January 29, 2007
...what is etched in my mind Pondok Tali Rasa
Is the glob of fire in the late light, Jl. Dumung 100, CT VIII
Orange red, the flames licking up, Karanggayam, Yogyakarta
A burning core of intensity, Indonesia
Like the essence of a giant fruit, bernfar@indosat.net.id
As if we were being shown, January 2007
Through a slit in the skin,
The fiery inside:
A hole in the surface
To another dimension—
As if suddenly
Through the film of the earth
A flame stuck out its tongue,
Licking greedily,
Exposing all the impacted fire
Compressed at its heart....
It is crisis makes intensity intense. Reality real.
- (William Everson, from “Spotfire” in The Masks
of Drought, 1980
Dear Family, Friends and Colleagues,

Merapi, two-mile high volcano near Yogyakarta.
This morning I arose at 4:00 a.m. as the call to prayer shattered
the silence. “Rise up! Rise up! Prayer is better than sleep!”
Sleepily, I climbed with my coffee to our crows nest, which looks
out towards the volcano. I began my day in silence and prayer,
following the example of my gentle Muslim neighbors. I love to
watch the sun come up and ignite the tropical colors. Suddenly,
fiery lava shot down the slopes in the darkness. Power and energy
slumber fitfully beneath our feet. The fire both destroys and
creates this tropical paradise. Similarly, there is power in this
beautiful people, power to create and destroy. Sometimes we wonder
which is stronger. The earthquake of last May and the religious
violence of some years ago are still vivid memories.
Farsijana is director of LPPM (Institute for Research and Community
Development) at Duta Wacana Christian University (UKDW). She works
with faculty from all the university departments to develop “action-based”
research projects all over Indonesia. “Action-based”
means the research is designed to address real problems and lead
to real action. She is a fountain of ideas and empowers many people
to carry them out. Recently, she won a major grant from the government
for a project to empower poor communities in Papua.
This semester, Farsijana will co-teach a new course for the Technical
Faculty on technology and social change. She continues teaching
anthropology and sociology of religion to huge classes of theology
students. After work, she is the district head of the Indonesian
Women’s Coalition (KPI). Several women from KPI work at
our house every day on the long-term task of earthquake recovery.
Farsijana led a series of workshops for women survivors, pairing
village women with intellectuals. Each team prepared a chapter
based on their experience of surviving the quake. The resulting
book, on women and disaster, is now in preparation for publication.
Most of the women in KPI are Muslims. They have grown very close
as they work together for others. Farsijana shows the love of
Christ to them and learns from the richness of their faith. This
Christmas she showed another side. Our families gathered from
around Indonesia and the world. With a house full of children
and young people, Farsijana reveled in cooking and caring for
our many guests.
Indonesian Consortium for Religious Studies
Four years ago, I relinquished my administrative duties at UKDW
and concentrated on teaching at UKDW, the State Islamic University
(UIN), and Gadjah Mada University (UGM). I love teaching philosophy,
social science, and ethics to mainly Muslim graduate students.
It is like a whole new career, learning to see the world with
different eyes. In March 2006, with the support of PC(USA), UKDW,
UGM, and UIN, I agreed to become the director of the Indonesian
Consortium for Religious Studies (ICRS-Yogya).
ICRS-Yogya sponsors an international, interdisciplinary Ph.D.
program in inter-religious studies. It’s the first religious
studies doctoral program in the world that is co-sponsored by
major Muslim, Christian, and national-secular universities. We
defied long traditions of mutual distrust and separation in order
to build a program that integrates Islamic studies, Christian
theology, and the social scientific study of religions. Perhaps
only in Indonesia, the largest and most dynamic Muslim population
in the world, could such an experiment succeed.
The rectors of the three universities and the Sultan legally
established ICRS-Yogya on October 6, 2006, by signing a detailed
Certificate of Agreement. In November, I traveled with the rector
of UIN, Prof. Amin Abdullah, to the American Academy of Religion
in Washington, D.C., to meet with representatives of prominent
universities to establish partnerships for exchanging students
and faculty. We are developing relationships with universities
such as Berkeley, Duke, Georgetown, Hartford, Harvard, Leiden,
Nijmegen, Princeton, Singapore, and Temple. In January we welcomed
religious scholars from all over Indonesia and several other countries
for an international conference to launch ICRS-Yogya.
For centuries, Westerners have come to Indonesia to study the
unique religious communities of this country, where major religions
are protected by law but atheism is illegal. Most Indonesians
who want to study religions descriptively go to the West. In Indonesia,
religions are usually studied apologetically, to prove the superiority
of one religion. ICRS-Yogya studies religions descriptively, by
listening to the convictions and observing the practices of real
believers. There’s a long history of religious tolerance
in Indonesia that is threatened by a small but growing number
of religious radicals. ICRS-Yogya will develop religious leaders
from all religions who understand the sincere practices of other
groups.
There is creative power behind ICRS-Yogya. Muslims, Christians,
Hindus, and Buddhists gather around a new gash in the earth that
reveals a purifying fire. Like Moses before the burning bush,
we take off our shoes and ask each other what we see. Each one
believes that his or her revelation is true. But we are learning
to bear witness to what we see of the power and beauty of God,
without neglecting to listen to our neighbors.
Warm regards,
Bernie and Farsijana Adeney-Risakotta
P.S. For more info, check out Web
site of the Indonesian Consortium for Religious Studies. See
the Web site of the Indonesian Women’s Coalition (KPI) for
information on the KPI disaster response and financial report. |