Ahmad Dahlan

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Kyai Haji Ahmad Dahlan (1868-1923) was an Indonesian Islamic revivalist who established Muhammadiyah in 1912.

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Ahmad Dahlan was born in the Muslim quarter of Yogyakarta behind the Yogyakarta Sultan's Great Mosque. His father was the chanter of Arabic prayers at the mosque, and Dahlan learned that language from his father. It is Muslim belief that one can only know the holy Koran in its original language, but very few Indonesians at this time knew Arabic, and those who could were considered people of great knowledge. Dahlan was sent to an Islamic boarding school or pesantren.[1] As one of his five obligations as a Muslim, he went on a pilgramage to Mecca where he studied with Ahmad Khatib, the renowned religious teacher. Dahlan associated with fellow Indonesian pilgrams from Sulawesi, West Java, Minangkabau, Aceh and other areas of strong belief, which helped them both conceive of a common interest against the Dutch colonial masters of Indonesia and the need to purify and renew Islam in Indonesia.[2]

After returning to Java around 1888, he married the daughter of the head (imam) of the Great Mosque in Yogyakarta. As one of the growing group who regarded themselves as modernists, he was concerned at the many Javanese practices not justified by Islamic scripture and argued for a the creation of a renewed purer Islam more in step with the modern world.[2] The efforts of Western Christian missionaries also concerned him. He joined Budi Utomo in 1909, hoping to preach reform to its members, but his supporters urged him to create his own organization.

He created Muhammadiyah in 1912 as an educational organisation as a means of realising his reformist ideals. It was quickly joined by traders and craftsment. In 1917 added a women's section named Aisyiyah, which played a significant role in modernising the life of Indonesian women. Spreading to the Outer Islands, Muhammadiyah established a strong base in Sulawesi only a decade later after it was founded. It was one of a number of indigenous Indonesian organisations founded in the first three decades of the twentienth century—a time known as the Indonesian National Revival—that were key in establishing a sense of Indonesian nationalism, and ultimately independence. Today, with 20 million members, Muhammadiyah is the second largest Muslim organisation in Indonesia after Nahdlatul Ulama.[2]

  • Ricklefs, M.C. A History of Modern Indonesia Since c. 1300, 2nd ed. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1994.
  • Vickers, Adrian (2005). A History of Modern Indonesia. New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-54262-2. 

  1. ^ Vickers (2005), p.54
  2. ^ a b c Vickers (2005), p.56


Preceded by
Chairman of Muhammadiyah
1912–1922
Succeeded by
KH Ibrahim
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