Javanese
Muslims at
the end of
Ramadan pray
during Eid
ul-Fitr at
Onafhankelijksplein
(Independence
Square) in
Paramaribo,
Suriname /
South
America.
Approximately
15% of the
population
of Suriname
are Muslim
Javanese.
The Javanese
Muslims from
Indonesia
began
arriving in
Suriname in
the 1890s.
The
Suriname-Javanese
community is
kejawen,
following
the
syncretic
practices
and beliefs
of Java. In
this
community
the keblat (qibla)
expresses a
unique
diasporic
experience
and
identity.
From the
Dutch East
Indies (now
Indonesia)
villagers
were
recruited
from Java as
contract
workers for
the
plantations
in another
Dutch
colonial
land,
Suriname.
Most of them
were kejawen
Muslims.
Kejawen
Islam, which
was dominant
in Javanese
villages, is
a syncretic
Islam which
incorporated
old Javanese
beliefs,
including
Hindu-Buddhist
elements.
The Javanese
arrived in
Suriname
without
persons
learned in
religion. It
was not
until the
beginning of
the 1930s
that partly
through
contacts
with
Hindustani
Muslims some
realized
that the
Kaaba was
not located
in the West,
but to the
northeast of
Suriname.
Subsequently,
a number of
Javanese
Muslims
started
praying in
that
direction.
This small
group, led
by Pak Samsi,
encouraged
people to
change the
direction of
prayer from
west to
east. Since
then, this
small group
has been
called wong
madhep
ngetan
(East-Keblat
people).
Later some
became very
critical of
what was
seen as the
superstition
and
religious
innovation (bidah)
among the
Javanese
Muslims. The
moderates do
not openly
criticize
the practice
of praying
to the west
as most of
the Javanese
Muslims
continued to
do; hence
they are
called wong
madhep
ngulon
(West-Keblat
people).
Javanese
Muslims and
Hindustani
Muslims are
celebrates
and prays
differently
due to
fundamental
conflicts
for
commenting
their
religion of
Islam. The
Muslim
population
of Suriname
is
predominantly
made up of
Hindustanis
who belong
to the
Hanafi
Madhab,
while the
Javanese
belong to
the Shafi
theological
school of
Islam. A
small group
of Africans
are Muslims
and they
were the
first
Muslims to
set foot in
Suriname.
They were at
Onafhankelijksplein
(Independence
Square) at
20th of
September
2009 for
their holy
pray at
front of two
historical
colonial
buildings of
Suriname
“Presidential
Palace” (AKA
White House
locally) and
“Clock
Tower”.
Source :
http://www.demotix.com/news/javanese-muslims-celebrates-eid-ul-fitr-suriname
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