Archive for 'Southeast Asia'
Blatant Colonialism in the Malay Muslim “Deep South” of Thailand
by Mark Woodward and Mariani Yahya* Thai-Buddhist colonialism? That is a strange concept, but it is reality as far as the Malay-Muslims of the “Deep South” of Thailand are concerned. Edward Said noted that the representation of political- and military-subject people as less than fully human is among the basic elements of the culture and [...]
Posted: December 18th, 2009 under Government, Military, Southeast Asia.
Comments: 1
Getting to the Bottom of Explosive Rumors Concerning Noordin Top
by Chris Lundry Dwarfed by the stories of the earthquake tragedy in Padang, yesterday Indonesian media picked up a sensational statement issued at the Jakarta police headquarters. According to police spokesman Nanan Sukarna, police investigators have discovered evidence that the corpse of Jemaah Islamiyah’s Noordin Top showed signs of anal trauma consistent with sodomy, leading to speculation that [...]
Posted: October 1st, 2009 under Indonesia, Islam, Language, Media, Politics, Popular Culture, Southeast Asia.
Comments: none
Noordin Top and Latent Conflict Between Indonesia and Malaysia
The 17 September death of Noordin Top at the hands of Indonesia’s anti terror squad Densus 88 brought a sense of relief to many in Southeast Asia. Noordin was Southeast Asia’s most wanted terrorist. Following the July 17 hotel bombings in Jakarta, a message attributed to him signaled a split from Jemaah Islamiyah (JI), and [...]
Posted: September 28th, 2009 under Analysis, Politics, Southeast Asia.
Comments: 3
Turning Up the Heat on Wahhabi Colonialism
by Mark Woodward* Over the last year it has become increasingly apparent to progressive Indonesian Muslim intellectuals and political leaders that there is a clear association between the spread of Wahhabi religious teachings and political extremism. In the weeks following the Ritz-Carlton and J. W. Marriott bombings in Jakarta, discourse about the dangers of Wahhabism [...]
Posted: September 2nd, 2009 under Analysis, Identification, Indonesia, Movements, Popular Culture, Sensemaking, Southeast Asia.
Comments: 2
Politics and Women’s Headwear in Indonesia
by Chris Lundry Before last week’s bombings, Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim country, completed a presidential election. Similar to the 2004 election (which I monitored with the Carter Center), there was the requisite hand wringing in the Western media about the influence of Islamist parties such as the Prosperous Justice Party (Partai Keadilan Sejahtera, PKS) and the National [...]
Posted: July 21st, 2009 under Analysis, Indonesia, Islam, Media, Politics, Southeast Asia.
Comments: 6
Israeli “Nukes” versus Palestinian Slingshots
by Steven R. Corman The CSC has just released a new white paper entitled Israeli Nukes versus Palestinian Slingshots: David and Goliath in Indonesia by Ronald Lukens-Bull and Mark Woodward. Both of them are currently visiting professors in Indonesia. They report on how the local population of Muslims–many of whom are moderates who oppose more [...]
Posted: March 8th, 2009 under Analysis, Southeast Asia.
Comments: none
Malaysian fatwas: No tomboys, no yoga
by Norman Vasu* Here is a brief report on two recent Fatwas from Malaysia that are raising some eyebrows. The first one was issued on October 23, 2008. Malaysia’s National Fatwa Council released an edict banning “tomboys” in the Muslim-majority country. The mufti of Malaysian state of Perak, Harussani Idris Zakaria, maintained that the Council [...]
Posted: November 26th, 2008 under Islam, Southeast Asia.
Comments: none
Resisting Wahhabi Colonialism in Yogyakarta
by Mark Woodward* (Yogykarta, October 2008) Accounts of the “War of Words†or the “Battle for the Soul of Islam†or whatever else one choose to call the ideological struggle between “radicals†and “moderates†in the Muslim world tend to focus on elite level intellectual discourse that is largely divorced from the daily realities of [...]
Posted: November 6th, 2008 under Analysis, Islam, Southeast Asia.
Comments: 4
Bashir is Moving On, Not Going Away
by Mark Woodward in Yogyakarta Indonesia As was reported last week, on August 6 Abbu Bakar Bashir announced his resignation as Amir of the Islamist organization Majelis Mujahid Indonesia or Indonesian Council of Jihad Fighters (MMI). His announcement, only days before the organization’s general convention, came as something of a surprise. It may lead some [...]
Posted: August 11th, 2008 under Organization, Southeast Asia.
Comments: none