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6 - Islam Embedded: ‘Moderate’ Political Islam and Governance in the Malay World

from PART TWO - POLITICS, GOVERNANCE, CIVIL SOCIETY AND GENDER ISSUES IN SOUTHEAST ASIAN ISLAM

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 November 2017

Shamsul A.B
Affiliation:
Director of the Institute of the Malay World & Civilization (ATMA)
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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The “Malay world” is a riverine-maritime complex of contemporary Southeast Asia, a geo-body often compared to the Mediterranean because of their many similarities, especially, as historical and civilizational “sites” where many great world civilizations, both from the East and West, interacted and crossfertilized. Physically, the Malay world is located at the centre of the region known as Southeast Asia, where 90 per cent of over 250 million of its population are Muslims who speak the Malay language and its various dialects. They inhabit present-day Malaysia, Indonesia, Brunei, Singapore, Southern Thailand, Southern Philippines and Southern Cambodia. Therefore, it is the largest single linguistic group of Muslims, with Malay as the lingua franca, and even larger than the Arab-speaking Muslims of the Middle East and North Africa put together. This fact is rarely highlighted nor publicly known to the majority of Muslims around the world. With such a huge population of Muslims residing in this vibrant region, it is not unexpected that many Western countries fear it may become a new “nest of global terrorists”. The fear is largely unfounded because historically the majority of them have been law-abiding and democracy-respecting citizens, in short, practising a moderate Islam. This chapter examines the origin and construction of the “moderateness”.

The first part of the chapter will focus on past and present discourse amongst social scientists, specializing on Southeast Asia, on the ontological nature of the Malay world Islam. The discussion revolves around two major conceptualizations-cum-analyses put forward by two world famous scholars, namely, Clifford Geertz, the cultural anthropologist from Princeton University, and William Roff, the historian from Columbia University, both of the United States. We will offer an alternative conceptualization upon which our subsequent discussion in this chapter shall be based. The second part will briefly deal with a central theme that has dominated analyses on global Islam in the last three decades, namely, “political Islam”. Indeed, the theme has become the framework within which the phenomenon labelled as “the revival of Islam” and the character of Muslim communities implicated in the movement, have been located, rigorously analyzed and have become the subject of numerous animated discussions and concerns worldwide. The third part is an empirical description of the Malaysian experience.

Type
Chapter
Information
Islam in Southeast Asia
Political, Social and Strategic Challenges for the 21st Century
, pp. 103 - 120
Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak Institute
Print publication year: 2005

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