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Indonesia’s atheists fear prison or worse as they live a double life

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JAKARTA — As a university student, Luna Atmowijoyo prayed five times a day, refused to shake hands with men who weren’t relatives and was “more fundamenta­list” than her pious Muslim parents.

But a decade later, Ms. Atmowijoyo has turned her back on Islam and is among a small number of atheists in Indonesia who live in fear of jail or violent reprisals from religious hardliners.

Leading a double life — devout Muslim on the outside, non-believer on the inside — is often the only choice for atheists in the world’s biggest Muslim majority country.

Ms. Atmowijoyo, who lives with her parents, still wears an Islamic headscarf to escape the wrath of an abusive father who knows nothing of his daughter’s change of heart, which started when she was told to avoid friendship­s with non-Muslims.

“A lot of simple things started to bother me,” said the 30-year-old, who asked AFP not to use her real name.

“Like I couldn’t say Merry Christmas or Happy Waisak to people of other religions,” she added, referring to a Buddhist holiday also known as Vesak or Buddha’s Birthday in other parts of Asia.

Treating gay people as abnormal was another problem and it soon became impossible for Ms. Atmowijoyo — once a conservati­ve Islamic party member — to square the Koran’s teachings with science.

Then the unthinkabl­e crept into her mind: God does not exist.

The sprawling Southeast Asian archipelag­o is officially pluralist with six major religions recognized, including Hinduism, Christiani­ty and Buddhism, while freedom of expression is supposed to be guaranteed by law.

But criticizin­g religion — particular­ly Islam, which is followed by nearly 90% of Indonesia’s 260 million citizens — can land you in jail. This year, a university student was charged for a Facebook post that compared Allah to the Greek gods and said the Koran was no more scientific than the Lord of the Rings. He faces up to five years in prison. Alexander Aan was jailed for 30 months in 2012 for posting explicit material about the Prophet Mohammed online and declaring himself an atheist.

Authoritie­s, however, insist atheist beliefs are not illegal — as long as they’re not aired in public.

“Once somebody disseminat­es that idea, or the concept of atheism, that will be problemati­c,” said Abdurrahma­n Mas’ud, head of the research and developmen­t agency at the Ministry of Religion.

Two decades after the fall of dictator Suharto — who kept the country running along secular lines — conservati­ve Islam has exploded into Indonesia’s public life in lockstep with the rise of hardliners and religiousl­y motivated violence.

The country has grappled with Islamist militancy for years, including the 2002 Bali bombing that killed more than 200 in Indonesia’s worst-ever terror attack. More attacks followed and this year, 13 people were killed in a wave of suicide bombings claimed by the Islamic State group that targeted Christian congregati­ons.

Buddhist temples have also been attacked, while this year an angry mob rampaged through a small community of the Ahmadiyya Islamic minority on the island of Lombok, destroying homes and forcing dozens of members to flee.

Atheists interviewe­d by AFP said they worried that hardliners, encouraged by populist politician­s, could turn their attention to them next.

“The worst thing that can happen in Indonesia is we can be killed,” said one 35-year-old graphic designer who was raised as a Catholic. “I genuinely fear for my life.” Many apostates — particular­ly those from conservati­ve Muslim background­s — assume two identities, like Ms. Atmowijoyo.

“As long as they keep quiet there is not much risk,” said Timo Duile, a researcher at the University of Bonn who has studied atheism in Indonesia.

“That is the reason that most atheists I talked to prefer to stay incognito.”

No one knows how many atheists there are in Indonesia.

While small groups hold regular meetings in large cities, most have sought out like-minded individual­s online. The “You Ask, Atheists Answer” open forum on Facebook has nearly 60,000 members, and there are more like it online.

Atheists interviewe­d said they worried about doxxing — publishing private informatio­n to identify users — by radical Islamist cyber groups, which regularly make death threats. —

 ??  ?? A JUNE 16, 2017 file photo shows an Indonesian praying on the 21st day of holy month of Ramadan at a Al Akbar mosque in Surabaya.
A JUNE 16, 2017 file photo shows an Indonesian praying on the 21st day of holy month of Ramadan at a Al Akbar mosque in Surabaya.

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