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  • page. 15
Pos oleh :

Islam, State and Student: Islamic Education in Yogyakarta’s Public High Schools

HeadlineNewsWednesday Forum News Friday, 7 April 2017


Abstract
One of the most significant ways the Indonesian state plays an active role in the country’s religious life is through education: Muslim students at all levels are required to take Islamic education classes, for which the government writes curricula and employs teachers. Therefore, the state—from the center at the Ministry of Religious Affairs to the periphery at individual teacher at public schools—has considerable power to shape religious perspectives of each new generation. His ongoing research is an ethnographic study of Islamic education in public high schools (Sekolah Menengah Atas Negeri) in the province of Yogyakarta, carried out through classroom observation, teacher interviews, and student focus groups. He will present the characteristics and effects of Islamic education in three fields: (a) perspective of religious diversity within Islam; (b) the valorization of the democratic nation-state as Islamic; and (c) the gender ideologies promoted as normatively Islamic. It is also noted how these phenomena vary in and among schools, noting the influence of socio-economic class, education, gender and religious background.
Speaker
Sawyer Martin French is research fellow at the Institute for International Studies at the Faculty of Social and Political Sciences at Universitas Gadjah Mada. He is currently conducting a yearlong research project on Islamic education in public high schools in Yogyakarta with the support of a grant in socio-cultural anthropology from the National Science Foundation.
Look at the full poster of the event here.

Memainkan Kartu Trump di Indonesia

BeritaBerita Utama Tuesday, 4 April 2017

Laine Berman | CRCS | Voices from America
Sejak tujuh belas tahun lalu, CRCS telah terhubung erat dengan para akademisi Amerika Serikat. Beberapa pelopor studi antaragama dari Amerika, seperti John Raines, Mahmud Ayoub, dan Paul Knitter, telah membantu dalam pendirian dan pengembangan CRCS. Banyak dosen tamu dan para pengajar bahasa Inggris dari Amerika telah mengajar di CRCS. Lebih dari 30 alumni CRCS kini juga telah melanjutkan studinya, untuk tingkat MA atau PhD, di universitas-universitas Amerika. Sehubungan dengan pelbagai kabar politik pascapemilu Amerika, juga fenomena yang serupa di negara-negara lain di Eropa dan Asia, kami mengundang para kolega dan relasi kami dari Amerika untuk menuliskan pandangan atau refleksi personal mereka di situs web CRCS. Artikel berikut ini, yang ditulis Laine Berman, adalah yang kedua untuk seri “Voices from America”. Versi orisinal dari tulisan ini dalam bahasa Inggris dapat dibaca di sini. Seri pertama dapat dibaca di sini.

Playing the Trump Card in Indonesia

HeadlineNewsPerspective Tuesday, 4 April 2017

Laine Berman | CRCS | Voices from America
The United States and Indonesia are both plural societies that struggle to understand how to live together in diversity and with the meaning of pluralism itself.  From its beginnings seventeen years ago, CRCS has had strong ties with American academia. Pioneers in inter-religious studies from the U.S., including John Raines, Mahmud Ayoub and Paul Knitter, were present at our founding and have been followed by a number of visiting lecturers who have stayed for a few weeks, months, or years, and by generations of English teachers. In addition, more than thirty CRCS alumni/ae have continued their studies for MA and PhD degrees in American universities. As we followed the news of the U.S. election within the context of the anti-pluralist turns across Asia and Europe, we wanted to know what our American friends are thinking and so we invited them to contribute their reflections to this page. This article, written by Laine Berman, is the second of the Voices from America series. To read the Indonesian translation of this article, click here. To read the first of the series, click here.

Re-membering the minority: tourism, displacement, and belonging in Maluku's Spice Islands

HeadlineNewsWednesday Forum News Monday, 3 April 2017


Abstract
In post-conflict Maluku, there has been renewed interest in redeveloping the Banda Islands as a major tourist attraction for the region, and as a world heritage site. As practices of tourism represent culture for diverse audiences, they also inform how local inhabitants conceptualize their identities, as well as influence the processes of collective memory. The Indonesian concepts of culture draw on relationships to land, community and cosmology referred to as adat that have a dynamic and complex relationship to people’s religious identifications. In this talk, I’ll explore how Christians displaced from the Banda islands during the conflict are being “re-membered” as outsiders in the process of reconstructing culture for the consumption of tourists, and consider how representations of culture for the tourism industry can potentially strengthen exclusive versions of local identity.
Speaker
Kelli Alicia Swazey is a faculty member at the Center for Religious and Cross-Cultural Studies at the Graduate School of Universitas Gadjah Mada. She holds a PhD in Cultural Anthropology from the University of Hawai’i Manoa. Her research focuses on identity in the public sphere, representation and the media, minority religions in Indonesia, and religion and tourism. She has designed several programs on diversity in Southeast Asia, and has been a featured TED speaker and a fellow of the INK (Innovation and Knowledge) program. 
Look at the full poster of the event here.

Religion, Evolutionary Science and Meaning-Making: Religious Studies visits the Faculty of Biology

BeritaHeadlineNews Friday, 24 March 2017

Anang G Alfian | CRCS | News

Universitas Gadjah Mada’s Faculty of Biology invited Whitney Bauman to present his on-going project at the Biology Hall on Monday, March 6th, 2017. Students and lecturers from various faculties came to hear his lecture. His specialization on the discourse of religion, science, and nature reflects his capacity as an associate professor at the Department of Religious Studies, Florida International University, as well as author of works including Theology, Creation, and Environmental Ethics (Routledge 2009) and Religion and Ecology: Developing a Planetary Ethics (2014). A longtime friend of CRCS who has taught intersession courses more than once, he is currently working to finish his third, single-authored book with a tentative title Truth, Beauty and Goodness: Ernst Haeckel and Religious Naturalism.
In his lecture, introduced by paleontology lecturer Donan Satria Yudha as the moderator, Bauman engaged religion and science in a contemporary discussion to look for a new way of understanding each through an evolutionary perspective. This perspective of religion-science relationship was inspired by the contemporary phenomenon in which religion has gained more spaces within science.
The emphasis Bauman made in the beginning of the lecture pointed out the direction of his topic of presentation. He started how historically the notion of religion has been discussed by different perspectives from dualism and reductionism to emergence theory. Along with the continuum of religion-science relationship, he challenged to look at the relation in a new way by focusing on the German scientist Ernst Haeckel (1834-1919) who formulated a new way of making sense out of the world through his studies of ecology and evolution. Bauman clearly stated his stance: “to place Haeckel’s Monism in continuity with this tradition of meaning-making.” He also emphasized that everything has undergone changes and the way we understand the relation between religion and science has always been a “relationship in constant flux.” He challenged the assumption of the previous models on religion-science relationship that views Religion and Science as two different traditions. “I argue that Religion and Science are always together, influencing one another,” Bauman continued, “there is no clear separation.”
As Bauman prefers to define “religion” through its meaning-making function, he observed that the way religion attains knowledge is also inseparable from the natural evolution perspective. Further, he explained that the relation involves not only human and nature as a traditional dichotomy but more as an interconnectedness of everything.  This view triggered questions from the audience.
One member of the audience asked a question on a human special status over the rest of nature which challenged the way certain traditions or religions view the status of humans in their scriptures. “I am not sure if humans have a special status in nature,” Bauman answered, “In fact, not only humans have culture and language; many other creatures might have them too.” Because knowledge is always in process and moves together with history and experiences, he argued that it is normal for many traditions to have different understandings of nature and the Truth.
Another question posed was about whether the first human walking on earth was the one as narrated in the scripture. Baumann referred to “Adam” as mentioned in the Genesis as its literal meaning, i.e. a creature on the earth which did not refer to any specific gender. In addition, Donan Satria Yudha said that  some Muslim scientists say that Homo sapiens may constitute the first human as mentioned in the scripture and it refers to the quality of being human in the evolution, and not to a specific figure.
The writer, Anang G Alfian, is CRCS student of the 2016 batch

Inverted Quest: Religion and imagined micro-cosmopolitanism in Tantraz comic series

HeadlineNewsWednesday Forum News Thursday, 23 March 2017


Abstract
As suggested by Ben Anderson, media is a powerful means in creating imagined community and accordingly in establishing a sense of cosmopolitanism. Taking this insight, the presentation will explore the rethoric represented in the series of comic under the title Baladeva, published by Tantraz Comiks (/Comics) Bali, Denpasar. The comic will be framed within the notion of micro-cosmopolitanism—a cosmopolitanism from below (Cronin, 2006)—through which the pressing questions of imagination of nationalism and cosmopolitanism, counter-transnational religious discourse, and religious minority are played out. Contemplating the present day contestation between nationalism and transnationalism discourse, understanding contemporary comics to a degree might illuminate the shift in the present Indonesia, notably from the perspective of popular culture.
Speaker
Leonard Chrysostomos Epafras is a core doctoral faculty and researcher at the Indonesian Consortium for Religious Studies, at the Graduate School of UGM. His research projects include Jewish Studies, Digital Humanities, and Pop-Culture Studies.
Look at the full poster here.

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Experience "Moving with Dharma," a unique practice Experience "Moving with Dharma," a unique practice as research performance that creatively explores Buddhist teachings in the context of contemporary Indonesia. This event blends music and dance to offer new perspectives on Dharma.

Happening on Saturday, May 17th, 2025, from 7 to 9 PM WIB at Balai Budaya Minomartani.

Witness the talents of performers M Rhaka Katresna (CRCS UGM), Victorhugo Hidalgo (Gnayaw Puppet), Gutami Hayu Pangastuti (Independent Researcher-Artist), and Sakasatiya (Music Presentation, ISI Yogyakarta). The evening will be guided by MC Afkar Aristoteles M (CRCS UGM).

The event also includes welcoming remarks by Samsul Maarif (CRCS UGM) and Ahmad Jalidu (Paradance Platform), an introduction to "Buddhism in Modern Asia" by Yulianti (CRCS UGM), and a discussion moderated by Ayu Erviana (CRCS UGM) with responders Nia Agustina (Paradance Platform) and Rahmad Setyoko (ICRS UGM).

This presentation is a collaboration between CRCS UGM, ICRS, and Paradance Platform, and is part of the final term project for "Buddhism in Modern Asia" and a group research project on "Interreligious Dialogue."

#MovingWithDharma #BuddhistTeachings #ContemporaryIndonesia #MusicAndDance #PerformanceArt #DharmaDiscussion #BalaiBudayaMinomartani #YogyakartaEvents #AcademicResearch #ArtAndSpirituality
Since the end of 19th century, the Catholic Church Since the end of 19th century, the Catholic Church has conducted missionary activities among the Javanese in Muntilan, Indonesia, establishing it as the first Catholic mission site in Java. The missionary work not only impacted the Javanese but also the Chinese descendants in Muntilan. The conversion of the Chinese to Catholicism in sparked debates among the Chinese community, who perceived it as a contributing factor to the abandonment of Chinese characteristics. This contest leads to the dynamic and diverse identities of Chinese Catholics within the community, as Chinese characteristics and Catholic faith mutually influence each other.

Come and join the #wednesdayforum discussion with @astridsyifa at the UGM Graduate School building, 3rd floor. We provide snacks and drinks, don't forget to brong your tumbler. This event is free and open to public
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