Being Muslim in Indonesia: Religiosity, Politics and Cultural Diversity in Bima
by Muhammad Sila
Leiden University Press, 2021 Paper: 978-90-8728-362-9 | eISBN: 978-94-006-0406-3 Library of Congress Classification BP63.I52B568 2021 Dewey Decimal Classification 297.0959865
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC
ABOUT THIS BOOK How people in the world’s largest Muslim country negotiate religious identities.
There are many ways of being Muslim in Indonesia, where more people practice Islam than anywhere else in the world. In Being Muslim in Indonesia, Muhammad Adlin Sila reveals the ways Muslims in one city constitute unique religious identities through ritual, political, and cultural practices. Emerging from diverse contexts, the traditionalist and reformist divide in Indonesian Islam must be understood through the sociopolitical lens of its practitioners—whether royalty, clerics, or laity.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY Muhammad Adlin Sila is a member of Indonesia’s Ministry of Religious Affairs and a lecturer at the State Islamic University of Syarif Hidayatullah, Jakarta.
REVIEWS
“I think the work is a valuable book with a wealth of new and as yet unrecorded information on Islam as practiced in Bima, obtained from fieldwork. One of the interesting things it shows is that the commonly accepted dichotomy between traditionalist Muslims (organized in the Nadlatul Ulama) on the one hand and the reformist Muslims (organized in the Muhammadiyah) is not fully tenable and that the boundaries between these two orientations within Islam are actually blurred, e.g. in the sensitive issue of traditional healing. The part on the Hanta Ua Pua Festival shows in an interesting way how religion is linked to the peculiar traditional dual power structure in Bima. All in all, this is the best book on Islam in everyday life in Bima, which I know of.”
— Nico Kaptein, University of Leiden
“This book contains a great deal of material on contemporary expressions of Islam in a part of Indonesia that is famous for its piety. One of the aims of the book is to show how villagers have continued to maintain a large degree of local social cohesion in the performance of a variety of rituals despite the over-arching presence of a global conflict in the Islamic world between traditionalist mysticism and scripturalist rationalism.”
— Thomas Gibson, University of Rochester
“This dissertation provides important ethnographic insights and theoretical arguments that shed light on the relationship between local politics and everyday Islam. With deep historical insights about local and transnational connection to Bima, the author observes how, during a moment of decentralization and regional autonomy, a once-forbidden ritual touting the arrival of Islam to Bima experiences a resurgence. Rather than ascribing this shift to ostensibly Islamic practice, the author argues compellingly that religion must be understood within a wider field of patronage and power relations, notably a clever shift in tactics from a Golkar-era party enthusiast to a post-authoritarian embrace of the power of Bima’s sultanate. This research provides a great contribution to a relative dearth of good ethnography of Muslim life in eastern Indonesia. . . The author has filled an important void in our scholarly understanding about the cultural politics of Islam in eastern Indonesia. This dissertation would likely be well received by scholars of religion, anthropology, and political science, and I look forward to reading the published version.”
— Mark Woodward, University of Boston
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations Preface Acknowledgement Notes on Transliteration and Style
Chapter One Introduction 1.1. Why Bima Is Important? 1.2. Sultan and Raja Bicara: Dyadic Leadership 1.3. Being Muslim as a Social Phenomenon 1.4. Outline of the Book Chapter Two Background of Study 2.1 . Previous Studies on Islam and Muslims in Bima 2.2 . Methodological and Theoretical Framework 2.3 . Bima as a Study Site The people The place 2.4 . Choosing the Field 2.5 . Methods of Collecting Data Chapter Three Hanta Ua Pua: Delivering Betel and Accepting Islam 3.1. The Historical Accounts of the Festival 3.2. Dato di Banda and Kampung Melayu 3.3. The Celebration of the Prophet Muhammad’s Birthday 3.4. Mawlid Texts: the many versions of written words praising the Prophet 3.5. The Festival of Hanta Ua Pua 3.6. Majelis Hadat Dana Mbojo and Hanta Ua Pua: the politics of festival 3.7. The local dimension of the NU and Muhammadiyah in Bima 3.8. Conclusion Chapter Four Imam and Royal Mosque 1.1. Imam and Sultan 1.2. Imam and Royal Foundation 1.3. Everyday Rituals among Muslims 1.4. Social Dimension of Ritual Prayers 1.5. Accommodation during Ramadan Ritual Prayers 1.6. The Festival of Breaking the Fast: Idul Fitri 1.7. Friday Congregational Prayers: regional bylaws and politics of ritual 1.8. Conclusion Chapter Five Sando and Spirt Possession: Engaging with the spirit and healing the sick 5.1. Sando, Spirit Possession and Spirit Mediumship 5.2. The Local Belief in Supernatural Beings and the Types of Illness 5.3. Religious Reformism in the Belief in Ancestral pirits: From parafu ro pambora to padasa 5.4. The Power of Water and the Qur’anic Verses in Healing Rituals 5.5. Being Submissive and Healing the Sick with the Help of God: karana ala 5.6. Protecting the Village, Asking for Salvation: doa dana 5.7. Healing Practice and Its Relationship to Islamic Mysticism 5.8. Fitua, Silsilah and the Seven Grade (Martabat Tujuh) 5.9. Conclusion Chapter Six Life-cycle Rituals: Praying from unborn to birth and becoming Muslim 6.1. Concepts of Solidarity in Lifetime Rituals 6.2. Ritual for a Pregnant Mother 6.3. Birth Delivery Ritual 6.4. Hair-shaving and Name-giving 6.5. Circumcision 6.6. Complete Qur’an Recital and Veiling 6.7. Conclusion Chapter Seven Life-cycle Rituals: Marriage and Death, Getting Together in Joy and Sadness 7.1. Village Gatherings 7.2. Marriage Ceremony 7.3. Bride-service at Prospective In-laws’ Residence 7.4. Marriage Payment Delivery 7.5. Henna Night 7.6. Marriage Contract Ceremony 7.7. Commemoration of the Deceased 7.8. Feasting and Praying for the Deceased 7.9. Conclusion Chapter Eight Concluding Remarks 8.1. Religiosity 8.2. Politics 8.3. Cultural Diversity 8.4. Conclusion
Being Muslim in Indonesia: Religiosity, Politics and Cultural Diversity in Bima
by Muhammad Sila
Leiden University Press, 2021 Paper: 978-90-8728-362-9 eISBN: 978-94-006-0406-3
How people in the world’s largest Muslim country negotiate religious identities.
There are many ways of being Muslim in Indonesia, where more people practice Islam than anywhere else in the world. In Being Muslim in Indonesia, Muhammad Adlin Sila reveals the ways Muslims in one city constitute unique religious identities through ritual, political, and cultural practices. Emerging from diverse contexts, the traditionalist and reformist divide in Indonesian Islam must be understood through the sociopolitical lens of its practitioners—whether royalty, clerics, or laity.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY Muhammad Adlin Sila is a member of Indonesia’s Ministry of Religious Affairs and a lecturer at the State Islamic University of Syarif Hidayatullah, Jakarta.
REVIEWS
“I think the work is a valuable book with a wealth of new and as yet unrecorded information on Islam as practiced in Bima, obtained from fieldwork. One of the interesting things it shows is that the commonly accepted dichotomy between traditionalist Muslims (organized in the Nadlatul Ulama) on the one hand and the reformist Muslims (organized in the Muhammadiyah) is not fully tenable and that the boundaries between these two orientations within Islam are actually blurred, e.g. in the sensitive issue of traditional healing. The part on the Hanta Ua Pua Festival shows in an interesting way how religion is linked to the peculiar traditional dual power structure in Bima. All in all, this is the best book on Islam in everyday life in Bima, which I know of.”
— Nico Kaptein, University of Leiden
“This book contains a great deal of material on contemporary expressions of Islam in a part of Indonesia that is famous for its piety. One of the aims of the book is to show how villagers have continued to maintain a large degree of local social cohesion in the performance of a variety of rituals despite the over-arching presence of a global conflict in the Islamic world between traditionalist mysticism and scripturalist rationalism.”
— Thomas Gibson, University of Rochester
“This dissertation provides important ethnographic insights and theoretical arguments that shed light on the relationship between local politics and everyday Islam. With deep historical insights about local and transnational connection to Bima, the author observes how, during a moment of decentralization and regional autonomy, a once-forbidden ritual touting the arrival of Islam to Bima experiences a resurgence. Rather than ascribing this shift to ostensibly Islamic practice, the author argues compellingly that religion must be understood within a wider field of patronage and power relations, notably a clever shift in tactics from a Golkar-era party enthusiast to a post-authoritarian embrace of the power of Bima’s sultanate. This research provides a great contribution to a relative dearth of good ethnography of Muslim life in eastern Indonesia. . . The author has filled an important void in our scholarly understanding about the cultural politics of Islam in eastern Indonesia. This dissertation would likely be well received by scholars of religion, anthropology, and political science, and I look forward to reading the published version.”
— Mark Woodward, University of Boston
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations Preface Acknowledgement Notes on Transliteration and Style
Chapter One Introduction 1.1. Why Bima Is Important? 1.2. Sultan and Raja Bicara: Dyadic Leadership 1.3. Being Muslim as a Social Phenomenon 1.4. Outline of the Book Chapter Two Background of Study 2.1 . Previous Studies on Islam and Muslims in Bima 2.2 . Methodological and Theoretical Framework 2.3 . Bima as a Study Site The people The place 2.4 . Choosing the Field 2.5 . Methods of Collecting Data Chapter Three Hanta Ua Pua: Delivering Betel and Accepting Islam 3.1. The Historical Accounts of the Festival 3.2. Dato di Banda and Kampung Melayu 3.3. The Celebration of the Prophet Muhammad’s Birthday 3.4. Mawlid Texts: the many versions of written words praising the Prophet 3.5. The Festival of Hanta Ua Pua 3.6. Majelis Hadat Dana Mbojo and Hanta Ua Pua: the politics of festival 3.7. The local dimension of the NU and Muhammadiyah in Bima 3.8. Conclusion Chapter Four Imam and Royal Mosque 1.1. Imam and Sultan 1.2. Imam and Royal Foundation 1.3. Everyday Rituals among Muslims 1.4. Social Dimension of Ritual Prayers 1.5. Accommodation during Ramadan Ritual Prayers 1.6. The Festival of Breaking the Fast: Idul Fitri 1.7. Friday Congregational Prayers: regional bylaws and politics of ritual 1.8. Conclusion Chapter Five Sando and Spirt Possession: Engaging with the spirit and healing the sick 5.1. Sando, Spirit Possession and Spirit Mediumship 5.2. The Local Belief in Supernatural Beings and the Types of Illness 5.3. Religious Reformism in the Belief in Ancestral pirits: From parafu ro pambora to padasa 5.4. The Power of Water and the Qur’anic Verses in Healing Rituals 5.5. Being Submissive and Healing the Sick with the Help of God: karana ala 5.6. Protecting the Village, Asking for Salvation: doa dana 5.7. Healing Practice and Its Relationship to Islamic Mysticism 5.8. Fitua, Silsilah and the Seven Grade (Martabat Tujuh) 5.9. Conclusion Chapter Six Life-cycle Rituals: Praying from unborn to birth and becoming Muslim 6.1. Concepts of Solidarity in Lifetime Rituals 6.2. Ritual for a Pregnant Mother 6.3. Birth Delivery Ritual 6.4. Hair-shaving and Name-giving 6.5. Circumcision 6.6. Complete Qur’an Recital and Veiling 6.7. Conclusion Chapter Seven Life-cycle Rituals: Marriage and Death, Getting Together in Joy and Sadness 7.1. Village Gatherings 7.2. Marriage Ceremony 7.3. Bride-service at Prospective In-laws’ Residence 7.4. Marriage Payment Delivery 7.5. Henna Night 7.6. Marriage Contract Ceremony 7.7. Commemoration of the Deceased 7.8. Feasting and Praying for the Deceased 7.9. Conclusion Chapter Eight Concluding Remarks 8.1. Religiosity 8.2. Politics 8.3. Cultural Diversity 8.4. Conclusion
Notes Appendices Glossary Bibliography Index
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC