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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... television and the internet, by travelling abroad more regularly than their forebears would have done, and by interacting with the diverse array of individuals, groups and movements found in large, internationally connected metropolises ...
... television and radio, in which celebrities with scant Islamic knowledge feature prominently and significant religious issues are reduced to brief, often glib, pronouncements. The former chair of Muhammadiyah, Ahmad Syafii Maarif, wryly ...
... television. Khaled became a smash hit in Egypt, promoting much the same sort of apolitical, strongly ritualistic and emotive Islamic piety that Aa Gym was popularising in Indonesia. From the time of Aa Gym's and 'Amr Khaled's first ...
... television. The active piety they have promoted, and that has become sensationally popular in the new century following the demise of violent political Islamism, is not concerned with the politics of religion except by way of aligning ...
... television youth market and today' s anxious parents? 3 Spiritual and personal development programs similar to those of the celebrity preachers are also offered by 'trainers' who do not preach in mosques but offer heavily Islamic ...