LIPIA
Of all the agencies for the spread of salifism in
Indonesia, none has been more important than
LIPIA. In early 1980, the Imam Muhammad bin
Saud University in Riyadh, which had branches in
Djibouti and Mauritania, decided to open a third, in
Indonesia. It sent an instructor, Sheikh Abdul Aziz
Abdullah al-Ammar, a student of the top salafi
scholar in the world, Sheikh Abdullah bin Baz, to
Jakarta. Bin Baz urged his protégé to meet with
Mohammed Natsir on arrival.30
Natsir welcomed the idea of Jakarta's hosting an
extension of a major Saudi university. Not only
would it help strengthen local capacity in Islamic
law, it would also give far more Indonesian
students access to the kind of instruction available
in Saudi Arabia.31 He agreed to facilitate the
project, and by the end of 1980, a new institute
based on salafi principles was up and running.32
and Tamsil Linrung, Menunaikan Panggilan Risalah:
Dokumentasi Perjalanan 30 Tahun Dewan Dakwah
Islamiyyah Indonesia, Jakarta, 1997.
28 See ICG Report, Jemaah Islamiyah in South East Asia, op.
cit., and ICG Asia Report N°43, Indonesia Backgrounder,
How the Jemaah Islamiyah Terrorist Network Works, 11
December 2002.
29 Other well-known salafi leaders who trained under Jamil ur-
Rahman were Abu Nida' and Shaleh Su'aidi of Yogyakarta,
Ahmad Fa'iz of Kebumen, and Abu Ubah, of Riau.
30 Aay Muhamad Furkon, Partai Keadilan Sejahtera,
Ideologi Dan Praksis Politik Kaum Muda Muslim Indonesia
Kontemporer (Teraju Publishers, 2004), p. 173.
31 Ibid.
32 The original name was Lembaga Pendidikan Bahasa Arab
(Institute for Arabic Language Study).
Indonesia Backgrounder: Why Salafism and Terrorism Mostly Don't Mix
ICG Asia Report N°83, 13 September 2004 Page 8
The new school followed the curriculum of its parent
university, and many of the faculty were salafi
scholars, brought from Saudi Arabia. It provided full
scholarships, covering tuition, housing, and a stipend
that by Indonesian standards was extraordinarily
generous (100 to 300 rials per month, roughly $27 to
$82)33. Promising graduates received scholarships to
continue their studies at the master's and PhD level
in Riyadh.
The first LIPIA students included men who have
become some of Indonesia's best-known salafi
leaders.34 Many students became Muslim preachers
(da'i), on university campuses, among other places,
and there was a particularly strong relationship
between LIPIA and outreach activities on the
campus of the University of Indonesia in Jakarta.35
But in the early 1990s, a split developed within the
faculty, passed on to the students, between the purists
of the salafi movement and those who were
influenced by the Muslim Brotherhood. The
Brotherhood's founder, Hassan al-Banna, pioneered
the concept of a political movement (harakah) aimed
at the transformation of Muslim societies and based
on the construction of model communities, built up
from small groups (usroh, literally family) of ten to
fifteen people who would live by Islamic law.
The concept of usroh communities spread rapidly on
Indonesian campuses in the early 1980s, just as the
Soeharto government's targeting of political Islam
intensified. Not only was the concept adopted by
many of the campus groups set up by DDII as a way
of organising Islamic study, but it also became the
theoretical basis for the establishment of what
amounted to political cells for more explicitly antigovernment
activities. Abdullah Sungkar, later to
found JI, and Abu Bakar Ba'asyir started the usroh
communities in Central Java.36
33 Figures denoted in dollars ($) in this report are in U.S.
dollars.
34 Among them are Abdul Hakim Abdat, a hadith scholar
from Jakarta; Yazid Jawwas, of Minhaj us-Sunnah in Bogor;
Farid Okbah, a director of al-Irsyad; Ainul Harits, Yayasan
Nida''ul Islam, Surabaya; Abubakar M. Altway; Yayasan al-
Sofwah, Jakarta; Ja'far Umar Thalib, founder of Forum
Ahlussunnah Wal Jamaah; and Yusuf Utsman Baisa, a
director of al-Irsyad Pesantren, Tengaran.
35 Ali Said Damanik, Fenomena Partai Keadilan (Jakarta,
2002), fn. 202, p. 206.
36 See ICG Briefing, Al-Qaeda in Southeast Asia, op. cit.
Within LIPIA, the influence of the Brotherhood
increased steadily. Several of the most popular
instructors subscribed to its basic tenets, and the
LIPIA library began filling up with books by leaders
of the Brotherhood or those supportive of its aims.37
Some LIPIA students influenced by Brotherhood
during this period went on to become leaders of the
Justice Party, now the Prosperous Justice Party, a
political movement set up very much along
Brotherhood lines (and that is sometimes referred to
as the tarbiyah or education movement).38 By the
early 1990s the purists, concerned about keeping the
focus on religious as opposed to political activities,
were upset at the influence of hizbiyah thinking in
LIPIA.
In fact, the basic methodology of the purists and the
political activists was almost identical. Both placed
heavy emphasis on education and recruitment. Both
used dauroh – training progrom in Islamic studies --
to draw in more followers and increase their religious
knowledge. But purists believed that the Brotherhood
was sullying Islam by being too accommodating to
"innovators" in the interests of achieving political
goals. As one scathing critic put it, "Everyone's a
friend, no one's an enemy, they yell, 'There's no East,
there's no West, there are no Sunnis, no Shi'as, what's
important is Islam!'"39 But by tolerating deviants, the
purists said, the Brotherhood was undermining the
principles of aqidah (faith).
Rather than fight a losing battle in LIPIA, the purists
around 1995-1996 began to discourage their followers
from attending the school. By the time that decision
was taken, however, LIPIA's influence on the spread
of the salafi movement was already huge, in terms of
the sheer numbers of graduates. By June 1998, the
school had produced 3,726 students; by 2004, the
number would be closer to 5,000.40 Not all became
committed salafis, of course. Ulil Abshar Abdalla, for
example, the founder of the Liberal Islam Network --
in some ways, the antithesis of the salafi movement --
is also a LIPIA graduate. But overall, no single
institution did more to propagate salafism in Indonesia.
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Jazaakumullaahu khayran
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