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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... sharia court) regional statute or regulation (in Aceh); derived from an Arabic term meaning ladministrative law' or rule God's word revealed to the Prophet Muhammad and the supreme source and absolute authority for Islam the ninth month ...
... law schools and the dominant school in Southeast Asia the prescribed ritual prayer to be performed five times a day Islamic law 'faction', 'party'; the second largest branch of Islam after Sunni communal meal to observe occasions of ...
... Islamic law. This was especially so for Java, where social scientists carefully recorded the heterodoxies of Muslim thought and behaviour. This favourable portrayal of Indonesian Islam began to change in the late 1990s as many scholars ...
... Islamic thinking on gender, which has found political expression in a number of bylaws passed by regional legislatures and administrations, and in a draft anti-pornography law that would, if enacted, have greatly restricted women's ...
... 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 by parliament's passing of the Sharia Banking Law in June ...