Online piety and its discontent: revisiting Islamic anxieties on Indonesian social media

Indones Malay World. 2018 Feb 22;46(134):80-93. doi: 10.1080/13639811.2018.1415056. eCollection 2018.

Abstract

In today's digital age, many Indonesian Muslims utilise social media, such as Facebook, WhatsApp and BlackBerry Messenger (BBM), to express their piety. However, their religious online practices are not devoid of ambiguities, discontents and tensions. The article focuses on these specific consequences of being digitally pious in Indonesia. It examines how riyā', an established concept in Islamic theology that refers to showing off one's piety, has gained new relevance in the context of contemporary uses of social media for religious purposes. The article particularly discusses online Qur'an reading groups (ODOJ) and sedekah (charity) activities that utilise social media, and asks how Muslims deal with the problem of riyā', which is strongly discouraged in Islamic theology, and with the discontent and anxieties it generates. At the same time, it reveals that the responses to the challenge that riyā' poses vary greatly and that Indonesian Muslims have found different ways to overcome it.

Keywords: Indonesia; Islam; piety; riyā’; social media.

Grants and funding

This article represents a result of the project ‘Islamic (Inter)Faces of the Internet: Emerging Socialities and Forms of Piety in Indonesia’, funded by the Austrian Science Fund (FWF P26645-G22). Directed by Martin Slama at the Institute for Social Anthropology, Austrian Academy of Sciences, the project started in June 2014; since then, online and offline research has been conducted by the authors.