Pancasila and the Christians in Indonesia: A Leaky Shelter?

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From the SelectedWorks of Dr Chang Yau HOON August, 2013 Pancasila and the Christians in Indonesia: A Leaky Shelter? Chang Yau HOON, Singapore Management University Available at: https://works.bepress.com/changyau_hoon/72/

ASLAN CULTURE a$ CONTENTS Articles / if2% The Study of Islam, Women, and Gender in China -Taking a Marla Jaschok, Shu~ J~nmun 1 Gender-Critical Turn ry$lj*. B4852, 7htEE +ElfKl@$A4$, k'k!e, $,kk%ll;sfi%: ff)~--~'%@a!~~~y5;~%1fi Confucian Ethics, Economic Development and Ethnic Chinese Business: Some Reflections X$!%%+kE!!, ~~~ExE&i~t3i~*~-~~E~% Pancasila and the Christians in Indonesia: A Leaky Shelter? ''@~fi*~flij7' $EpjzlYJg,@@: -bj$&-&m@jig?%? A Discussion on the Late Ming Scholars' Reception of Catholicism- From the observation on Xu Guangqi's social network %%%AHE*&m#g9--Mt%fi@W~?k2mi&%S ~ ~ Z ~ ~ k ~ ~ P J ~ d ~ R % The Revitalization of Confucian Cultural Ideals?262%tB%A: %%%ghk&%amibgr5%+ Chinese Without Association: The Rescue Organization for the Unemployed Chinese in Penang and its Internal Dispute fl$izr';;--b,%k$+afsie$$p:g& (1938-1942) Tan Kah Kee's Mobilization of the Chinese in Malaya and Singapore for Anti-Wang Jingwei Movement ~ ~ ~ E5X0+4t~+~RiX*~rn4*% i ~ ~! c The Sirius Poetical Society and the Proliferation of Malaysian Chinese Modem Literature in the 1980s Egfll%f ~L.B+XR~)&~3i~1Rd{djqJQd A Survey on the Century-old Temples and Contemporary Worshipping of the Goddess of Mercy in the Kinta District of Perak State Leo Suryadinata 1.5 @@& Chang-Yau Hoon 29 ZZB Xijuan Shi 553% i%j.%k 62 Tan Eng Chaw x?jzz 68 Goh Leng Hoon v 85 Yeap Chong Leng 8tIllhk Chiah Seng E%% Tan Ai Boay CULTURE 37 AUGUST 2013 MICA (P) 08010812013 ISSN 0217l6742 % jld jk 2?)El @f + 4 + A JOURNAL OF THE SINGAPORE SOCIETY OF ASLAN STUDIES

ASIAN CULTURE 37 AUGUST 2013 Pancasila and the Christians in Indonesia: A Leaky Shelter? Chang-Yau Hoon * The diversity of Indonesia was celebrated in the 1945 Constitution in the national motto, "Bhinneka Tunggal Ika" which proclaimed "Unity in Diversity". The national ideology of Pancasila - the five principles of belief in One Supreme God, humanism, nationalism, popular sovereignty and social justice - further upheld harmony across Indonesia's diverse populations. Recognition of and respect for different religions, the Indonesian Constitution (UUD 1945) accorded "all persons the right to worship according to their own religion or belief' (Chapter 29). Six religions are officially recognized under the Constitution; Islam, Christianity (Protestantism), Catholicism, Hinduism, Buddhism and Confucianism. The spectrum of religions given official recognition points to an acceptance of diversity as inherently Indonesian. According to the 2010 census, approximately 87 percent of the population of 238 million are Muslim, 7 percent are Protestants, 3 percent are Catholics, less than 2 percent Hindus; with Buddhists, Confucians and others accounting for less than two percent (Sensus Penduduk 2010). The state ideology of Pancasila plays a pivotal role in the unification of the diverse, religious, ethnic and linguistic groups of Indonesia. However, while it articulates the philosophical foundation and noble aspiration of the nation, it is far from being reflective of the social reality of Indonesia. Pancasila can be hailed as the model for the diverse communities in the archipelago to imagine themselves as a nation. To borrow Charles Taylor's notion of "social imaginary" - which he refers to as the ways in which people imagine their social existence in relations to the existence of their fellows - Pancasila can be seen as embodying the "modem social imaginary" of Indonesians (2007: 171). This social imaginary is powerful as it proposes an ideal moral order which can determine how members in a moral community should live. However, every community, and, every individual is entangled in a web of varying and contested social imaginaries, so that there will be always be resistance, in varying degrees, to any injunctions to conform. Thus, Pancasila, although an important social imaginary, is subject to reception and rejection. How Pancasila is negotiated and related to is a useful key to the reading of the evolution of Indonesian society in the face of new forces of modernity and globalization. The idealism of the ethnic and religious harmony, as proclaimed in the national motto "Unity in Diversity," had, in time to be realized on the ground through state and institutional intervention. Ethnic and religious plurality was never seriously dealt during Suharto's "New Order" period (1966-1998) as public discourses on social differences or SARA (ethnicity, religion, race and inter-group differences) were officially prohibited. Assimilation was the dominant discourse. Multiculturalism was only endorsed after the fall of Suharto in 1998 (Suryadinata 2004; Hoon 2006), but the lifting of the top-down strong arm tactics deployed in the interminable 32 years of New Order government; freedom to express ethnic and religious diversity also meant the opening of the door to inter-communal challenges Parker and Hoon