• 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
  • Bedah Buku
  • Damn! Beckham Is A Jew

Damn! Beckham Is A Jew

  • Bedah Buku
  • 1 January 2010, 00.00
  • Oleh:
  • 0

IMAGING JEW IN INDONESIA

785jewEpafras’s book on Jew in the Indonesian Public Discourse is the first book offering a complete and complex analysis of allegorizing Jew in Indonesia. Allegorizing Jew, to take Epafras’s argument, is to refer the complex problem of prejudicing Jew in Indonesia, which prerequisites analysis of three main issues related each other; first, the issue of Qur’anic interpretation; secondly, of historical construction towards the Jew; and the last, the issue of contextual problem regarding to the Jew. Interestingly, Epafras provide an extended and depth elaboration which contains analysis in the areas of (interpretive) theological, historical and media framing construction.

Epafras’s main arguments are that the notion of Jew “was imported from Middle East” which “also coincides with the existing religious narrative, cultural memory and interpretations.” In addition, the image of Jew problem outside Indonesia also constructs the prejudice attitude towards the Jews in Indonesia. Moreover, dealing with Israel/Palestine issue, the discourse of Jews in Indonesia has been a symbolic debate that “reified into moral character related to certain Islamic ideal” (pp. 7).

Having elucidated the colonial image of Jews, Epafras come to conclude that Jews in historical Indonesia was in negative image. It becomes more negative one when the first World Islamic Congress in Jerusalem December 7, 1931, in which Kahar Muzakir attended as an Indonesian delegation, declared that “the Congress considers that Zionism is ipso facto an aggression detrimental to Moslem well-being.” Furthermore, the declaration had indirectly influenced the first Congress of Supreme Council of Muslims of Indonesia (MIAI) held in 1938, which “demanded the League of Nations to cancel the British’s partition plan over the Palestine which divided between Arabs and Jews” (pp. 53). Together with the interpretive-Jews-presumption-of the Qur’an, this historical construction has been installed and adopted in some Indonesian muslim’ assumption.

In turn, Epafras examines the historical image to the present assumption by analyzing the discourses on Jews in a muslim media. As a result, Epafras argues that there is too much a Zionophobia in the media muslim, an exaggerate anti-Zionist. From this result, we turn to know that over-generalization happened in the Muslim-Jews discourse in the media muslim, which perceive Jews as the same meaning as Zionist and Israel also.

However, the rich-analysis of this book does not follow with elucidating moderate muslim attitude toward the Jews, for example Gus Dur’s image on Jews. A balanced analysis is needed in this book to show that there are varieties of images toward the Jews. Aside from this, Efapras’s book is a must read for religious studies students as well as those who concern on study of religions in Indonesia.

Leave A Comment Cancel reply

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

*

Instagram

S U R G A Surga dan neraka memang dibuat sebagai a S U R G A
Surga dan neraka memang dibuat sebagai alat ukur dan wadah pemisah. Keberadaanya merupakan konsekuensi logis dari sebuah tarik ulur tentang baik dan buruk. Mereka yang dijanjikan surga patut bersenang hati. Namun, ada saat ketika keyakinan tentang keselamatan tidak lagi menenangkan. Mungkin persoalannya bukan siapa yang akan masuk surga, melainkan mengapa kita begitu sibuk memastikan orang lain tidak.
Berawal dari percakapan antah berantah, @safinatul_aula tengah berefleksi tentang nasib diri dan teman-temannya nanti. Simak refleksinya di situs web crcs.
Tensions around the Gulf of Hormuz are shaking glo Tensions around the Gulf of Hormuz are shaking global oil supply and accelerating the push for alternatives green energy. Geothermal is often framed as the answer. But whose “green” is it?
What if “green energy” isn’t always as green as it sounds?
Together with @honeyyymooooonnn we bring stories from communities on the frontlines of geothermal projects in Indonesia, where sustainability is debated, challenged, and reimagined. It is not just about resistance, but a different way of thinking about energy, justice, and our relationship with nature.

Join the discussion at UGM Graduate School building, 3rd floor. We provide snacks and drinks, don't forget to bring your tumbler. This event is free and open to public.
S I M P A N G Ada saat ketika tradisi tidak saling S I M P A N G
Ada saat ketika tradisi tidak saling meniadakan, tetapi diam-diam bernegosiasi. Seperti tahlilan yang bersanding dengan cengbeng. Dua bahasa ritual berbeda yang bertemu dalam kebutuhan yang sama: merawat ingatan dan menghadirkan yang telah tiada. Di situ, batas antara agama dan budaya dilenturkan. Mungkin yang mengganggu bukan pertemuannya, melainkan kegelisahan kita sendiri tentang siapa yang berhak menentukan mana yang sah, mana yang menyimpang.

Simak catatan lapangan @yohanes_leo27 tentang cengbeng di makam dukun gula Bah De Pok hanya di situs web crcs
ENTANGLED WORLDS 🌏 Toward a Transdisciplinary Envi ENTANGLED WORLDS 🌏
Toward a Transdisciplinary Environmental Studies

Wednesday Forum Thematic series brings together three distinct topics, each grounded in different disciplinary and lived backgrounds.
Across these conversations, we move from grassroots environmental struggles in Indonesia, to the historical formation of extractive industries under colonial capitalism, and finally to everyday religious practices embedded in agricultural life. Each session offers a different lens—activism, historical analysis, and lived religion—yet all point to the same reality: our environmental worlds are never isolated, but shaped through complex entanglements of power, belief, and practice.

Join the discussion at UGM Graduate School building, 3rd floor. We provide snacks and drinks, don't forget to bring your tumbler. This event is free and open to 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