The Marginalised Majority: Indonesian Muslim Women on Nationalism
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Nisa, Eva
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Association for the Publication of Indonesian and Malaysian Studies Inc
Abstract
There is a growing trend among many Indonesian Muslims to feel closely
connected with the transnational community, especially through their association with
transnational Islamic movements. This paper examines the voices of Indonesian
women who have been active in global transnational Islamic movements, namely
followers of Hizbut Tahrir Indonesia, Salafism, and Tablighi Jama’at. Women’s
voices are often marginalised in discussions of these movements. To what extent does
these women’s alternative imagined belonging challenges their sense of inherited
Indonesian identity? How do they feel as Muslims in the largest majority-Muslim
country in the world? What are their hopes and wishes with regards to their
understanding of the notion of citizenship in Indonesia? Drawing extensively on case
studies based on anthropological research in Jakarta, Yogyakarta, and Makassar,
this paper demonstrates that women who attach themselves to transnational Islamic
movements feel marginalised in the nation-state system despite the fact that Indonesia
is the world’s largest majority-Muslim country. On the other hand, their attachment
to the transnational umma has eased the perceived pressure of being a minority and
provided them a chance to gain a better status as part of a global community of
Muslims. This phenomenon is part of the reflection of the crisis of trust between
Muslims and nation-state systems. Attachment to transnational movements has
introduced many Muslims to new hopes, identities and solidarities.
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RIMA: Review of Indonesian and Malaysian Affairs
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Restricted until
2037-12-31
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