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Buddhism in Muslim Indonesia

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Author(s)
Steenbrink, Karel
Keywords
nationalism
conversion
WALUBI
Confucianism
Buddhism
GE Subjects
Political ethics
Governance and ethics
Religious ethics
Spirituality and ethics
Community ethics
Minority ethics
Comparative religion and interreligious dialogue

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URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/157183
Abstract
This article presents an overview of various ways in which Buddhists and Muslims have lived together in Indonesia since the arrival of Islam about 1200. It tells how Buddhism has slowly disappeared and become a religion for mainly the Chinese who, until the late 19th century, have often converted to Islam. This article analyzes the role of three key figures in the recent government–supported revival of Buddhism. These figures are the Chinese–Indonesian monk Ashin Jinarakkhita, the Balinese lay devotee and government official Oka Diputhera, and the Chinese–Indonesian businesswoman Sri Hartati Murdaya. They have tried to accommodate Buddhism to the Muslim– dominated nationalism of modern Indonesia. The result of the past five decades is that Buddhism has obtained a modest but safe position in independent Indonesia.
Date
2013
Type
Journal volume
Copyright/License
With permission of the license/copyright holder
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Islamic Ethics

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