JAKARTA – The faithful gathered in an imposing modernist building, thousands of men in skullcaps and women in veils sitting shoulder to shoulder. Their leader took to his perch and delivered a stark warning.
The grand imam says he is simply following the Prophet Muhammad’s instructions that Muslims should care about nature. President-elect Prabowo Subianto has campaigned to expand production of biofuels that could lead to deforestation. With the capital, Jakarta, sinking into the sea, the departing president, Mr Joko Widodo, is building a new capital that is billed as a green metropolis powered by renewable energy. But to do this, he has cleared forests.
Clerics have not always been on board with the movement. Two decades ago, a regional branch of the Ulema Council issued a fatwa against Mr Aak Abdullah al-Kudus, an environmentalist in East Java province who tried to combine a tree-planting campaign with the celebration of the Prophet Muhammad’s birthday. He also received death threats.
One of her first jobs was as a researcher for Greenpeace. She later founded Enter Nusantara, an organisation that aims to educate youth on climate change. The new panels helped slash the mosque’s monthly power bill, its leader Ananto Isworo said. Congregants were already using harvested rainwater to cleanse themselves.Why Indonesia is addicted to coal and how it can go green
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