Special Focus RELIGION AND POLITICS IN SOUTHEAST ASIA. Editor Terence Chong

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Special Focus RELIGION AND POLITICS IN SOUTHEAST ASIA Editor Terence Chong

Volume 25, Number 1 (April 2010) Journal of Social Issues in Southeast Asia SOJOURN CONTENTS Editor s Note Religion and Politics in Southeast Asia Terence Chong vii Articles Commemoration and the State: Memory and Legitimacy in Vietnam Edyta Roszko 1 Church and State in the Philippines: Tackling Life Issues in a Culture of Death Julius Bautista 29 State and Social Christianity in Post-colonial Singapore Daniel P.S. Goh 54 Research Notes and Comments Vietnamese Party-State and Religious Pluralism since 1986: Building the Fatherland? Mathieu Bouquet 90 Missionary Intent and Monastic Networks: Thai Buddhism as a Transnational Religion Pattana Kitiarsa 109

iv Contents Book Reviews Southeast Asian Lives: Personal Narratives and Historical Experience. Edited by Roxana Waterson 133 State Terrorism and Political Identity in Indonesia: Fatally Belonging. By Ariel Heryanto 139 Land and Longhouse: Agrarian Transformation in the Uplands of Sarawak. By R.A. Cramb 143 Beyond the Green Myth: Borneo s hunter-gatherers in the twenty-first century. Edited by Peter Sercombe and Bernard Sellato 148

SOJOURN Editorial Committee Chairperson: K. Kesavapany Editors: Terence Chong, Lee Hock Guan, Ooi Kee Beng, Hui Yew-Foong, Theresa Davasahayam Production Editor: Stephen Logan International Advisory Members Charnvit Kasetsiri, Thammasat University, Thailand Chua Beng Huat, National University of Singapore, Singapore Maria Serena I. Diokno, University of the Philippines, Philippines Robert Hefner, Boston University, United States Joel S. Kahn, La Trobe University, Australia Ben Kerkvliet, Australian National University, Australia Victor T. King, University of Leeds, United Kingdom Francis Loh Kok Wah, Universiti Sains Malaysia, West Malaysia Otto van den Muijzenberg, Amsterdam School of Social Science Research, Netherlands James Scott, Yale University, United States Takashi Shiraishi, Kyoto University, Japan Taufik Abdullah, LIPI, Indonesia

Editor s Note Religion and Politics in Southeast Asia The articles and research notes in this Special Focus issue of SOJOURN were part of the proceedings from the international conference, Religion in Southeast Asian Politics: Resistance, Negotiation and Transcendence, held at the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies (ISEAS), 11 12 December 2008. The conference, co-sponsored by Cornell University s Southeast Asia Progamme and generously supported by the Konrad Adenauer Stiftung, saw paper presenters from different parts of the world converge to examine the nexus between national politics and religion in the Southeast Asian landscape. During the conference it was clear that the presentations fell into two broad categories the politics of Islam and the rest. This should not be surprising given the political and cultural history of the region, as well as the deep scholarship on Islam in the disciplines of contemporary history, anthropology, sociology, and political science. The editorial decision was made to hive off the papers on Islam and politics into an edited volume to be published by ISEAS, with the more interesting and noteworthy non-islam papers to be published in this Special Focus issue. The papers here cover the countries of Vietnam, the Philippines, Thailand, and Singapore and the religions of Catholicism, Protestantism, Buddhism and ancestor worship. Despite the diverse papers in this Special Focus issue, three general points can be observed from the findings presented. The first is the increasingly public role that religion is assuming, both in politics as well as in civic life. The traditional boundary between private and public spheres is clearly

viii Terence CHONG porous with, on one hand, the private playing out in the public and, on the other, with the public becoming a conduit for the private. The second point is the way religion does not eschew national politics but often posits itself as an active agent of nation building. Its perceived contributions to the nation are not just championed by marginal non-state actors who seek to use religion for their interests but also by the state itself, especially when it faces a crisis of legitimacy. No longer an alternative realm for spiritual fulfilment or identity formation, religion strives to influence and shape notions of the nation and national culture, either through the interpretation of folk myths, representation of heroes, or by affirming state structures and institutions. The third point, related to the second, is how religion is not necessarily seen as a tranquil retreat from the capricious forces of modernity and capitalism, but a specific way in which to frame such forces, harnessing them with particular ideological (or spiritual) interpretations. It is thus no longer helpful to examine notions of modernity, capitalism, globalization or religion with rigid conceptual frameworks but, instead, seek the numerous points where they invariably intersect. The conclusions offered in the papers here serve as pathways for further research into the multidimensional interfaces between religion and politics. They grapple with the implications of globalization, multiculturalism, post-colonialism and modernity on the interfacing of beliefs and politics in Southeast Asia, and will be a suitable springboard for the study of the complex evolution of religion and politics in the region. Terence CHONG