Book description
This is a unique report from deep inside the largest Muslim country
in the world. It is not another work of journalism; instead it is a
picture of how Islamic fundamentalism can displace older and more
easygoing forms of belief, inside families and small communities. The
author lived with his family for two and a half years in a village in
Eastern Java, and gives us an intimate experience of a process that is
taking place all over the Islamic world, a microcosm of threatening
change. Andrew Beatty has also written an unforgettably human story
set in a beautiful place. When he first visited this idyllic-seeming
village in Java, he was entranced by its strange and sensual way of
life. Javan mysticism, Hinduism and Islam coexisted without competing
with each other; and the ancient traditions of the shadow and dragon
plays, of celebratory feasting, of communion with the spirits of the
dead and belief in werewolves seemed set to endure as they had always
done. Public tolerance of transvestism and of short-lived affairs gave
the village a most unpuritanical atmosphere. But the village was
shadowed by a dark past, like the rest of Indonesia: in 1965 local
people suspected of communism were murdered in huge numbers. And in
the present, the chill wind of Islamism was driving apparently modern
young women to take the veil, and young men to announce that they
would no longer participate in the old rituals. The loudspeakers fixed
on the local mosques grew more intrusive and strident, blaring
intolerance at all hours of the day. Violent incidents multiplied, and
boundaries sharpened: Beatty and his family began to feel like
vulnerable outsiders. And out in the countryside a hysterical fit of
killings began, a kind of witch-craze. This is a story of how one of
the biggest issues of our time plays out in ordinary lives.
Andrew Beatty grew up in Warwickshire. After studying English at
York University he travelled in Asia for two years and discovered an
interest in anthropology which he later took up at Oxford. Among many
odd jobs, he has worked in a banana plantation in north-west
Australia, on a scallop trawler, and in an Italian circus. He has
lived for five years in Indonesia, on the tribal island of Nias and in
a peasant village in Java. Currently he teaches anthropology at Brunel
University in London. He is married with two children.