Designs on Indonesia's Muslim Communities
Loading...
Date
Authors
George, Kenneth M.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Abstract
ON OCTOBER 15, 1991, HAJI MUHAMMAD SOEHARTO, President of Indonesia, became
the first official calligrapher for the Al-Qur'an Mushaf Istiqlal-The National
Independence Illuminated Qur'an-by inking in the initial letter of the Basmallah in
the opening sura (Al-Fatihah, the prologue; see Fig. 1). Four years later, just after
commemorating the fiftieth anniversary of Indonesian independence, he put the
finishing touch to the closing sura of the Qur'an (An-Naas, or "Humanity," Sura 114),
signed the completed manuscript, and presented it to the people of Indonesia and to
the Muslim world community. Although he is adept at using or reciting the Qur'anic
Arabic needed for daily prayer, the profession of faith, and the verbal exchanges that
bond Muslims with each other, Soeharto is a decidedly unpracticed calligrapher when
it comes to Arabic orthography. On both occasions, his hand merely followed the
lines of the Naskhi-style script prepared by a team of artists, designers, calligraphers,
and Qur'anic authorities. In this way, Soeharto was figured into the material production and social legitimation of the national mushaf. As signatory and
Indonesia's president, he gave the mushaf a seal of approval and legitimacy; as
calligrapher, he yielded to artistic and religious authorities, and so let others write
through him, and for him.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Collections
Source
The Journal of Asian Studies