Leaving Islam:
How I became an atheist
Aditya Nandiwardhana September 24, 2015
'No matter how many good things you have done before
you kick the bucket, if you are not a Muslim, then bad news for
you. Even back then, I had a problem accepting that part of the
religious teaching'
“In the afterlife, only Muslims get to enter
paradise.”
That was what my Quran tutor told me when I was in
fourth grade. The moment she told me that, I was really, really,
surprised.
I was raised as a Muslim, and like any other Muslim
kid in Indonesia, I had to learn how to recite the Quran. My father
hired a Quran tutor for me and I spent a couple of hours 3 days a
week with her. I did not only learn how to recite the Quran from
her, I also learned about Islam in general, about what Islam (well,
at least her version of Islam) teaches us.
One of the things that I learned from her was that
entering paradise is a Muslim privilege. No matter how many good
things you have done before you kick the bucket, if you are not a
Muslim, then bad news for you.
Even back then, I had a problem accepting that part
of the religious teaching.
Here is the thing, I was born into the Muslim
tradition because my father is a Muslim man. However, that was not
the only tradition that I was born into.
My mother is a Catholic woman, a devout one in my
opinion. When I was very little, I spent a lot of time with my
grandparents from my mother’s side. They had to babysit me a lot
because both my parents were working back then.
They had a lot of Catholic ornaments in their house
– crucifixes on the walls, a statue of Virgin Mary, pictures of
various saints, and many others. They would tell me stories about
Jesus when they were babysitting me and I liked those
stories.
When I was not being babysat by them, my father
usually told me to
perform shalat prayers
with him. I did not know how to actually perform the prayers, of
course, but I would just follow the movements from him.
That was my early childhood. I was always aware of
the fact that my parents had different religious backgrounds. I did
not have any problem accepting that fact – it all just made sense
to me. I also knew that there were other people with other
religious beliefs out there and thought that all of those different
beliefs were as valid as mine. I had already identified as a Muslim
at the time. If anyone asked me what my religion was, I would
answer: Islam.
I never thought that my religion was superior to
others, though. Until my Quran tutor taught me
otherwise.
Becoming agnostic
I guess that was the starting point of the journey
that led me to become an agnostic-atheist.
I had a problem accepting the doctrine of the
superiority of Islam over other religious beliefs, that only
Muslims can enter paradise after the apocalypse. I loved my
grandparents and I thought that it was not fair that they were
going to hell just because they believed in God in a different way
than I did. As I grew up, I started having other questions
regarding other aspects of Islam such as the role of women in the
traditional views of Islam and LGBT rights, but I was also afraid
to question those views further because I did not want to go to
hell for doubting my faith.
It wasn't until my second year of university that I
finally stopped practicing Islam. I stopped
performing shalat, I stopped
going to
the masjid (mosque)
every Friday, and I stopped
performing shawm (fasting)
during Ramadan. I did not identify as a Muslim anymore. I was not
an atheist yet at the time. I was kind of a deist, still believing
in a “higher power” of some sort. But I had finally become
amurtadin (apostate).
I was not open about my epiphany to my parents. I
lived in
a kost (a
boarding house for university students) in Yogyakarta when I first
stopped identifying as a Muslim, while my parents lived in Jakarta,
so that made it easier for me. But every time I went back to my
parents’ house in Jakarta, I would pretend that I was still a
Muslim.
I would try to get out of the house every time it
was near prayer time, because I did not want to pray with my
father. Of course I could not always get out of the house during
prayer time, so I had to pretend to pray with my father during
those occasions.
"The main crisis
that humanity faces now is not religion, as many atheists would
suggest. it is the oppressive power structures that oppress lgbt
people, religious minorities (including but not limited to
atheists), women, the working class and other oppressed
groups."
Ramadan was the hardest challenge for me. I had to
pretend that I was fasting and think of how to sneak food into my
room without getting caught. Every time I went back to Jakarta
during university break, I could not wait to go home to my kost in
Yogyakarta.
Exploring Buddhism
I began to have curiosity about Buddhism during my
first years of apostasy. I read a lot about Buddhism and also went
to the local Buddhist temple near my kost to learn more about it. I
used to meditate regularly, and I am still trying to
now.
I was really into Buddhism for a while, until I grew
skeptical of its supernatural aspects. I still think that Buddhism
is a wonderful means of spirituality, though. You might even call
me a Buddhist-atheist or a secular Buddhist. I just find it hard to
believe in the supernatural aspects of Buddhism, or in
supernaturalism in general.
What first made me became more skeptical of
supernaturalism were the works of Richard Dawkins and other
prominent figures of the New Atheist movement. I
read The God
Delusion and also watched his speech on
YouTube. If you did not know, Buddhism is a non-theistic religion.
So even before I became a full-time atheist, I already had a
problem with the concept of an anthropomorphic god.
One of the things that got me into Buddhism in the
first place is that it does not have a belief in such a god. When I
became interested in New Atheism in general, I started to be more
and more skeptical about any supernatural claim, and, consequently,
the supernatural aspects of Buddhism.
Before I knew it, I became an atheist.
Becoming an atheist
Becoming an atheist was not a conscious decision for
me. It was not like I woke up one day in the morning and said to
myself, “I think I want to be an atheist!” There was not an exact
moment when I knew I was an atheist. Being an atheist was more of
an outcome of a long thought process in my experience. When I
realized that I was, technically, already an atheist, I joined the
Indonesian Atheists group on Facebook.
When I first started identifying as an atheist, I
was somewhat into the New Atheists movement. Yes, I was “that kind
of atheist”, which I am now quite ashamed of. I was borderline
Islamophobic, partly because as an apostate, I was oppressed by the
Muslim hegemony in Indonesia, and also because I had to pretend to
believe in Islam in front of my family.
Most of the atheists I knew from the Facebook group
were also these arrogant, militant atheists, who influenced me to
turn into one.
It was my interest in Leftist discourses, especially
in anarchism, that made me ditch the New Atheist movement
eventually. I realized that the prominent New Atheists like Richard
Dawkins, Sam Harris, and Christopher Hitchens are U.S. Imperialist
apologists. I also learned about feminism, which made me come to
the conclusion that Dawkins is sexist.
I am still an atheist, an agnostic-atheist to be
exact. I do not claim that I know there is no God, I am just
skeptical that such God exists. However, I am a different atheist
from what I was before. Rather than putting my energy into debating
religious people that they are wrong about God, I am more concerned
about other important issues like gender, race, class, the
environment, and human rights.
I have also stopped making hasty generalizations
about religious people, as many atheists tend to do. I know a lot
of religious people, who are also feminist and LGBT-allies, while,
on the other hand, there are a lot of atheists who are sexist,
racist and classist, which proves that bigotry is not exclusive to
religious people.
I am not denying that many religious people use
religion as a justification to perpetuate oppression, but there are
also religious people who use their own interpretation of religion
to combat oppression. Religion is about interpretation after all;
you can use the interpretation that supports the status quo, or you
can use the one that challenges it.
The main crisis that humanity faces now is not
religion, as many atheists would suggest. It is the oppressive
power structures that oppress LGBT people, religious minorities
(including but not limited to atheists), women, the working class
and other oppressed groups. All people, no matter their religious,
racial, or national backgrounds, should work together to dismantle
this oppressive power structure.
This transformation and journey through religion is
what makes me a Magdalene, unique and determined in the hope that
other atheists or all of humanity in general, will understand this
and fight for a just world.
– Rappler.com