Religion
Related: About this forumIndonesia's Rising Religious Intolerance
By BENEDICT ROGERS
Published: May 21, 2012
JAKARTA Just a few days after Lady Gagas concert in Indonesia was canceled after protests by Islamic groups, I flew 1,370 kilometers from Jakarta to Padang, West Sumatra, and drove a further 130 kilometers, a four-hour journey along rough, winding roads, to Sijunjung, to visit an Indonesian atheist jailed for his beliefs.
Alex Aan, a 30-year-old civil servant, is a gentle, soft-spoken, highly intelligent young man who simply gave up his belief in God when he saw poverty, war, famine and disaster around the world.
He faces the possibility of up to six years in prison, charged with blasphemy, disseminating hatred and spreading atheism. Radical Muslims came to his office, beat him up, and called the police after reading about his views on Facebook.
Alex is the first atheist in Indonesia to be jailed for his belief, but his case is symptomatic of a wider increase in religious intolerance in the worlds largest Muslim-majority nation. The previous Sunday, I joined a small church in Bekasi, a suburb of Jakarta, for a service, but found the street blocked by a noisy, angry mob and a few police.
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/22/opinion/indonesias-rising-religious-intolerance.html
msongs
(67,478 posts)rug
(82,333 posts)cbayer
(146,218 posts)I think this may have to do more with political control.
2ndAmForComputers
(3,527 posts)[pre]
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rug
(82,333 posts)Have a laugh over that one?
2ndAmForComputers
(3,527 posts)rug
(82,333 posts)Ron Obvious
(6,261 posts)When it comes to Islam, I'll never forget that gentle peacenic and Muslim convert Cat Stevens saying that, of course, anybody who mocks the prophet Mohammed should be killed, as though that were only self-evident.
It chills me to this day.