to rescue an entire generation from
Wahhabi-financed extremists whose goal is to transform Muslim youth
into holy warriors and suicide bombers. For every young Indonesian
seduced by the ideology of hatred and fanaticism – including those
responsible for the recent, awful attacks in Bali – countless others
see through the extremists’ web of lies and hatred, in no small part
thanks to the visionary courage of people like Ahmad Dhani. For as
they listen to Dewa’s music, the hearts of millions of young
Indonesians have been inspired to declare: “No to the warriors of
jihad! Yes to the warriors of love!”
Kyai Haji Abdurrahman Wahid is a former
president of Indonesia. From 1984-1999 he headed Nahdlatul Ulama, the
world’s largest Muslim organization, with nearly 40 million members.
C. Holland Taylor is chairman & chief executive of Libforall
Foundation, a nonprofit that works to reduce religious extremism and
discredit the use of terrorism. Dhani serves on the foundation’s
board. The authors can be reached at
media@libforall.org.
URL for this article:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/10/06/AR2005100601559.html
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