About Christian persecution in Indonesia
Although Indonesia is the world’s most populous Muslim-majority country, it has a history of religious toleration. According to the founding constitution, “The State shall be based upon the belief in the One and Only God,” but freedom of worship is guaranteed for all. In the 1960s, President Suharto required everyone to belong to one of five “religions:” Islam, Protestantism, Catholicism, Hinduism or Buddhism. This created a canopy of freedom unusual in the region. Still, with Indonesia being such a vast set of islands, local tensions and areas where Islamic extremism took hold created much anti-Christian violence, and Christian persecution in Indonesia began to take root.
In the late 1990s, a dreadful conflict between Muslims and Christians in Ambon left hundreds, if not thousands, dead. In the province of Aceh, sharia law has been practiced since 2014, although it is not supposed to apply to the Christians. The country is afflicted mainly with foreign-backed Islamic extremist groups, which target Christians regularly. Younger people are becoming more observant Muslims, and in many cases, more strident. In 2000, extremists planted bombs at churches on Christmas Eve in various cities, killing 18 people.
Additionally, in 2016, then-Governor of Jakarta Basuki Tjahaja Purnama, who is a Chinese Christian also known as Ahok, was convicted on trumped-up blasphemy charges. He was imprisoned for two years. Still, most Muslims in the land are moderate, largely due to the massive Nahdlatul Ulama (NU). As the largest Islamic organization in the world, the NU is sympathetic to ideals of religious freedom. Members even guard churches on Christmas Eve. It is Islamic movements backed by foreign funds that drive the persecution of Christians in this vast archipelago. Sometimes the government acts with alacrity to put a stop to it, and sometimes not.