Literacy Culture in the Islamic Religious Education and the Development of Islam in Indonesia

Abstrak

Globalisasi telah memungkinkan pengembangan Islam di satu wilayah dengan bantuan gerakan global. Fenomena ini juga terjadi di Indonesia. Namun, apa yang tidak banyak kita pahami adalah bagaimana Ulama Turki telah berkontribusi untuk mengembangkan budaya literasi Islam untuk meningkatkan perkembangan Islam di Indonesia. Artikel ini berupaya mengidentifikasi Gerakan Nur Jamaat yang telah memanfaatkan globalisasi untuk membangun budaya literasi di kalangan Muslim Indonesia dan memperkenalkan karya-karya Bediuzzaman Said Nursi. Melalui penelitian yang cermat terhadap gerakan global ini, studi ini berupaya memahami bagaimana organisasi Muslim global mengambil keuntungan dari globalisasi dan apa tanggapan Muslim lokal terhadapnya. Ini adalah penelitian kualitatif dengan observasi, wawancara, serta penelitian kepustakaan sebagai alat pengumpulan data. Penelitian ini memuncak berupaya untuk memahami bagaimana globalisasi telah menjadi mekanisme yang positif dalam perkembangan organisasi Islam di Indonesia.

Referensi

Askari, H., Iqbal, Z., & Mirakhor, A. (2011). Globalization and Islamic Finance : Convergence, Prospects and Challenges. Wiley.

Azmil Tayeb. (2018). Islamic education in Indonesia and Malaysia: shaping minds, saving souls.

Banchoff, T. F. (2008). Religious Pluralism, Globalization, and World Politics. Oxford University Press.

Beyer, P. (2013). Religion in the Context of Globalization : Essays on Concept, Form, and Political Implication. Taylor and Francis.

Bryman, A. (2008). Social Research Methods (Issue Book, Whole). Oxford University Press.

Dijk, C. van, Kaptein, N. J. G., & Suharto. (2016). Islam, politics and change the Indonesian experience after the fall of Suharto.

Drakeley, S. (2005). The history of Indonesia. Greenwood Press.

Fogg, K. W. (Kevin). (2015). Hamka’s Doctoral Address at Al-Azhar: the Influence of Muhammad Abduh in Indonesia. Muhammadiyah University Yogyakarta.

Fox, J. J. (2004). Currents in Contemporary Islam in Indonesia.

Geri, M. (2019). Ethnic minorities in democratizing Muslim countries: Turkey and Indonesia. Palgrave Macmillan.

Giulianotti, R., & Robertson, R. (2007). Forms of Glocalization: Globalization and the Migration Strategies of Scottish Football Fans in North America. Sociology, 41(1), 133–152.

Hasan, N. (2009). Transnational Islam in Indonesia. In P. G. Mandaville (Ed.), Transnational Islam in South and Southeast Asia: Movements, Networks, and Conflict Dynamics. The National Bureau of Asian Research.

Kersten, C. (2018). A history of Islam in Indonesia.

Kosebalaban, H. (2011). Turkish foreign policy : Islam, nationalism, and globalization. Palgrave Macmillan.

Meuleman, J. (2005). Islam in the Era of Globalization : Muslim Attitudes towards Modernity and Identity.

Meuleman, J. H. (2002). Islam in the Era of Globalization Muslim Attitudes Towards Modernity and Identity. RoutledgeCurzon.

Mohammadi, A. (2002). Islam encountering globalization. RoutledgeCurzon.

OECD. (2018). PISA 2018.

Ozdalga, E. (1999). Naqshbandis in western and central Asia : change and continuity: papers read at a conference held at the Swedish Research Institute in Istanbul, June 9-11, 1997.

Parsons, D. (1997). The Music of Islam : recorded in Egypt, Morocco, Tunisia, Turkey, Yemen, Pakistan, Indonesia, Iran and Qatar. Celestial Harmonies.

Permana, F. E.. (2019, December 11). Kontak Ottoman Islam dan Nusantara, Ibnu Batutah: Hosmusam! Republika. https://www.republika.co.id/berita/dunia-islam/khazanah/19/12/11/q2bia1320-kontak-ottoman-islam-dan-nusantara-ibnu-batutah-hosmusam

Pringle, R. (2012). Understanding Islam in Indonesia : Politics and Diversity. Editions Didier Millet.

Robertson, R. (1995). Glocalization: Time-space and Homogeneity-heterogeneity. In M. Featherstone (Ed.), Global Modernities (pp. 25–44). Sage.

Roudometof, V. (2003). Glocalization, Space, and Modernity 1. The European Legacy: Toward New Paradigms, 8(1), 37–60.

Rudnyckyj, D. (2010). Spiritual economies : Islam, globalization, and the afterlife of development. Cornell University Press.

Rumadi, & Lunnon, R. (2015). Islamic post-traditionalism in Indonesia.

Saat, N. (2018). The state, ulama and Islam in Malaysia and Indonesia.

Saleh, F. (2001). Modern trends in Islamic theological discourse in 20th century Indonesia : a critical study. Brill.

Schneier, E. V. (2016). Muslim democracy : politics, religion and society in Indonesia, Turkey and the Islamic world. Routledge.

Setyaningrum, A. (2015). Pemikiran Pendidikan Asy-Syaukani dan Peranannya dalam Menciptakan Renaissance. Edukasia: Jurnal Penelitian Pendidikan Islam, 10.

Simandjuntak, D. (2018). No TitleIdentity politics looms over Indonesia’s presidential election. https://www.eastasiaforum.org/2018/11/10/identity-politics-looms-over-indonesias-presidential-election/

Turam, B. (2004). A bargain between the secular state and Turkish Islam: politics of ethnicity in Central Asia. NANA Nations and Nationalism, 10(3), 353–374.

Wahyudi, D. T. (2019, May 2). Toleransi Beragama Indonesia Menginspirasi Jerman. Indopos. https://indopos.co.id/read/2019/05/02/173913/toleransi-beragama-indonesia-menginspirasi-jerman/

Yavuz, M. H. (2003). Islamic Political Identity in Turkey. Oxford University Press.

Yilmaz, H. (2018). Comparison of the University Students in Turkey and Central Asia with Regards to Their Characteristics of Thinking, Decision Making and Cognitive Closure. Asian Journal of Education and Training, 4(4), 309–318.

Diterbitkan
2020-07-29

##plugins.generic.recommendByAuthor.heading##

1 2 > >>