Muhammadiyah, Local Politics and Local Identity in Kotagede

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8/16/2019 Muhammadiyah, Local Politics and Local Identity in Kotagede http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/muhammadiyah-local-politics-and-local-identity-in-kotagede 1/18  Muhammadiyah, Local Politics and Local Identity in Kotagede Author(s): Priyambudi SULISTIYANTO Source: Sojourn: Journal of Social Issues in Southeast Asia , Vol. 21, No. 2, Dynamics of the Local (October 2006), pp. 254-270 Published by: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies (ISEAS) Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/41308078 Accessed: 11-04-2016 16:11 UTC  Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at http://about.jstor.org/terms  JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. Institute of Southeast Asian Studies (ISEAS)  is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Sojourn: Journal of Social Issues in Southeast Asia This content downloaded from 152.118.24.10 on Mon, 11 Apr 2016 16:11:40 UTC All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms

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 Muhammadiyah, Local Politics and Local Identity in Kotagede

Author(s): Priyambudi SULISTIYANTO

Source: Sojourn: Journal of Social Issues in Southeast Asia , Vol. 21, No. 2, Dynamics of the

Local (October 2006), pp. 254-270

Published by: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies (ISEAS)

Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/41308078

Accessed: 11-04-2016 16:11 UTC

 

Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at

http://about.jstor.org/terms

 

JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted

digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about

JSTOR, please contact [email protected].

Institute of Southeast Asian Studies (ISEAS)  is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve andextend access to Sojourn: Journal of Social Issues in Southeast Asia 

This content downloaded from 152.118.24.10 on Mon, 11 Apr 2016 16:11:40 UTCAll use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms

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 SOJOURN: Journal of Social Issues in Southeast Asia Vol. 21, No. 2 (2006), pp. 254-70 DOI: 10.1355/sj21-2f

 © 2006 ISEAS ISSN 0217 9520 print / ISSN 1793 2858 electronic

 Research Notes and Comments

 Muhammadiyah Local Politics and

 Local Identity in Kotagede

 Priyambudi SULISTIYANTO

 This article is a preliminary observation of local politics and local identity

 in Kotagede, Central Java, Indonesia, during the post-Soeharto period. It

 examines the roles of Muhammadiyah and local actors in maintaining local

 identity in this town. I highlight the importance of Islamic and Javanese

 traditions in shaping the local history and the dynamics of local politics

 in Kotagede. I also argue that there is a place for local actors and social

 networks in the pursuit of preserving local identity in this town. Some

 observations are made about the impact of the Yogyakarta earthquake

 and future research directions.

 Keywords: Kotagede, Muhammadiyah, scholarship, local politics, local identity.

 This article is based on two research field trips I made to Kotagede,

 Indonesia, in 2005. 1 My long-term research plan is to document the

 political ethnography of Kotagede during the post-Soeharto period,

 exploring the interplay between local politics and local identity in

 the era of decentralization and paying attention to the significance

 of Muhammadiyah and the role of local actors in Kotagede. Here I

 will offer some thoughts on the directions this study will take.

 The importance of studying local politics in Indonesia in the era

 of decentralization cannot be overemphasized. Scholars have been

 Reproduced from SOJOURN: Journal of Social Issues in Southeast Asia Vol. 21 No. 2 (October 2006)

 (Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 2006). This version was obtained electronically direct from

 the publisher on condition that copyright is not infringed. No part of this publication may be reproduced

 without the prior permission of the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies. Individual articles are available at

 < http://bookshop.iseas.edu.sg >

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 Muhammadiyah Local Politics and Local Identity in Kotagede 255

 debating the ramifications of the decentralization policies adopted

 in the post-Soeharto period. Generally they agree that the ways in

 which local communities have responded to decentralization have

 varied between the regions (Aspinall and Fealy 2003; Kingsbury and

 Aveling 2003; Erb, Sulistiyanto and Faucher 2005). In the Soeharto

 period, the relationship between local politics and religion was

 shaped by a centralistic political structure. Since the fall of Soeharto

 in 1998, the regions have had to think more for themselves and

 find their own ways of dealing with local issues. Maintaining local

 identity has become an important issue in the regions in the era of

 decentralization in Indonesia.

 The people of Kotagede today have inherited a rich religious and

 cultural legacy, accepting both Islamic and Javanese traditions as part

 of their identity. These traditions coexist and interact with each other,

 enhancing the spirit of tolerance in Kotagede. The local people are

 proud of their traditions and may seem somewhat parochial to an

 observer, but in a positive sense. The identification with their glorious

 past as the capital city of the old Javanese kingdom of Mataram

 creates a sense of ownership of this place. The people of Kotagede

 enjoy talking to outsiders - tourists, visitors or newcomers - about

 this glorious past and their local identity.

 I will begin with explaining the geographical and historical setting

 of Kotagede. This town is located about ten kilometers from Yogjakarta

 and has a population of 30,000 people (Pemerintah Kota Yogyakarta

 2004). It is a popular tourist destination with many important

 historical and cultural sites. Kotagede is known as an Islamic town

 {kota Islam), a Javanese town ( kota Jawa), and a silver town ( kota

 perak). It is divided into two administrative areas. The northeast area

 belongs to the Yogyakarta municipality, while the southwest area is

 under the Bantul district.

 Kotagede has strong religious and cultural identities. Where in

 some other parts of Indonesia, strong religious identities have become

 a source of local conflict, in Kotagede, this has not been the case. A

 strong communal spirit grounded in an acceptance of their history

 and local identity helps to maintain social harmony.

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 256 Priyambud SULSTYANTO

 The history of Kotagede is an important subject for its people.

 The historical trajectory of Kotagede has been shaped by the

 relationship between Islam and Javanese traditions. Prince Senopati

 {Panembahan Senopati ), the founder of the Mataram Kingdom,

 established Kotagede in the late 16th century (Van Mook 1958:

 290; Nakamura 1983: 15). While a Muslim, he was also Javanese,

 thus heavily influenced by the Hindu and local animistic traditions

 that characterize Javanese culture. Kotagede was Mataram's capital

 before it moved to Yogyakarta in the 17th century. During the

 Mataram Kingdom period, Kotagede was an important place for

 Javanese cultural activities as many royal family members and their

 employees resided here. Kotagede also attracted artisans, traders,

 crafts people, musicians, scholars, and religious figures. These groups

 settled and developed a sophisticated cultural life and luxury items

 for the aristocracy.2 Later on, especially during the Dutch colonial

 period, artisans from Kotagede produced gold and silver items for

 the Dutch community and other Europeans who lived in Java

 (Maulana 2001: 33).

 Scholarship on Kotagede

 Previous studies of Kotagede have mainly dealt with the political history

 and socio-religious aspects of the town (Soekiman 1992; Albiladiyah

 1997; Khudori 2000; Tjahyono 1991; Zaidan 2003; and Bahari

 2004). Van Mook (1958), a Dutch scholar, studied political and social

 life in Kotagede during the 1920s. He found that the coexistence of

 Islamic and Javanese traditions were important in shaping the social,

 economic, and cultural life of Kotagede. Van Mook (1958: 287-88)

 also noted the importance of the local entrepreneurs and traders

 (mostly the local silversmiths, or pengrajin perak), many of whom were

 members of Muhammadiyah. Their association with Muhammadiyah

 contributed significandy to the local economy in Kotagede during the

 1920s and the 1930s. The locals regard these decades as a "golden era"

 in Kotagede when the production of silver goods reached a significant

 level, bringing economic prosperity to the community.

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 Muhammadiyah Local Politics and Local Identity in Kotagede 257

 In the early 1970s, Japanese scholar Mitsuo Nakamura, in a

 study of the role of Muhammadiyah in Kotagede, suggested that in

 spite of the successful "Islamization" of Kotagede, Muhammadiyah

 was unable to totally eradicate the peoples attachment to Javanese

 traditions (Nakamura 1983). He noted that the local people

 accepted both Islamic and Javanese traditions as their way of living

 and as a part of their identity. Nakamura noticed signs of declining

 economic prosperity in Kotagede during the late 1960s and the

 1970s as the local entrepreneurs and traders struggled to defend

 themselves against the onslaught of market competition brought

 about by the growing number of foreign investors in Indonesia.

 Nakamura also suggested that with the collapse of the Indonesian

 Communist Party {Partai Komunis Indonesia , PKI) in the middle of

 1960s, Muhammadiyah expanded its religious and social activities

 in Kotagede (with the support of the local entrepreneurs and

 traders .

 In an ethnographic study conducted in 2000, Indonesian scholar

 Jadul Maulana argued that strong local initiatives had led various

 actors to rejuvenate and preserve local traditions in Kotagede.

 Observing the proceedings of the Kotagede Festival {Festival Kotagede )

 held in 2000, he acknowledged the richness of the religious and

 cultural identities of the Kotagedean community (2001: 14-20).

 The political and economic crises that have occurred in the post-

 Soeharto period have direcdy affected the people of Kotegede, as the

 number of foreign tourists has declined with the consequence of a

 weakening local economy. However, Maulana (2001: 13) also noted

 that, surprisingly, this economic change of fortune in Kotagede had

 had some positive impact. It forced Kotagedeans to initiate a range

 of cultural activities such as ketoprakan (traditional theater), and

 mocopatan (poetry reading), among others, that led to an appreciation

 of their rich religious and cultural traditions, while at the same time,

 attracting tourists. As Maulana (2001: 38) suggests, the Kotagedean

 community realized the importance of maintaining their Islamic and

 Javanese traditions.

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 258 Priyambud SULSTYANTO

 Muhammadiyah and Local Politics

 When its founder Haji Ahmad Dahlan established Muhammadiyah in

 Yogyakarta in the early 20th century, his vision was for it to uphold the

 mission of amar ma'aruf nahi mungkar (right relationship with fellow

 human being) and to ensure that Islam (and Muhammadiyah) would

 bring rahmatan lil 'alamin (peace in the world) (Nakamura 1983: 48).

 In Kotagede, Muhammadiyah gained a strong following. Haji Masyhudi

 took up the mission by establishing a Muhammadiyah branch in 1923

 and under his leadership the organization founded religious and social

 institutions to cater for the needs of the local people (Nakamura

 1983: 70-73; Maulana, 2001: 24). Muhammadiyah was less directly

 active in the local political arena, and has no formal link with any

 particular political party, unlike the other major Muslim organization

 in Indonesia, the Nahdlatul Ulama (NU). Muhammadiyah believes

 that political affiliation is a personal or private matter. Nonetheless,

 Muhammadiyah has produced some local leaders in Kotagede. It has

 been a training ground for not just local but also some prominent

 national political leaders, including the former religious minister of the

 Soekarno period, Kahar Muzakir, and of the Soeharto period, Mukti

 Ali. A few local politicians who currently hold office in Yogyakarta are

 members of or have association with Muhammadiyah.

 Muhammadiyah was not the only major organization active in

 Kotagede in the early 20th century. Syarikat Islam (SI), which was a

 social and economic organization, was established in Kotagede before

 Muhammadiyah, its supporters being mainly local entrepreneurs

 and traders (Nakamura 1983: 55). At around the same time, the

 Indonesian Communist Party (Partai Komunis Indonesia, PKI) also

 established a branch in Kotagede. The PKI was very popular among

 the local workers and peasants. At the end of 1 924 the PKI organized

 an international conference that brought a thousand of its members

 and supporters to Kotagede (McVey 1965: 262-73; Shiraishi 1990:

 313). Rivalry between the PKI and Muhammadiyah started at this

 point with workers and peasants supporting the former, and wealthy

 local entrepreneurs supporting the latter. Nakamura observes:

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 Muhammadiyah Local Politics and Local Identity in Kotagede 259

 The PK3 advocated direct action to overthrow the Dutch colonial

 regime. The Muhammadiyah, although no less anti-colonial, did

 not let the organization become involved in such an action. The

 Muhammadiyah took the religious enlightenment of individuals as its

 primary task and regarded its political involvement rather detrimental

 to the performance of that task. Although individual members

 were accorded the freedom of political actions as individuals, the

 Muhammadiyah took the stand that political action without religious

 conviction was groundless or even harmfid to its task of religious

 enlightenment (1983: 65).

 During the post-independence period, the PKI gained ground in

 Kotagede, with the result that Muhammadiyah joined other Islamic

 organizations in establishing the Masyumi, a coalition of Islamic

 political parties that were active in the post-independence period.

 Masyumi was popular in Kotagede in the 1950s, ranking number

 one in the 1955 general elections, slighdy above the PKI (with

 approximately one third of the votes each) while the Indonesian

 Nationalist Party ( Partai Nasional Indonesia , PNI) and other small

 parties shared the remaining votes (Nakamura 1983: 105; Maulana

 2001: 27). Surprisingly, the almost equal support for the PKI and

 Masyumi in Kotagede at this time did not divide or polarize the local

 people. Peace was maintained in Kotagede, which the local people

 believe, was due to the commitment of its people to the spirit of

 tolerance that is embodied in this town.

 However, it is not clear how Kotagede weathered the crisis that

 followed the fall of Sukarno in 1965. Thousands of members the

 PKI and the latter s affiliates such as the leftist cultural organization,

 Lekra, and several workers' organizations were killed or arrested and

 jailed in Java and Bali. It remains a mystery that no one is willing to

 talk about in Kotagede, which had large numbers of PKI members

 and supporters. They are still reluctant to talk about this part of

 local history in Kotagede.

 The departure of the PKI from the local political arena in the

 1960s brought considerable political and social change to Kotagede.

 Many sympathizers and members of the PKI who were stigmatized

 and traumatized looked for political security and sanctuary within

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 26 Priyambud SULSTYANTO

 Muhammadiyah. As noted by Maulana (2001: 27-28), during

 the New Order period, there was an expansion of religious and

 social activities in Kotagede. Muhammadiyah became the largest

 organization in Kotagede. But the dominance of Muhammadiyah

 did not necessarily translate into an Islamic voting block for Islamic

 political parties contesting the general elections during the Soeharto

 period. Muhammadiyah leaders in Kotagede continued to assert the

 freedom of the individual in political matters. It was commonly

 said "religion is for spiritual purposes, while politics is for political

 purposes" ( agama itu untuk rohaniah, politik untuk duniawiah). In

 the general elections of the Soeharto period (1971, 1977, 1982,

 1987, 1992, 1997) the people of Kotagede voted for all three of the

 political parties that contested them: the Unity Development Party

 {Partai Persatuan Pembangunan, PPP), an alliance of Islamic political

 parties, the ruling party Golkar ( Golongan Karya) and the Indonesian

 Democratic Party ( Partai Demokrasi Indonesia, PDI) (Zaidan 2003).

 The voting results illustrated the political diversity in Kotagede.

 This diversity continued after the fall of Soeharto in 1998. In

 the 1999 general elections, Kotagedeans voted almost equally for

 the two major political parties, the National Mandate Party ( Partai

 Amanat Nasional, PAN) (37 per cent of the votes) and the Indonesian

 Democratic Party-Struggle ( Partai Demokrasi Indonesia-Perjuangan,

 PDI-P) (30 per cent of the votes). The remaining 33 per cent of the

 votes were distributed among other political parties.3 Some have argued

 that the PAN gained the largest percentage of the Kotagede vote in

 1999 because the party was led Amien Rais, a former chairman of

 Muhammadiyah. Some have suggested that PAN relied very much

 on the support of Muhammadiyah in Kotagede (Nakamura 2005:

 220-21). However, in the 2004 general elections, the popularity of

 PAN in Kotagede declined with voters supporting parties such as the

 PDI-P, PPP, Golkar, and new comers such as the Prosperous Justice

 Party ( Partai Keadilan Sejahtera, PKS) and the Democratic Party

 {Partai Demokrat, PD).

 The results of the 2004 general elections in Kotagede underlined

 the on-going political diversity of the people of Kotagede and also

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 Muhammadiyah Local Politics and Local Identity in Kotagede 261

 the decline of the Islamic-based political parties. Whereas in the

 1999 general elections, PAN was able to rely on the votes of a large

 section of the people in Kotagede, this seemed not to be the case

 anymore in the 2004 general elections.4 With the declining popularity

 of PAN in Kotagede, competition for the local vote increased, with

 new contenders coming mainly from the business community, in

 particular the silver industry. In this new development we see local

 business leaders joining other political parties such as PKS and PD

 in order to expand their influence beyond the business world.

 Some recent local political developments deserve attention

 especially the direct election for the district head known as Pilkada

 ( pemilihan kepala daerah langsung) that took place in June 2005. I

 was able to observe in this election that the people of Kotagede voted

 overwhelmingly for the incumbent bupati (district head) of Bantul

 district, Idham Samawi, who was supported by the PDI-P and other

 small political parties. The candidates who were supported by the

 PAN and the Nation Awakening Party ( Partai Kebangkitan Bangsa,

 PKB) obtained few votes, even though both parties were perceived

 by the public to be close to Muhammadiyah and Nahdlatul Ulama

 respectively. Prior to the Pilkada, there had been speculation among

 the local people that the incumbent bupati would face difficulty in

 gaining votes from the local people in Kotagede. This was not the

 case after all. I observed several polling booths in Kotagede and I am

 impressed that the voters showed their independent views. The local

 people showed their political maturity by accepting the winners and

 the losers without entering into disputes over the final results of the

 Pilkada. The re-election of Idham Samawi suggests that the people of

 Kotagede supported leadership of the incumbent bupati , who had

 succeeded in developing both Kotagede and the broader Bantul district.

 I would argue that the neutrality of Muhammadiyah has allowed

 the people of Kotagede to show their maturity and independence

 in casting their votes in both general and local elections. The local

 people express this phenomenon by saying that they are practical

 and business-like people who always put their eggs in many baskets

 rather than in a single one, which could disappear when things go

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 262 Priyambud SULSTYANTO

 wrong. The wisdom holds for politics as well as for business: they

 should never invest all resources in a single political party.

 Local People and Local Identity

 The coexistence of Islamic and Javanese traditions has been established

 for centuries in Kotagede. Through religious and cultural activities such

 as arisan, pengajian, paguyuban, and selamatan the local people know

 each other and support each other.5 By engaging in these activities,

 the Kotagedean community shows its willingness to accept different

 religious and cultural traditions. One popular activity is selamatan,

 which involves groups of families. The selamatan has been practiced

 in Kotagede for centuries. It is still practiced today by local people,

 both the devout and the less devout Muslims. The Muhammadiyah

 has tolerated selamatan because it is an activity that has many followers

 in Kotagede. It is a part of their Javanese identity. In this sense, as

 my source states, "the Muhammadiyah had to live with selamatan

 as part of accepting different local religious and cultural practices".6

 Selamatan functions somewhat like a civic forum in which local

 people can meet and discuss the issues or problems faced by the

 whole community.

 The role of local actors in maintaining local identities in Kotagede

 also deserves attention. It is important here to examine the life stories

 of a few personalities in Kotagede including their concerns and ideas

 about the future of Kotagede. The first is a prominent religious

 and cultural figure in Kotagede who is also an active member of

 Muhammadiyah. Amiruddin was born in Kotagede in the early

 1950s. His father was a prominent religious leader who was active

 in the Kotagede branch of Muhammadiyah. Amiruddin came from

 a prominent local family who were among those known in Kotagede

 as the Bani Mukmin people, a term that refers to the early setders

 of Kotagede. Many local leaders in Kotagede come from these

 families, as do many Muhammadiyah activists. Amiruddin studied

 in Kotagede and Yogyakarta. He learned Islam from his father at

 home. He grew up and was actively involved in the activities of the

 Kotagede branch of Muhammadiyah. After he obtained a university

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 Muhammadiyah Local Politics and Local Identity in Kotagede 263

 degree from Gadjah Mada University in Yogjakarta, he became a

 lecturer in that university.

 Within Muhammadiyah, Amiruddin has risen from the bottom

 level ( ranting ) to the national level ( pimpinan pusat). From 1995 to

 2005, he was the secretary of Majelis Tarjih in Muhammadiyah at the

 national level. He was indeed among the elite circle of Muhammadiyah

 during this period. This allowed him to discuss both local and national

 issues with high profile personalities such as Amien Rais (the former

 leader of PAN) and Ahmad Syafii Maarif (the former chairman of

 Muhammadiyah). Through his social and religious involvements in

 Kotagede, Amiruddin is regarded as an icon for Muhammadiyah in

 Kotagede. As a prominent member of Muhammadiyah, he prefers

 to help the people in Kotagede through social and cultural activities

 rather than through political activities. In this respect he embodies

 the mission of Muhammadiyah. He has been active in promoting

 local identity in Kotagede by encouraging Kotagedeans to respect

 their religious and cultural traditions.7 He has been instrumental,

 along with some other local personalities (including Paiman, whom

 I shall mention below), in establishing a Living Museum project in

 2003, the aim of which is to preserve Kotagede and to promote such

 conservation as a model for other historical cities in Indonesia (Dinas

 Kebudayaan dan Pariwisata DIY Yogyakarta, 2003).

 Unlike a conventional museum, the intention of this living

 museum is to have it looked after by the local people of Kotagede.

 This requires the active participation of the local people to preserve

 their local identity and their cultural resources and to use them to

 the benefit of the entire local community.8 There were several steps

 taken to establish a Living Museum in Kotagede. The first step was

 to gather information about historical and cultural sites in Kotagede

 that can be preserved and protected. This was done by talking to

 local people and by visiting the sites scattered around Kotagede. The

 second step was to identify several areas in Kotagede that have their

 own special character such as the silversmith area, the handicraft area,

 the batik painting area, and the leather craft area. Each area is to be

 maintained with its own strong character and identity, and can be

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 264 Priyambud SULSTYANTO

 Silver handicraft from Kotagede (Photograph courtesy of Priyambudi Sulistiyanto)

 enjoyed by both locals and outsiders. The third step was to identify

 and to interview the older people who lived in Kotagede in order

 to preserve their knowledge about the town. Their knowledge and

 insights are useful and needed for the preservation of local identity.

 Amiruddin and Paiman have been actively involved in thinking and

 preparing concepts and practical ideas to promote and maintain local

 identity in Kotagede.

 The second person is a successful entrepreneur in the silver

 industry. Paiman is in his early forties and is the son of a well-known

 local painter. He was born, grew up, and still lives in Kotagede. He

 owns a silver shop and three workshops where local silversmiths

 produce fine silver items. He studied in Kotagede and Yogjakarta and

 obtained a university degree from Gadjah Mada University. Early in

 his life, Paiman was not interested in running a silver business. His

 mother had once told him that being a businessperson was a tough

 call suggesting he worked in the civil service instead. He took her

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 Muhammadiyah Local Politics and Local Identity in Kotagede 265

 advice and applied for such a job after he obtained his university

 degree. However, he found himself unable to obtain a job either in

 the government or in the military.9

 Paiman thus decided to start a silver business at the end of the

 1980s. It was difficult in the beginning, as he had to compete with

 other more established businesses. He needed to learn from other

 silver entrepreneurs, while also looking for opportunities to enhance

 his own silver business. His relationships with foreign students and

 researchers during his days at Gadjah Mada University in the 1980s

 helped in establishing connections with silver companies abroad in

 the United States, Australia, Singapore, and Europe. Through these

 connections he began to do business with museums abroad that

 ordered and purchased silver items from his shop.

 Surprisingly, Paimans silver business expanded rapidly after the

 1998 economic crisis. He survived so well primarily because of his

 strong links with business counterparts in Jakarta and abroad. He

 worked to maintain his overseas links well by regularly sending updates

 promoting new designs. By having overseas customers, he earned U.S.

 dollars whose value against the Indonesian rupiah increased sharply

 after the 1998 economic crisis. Paimans success story attracted the

 attention of his fellow entrepreneurs in Kotagede. The media has

 also taken an interest in his achievements and often asks him to

 comment on the challenges and problems facing Kotagede. This has

 led Paiman to become involved in the local movement to preserve

 local cultural activities including the Living Museum project, of

 which he is the treasurer.

 Both Amiruddin and Paiman are members of Muhammadiyah and

 are involved in many of its religious and social activities. Through their

 personal and public engagements with Muhammadiyah, they have also

 been actively involved in a number of local initiatives to maintain local

 identity in Kotagede. Amiruddin uses his deep religious and cultural

 knowledge on Kotagede combined with his organizational link with

 Muhammadiyah to find a way in which the spirit of tolerance and

 the maintaining of local identity can be preserved in Kotagede. He

 talks at various local gatherings such as pengajian and selamatan about

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 266 Priyambud SULSTYANTO

 the importance of the Kotagede community. Paiman, who belongs to

 the younger generation in Kotagede, also uses his business skill and

 knowledge to nurture the rich local knowledge in the silver industry,

 something that is a significant part of the local identity of the people in

 Kotagede. With his financial resources, Paiman is involved in support-

 ing pengajian and other local cultural activities. Both Amiruddin and

 Paiman believe that the Muhammadiyah spirit of "amar ma'aruf nahi

 mungkar " has inspired them to engage in local activities in Kotagede.

 Both of them also believe that, given the fact that Kotagede has long

 and rich Islamic and Javanese traditions, it can draw upon a range

 of cultural, social, education, and economic resources to bring about

 significant improvements in the well-being of Kotagedeans.

 Have things remained the same in Kotagede since 2005? I visited

 Kotagede again in the middle of 2006 and witnessed the destruction

 of this town by the earthquake that occurred on 27 May 2006. The

 earthquake destroyed the market, many shops, and other businesses,

 and also homes and religious buildings, leaving the local economy

 struggling. Kotagede suffered like neighbouring districts, with

 hundreds of people killed (KR, 28 May 2006). I talked to many

 people about the impact of the earthquake in Kotagede, including to

 Paiman. They told me that what is holding the local people together

 is their religion and their spirit of gotong royong, meaning that the

 Kotagedean community is using its own resources and helping each

 other to rebuild their community.10 In a practical sense, neighbors

 help each other voluntarily especially when it comes to cleaning up

 the debris and to rebuilding houses. Beyond this individual effort,

 Muhammadiyah and other social organizations in Kotagede have also

 organized volunteers to help those affected by the earthquake. The

 earthquake destroyed the local economy, which will require a few

 years to get back to normal. Rebuilding historical houses and other

 historical buildings will need government assistance because the local

 community does not have sufficient financial resources in their hands

 to do this. However, the earthquake also strengthened local solidarity

 and a sense of local belonging, which will help a lot in the process

 of rebuilding Kotegede.

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 Muhammadiyah Local Politics and Local Identity in Kotagede 267

 Historic house in Kotagede, before the earthquake on 27 May 2006 (Photograph courtesy of

 Priyambudi Sulistiyanto)

 Concluding Remarks

 In this article I have presented preliminary observations about

 the role of Muhammadiyah and some local actors in maintaining

 and preserving local identity in Kotagede. I have argued that the

 coexistence of both Islamic and Javanese identities is very important

 for the local people. I have explained that Muhammadiyah has long

 been an important organization in Kotagede. Through its influence,

 Islam in Kotagede is a religion that has been blended and localized.

 Islam lives alongside Javanese traditions that have many followers

 in Kotagede. The coexistence of Islamic and Javanese traditions is

 accepted by the Kotagedean community, as something that enriches

 their lives in ways that they maintain and nurture for the benefit

 of the whole community. At the local political level, I have argued

 that local politics has diversified in Kotagede in the post-Soeharto

 period. Muhammadiyah has an impact on the way in which the

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 268 Priyambud SULSTYANTO

 local people cast their votes in Kotagede. As I have learned from

 Amiruddin and Paiman, two active members of Muhammadiyah,

 the Kotagedean community accepts both Islam and the Javanese

 traditions. They believe that these traditions have lived together

 in Kotagede in tolerance, allowing the local people to follow both

 traditions and to practice their rituals without undermining each

 other. I suggest that the case of Kotagede can be seen as an example

 of how a local community can positively assert its local identity in

 the decentralization era. I also think that there are several areas that

 deserve further thought in researching this town. It is important to

 examine the legacies of PKI in Kotagede especially since some of

 its followers still live in the town. These legacies especially relate

 to its involvement in the political and cultural life of Kotagede. It

 is also important to gather more information about the Kotagede

 branch of Muhammadiyah including the detailed profiles of its

 leaders and members. This is important in order to understand

 whether as an organization Muhammadiyah shapes or is shaped

 by the local dynamics and the local people in Kotagede. My last

 thought is to examine the impact of the 2006 earthquake on the

 everyday life of Kotagede. Some things have changed drastically

 since this town was hit by the earthquake and it is important to

 examine the local knowledge and wisdom that contribute to the

 resilience and unity of this community.

 NOTES

 1. An early version of this article was presented at the Centennial Conference on

 City States organized by the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences and the Asia

 Research Institute, National University of Singapore, in Singapore, on 1-3

 August 2005. I would like to thank to the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences

 for providing a research grant which enabled me to do fieldwork in Kotagede,

 Central Java, Indonesia twice in June- July 2005 and in December 2005, and

 to the Asia Research Institute for hosting me to revise this article. Special

 thank you to Nyarwi who helped me to gather data in Kotagede. Thanks also

 to Lyn and Rossi for commenting on this paper and to anonymous reviewers

 for their critical comments. All shortcomings are mine.

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 Muhammadiyah Local Politics and Local Identity in Kotagede 269

 2. In the late 19th century, a group of artisans was brought specially to Kotagede

 by the Yogyakarta royal family to produce gold and silver items for the royal

 family. This group was known as the Kalang people. They grew very rich in

 the 1920s and became the backbone of the local silver industry in Kotagede.

 The large houses owned by the Kalang people are still around and can be

 found scattered throughout Kotagede.

 3. There were about 13,000 votes in the 1999 general elections (see Zaidan,

 2003: 44-45).

 4. The mayor of Yogjakarta city is an MP from PAN and he is from Kotagede.

 5. Artsan is a monthly meeting to discuss local issues and to share information

 about what is happening in Kotagede. Paguyuban is a recreational or social

 organization set up by the local people. It is a Javanese tradition. Pengajian is

 a Quranic recital forum, which takes place on a weekly basis. Selamatan is a

 community forum that thanks its members for their involvement in different

 functions such as celebrating a birth, building a house, commemorating

 someone who just died, etc.

 6. Interview with a local NuU activist, Yogjakarta, 7 July 2UU >.

 7. Interview with Amiruddin (pseudonym), Kotagede, 10 July 2005.

 8. Interview with a local silversmith, Kotagede, 9 July 2005.

 9. Interview with Paiman (pseudonym), Kotagede, 12 July 2005.

 10. Gotong royong means mutually helping each other.

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 Priyambudi Sulistiyanto is Assistant Professor at the Southeast Asian Studies Programme,

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