Expressing Islam: Religious Life and Politics in IndonesiaGreg Fealy, Sally White Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 2008 - 295 من الصفحات As the forces of globalisation and modernisation buffet Islam and other world religions, Indonesias 200 million Muslims are expressing their faith in ever more complex ways. Celebrity television preachers, internet fatwa services, mass religious rallies in soccer stadiums, glossy jihadist magazines, Islamic medical treatments, alms giving via mobile phone and electronic sharia banking services are just some of the manifestations of a more consumer-oriented approach to Islam which interact with and sometimes replace other, more traditional expressions of the faith.
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... cent of the total banking sector. Juoro argues that for the Islamic financial sector to attain the 10–15 per cent market share predicted by Bank Indonesia for 2015, it needs, first, a more certain statutory framework (addressed in part ...
... cent share for sharia banking by the end of 2008, it had grown to only 2 per cent by early 2008 and is likely to fall well short of this target.3 For further discussion of sharia banking, see Chapter 13 by Juoro and Chapter 14 by ...
... cent per year since 2002, compared with 25 per cent for conventional insurance, while sharia property and loss insurance has increased by 44 per cent, compared with just 8 per cent for conventional insurance. The overall market share of ...
... cent per annum, cities increasingly became the centre of this economic boom. Ever larger numbers of people from rural areas were drawn to big cities such as Jakarta, Surabaya, Bandung, Medan and Makassar in search of better educational ...
... cent of sharia bank customers have both a sharia account and a (usually much larger) account with 19 Risalah Mujahidin, February-March 2008: 92. a conventional bank.20 A Muslim media executive showed me his. 32 Expressing Islam ...