National

Ibu Sinta hosts interfaith sahur

Sab, 3 Agustus 2013 | 08:50 WIB

Jakarta, NU Online
Sinta Nuriyah Wahid, well-known as Ibu Sinta former first lady of Indonesia, is determined to carry on the legacy of her late husband, Abdurrahman Wahid, popularly known as Gus Dur.<>

The longtime Nahdlatul Ulama leader, who served as Indonesia's president from 1999 to 2001, is regarded as a father of pluralism and democracy, and a strong advocate of religious tolerance.

Keeping his spirit alive, Sinta hosted a pre-dawn Ramadhan meal and dialogue to promote interfaith understanding at Pesantren Al Ghazaly in Bogor on July 11th.

"We always conducted similar activities when my husband was the president. Ramadan is a time when everyone gets together. I would like to continue these activities," Sinta said as quoted by Khabar Southeast Asia.

"We would like to interact with people from various backgrounds as a reminder that we are living among those with different faiths and ethnicities. We need to provide an example for our community that everyone can get together in peace regardless of our differences," she added.

The lessons of Ramadhan

About 300 people attended the pre-dawn meal, known as Sahur. Among them was Fransiscus Hari, who spoke with Khabar Southeast Asia a day after the event.

"I am really fortunate that I had an opportunity to attend this forum. Even though I am not a Muslim, everyone was friendly and greeted me warmly," he said. "We had good dialogues among followers of different religions. We forgot what conflicts had occurred [in West Java]. The event gave us a lot of room to learn from each other."

According to the former first lady, fasting teaches patience and the ability to withstand thirst, hunger and lust. "Various actions of corruption have been caused by an eroding faith, and now it is a time to leave any bad behaviours behind. We need to move forward," Sinta added.

She also asked everyone to embrace tolerance and peace, and to help those in need, including street children and the homeless.

The head of the Pesantren Al Ghazaly, Mustafa bin Abdullah bin Nuh, called for bringing all religious followers together as one nation.

"Islam is the religion of the majority in our country and in the past Islam was able to unite Indonesia under the Pancasila, the five philosophical pillars of Indonesia, and under the Indonesian constitution of 1945," he said.

"And I am sure it still does," he added.

Prophet teaches love, respect and harmony

Bogor city community leader Dody Rosadi praised the gathering as a positive development. "We need many more similar events in Bogor and other places, especially when the community has various religious followers," he told Khabar.

"We have to use the life of our Prophet as guidance for living. He teaches us love, respect, and harmony," he said. "Do not just perform acts of worship and religious rituals – we must change our attitude and behaviour to be better."

Muhammad Akbar, an Al Ghazaly student, admitted that he became more open and tolerant after attending the event.

"Before attending this event, I only focused on Islam and was not very open to other religions. I just thought we are different. But with this event, I can see tolerance in practice," he said.

Alex Paul, a member of the GKI Yasmin church in Bogor, said such moments of togetherness are what Indonesia needs. "Events like this tear down the differences in society. Hopefully, this will be followed by other communities," Alex told Khabar.

John Naidoo, one of the interfaith leaders at the event, said that the religious differences in Indonesia are God's beautiful creation, and that Indonesians must remember the national motto Bhinneka Tunggal Ika (unity in diversity).

"It is a powerful motto. It is telling you about Indonesia, and it is our identity," he said.

Editing by Sudarto Murtaufiq