How Indonesia Became a World Leader in Islamic Education: A Historical Sociology of a Great Transformation

Robert W. Hefner

Abstract


Over the past twenty years, educators around the world have worked to devise curricula to educate students about how to live together as citizens in diverse societies. In Muslim educational circles, this task has been made additionally challenging by jurisprudential legacies from classical times that make strict and hierarchical distinctions between Muslims and non-Muslims. This essay presents a historical sociology of educational reform in Islamic schools in Indonesia with regards to education about citizenship and nation. This study shows that the late-nineteenth century ascendance of madrasa-like institutions across the Indonesian archipelago meant that the widespread adoption of a more-or-less standardized fiqh-focused curriculum (like that long common in Middle Eastern and South Asian madrasas) coincided with two other developments: the rise of Indonesian nationalism, with an emphasis on multi-religious citizenship, and the spread of modernist-style “Islamic schools” (sekolah Islam) with a broad-based academic curriculum. The coincidence of these three currents ensured that here in Indonesia Islamic schooling adopted a general curriculum emphasizing the sciences of the world in addition to Islamic sciences more readily than in many other Muslim lands. In a manner that anticipated a shift recently seen in other Muslim-majority countries, Islamic educators did so while also prioritizing Islamic ideals of the public good (maslahat) and purpose-driven (maqasid) ethics over legal formalism, and rallying to the ideal of Indonesian traditions of multi-religious citizenship. In all these regards, Islamic higher education contributed greatly to contemporary Indonesia’s cultural and democratic reform.

Keywords


Islamic education; Indonesia; curricular reform; civic education; Islamic ethics

Full Text:

PDF

References


Abukari, A. (2014). Education of women in Islam: A critical Islamic interpretation of the Quran. Religious Education, 109(1), 4-23.

British Broadcasting Corporation. (2014). Afghanistan: Before and after the Taliban. News Report.

Berger P. & Luckmann, T. (1966). The social construction of reality: A treatise in the sociology of knowledge. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 7(1), 122-125.

Berger, P. & Luckmann, T. (1991). The social construction of reality. London: Penguin Books.

Burr, V. (2003). Social Constructionism (2nd ed.). London: Routledge.

Creswell, J.W. & Creswell, J.D. (2018). Research design: Qualitative, quantitative, and mixed methods approach. Sage publications.

Dawson, C. (2002). Practical research methods: A user-friendly guide to mastering research techniques and projects. How To Books.

Dillabough, J.A. (2006). Gender theory and research in education: Modernist traditions and emerging contemporary themes. In M Arnot& M Mac an Ghaill (Eds.), The RoutledgeFalmer Reader in Gender & Education (pp. 29–44). Routledge.

Emadi, H. (2002). Repression, resistance, and women in Afghanistan. Greenwood Publishing Group.

Gannon, K. (2021). Taliban replace ministry for women with ‘virtue’ authorities. ABC News. https://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/taliban-replace-ministry-women-restricting-80094066. (16 November, 2021)

Gay, L.R., Mills. G.E., & Airasian, P. (2012). Educational research competencies for analysis and applications (10th ed.). Pearson.

Giustozzi, A. (2010). Between patronage and rebellion: Student politics in Afghanistan. Kabul, Afghanistan: Afghanistan Research and Evaluation Unit.

Human Rights Watch (2017). “I won’t be a doctor, and one day you’ll be sick”: Girls’ Access to Education in Afghanistan. USA: Human Rights Watch Publication.

Karlsson, P., & Mansory, A. (2008). Islamic and modern education in Afghanistan: Conflictual or complementary. Institute of International Education, Stockholm University.

Khwajamir, M. (2016). History and problems of education in Afghanistan. SHS Web of Conferences 26,01124. DOI 10.1051/shsconf/20162601124

Kissane, C. (2012). The way forward for girls’ education in Afghanistan.

Journal of International Women's Studies, 13(4), 10-28.

Mashriqi, K. (2016). Afghanistan women perceptions of access to higher education. Journal of Research Initiatives, 2(1), 2.

Mashwani, H. U. (2017). Female education in Afghanistan: Opportunities

and challenges. International Journal for Innovative Research in Multidisciplinary Field, 3(11).

Ministry of Education. (2018). Community-based education policy and guidelines. Kabul: Afghan Ministry of Education

Roof, D.J. (2015). Day-by-day: Higher education in Afghanistan. FIRE: Forum for International Research in Education, 1(3). Retrieved from http://preserve.lehigh.edu/fire/vol1/iss3/6

Samady, Saif R.: Changing profile of education in Afghanistan. 2013, 15 S. - URN: urn:nbn:de:0111-opus-77980 - DOI: 10.25656/01:7798

Shayan, Z. (2015) Gender Inequality in education in Afghanistan: Access and barriers. Open Journal of Philosophy, 5, 277-284. doi: 10.4236/ojpp.2015.55035.

Subrahmanian, R. (2005). Gender equality in education: Definitions and measurements. International Journal of Educational Development, 25(4), 395–407.

UNESCO (2011). UNESCO Country Programming Document (UCPD)—Afghanistan,2010–2011. http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0018/001875/187584e.pdf

UNESCO (2021). The right to education: What’s at stake in Afghanistan a 20-year review. France: United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization Publication

UN Women (2021). Women’s rights in Afghanistan: Where are we now? Gender Alert No. 1 https://www.unwomen.org/sites/default/files/2021-12/gender-alert-women-rights-in-Afghanistan-en.pdf

Yin, K.R. (2014). Case study research: Design and method (5th ed.) California: SAGE Publications Inc.

Zirack, L. (2021). Women's education: Afghanistan's biggest success story now at risk. https://thediplomat.com/2021/09/womens-education-afghanistans-biggest-success-story-now-at-risk/. (17 November, 2021).




DOI: https://doi.org/10.56529/mer.v1i1.25

Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.


Indexed by:

GS GS


 

License

© Copyright CC BY-SA

Web Analytics View My Stats

Muslim Education Review, p-ISSN: 2829-1867, e-ISSN: 2962-6463