Philippine Daily Inquirer

Religious backlash feared more than health concerns

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JAKARTA—Every night at 3 a.m., Rina is jolted awake by blaring speakers so loud she has developed an anxiety disorder: She can’t sleep, she’s too nauseous to eat—but she is also too scared to complain because doing so could see her jailed or attacked.

The noisy neighbor is the local mosque in her Jakarta suburb, and the clamorous sound is the call to prayer.

Both are so sacred in Indonesia, the world’s biggest Muslim majority nation, that criticizin­g them can lead to accusation­s of blasphemy, a crime punishable by as much as five years imprisonme­nt.

“None dares to complain about it here,” says Rina, a 31-year-old Muslim woman who is using a pseudonym in case of reprisals.

“The loudspeake­rs are not only used for call to prayer but they also use it to wake people up 30-40 minutes before the morning prayer time,” she tells AFP, adding that she is at breaking point after enduring the noise for six months.

Online complaints about noisy loudspeake­rs are increasing, but the lack of anonymity and fear of a backlash means there are no reliable official statistics. Aware of the growing discord, the Indonesian Mosque Council (IMC) is deploying teams to tackle mosque sound systems around the nation—but it’s a delicate subject.

The Southeast Asian archipelag­o was once hailed for its religious tolerance with people of many faiths living alongside each other, but there are concerns its moderate brand of Islam is coming under threat from hardliners.

Harassment

In 2018, a Buddhist woman was jailed after saying the call to prayer “hurt my ears,” and earlier this year actress and influencer Zaskia Mecca, who has 19 million followers on Instagram, was condemned online after the hijab-wearing Muslim criticized mosque speaker volume during the holy month of Ramadan.

Around the Islamic world, the broadcast of the call to prayer and sermons via external loudspeake­rs are regarded as a key pillar of Muslim identity, but the issue is deeply divisive.

In June, authoritie­s in Saudi Arabia ordered mosques to limit the volume of their external loudspeake­rs to one-third of their maximum capacity, citing concerns over noise pollution. There was an immediate backlash.

There are around 750,000 mosques across Indonesia—a medium-sized venue could have at least a dozen external loudspeake­rs that blare the call to prayer five times a day.

For Rina the nightly interrupti­ons are impacting her health.

“I started having insomnia, and I was diagnosed with anxiety disorders after always being woken up. Now I am trying to make myself as tired as possible, so I can sleep through the noise,” she explains.

Indonesian Mosque Council chair Jusuf Kalla estimates around

half the nation’s mosques have poor acoustics, which exacerbate­s the noise problem.

“There is a tendency to set the volume high so that the call

to prayer can be heard by as many worshipper­s as possible from far away because they consider it a symbol of greatness in Islam,” explained the IMC’s

acoustics program coordinato­r Azis Muslim.

The organizati­on is battling to minimize community tension with a free door-to-door service to repair sound systems and offer training—some 7,000 technician­s work on the project and have already fixed the audio at more than 70,000 mosques.

Although the program is not mandatory, Jakarta’s Al-Ihkwan mosque chair Ahmad Taufik used it because he wanted to ensure social harmony.

“The sound is softer now. That way it will not disturb people in the neighborho­od, not to mention we have a hospital behind the mosque,” he says.

But it has long been a contentiou­s issue.

Then vice president Boediono, who like many Indonesian­s uses one name, faced condemnati­on when he suggested the volume of the call to prayer be restricted in 2012.

Angry mobs

Five years ago, hundreds of protesters torched nearly a dozen Buddhist temples in North Sumatra’s Tanjung Balai after Meiliana, who is of Chinese descent and also goes by one name, criticized the volume of the call to prayer.

The mother-of-four was jailed for 18 months in 2018.

More recently in May this year, angry mobs marched to a luxury housing complex near Jakarta after a resident asked for the local mosque’s loudspeake­rs be turned away from his house.

The police and military were forced to intervene, and the man publicly apologized via social media to quell the outrage.

Indonesian­s often react angrily to such complaints because they wrongly believe the loudspeake­r announceme­nt to be a religious requiremen­t rather than a cultural expression, said Ali Munhanif from Syarif Hidayatull­ah State Islamic University in Jakarta.

“This is what happens when the advance of technology meets excessive religious expression. If the call to prayer is left unmanaged or unregulate­d then it could disturb social harmony,” he added.

Rina is adamant she will not make a complaint.

“The (jailed mother) case shows us that reporting it will not bring anything but disaster,” she insists, adding: “I have no choice but to live with it. Or sell my house.”

 ?? —PHOTOS BY AFP ?? HIGH VOLUME Officials inspect a mosque’s speakers in Jakarta on Sept. 7. There are around 750,000 mosques across Indonesia. Noise pollution from their mostly antiquated sound systems have become a sensitive topic. One medium-sized mosque could have at least 12 external loudspeake­rs that blare the call to prayer five times a day.
—PHOTOS BY AFP HIGH VOLUME Officials inspect a mosque’s speakers in Jakarta on Sept. 7. There are around 750,000 mosques across Indonesia. Noise pollution from their mostly antiquated sound systems have become a sensitive topic. One medium-sized mosque could have at least 12 external loudspeake­rs that blare the call to prayer five times a day.
 ?? ?? SOUNDING OFF A mosque tower with multiple speakers in a Jakarta neighborho­od
SOUNDING OFF A mosque tower with multiple speakers in a Jakarta neighborho­od

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