
Toward a Kinder, Gentler Islam
BY
WALTER RUBY
February 20, 2008
A former telecom CEO and the former
Indonesian president look to expand their fight against religious
extremism in Muslim world.
|
Former Indonesian President Abdurrahman
Wahid, left, and Holland Taylor: Offering an alternative to
fundamentalist Islam. Courtesy of LibforAll |
Is there a tolerant,
pluralistic form of Islam that has the self-confidence and mass appeal
to counter the spread of violent and fundamentalist jihadist ideology
across the Muslim world?
C. Holland Taylor, a North
Carolina ex-businessman who was born Christian but terms himself a
“universalist drawn to mystical traditions in all religions,” thinks so.
He is so convinced that such an alternative exists in the
Sufi-influenced Islam of Indonesia that he quit his position as CEO of
an international telecom firm and joined forces with Abdurrahman Wahid,
a former president of Indonesia to form an international NGO known as
the LibforAll Foundation. The organization is dedicated to supporting
moderate Muslims in promoting a culture of liberty and tolerance.
That effort has been
successful enough over the past five years in stemming the growth of
militant Islam in Indonesia, a Southeast Asia archipelago with 240
million people — by far the world’s largest Muslim nation — that Taylor
and Wahid now hope to extend LibforAll’s campaign against religious
extremism throughout the Muslim world.
Last year, LibforAll
sponsored two initiatives that signaled its determination to challenge
Muslim militant ideology head on, even at the risk of being labeled
pro-Zionist: a conference held last June in Bali at which Wahid made a
speech rebuking Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad for promoting
Holocaust denial, and a visit to Israel last December by a delegation of
high-level Indonesian Muslim leaders.
“We decided to move ahead with these initiatives because hatred of Jews
and Israel is part and parcel of the radicalization of the entire Muslim
world and, if we are to get to peace, that kind of thinking has to
change,” Taylor told The Jewish Week in an interview during a recent
stopover in New York, while traveling between LibforAll’s international
headquarters in the Indonesian capital of Jakarta and his home in
Winston-Salem, N.C.
“The courageous Indonesian
Muslim leaders involved in our movement are ready to work with people of
all backgrounds and faiths in the battle against Islamic extremism,
which is a threat to all of humanity.”
A youthful-looking 51 with an infectious enthusiasm for a subject —
Indonesian Islam — few Westerners know anything about, Taylor has had a
fascination with the Muslim world ever since living with his family in
Iran for four years as a child.
After graduating from Princeton, he wrote several books on politics and
economics and served as CEO of a telecom firm called U.S. Global Link,
traveling throughout the world during the late 1990’s to countries that
were then privatizing hitherto government-linked telecom companies. One
such country was Indonesia, of which Taylor became so enamored that he
decided to leave telecommunications and relocate to Jakarta in order to
study the Indonesian language and the history of Islam there.
“I was fascinated to learn that Java [the main island of Indonesia] was
the only place in the entire Muslim world where the tolerant Sufi
understanding of Islam triumphed over the stricter, more doctrinaire
versions of the religion that exist elsewhere,” Taylor explained.
In the course of his study of
Javanese Islam, Taylor became a friend and confidante of Wahid, a frail
67-year-old Muslim cleric who served as president of Indonesia from 1999
to 2001 before being forced out of office by the military. In the years
since, Wahid, who is known popularly in Indonesia as Gus Dur, has
devoted himself to promoting religious tolerance, pluralism and
democracy.
Together, Taylor and Wahid decided to create LibforAll (the “lib” stands
for both liberty and liberation), an Indonesian and U.S.-based
organization dedicated to buttressing moderate Muslims as they fend off
a lavishly-funded effort by the Saudi government and other backers of
the strict Wahhabi brand of Islam to spread the tenets of that sect to
Indonesia. In recent years, Indonesia has seen a spurt of terrorist
violence by Islamic extremists, including suicide bombings in Jakarta
and the tourist island of Bali that killed hundreds.
According to Taylor, “Gus Dur and I reach out to spiritual leaders and
opinion leaders in Indonesian society who have a pluralistic
understanding of Islam and are ready to advocate it publicly in order to
dissuade Muslim population from supporting extremism and violence.”
In an article published last year in the Wall Street Journal, Wahid
wrote, “Muslims themselves can and must propagate an understanding of
the ‘right’ Islam, and thereby discredit extremist ideology...Our goal
must be to illuminate the hearts and minds of humanity and offer a
compelling alternative vision of Islam, one that banishes the fanatical
ideology of hatred to the darkness from which it emerged.”
Soon after co-founding LibforAll, Wahid denounced a series of fatwas
(religious rulings) issued by a high-ranking council of Indonesian
Muslim clerics that condemned any Islamic teachings based on liberalism
and banned the participation of Muslims in interfaith prayers with
non-Muslims.
In the less than five years since the founding of LibforAll, Taylor has
built a growing network of supporters in Europe and the United States.
Last year, LibforAll received funding from the Organization of Security
and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) for work advising European governments
how to prevent the growth of Islamic extremism in their countries. In
2006, the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on State and Foreign
Operations recommended that $3.5 million be appropriated to LibforAll
for programs targeting Muslim youth in the Middle East and elsewhere,
but the appropriation later failed due to gridlock between Republicans
and Democrats on the Hill.
While intent on building ties
to both sides of the U.S. political divide, Taylor appears to have a
greater affinity with neoconservatives like Bret Stephens, a former
editor in chief of the Jerusalem Post and presently foreign affairs
columnist at the Wall Street Journal.
Last year, after an extended visit to Indonesia to profile the efforts
of Taylor and Wahid, Stephens, who is known for a staunchly hawkish
stance on Israeli-Arab conflict and relationship between Islam and the
West, stated: “My visit to Indonesia was an eye opener for me because
for the first time I encountered a huge (Muslim) movement in
confrontation with Muslim radicalism lavishly funded by Saudi Arabia. I
came back convinced of the need for the U.S. to pursue public diplomacy
more aggressively than in the past, to identify genuine moderates in
Muslim countries and to give them the resources they need to prevail.”
In response to the notorious Holocaust-denial conference held in Tehran
in December 2006, LibforAll sponsored a one-day “religious summit” in
Bali. Among the highlights of the Wiesenthal Center-underwritten event,
which was attended by Christian, Hindu and Buddhist priests and Rabbi
Daniel Landes of the Pardes Institute in Jerusalem, were appearances by
badly scarred victims of terror from Israel and Indonesia, and by Sol
Teichman, a 79-year-old Holocaust survivor. In his address to the
conclave, Wahid said, “Although I am a good friend of Ahmadinejad, I
have to say he is wrong [about the Holocaust]. I visited Auschwitz’s
Museum of the Holocaust and I saw many shoes of dead people.”
Equally unprecedented was the next joint project of LibforAll and the
Wiesenthal Center — a weeklong trip to Israel and the West Bank by a
five-member delegation of leaders of the two largest Muslim movements in
Indonesia. The participants visited with missile-plagued residents of
Sderot, danced with yeshiva students in Kiryat Shemona, dialogued in
Ramallah with Mohammed Dajani, a Palestinian proponent of non-violence,
and held an hour-long meeting with President Shimon Peres.
Taylor was asked whether the credibility of his organization is not
undercut in the Muslim world when it seeks U.S. funding and works
closely with Jewish groups.
“The reality is that no matter what we do, our enemies are going to
denounce us as tools of the Americans and Zionists,” he said. “So we
might as well go ahead and take money from all available sources so that
we can expand the scope and effectiveness of our efforts.”
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