NURTURING
TOLERANCE IN PESANTREN
Lily
Zakiyah Munir
Center
for Pesantren and Democracy Studies (CePDeS)
From
The Jakarta Post, 5 September 2003
Back five years
ago in a pesantren (Islamic boarding school) in
the small city of Jombang, East Java, amidst a tranquil crack of dawn a
congregation of male santris (students of pesantren) was performing their morning prayer in the mosque. While they were absorbed in the
rituals, a Dutch Catholic priest who had spent the previous night at the pesantren was observing them from behind. Sitting cross-legged at the outer part of the mosque, he was
attentively watching them perform the rituals and patiently waiting for a
dialogue with some santris to be scheduled after
the prayer. Later on that day,
after a dialogue with santris, the priest had a
warm, friendly conversation in the Arabic language with the kyai (leader of pesantren) on various
religious and humanitarian issues.
The Catholic priest, upon returning to his country, wrote that his stay
at the pesantren and dialogues with the santris and kyai was one of the most
beautiful moments in his life. He
thanked the kyai and santris for their hospitality and warm welcome.
Three years
later, the pesantren hosted a multi-religious
delegation from a Norway-based inter-faith organization that came to Indonesia to
see how religious pluralism is internalized and practiced here. The dialogue between the delegation and
the santris was warm, open and sometimes filled
with bursts of laughter. The santris
enjoyed not only stories about far away life
especially among its teenagers, but also the opportunity to practice their
English. They had no prejudice at
all to the delegation, moreover because one of them who happened to be the
leader was a Norwegian Muslim lady with a headgear. The santris and the European
guests exchanged views and perspectives on different topics especially relating
to the lives of Muslims and Christians in Europe.
The above
stories are just two ‘episodes’ in the activities of many pesantrens
in Indonesia, including Jombang which is known as a
city of thousand pesantrens. Countless Western and non-Muslim
researchers and activists have visited and even lived in pesantren for different purposes.
Some of them conducted anthropological studies using the popular method
of participant observation; some others taught English, while others were
interested in learning deeper about Islam. These direct encounters with ‘outsiders’ have
been an invaluable experience for santris which
has nurtured awareness and appreciation of differences and diversities. It is not surprising, therefore, that pesantrens
in Indonesia have produced broad-minded and
tolerant personalities and alumni such as Abdurrahman Wahid or Nurcholis
Madjid, two out of quite a few Muslim intellectuals and scholars widely reputed
for their integrity in religious pluralism.
When asked about
religious justification on their openness to outsiders, including non-Muslims,
some santris immediately referred to the Prophet
Muhammad’s saying that whoever believes in God and in the hereafter, s/he
has to respect her/his guest. This
prophetic saying (hadith) is a strong religious
basis for santris to be confident in respecting
their non-Muslim guests. There is
no limitation in this hadith as to whom the
respect should be addressed in terms of religion, for example to Muslim guests
only. The limitation applies in
terms of time, which is three days.
To a visitor of more than three days, the host is not obligated to give
a special treatment.
Another santri
refers to the teaching on brotherhood that is
prevalent among members or followers of Nahdlatul Ulama or NU (Resurgence of Ulemas), the
so-called largest Muslim organization in Indonesia. The teaching advocates three levels of brotherhood that need
to be uplifted in pursuing peaceful coexistence of all humankind. First, is
brotherhood among Muslims (ukhuwwah Islamiyah); second,
is brotherhood among people of the same nation (ukhuwwah wathoniyah), and third, brotherhood among all human beings (ukhuwwah
basyariyah) regardless of their race, ethnicity,
religion and nationality.
The above
illustration of tolerance and pluralism in pesantren might sound ‘awkward’ amongst the emerging
stigmatization against pesantren in the
aftermath of the JW Marriot bombing.
The suicide bomber, Amsar, reportedly was an alumnus of a pesantren, the Al-Mukmin in Ngruki, which is led by the alleged cleric Abu
Bakar Ba’asyir. This
association of pesantren with a suicide bomber
can obviously ruin the image of moderate and tolerant santris in thousands of pesantrens who have
demonstrated these traits as their built-in characters as illustrated in the
examples above. From outside,
judged from the names or physical appearance, these two types of pesantren may look alike. But in
terms of teachings and moral values nurtured they are completely contradictory,
just like night and day. In a pesantren like Ngruki, a dialogue with ‘the other’ (people with
different interpretations of Islam or those who are non Muslim) would not be
possible. These people are
regarded as ‘kafir’ or infidels and there is no point in dialoguing
with them. Their blood is even
considered ‘halal,’ meaning that it is allowable to shed their
blood. So, one should never make
any generalization when talking about pesantren. There are thousands of moderate pesantrens,
but there are radical pesantrens, as few as five according to Sidney Jones, that appear like, to
borrow the term used by Bassam Tibi in his book The Challenge of
Fundamentalism, ‘a horse of another
colour.’
One unique
characteristic of moderate pesantrens which has
enabled them to produce tolerant and pluralistic people is their balance in
teaching Islamic legal aspects (Fikih) and the
spirituality (Sufism). This approach can be traced back to derive from the nine saints (wali
songo) who spread Islam on the island of Java
peacefully. This spirituality
dimension is what probably missing in radical pesantrens, who prefer to stand in a binary position: right/wrong, halal/haram,
me/the other, heaven/hell, etc.
As a result, they produce people with an
exclusionary stance who see the world as black and white and who lack the
beauty and inner meaning of the religion: peace, tolerance, respect, love and
care for others, and other esoteric and humanitarian traits.
This type of
Islam is not typical Indonesian.
Islam in Indonesia has been known as tolerant, pluralistic and adaptable
to local cultures. But the last
three decades have witnessed the growing phenomenon of Islamic fundamentalism
that tends to practice religious teachings in a rigid and exclusive way. Moderate pesantrens should be alert of this and enhance their teachings on pluralism to
their santris.