Revisioning Official Islam in Indonesia: The Role of Women Ulama Congress in Reproducing Female Authority in Islamic Law

Zainul Mun'im, Muhamad Nasrudin, Suaidi Suaidi, Hasanudin Hasanudin

Abstract

Until now, the religious views of the Indonesian Government, known as official Islam, tend to be masculine and patriarchal in determining laws. The masculinity of official Islam can easily be found in some regulations in Indonesia. The establishment of the Indonesian Congress of Women Islamic Scholars (Kongres Ulama Perempuan Indonesia, KUPI) has introduced a new perspective on gender amid the dominance of official Islamic masculinity. This article focuses on the role and position of KUPI amid the dominance of official Islamic masculinity in Indonesia. Through content analysis and Charles Peirce's theory of knowledge construction, the author found that KUPI has successfully become a center for reproducing female authority in Islamic law. This is achieved by reinterpreting several government rules and policies that tend to be masculine and disadvantageous to women. The success of KUPI as a center for the reproduction of the authority of women Islamic scholars plays a role in revising official Islam. KUPI accomplishes this by offering a new paradigm that embodies the values of justice and gender equality.

 

Abstrak: Pandangan-pandangan keagamaan Pemerintah Indonesia yang dikenal dengan istilah official Islam selama ini masih cenderung maskulin dan patriarki dalam menetapkan hukum. Maskulinitas official Islam dapat dengan mudah ditemukan dalam sebagian aturan di Indonesia. Penyelenggaraan Kongres Ulama Perempuan Indonesia (KUPI)  memunculkan perspektif baru terkait gender di tengah dominannya maskulinitas Official Islam tersebut. Artikel ini menganalis peran dan posisi KUPI di tengah dominannya maskulinitas Official Islam di Indonesia. Melalui pendekatan content analysis dan teori konstruksi pengetahuan Charles Peirce, penulis berargumen bahwa KUPI telah berhasil menjadi pusat reproduksi otoritas ulama perempuan di Indonesia. Hal ini dicapai dengan melakukan penafsiran ulang terhadap beberapa aturan dan kebijakan pemerintah yang cenderung maskulin dan merugikan perempuan. Keberhasilan KUPI menjadi pusat reproduksi otoritas ulama perempuan ini berperan dalam merevisi Official Islam tersebut. Hal ini dilakukan oleh KUPI dengan menawarkan paradigma baru yang lebih mengandung nilai-nilai keadilan dan keseteraan gender.


Keywords


Indonesian Congress of Women Islamic Scholars; female authority; Indonesian official Islam; gender

References

Al-Jazāirī, ‘Abd Rahman. (2003). Kitāb al-Fiqh ‘alā al-Madhāhib al-Arba’ah. Dār al-Kutub al-‘Ilmiyyah.

Al-Maqdisī, I. Q. (1997). Al-Mughnī. Dār ’Ālam al-Kutub.

Al-Qaraḍāwī, Y. (1996). Al-Ijtihād fī al-Sharī’ah al-Islāmiyyah ma’a Naẓarāt Tahlīliyah. Dār al-Qalm.

Al-Qaraḍāwī, Y. (2001). Fi Fiqh al-Aqalliyāt al-Muslimah Ḥayat al-Muslimīn Wasaṭ al-Mujtama’āt al-Ukhrā. Dār al-Syurūq.

Alwani, Z. (2019). Muslim Women as Religious Scholars. CrossCurrents, 69(1), 45–58. https://www.jstor.org/stable/26756899

Al-Zuḥaylī, W. (1997). Al-Fiqh al-Islāmī wa Adillatuhu. Dār al-Fikr al-Mu’āṣir.

Andrios, B. (2022, September 7). Menag Yaqut Dukung Helat Kongres Ulama Perempuan Indonesia II. Kementerian Agama Republik Indonesia. https://kemenag.go.id/nasional/menag-yaqut-dukung-helat-kongres-ulama-perempuan-indonesia-ii-lx6ohw

Arimbi, D. A. (2009). Reading Contemporary Indonesian Muslim Women Writers. Amsterdam University Press.

Arkūn, M. (1986). Tārīkhiyyah al-Fikr al-‘Arābī al-Islāmī. Markaz al-Inmā’ al-Qaumī.

Barazangi, N. H. (2008). The Absence of Muslim Women in Shaping Islamic Thought: Foundations of Muslims’ Peaceful and Just Co-existence. Journal of Law and Religion, 24(2), 403–432. JSTOR. http://www.jstor.org/stable/25654324

Blackburn, S. (2004). Women and the State in Modern Indonesia. Cambridge University Press.

Blackwood, E. (2007). Regulation of Sexuality in Indonesian Discourse: Normative Gender, Criminal Law and Shifting Strategies of Control. Culture, Health & Sexuality, 9(3), 293–307. JSTOR.

Brenner, S. (2011). Private Moralities in the Public Sphere: Democratization, Islam, and Gender in Indonesia. American Anthropologist, 113(3), 478–490.

Brown, N. J. (2017). Official Islam in The Arab World: The Contest for Religious Authority. Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

Butt, S. (2008). Polygamy and Mixed Marriage in Indonesia: Islam and the Marriage Law in the Courts. The Federation Press.

El-Alami, D., & Hinchcliffe, D. (1996). Islamic Marriage and Divorce Laws of the Arab World. Kluwer Law International.

Engineer, A. A. (2008). The Rights of Women in Islam. Sterling Publishers Privated Limited.

Esposito, J. L. (1975). Women’s Rights in Islam. Islamic Studies, 14(2), 99–114. JSTOR.

Fadl, K. A. E. (2001). Speaking in God’s Name: Islamic Law, Authority, and Women. Oneworld.

Fanani, A. (2009). Islam dalam Berbagai Pembacaan Kontemporer. Pustaka Pelajar.

Fayumi, B. (2023, Juli 13). Personal Communication

Hadi, S. (2014). Bias Gender dalam Konstruksi Hukum Islam di Indonesia. Palastren, 7(1), 25–46. https://doi.org/DOI:10.21043/palastren.v7i1.997

Hatley, B. (2002). Women in Indonesia: Gender, Equity and Development. Institute of Southeast Asian Studies.

Hidayah, N., et. al. (2024). Islamic feminism in Indonesia: The case of Fiqh an-Nisa program P3M/Rahima. in Rahiem (ed.). Religion, Education, Science and Technology towards a More Inclusive and Sustainable Future. Oxon and New York: Routledge. pp. 267–272.

Hidayah, N. (2023). Gender, Economy, and the Law: Women Entrepreneurs in Indonesian and Islamic Legal Perspectives. Samarah. 7(2), pp. 1121–1143.

Hidayah, N. (2012). 'Feminising' Islam in Contemporary Indonesia: The Role of Progressive Muslim Women's Organisations, Ph.D Thesis, The University of Melbourne.

Jum’ah, ‘Alī. (2005). Al-Bayān li Mā Yushgil al-Adhhān. Al-Muqaṭṭam li al-Nashr wa’l-Tauzī’.

Kloos, D., & Ismah, N. (2023). Siting Islamic feminism: The Indonesia Congress of Women Islamic Scholars and the challenge of challenging patriarchal authority. History and Anthropology, 34(3), 1–26. https://doi.org/10.1080/02757206.2023.2249495

Kodir, F. A. (2022). Metodologi Fatwa KUPI: Pokok-pokok Pikiran Keagamaan Kongres Ulama Perempuan Indonesia. KUPI.

Kodir, F. A. (2023, Agustus 1). Personal Communication

Komisi Nasional Perempuan. (2019). Risalah Kebijakan Pelukaan Genital Perempuan: Praktik Menyakitkan yang Dikekalkan Atas Nama Tradisi. Komnas Perempuan.

Kozma, T. (2012). Understanding Gender Mainstreaming in Modern Law Enforcement. Connections, 11(2), 87–94. JSTOR.

KUPI. (2020, Mei 5). Hasil Kongres KUPI 1 Tahun 2017. Kongres Ulama Perempuan Indonesia. https://kupipedia.id/index.php/Hasil_Kongres

KUPI. (2021a, Agustus 20). Naskah Hasil Musyawarah Keagamaan Tentang Pernikahan Anak [Hasil Kongres]. Kupipedia. https://kupipedia.id/index.php/Naskah_Hasil_Musyawarah_Keagamaan_Tentang_Pernikahan_Anak#Sikap_dan_Pandangan_Keagamaan

KUPI. (2021b, Oktober 15). Visi Misi KUPI. Kongres Ulama Perempuan Indonesia. https://kupi.or.id/visi-misi-kupi/

KUPI. (2022a). Peminggiran Perempuan dalam Menjaga NKRI dari Bahaya Kekerasan atas Nama Agama (Hasil Kongres 04/Mk-Kupi-2/XI/2022; Hasil Musyawarah Keagamaan Kongres Ulama Perempuan Indonesia (Kupi) Ke-2). Kongres Ulama Perempuan Indonesia.

KUPI. (2022b). Perlindungan Perempuan dari Pemotongan dan Pelukaan Genitalia Perempuan (P2GP) Yang Membahayakan Tanpa Alasan Medis (Hasil Kongres 08/MK-KUPI-2/XI/2022; Hasil Musyawarah Keagamaan Kongres Ulama Perempuan Indonesia (Kupi) Ke-2). Kongres Ulama Perempuan Indonesia.

KUPI. (2022c, Januari 18). Lukman Hakim Saifuddin. Kongres Ulama Perempuan Indonesia. https://kupipedia.id/index.php/Lukman_Hakim_Saifuddin

KUPI. (2022d, Mei 5). Diskursus Hukum Islam. Kongres Ulama Perempuan Indonesia. https://kupipedia.id/index.php/Diskursus_Hukum_Islam

KUPI. (2022e, November 8). Pengumuman Calon Peserta & Pengamat di Kongres Ulama Perempuan Indonesia (KUPI) ke-2 di Pondok Pesantren Hasyim Asy’ari Bangsri Jepara, Tanggal 24-26 Nopember 2022. Kongres Ulama Perempuan Indonesia. https://kupi.or.id/peserta-lolos-seleksi-kupi2-jepara/

KUPI. (2022f, November 12). Sejarah dan Latar Belakang KUPI. Kongres Ulama Perempuan Indonesia. https://kupi.or.id/tentang-kupi/

KUPI. (2023, Juni 12). Hasil Musyawarah Keagamaan Kongres Ulama Perempuan Indonesia Ke-2. Kongres Ulama Perempuan Indonesia. https://kupipedia.id/index.php/Hasil_Musyawarah_Keagamaan_Kongres_Ulama_Perempuan_Indonesia_Ke-2

Ma’ruf, A., Wilodati, & Aryanti, T. (2021). Kongres Ulama Perempuan Indonesia dalam Wacana Merebut Tafsir Gender Pasca Reformasi: Sebuah Tinjauan Geneologi. Musawa: Jurnal Studi Gender dan Islam, 20(2), 127–146. https://doi.org/10.14421/musawa.2021.202.127-146

Mun’im, Z. (2021). Peran Kaidah Fikih dalam Aktualisasi Hukum Islam: Studi Fatwa Yusuf Al-Qaradawi tentang Fiqh Al-Aqalliyat. Al-Manahij: Jurnal Kajian Hukum Islam, 15(1), 151–172. https://doi.org/10.24090/mnh.v15i1.4546.

Munitz, M. K. (1981). Contemporary Analytic Philosophy. Macmillan Publishing.

Nurlaelawati, E. (2010). Modernization, Tradition and Identity: The Kompilasi Hukum Islam and Legal Practice in the Indonesian Religious Courts. Amsterdam University Press.

Nurlaelawati, E. (2013). Muslim Women in Indonesian Religious Courts: Reform, Strategies, and Pronouncement of Divorce. Islamic Law and Society, 20(3), 242–271. JSTOR.

O’Shaughnessy, K. (2009). Gender, state and social power in contemporary Indonesia: Divorce and marriage law. Routledge.

Platt, M. (2017). Marriage, Gender and Islam in Indonesia: Women Negotiating Informal Marriage, Divorce and Desire. Routledge.

Prihatinah, T. L. (2005). Women and Income Generating Projects: The Gender Impacts of Indonesian Government Policies [Doctoral Thesis]. Murdoch Univeristy.

Rascoff, S. J. (2012). Establishing Official Islam? The Law and Strategy of Counter-Radicalization. Stanford Law Review, 64(1), 125–189.

Rinaldo, R. (2008). Envisioning the Nation: Women Activists, Religion and the Public Sphere in Indonesia. Social Forces, 86(4), 1781–1804. JSTOR.

Robbins, M., & Rubin, L. (2017). The Ascendance of Official Islams. Democracy and Security, 13(4), 363–391. https://doi.org/10.1080/17419166.2017.1360184

Robinson, K. (2006). Islamic Influences on Indonesian Feminism. Social Analysis: The International Journal of Social and Cultural Practice, 50(1), 171–177. JSTOR.

Rofiah, N. (2023, September 7). Personal Communication [Komunikasi pribadi].

Sezgin, Y., & Kunkler, M. (2014). Regulation of “Religion” and the “Religious”: The Politics of Judicialization and Bureaucratization in India and Indonesia. Comparative Studies in Society and History, 56(2), 448–478.

Shaltūt, M. (1995). al-Fatāwā: Dirāsatun li Mushkilāti al-Muslim al-Mu’āṣir fî Ḥayātihi al-Yaumiyyah wa al-‘Āmmah. Dār al-Shurūq.

Situmorang, A. (2007). Staying single in a married world: Never-married women in Yogyakarta and Medan. Asian Population Studies, 3(3), 287–304.

Tim KUPI. (2017). Proses dan Hasil Kongres Ulama Perempuan Indonesia. Kongres Ulama Perempuan Indonesia.

Tim Penyusun Mahkamah Agung RI. (2011). Himpunan Peraturan Perundang-undangan yang Berkaitan dengan Kompilasi Hukum Islam dengan Pengertian dalam Pembahasannya. Mahkamah Agung RI.

Ulfiyati, N. S. (2019). Pandangan dan Peran Tokoh Kongres Ulama Perempuan Indonesia (KUPI) dalam Mencegah Perkawinan Anak. De Jure: Jurnal Hukum dan Syari’ah, 11(1), 23–35.

Undang-undang Republik Indonesia Nomor 1 Tahun 1974 Tentang Perkawinan (1974).

Undang-undang Republik Indonesia Normo 16 Tahun 2019 tentang Perubahan atas Undang-undang Nomor 1 Tahun 1974 tentang Perkawinan (2019).

Wardah, F. (2014, Januari 29). Peraturan Menteri Kesehatan RI Soal Sunat Perempuan Telah Dicabut. VOA Indonesia. https://www.voaindonesia.com/a/peraturan-menteri-kesehatan-ri-soal-sunat-perempuan-telah-dicabut/1839905.html

Wieringa, S. E. (2015). Gender Harmony and the Happy Family: Islam, Gender, and Sexuality in Post-Reformasi Indonesia. South East Asia Research, 23(1), 27–44. JSTOR. https://doi.org/10.5367/sear.2015.0244




DOI: 10.15408/ajis.v24i1.34744

Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.