JAKARTA,
Indonesia — Growing up in a conservative Muslim household in rural West
Sumatra, Alexander Aan hid a dark secret beginning at age 9: He did not
believe in God. His feelings only hardened as he got older and he faked
his way through daily prayers, Islamic holidays and the fasting month
of Ramadan.
He
stopped praying in 2008, when he was 26, and he finally told his
parents and three younger siblings that he was an atheist — a rare
revelation in a country like Indonesia, the world’s most populous
Muslim-majority nation. They responded with disappointment and
expressions of hope that he would return to Islam.
But
Mr. Aan neither returned to Islam nor confined his secret to his
family, and he ended up in prison after running afoul of a 2008 law
restricting electronic communications. He had joined an atheist Facebook
group started by Indonesians living in the Netherlands, and in 2011 he
began posting commentaries outlining why he did not think God existed.
“When
I saw, with my own eyes, poor people, people on television caught up in
war, people who were hungry or ill, it made me uncomfortable,” Mr. Aan,
now 32, said in an interview. “What is the meaning of this? As a
Muslim, I had questioned God — what is the meaning of God?” He was
released on parole on Jan. 27 after serving more than 19 months on a
charge of inciting religious hatred.
Indonesia’s state ideology, Pancasila,
enshrines monotheism, and blasphemy is illegal. However, the
Constitution guarantees freedom of religion and speech, and the country
is 16 years into a transition from authoritarianism to democracy.
But
Mr. Aan’s case is one of an increasing number of instances of
persecution connected to freedom of religion in Indonesia in recent
years. Although Indonesia has influential Christian, Hindu and Buddhist
minorities, every year there have been hundreds of episodes, including
violent attacks, targeting religious minorities like Christians and
Shiite and Ahmadiyah Muslims, as well as dozens of arrests over
blasphemy against Islam. Numerous churches have been closed for lacking
proper permits.
According
to human rights organizations and various surveys, religious
intolerance is on the rise in Indonesia, at least partly because of the
growing influence of radical Islamic groups that use street protests and
acts of violence to support their aims. Some of these radical groups
demonstrated in Jakarta, the capital, before Mr. Aan’s trial in West
Sumatra in 2012.
“His
case very much ties in with that whole trend,” said Benedict Rogers,
the East Asia team leader for Christian Solidarity Worldwide, a human
rights organization founded in Britain. The group released a report
in February warning that religious intolerance in Indonesia was
spreading beyond traditionally conservative Muslim bases like West Java
Province.
“Of
course there would be religious people who would take offense about
someone publicly expressing this view” about atheism, Mr. Rogers said.
“But I think if it weren’t for this growing Islamism and extremism,
Alexander’s case probably wouldn’t have happened.”
Mr.
Aan’s troubles began in January 2012 when a mob in the Dharmasraya
district of West Sumatra showed up looking for him at a government
planning office where he worked as a data analyst.
“They wanted me to stop saying there is no God,” he said. “I told them that it was my right to express my beliefs.”
Police
officers were called to prevent any violence, and they instead escorted
Mr. Aan to the local police station, where he found himself being
interrogated and, within hours, charged with disseminating information
aimed at inciting religious hatred. The next day, he was charged with
blasphemy and inciting others to embrace atheism.
A
court in Padang, the capital of West Sumatra Province, threw out the
blasphemy and atheism charges, but it convicted Mr. Aan in June 2012 of
trying to incite religious hatred under the electronic information law
and sentenced him to two and a half years in prison.
“What I posted was for discussion, not to incite hatred,” he said in the interview.
Mr.
Aan’s case was among several controversial prosecutions over comments
made on the Internet in Indonesia, where Twitter and Facebook are
extremely popular.
A
homemaker was jailed and charged with defamation in 2009 after
complaining about what she said was an incorrect hospital diagnosis in a
private email that found its way online. In February, a Twitter user
was sentenced to a year’s probation for “libelous tweets” against a
former national lawmaker who had been convicted and sent to prison for
corruption.
“It’s
funny — we say we have freedom of expression, but it’s only up to a
certain point,” said Enda Nasution, an Indonesian blogger. “I think we
are absorbing all of these new norms, and with the Internet, we are
experimenting with what we can and can’t do. Atheism is a no-no, it
seems.”
Christian
groups and religious and human rights advocates say that rising
religious intolerance is also linked to the efforts to promote regional
autonomy in Indonesia in 1999 as part of the country’s transition to
democracy after three decades of highly centralized, authoritarian rule
under President Suharto.
More
than half of Indonesia’s 491 provincial districts have enacted various
bylaws inspired by Islamic law, or Shariah, in recent years.
“So
much power was given to local authorities, and in many cases — in
particular in regions where Muslim organizations dominated — there were
violations against religious freedom, and freedom, for example, for
someone to say they are an atheist,” said Theophilus Bela, secretary
general of the Indonesian Conference on Religions for Peace, a
nongovernmental organization focused on interfaith dialogue.
While
serving his prison sentence, Mr. Aan lay low, reading books and playing
chess, and he said that by the end of his time behind bars, he had gone
from being an outcast to having friends among his fellow inmates. Now,
he is preparing to apply to universities to pursue a master’s degree in
physics.
“My
case was a religious issue and a human rights issue, both because
Indonesia is a Muslim country and because it’s a developing country and
new democracy,” he said. “I was just searching for the truth, and
everything I felt, I expressed.”
These days, Mr. Aan said, he is still active on Facebook and Twitter, but he never mentions religion or his criminal case.
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