ABSTRACT

Exploring the distinctive nature and role of local pilgrimage traditions among Muslims and Catholics, Muslim and Catholic Pilgrimage Practices draws particularly on south central Java, Indonesia. In this area, the hybrid local Muslim pilgrimage culture is shaped by traditional Islam, the Javano-Islamic sultanates, and the Javanese culture with its strong Hindu-Buddhist heritage. This region is also home to a vibrant Catholic community whose identity formation has occurred in a way that involves complex engagements with Islam as well as Javanese culture. In this respect, local pilgrimage tradition presents itself as a rich milieu in which these complex engagements have been taking place between Islam, Catholicism, and Javanese culture. Employing a comparative theological and phenomenological analysis, this book reveals the deeper religio-cultural and theological import of pilgrimage practice in the identity formation and interaction among Muslims and Catholics in south central Java. In a wider context, it also sheds light on the larger dynamics of the complex encounter between Islam, Christianity and local cultures.

part I|81 pages

Javano-Muslim Case

chapter 1|28 pages

Formation of Javano-Islamic Identity

Saints, Shrines, and Sacred History

chapter 2|26 pages

Muslim Self and Hindu-Javanese Other

Spatial, Architectural, and Ritual Symbolisms

chapter 3|26 pages

The Richness of Pilgrimage Experience

Devotion, Memory, and Blessings

part II|85 pages

Javano-Catholic Case

chapter 4|30 pages

Identity as Memory

Sacred Space and the Formation of Javano-Catholic Identity

part III|37 pages

Comparative Perspective

chapter 7|28 pages

A Double Visiting

Comparative Insights on Muslim and Catholic Pilgrimage Practices in Java

chapter |8 pages

Going Home and Setting Off Again