Jurnal Sosiologi Reflektif

Ethical Politics beyond Power: The Alawiyyin’s Moral Engagement and Non-Electoral Participation in Democratic Indonesia

Authors

  • Abdullah Yusuf Muflih
    Universitas Sebelas Maret, Indonesia
  • Haikal Akmal Ajikontea
    Universitas Sebelas Maret, Indonesia
  • Tafrikhul Khotir
    Universitas Sebelas Maret, Indonesia

Downloads

Article Galley

DOI https://doi.org/10.14421/r29bpz03
Page: 1-30
127 views
111 PDF Downloads

How to Cite

Ethical Politics beyond Power: The Alawiyyin’s Moral Engagement and Non-Electoral Participation in Democratic Indonesia. (2025). Jurnal Sosiologi Reflektif, 20(1), 1-30. https://doi.org/10.14421/r29bpz03

Abstract

In Indonesia, debates around Islam and politics often revolve around tensions between secular democracy and religious identity, usually spotlighting mass-based movements or populist Islamism. However, the role of religious elites like The Alawiyyin—descendants of the Prophet Muhammad—remains understudied despite their subtle influence on political discourse. This study aims to examine how The Alawiyyin in Surakarta interpret Islamic politics and practice political participation without direct involvement in electoral processes. Employing a qualitative case study approach, it draws on data collected through semi-structured interviews, participant observation, and document analysis. The analysis uses triangulation techniques to ensure validity across multiple sources and methods. The study is framed by Bayat’s post-Islamism, Roy’s depoliticization thesis, Weber’s patrimonial authority, and Tilly’s concept of contentious politics. The findings indicate that for The Alawiyyin, politics is inherently ethical and inseparable from religious duty, where governance and leadership are regarded as moral responsibilities rather than instruments of power. Their participation is expressed through teaching, da’wah, and ethical dialogue, enabling them to influence civic and political values while maintaining independence from partisan agendas. The implication of this study is that Islamic political participation can extend beyond formal institutions, taking the form of ethical leadership and moral engagement that strengthen democratic pluralism in Indonesia.

Di Indonesia, perdebatan tentang hubungan Islam dan politik sering berfokus pada ketegangan antara demokrasi sekuler dan identitas keagamaan, dengan sorotan utama pada gerakan massa atau Islamisme populis. Namun, peran elite agama seperti Alawiyyin—keturunan Nabi Muhammad—masih jarang dibahas meskipun mereka memiliki pengaruh halus dalam wacana politik. Penelitian ini bertujuan untuk mengkaji bagaimana komunitas Alawiyyin di Surakarta memahami politik dalam Islam dan bagaimana mereka terlibat dalam politik tanpa terlibat langsung dalam proses elektoral. Penelitian ini menggunakan pendekatan studi kasus kualitatif dengan data yang dikumpulkan melalui wawancara semi-terstruktur, observasi partisipatif, dan analisis dokumen. Analisis dilakukan dengan teknik triangulasi untuk menjaga validitas dari berbagai sumber dan metode. Penelitian ini menggunakan kerangka teori dari Bayat (post-Islamisme), Roy (depolitisasi Islamisme), Weber (otoritas patrimonial), dan Tilly (politik kontestasi). Hasil penelitian menunjukkan bahwa bagi komunitas Alawiyyin, politik tidak dapat dipisahkan dari etika keagamaan, di mana kepemimpinan dan tata kelola dipahami sebagai tanggung jawab moral, bukan sebagai sarana untuk meraih kekuasaan. Partisipasi politik mereka diekspresikan melalui pendidikan, dakwah, dan dialog etis yang memungkinkan mereka memengaruhi nilai-nilai sosial dan politik tanpa terikat pada kepentingan partai atau afiliasi politik tertentu. Implikasi penelitian ini adalah bahwa partisipasi politik Islam dapat melampaui batas-batas institusional formal dengan mewujud dalam bentuk kepemimpinan etis dan keterlibatan moral yang memperkuat pluralisme demokrasi di Indonesia.

Keywords:

Alawiyyin , Moral Politics , Non-Electoral Participation , Islamic Ethics , Democratic Pluralism

References:

Adnan, Muhammad. 2021. “Di Bawah Bayang-Bayang Syariat: Islam, Islamisme Dan Demokrasi Di Kota Surakarta.” Politika: Jurnal Ilmu Politik 12(1):46–67. doi: 10.14710/politika.12.1.2021.46-67.

Akmaliah, Wahyudi, and Ibnu Nadzir. 2024. “The ‘Elective Affinity’ of Islamic Populism: A Case Study of Indonesian Politic Identity Within the Three Elections.” Studia Islamika 30(1):31–61. doi: 10.36712/sdi.v31i1.36305.

Alam, Lukis, Benni Setiawan, Shubhi Mahmashony Harimurti, and Meredian Alam. 2023. “The Changing Piety and Spirituality: A New Trend of Islamic Urbanism in Yogyakarta and Surakarta.” Indonesian Journal of Islam and Muslim Societies 13(2):227–52. doi: 10.18326/ijims.v13i2.

Arifianto, Alexander R. 2020. “Rising Islamism and the Struggle for Islamic Authority in Post-Reformasi Indonesia.” TRaNS: Trans-Regional and -National Studies of Southeast Asia 8(1):37–50. doi: 10.1017/trn.2019.10.

Bayat, Asef. 2013. Post-Islamism: The Changing Faces of Political Islam. New York: Oxford University Press.

Bayat, Asef. 2017. Revolution without Revolutionaries: Making Sense of the Arab Spring. 1st ed. California: Stanford University Press.

Bayat, Asef. 2021. “The Arab Spring and Revolutionary Theory: An Intervention in a Debate.” Journal of Historical Sociology 34(2):393–400. doi: 10.1002/johs.12334.

Bhojani, Ali Reza, and Morgan Clarke. 2023. “Religious Authority beyond Domination and Discipline: Epistemic Authority and Its Vernacular Uses in the Shi’i Diaspora.” Comparative Studies in Society and History 65(2):272–95. doi: 10.1017/S0010417522000470.

Bourchier, David M. 2019. “Two Decades of Ideological Contestation in Indonesia: From Democratic Cosmopolitanism to Religious Nationalism.” Journal of Contemporary Asia 49(5):713–33. doi: 10.1080/00472336.2019.1590620.

Campbell, Steve, Melanie Greenwood, Sarah Prior, Toniele Shearer, Kerrie Walkem, Sarah Young, Danielle Bywaters, and Kim Walker. 2020. “Purposive Sampling: Complex or Simple? Research Case Examples.” Journal of Research in Nursing 25(8):652–61. doi: 10.1177/1744987120927206.

Castañeda, Ernesto. 2023. “Charles Tilly’s Elegant Theories About the Origins of European Nation-States, Social Movements, Contentious Politics, and Democracy.” American Behavioral Scientist 0(0):1–23. doi: 10.1177/00027642231194871.

Ciftci, Sabri, F. Michael Wuthrich, and Ammar Shamaileh. 2019. “Islam, Religious Outlooks, and Support for Democracy.” Political Research Quarterly 72(2):435–49. doi: 10.1177/1065912918793233.

Denzin, Norman K. 2017. “Critical Qualitative Inquiry.” Qualitative Inquiry 23(1):8–16. doi: 10.1177/1077800416681864.

Al Fajar, Rachmad, and Kamarudin. 2021. “Dukungan Habib Idrus Bin Hasyim Alatas Untuk Memenangkan Pasangan Anies-Sandi Pada Pilkada DKI Jakarta.” Polikrasi: Journal of Politics and Democracy, 1(1):46–54. doi: 10.61183/polikrasi.v1i1.4.

Fatkhurrohman, Mukhlis. 2022. “Pluralisme Kota Solo Berbasis Islam Rahmatan Lil ’Alamin.” Mamba’ul ‘Ulum 18(2):181–91. doi: dx.doi.org/10.54090/mu.69.

Al Fozaie, Mohammad Tariq. 2023. “Behavior, Religion, & Socio-Economic Development: A Synthesized Theoretical Framework.” Humanities and Social Sciences Communications 10(241):1–15. doi: 10.1057/s41599-023-01702-1.

Hanafi, Sari. 2015. “Review: Asef Bayat, Life as Politics: How Ordinary People Change the Middle East.” International Sociology 30(5):472–75. doi: 10.1177/0268580915598097.

Huff, Toby E., and Wolfgang Schluchter. 2017. Max Weber & Islam. New York: Routledge.

Ibrahim, Muhammad Khalis. 2024. “Revisiting the ‘Failure of Islamism’ Based on Its History and Development in Turkiye.” Journal of Al-Tamaddun 19(2):53–72. doi: 10.22452/JAT.vol19no2.4.

Kesuma, Arsyad Sobby, Abdul Halim, and Nur Syam. 2022. “The Religious Politics of Habaib in Surabaya and Bangil East Java: A Socio-Religio-Political Approach.” Qudus International Journal of Islamic Studies 10(2):285–318. doi: 10.21043/qijis.v10i2.12090.

Mawardi, Mawardi, and Agus Permana. 2022. “Habaib Dalam Peta Politik Indonesia.” Al-Tsaqafa: Jurnal Ilmiah Peradaban Islam 19(1):101–28. doi: 10.15575/al-tsaqafa.v19i1.18613.

Meléndez, Carlos, and Cristóbal Rovira Kaltwasser. 2019. “Political Identities: The Missing Link in the Study of Populism.” Party Politics 25(4):520–33. doi: 10.1177/1354068817741287.

Mibtadin, Kadarin Lilam Nuriyanto, and Arnis Rachmadhani. 2022. “Religion, Cultural Transformation, and Modernization: A Narrative on the Religious Paradigm Shift of the Community in Surakarta.” The SARPASS 01(02). doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.15642/sarpass.2022.1.2.179-190.

Nur Fitri, Alifa, and Adeni. 2020. “Jokowi Dan Kekuatan Pencitraan Diri Serta Relasinya Dengan Umat Islam.” Alhadharah: Jurnal Ilmu Dakwah 19(2):1–17. doi: https://doi.org/10.18592/alhadharah.v19i2.3503.

Poya, Abbas. 2023. “Desacralization of Religious Concepts: The Prophecy from the Perspective of the Iranian Reformist Scholar Seddigha Wasmaghi.” Religions 14(12):1–12. doi: 10.3390/rel14121452.

Priya, Arya. 2021. “Case Study Methodology of Qualitative Research: Key Attributes and Navigating the Conundrums in Its Application.” Sociological Bulletin 70(1):94–110. doi: 10.1177/0038022920970318.

Roy, Olivier. 1994. The Failure of Political Islam. Harvard University Press.

Rusman, Ardi, Al Rafni, and Suryanef. 2022. “Modal Sosial Jokowi Dengan Politik Kekerabatan: Studi Kasus Pilkada 2020 Di Surakarta Dan Medan.” Indonesian Journal of Social Science Review 1(2):106–13. doi: dx.doi.org/10.22146/polgov.v4i1.3525.

Sadeghi, Fatemeh. 2021. “Post-Islamism: From Making Islam Democratic to the Politics of Myth.” Manchester Journal of Transnational Islamic Law & Practice 17(1):3–18. https://www.electronicpublications.org/stuff/839.

Schwadel, Philip. 2020. “The Politics of Religious Nones.” Journal for the Scientific Study Of Religion 59(1):180–89. DOI: 10.1111/jssr.12843.

Setianto, Yudi, Sanggar Kanto, Darsono Wisadirana, Anif Chawa Fatma, and M. Chairul Basrun Umanailo. 2022. “Transforming Preman to Radical Islamic Laskar in Solo, Central Java.” HTS Teologiese Studies / Theological Studies 78(4):1–7. doi: 10.4102/hts.v78i4.7285.

Suparto, Halid, and Samsul Adabi bin Mamat. 2019. “Bani ‘Alawiyyin in Indonesia and the Malay World Network, Development and the Role of Institution in Transmitting the Peaceful Mission of Islam.” Journal of Indonesian Islam 13(2):267–96. doi: 10.15642/JIIS.2019.13.2.267-296.

Taherdoost, Hamed. 2021. “Data Collection Methods and Tools for Research; A Step-by-Step Guide to Choose Data Collection Technique for Academic and Business Research Projects.” International Journal of Academic Research in Management (IJARM) 10(1):10–38. https://ssrn.com/abstract=4178676

Taherdoost, Hamed. 2022. “What Are Different Research Approaches? Comprehensive Review of Qualitative, Quantitative, and Mixed Method Research, Their Applications, Types, and Limitations.” Journal of Management Science & Engineering Research 5(1):53–63. doi: 10.30564/jmser.v5i1.4538ï.

Tilly, Charles, and Sidney Tarrow. 2015. Contentious Politics. 2nd ed. Oxford University Press.

Turner, Bryan S. 2023. Understanding Islam Positions of Knowledge. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.

Wibowo, Prihandono. 2020. “Sekuritisasi Wacana Khilafah Di Indonesia.” Jisiera: The Journal of Islamic Studies And International Relations 5:25–49. doi: 10.5281/zenodo.4052347.