• Tentang UGM
  • Portal Akademik
  • Pusat TI
  • Perpustakaan
  • Penelitian
Universitas Gadjah Mada
  • About Us
    • About CRCS
    • Vision & Mission
    • People
      • Faculty Members and Lecturers
      • Staff Members
      • Students
      • Alumni
    • Facilities
    • Library
  • Master’s Program
    • Overview
    • Curriculum
    • Courses
    • Schedule
    • Admission
    • Scholarship
    • Accreditation and Certification
    • Academic Collaborations
      • Crossculture Religious Studies Summer School
      • Florida International University
    • Academic Documents
    • Student Satisfaction Survey
  • Article
    • Perspective
    • Book Review
    • Event Report
    • Class Journal
    • Interview
    • Wed Forum Report
    • Thesis Review
    • News
  • Publication
    • Reports
    • Books
    • Newsletter
    • Monthly Update
    • Infographic
  • Research
    • CRCS Researchs
    • Resource Center
  • Community Engagement
    • Film
      • Indonesian Pluralities
      • Our Land is the Sea
    • Wednesday Forum
    • ICIR
    • Amerta Movement
  • Beranda
  • Artikel
  • Religious Nuance in School Gang Rivalries in Yogyakarta

Religious Nuance in School Gang Rivalries in Yogyakarta

  • Artikel
  • 16 October 2012, 00.00
  • Oleh:
  • 0

I Made Arsana Dwiputra | CRCS | Article

Student brawl. merdeka.comBrawls among school students become a major issue in Indonesia recently due to the level of their violence became deadly. Five high school students dead on August and September brawls. Some say exposure to violent media influence students’s aggressive behavior. A study on school gangs in Yogyakarta may help us to understand violent acts among school students.

A recent study by Hatib Abdul Kadir, a 2010 graduate of the CRCS who is now a lecturer in the Anthropology Department of the Brawijaya University in Malang, shows the role of religious identity in student gang life. In his study published by The Asia Pacific Journal of Anthropology  titled “Political Gangsterism and Islamic Masculinity in Young Moslem Post New Order: Gang Hostility and Mass Fighting among Islamic High School Students in Yogyakarta,” Hatib (as he is usually referred at CRCS) argues that religious aspect is neglected in understanding school gang life because most studies in this issue relate school gang life to economic and political situation. Student participation in gang is seen as a response to economic deprivation or hostile state authorities.

While such a secular element cannot be neglected, Hatib’s study of various student gangs in different schools in Yogyakarta found that religious identity and issues are central in the formation of school gangs. He suggests that the school gang phenomenon is not only about ‘secular’ juvenile delinquency (kenakalan remaja), but also about religious-based contestation.

Hatib’s survey in 2008 found that there are 23 school gangs in Yogyakarta; surprisingly many of them are associated with religions grouping including such as Islam, Catholic, and Christian. Their association with a religious identity is due to the affiliation of the schools to religious organizations. In Yogyakarta, according to Hatib’s finding, there are six school gangs associated with Islamic schools, three gangs in Christian schools, one gang associated with a Catholic school. Most prominent schools in this study include SMU 1 Muhamadiyah (Islam), SMU John De Britto (Catholic), SMU Bopkri (Christian). The religious nuance of student gang life in these schools are most apparent in the uses of religious terms in their activities. To identify their groups, school gang in Muslim school uses religious term like Oestad (Ustad = Muslim preacher and religious leader), Dr. Pay abbreviation of Daerah Pemuda Anti Yahudi (Anti Jewish Youth Area). They also call their operation in religious terms like shaf (rows of Muslim men in sholat prayer) to refer to the strategy of Umar Bin Khattab (Muslim leader in 6th century) to defend the Palestine. In situation of conflict, their strategies of defense and attack are defined in the term of kloter (that refers to departure groups of Indonesian pilgrims to Mecca). In situation of peace, they relates to the Islamic concept of islah to settle a peace agreement to their opponents.Similarly, school gang in Catholic and Christian schools use religious term to identify themselves such as Pastoer (Priest), Laki-Laki Penuh Dosa (Sinful Men).

Based in interviews and participant observation in the school gang life, Hatib who is now doing a PhD in the US identifies the connection of student gangs in the Muslim schools mentioned before to kampong gangs and laskars (paramilitary group) that are affiliated to a political party or ormas (civil’s organization) religious and secular one. The Oestad Muslim school gang for instance has connection with Ka’bah Youth Movement (Gerakan Pemuda Ka’bah/GPK) that affiliated to Islamic Party, United Development Party (Partai Persatuan Pembangunan/PPP). School gang, according to Hatib, gives an entry point for students to reach a high level carrier such as politicians or more high level of thugs or well known as gentho in Yogyakarta.

Kampong gangs and laskar serve as agencies that help developing the discourse of religious conflict that occurred in some regions in Indonesia. For example, Muslim school gang (Oestad) develop an anti-Chsirtian discourse with reference to past conflicts with religious nuance such as those took place in in Situbondo, Tasikmalaya, Ketapang, Ambon, and Poso. Using such a discourse, student gangs in Christian and Catholic schools such as Pastoer gang  at Bopkri (Christian school gang) and the Laki-Laki Pendosa or Sinful Men (De Brito Catholic school gang) are the main enemies of the Oestad  gang of  SMU 1 Muhamadiyah school gang.

Religious nuance in youth gang life in Yogyakarta is not new. In 1980s two notorious youth gang in Yogyakarta are affiliated to religious groups; they include  Kisruh (identified as a Catholic group) Joxzin (identified as Muslim youth). Conflict between these two were sometimes linked to conflict between the paramilitary groups of political parties, the Indonesian Democratic Party (Partai Demokrasi Indonesia/PDI) and the United Development Party (Partai Persatuan Pembangunan/PPP) during New Order regime. For Hatib, it is clear that the school gang is become a start of gang rivalry in Yogyakarta that involving religious identities.

Hatib’s study on school gang phenomenon in Yogyakarta gives a nuance in understanding student gang life. This suggests that concern on gang life schools not only relate to their violence, but also their use of religious identity. This signals a worrying tendency of the seeding of religious sectarianism among youth (Ed-Iqb)

Leave A Comment Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

Instagram

📢 Fellowship Kebebasan Beragama atau Berkeyakinan 📢 Fellowship Kebebasan Beragama atau Berkeyakinan (KBB) 2026 – Angkatan VII

CRCS UGM bersama sejumlah lembaga mitra membuka kesempatan bagi 20–25 dosen untuk mengikuti program fellowship yang berfokus pada isu kebebasan beragama atau berkeyakinan di Indonesia.
Program ini ditujukan bagi dosen dari bidang hukum, syariah, teologi, filsafat, studi agama, serta ilmu sosial dan politik yang tertarik mengembangkan pengajaran, riset, dan diskusi akademik tentang KBB di perguruan tinggi.
Melalui fellowship ini, peserta akan mendapatkan ruang belajar, jejaring akademik, serta dukungan untuk memperkuat kajian dan pengajaran tentang kebebasan beragama di kampus.
To understand Iran, geopolitics alone is not enoug To understand Iran, geopolitics alone is not enough.
Behind every headline about war or sanctions lies a deeper landscape of history, memory, and moral imagination. In this conversation, Dicky Sofjan shows that contemporary conflicts involving Iran cannot be read only through the language of strategy and power. They must also be understood through the histories and symbols that continue to mobilize political and social meaning today.

Click the link in our bio to read the full interview.
Some changes in family life arrive quietly. In Yog Some changes in family life arrive quietly. In Yogyakarta and Ponorogo, more husbands cook, clean, and care for children, while still remaining the imam in the household. What shifts is not only labor but the meaning of leadership, belief, and marriage itself. A small domestic change opens a larger question about gender, religion, and the stories families tell about themselves.

Join the conversation at the #wednesdayforum with Alimatul Qibtiyah, March 11 at UGM or via livestream. We're offering a free iftar, so get there early! This event is free and open to the public.
What is well-being? Indonesia today: land taken, f What is well-being?
Indonesia today: land taken, forests cleared, plantations marching under the banner of food security. Officials call it progress, yet Indigenous ground tells another story. Baduy farmers keep ngahuma alive: rice, ritual, survival, all tied together. Wellbeing here isn’t profit. It’s balance when human and earth still holding on.

Join us for the next  #wednesdayforum discussion at the 3rd floor of the UGM Graduate School building. We're offering a free iftar, so please register. This event is free and open to the public.
Follow on Instagram

Twitter

Tweets by crcsugm

Universitas Gadjah Mada

Gedung Sekolah Pascasarjana UGM, 3rd Floor
Jl. Teknika Utara, Pogung, Yogyakarta, 55284
Email address: crcs@ugm.ac.id

 

© CRCS - Universitas Gadjah Mada

KEBIJAKAN PRIVASI/PRIVACY POLICY