Table of Contents
Officially founded only in 1990, Pesantren Daarut Tauhid was in fact established earlier in 1987 by Abdullah Gymnastiar. This period from 1987 up until 1990 represents the period of the initial stages of the pesantren. There were, during this period, some events which are not merely significant but determinant in the foundation of the pesantren. Echoing Van Gennepian sequences, these events were to a great extent rites de passage, in that they were necessary rites which turned Gymnastiar from an “ordinary persona” into an extraordinary kyai (the leader of both the pesantren and many Muslims) and transformed the environment from an ordinary community into a distinguished pesantren milieu.
Furthermore, these events can be seen as a potential foundation and will later explicitly illuminate both the very nature and the primary function of Daarut Tauhid as the Bengkel Akhlaq (Workshop for Morality). It will be tangibly apparent in the chapters to follow how these events, with the relative exception of hajj and umrah, became practised rituals in Daarut Tauhid in fulfilment of its “mission” as the Bengkel Akhlaq.
These events were, first, the one-month i’tikaf (retreat, stay in a mosque) during Ramadhan and the closely related notion of lailatul qodar (the night of power/determinism), secondly the dreams of the Prophet Muhammad, then the hajj and umrah to Mecca, and finally the shilaturrahmi (bonds of friendship). Here I shall respectively describe these events, portraying how they functioned as the preconditions to the foundation of the pesantren and further tracing their significance as rites de passage. But, before doing so, both because K.H. Abdullah Gymnastiar is the key-actor in these events and because he is the key-person as at once the founder and the leader of Daarut Tauhid, I would like first to introduce him.
KH. Abdullah Gymnastiar (I shall hereafter name him Aa Gym [1] by which he is well-known) is a very young religious leader since he was born in 1962 and only 33 years of age. Being the first-born child of four children, Aa Gym has the characteristic of self-sufficiency and high creativity. Furthermore, early in his childhood, he already showed a talent for leadership. He used to initiate and lead play-groups amongst the children of his own age and even older.
These characteristics of self-sufficiency, creativity, and leadership became more and more apparent throughout his school age growth. Young Aa Gym, and to some extent all his brothers and sister, tend to meet their own needs, both academic and other, without bothering their parents. Aa Gym never asked anything so expensive that his parent could not afford it. If anything, he saved his money and would ask his parent only for the amount he lacked. Concerning this, his mother once imitated for me his words when he wished to buy an expensive pair of shoes: “Teh,[2] do you have any spare money?” “What are you after, indeed?” replied his mother. “I wish to buy a pair of shoes but I have only part of money.” This begging was however very rarely done by Aa Gym. “Aa Gym never let himself bother me or his father,” his mother convinced me. “He and the rest of my children never merekesel (force) requested money,” she emphasised, “as children commonly do.”
This characteristic of self-sufficiency has given rise to another characteristic of Aa Gym, his sense of entrepreneurial business. Early in his primary school period, when he was seven years of age, he had already learned to sell toys such as kelereng (marbles), petasan (firecracker), and the like. “When attending the first year of primary school,” his younger brother once told me, “he used to sell petasan to his class- and play-mates.” When there was a social event such as a football match, musical show, and the like that attracted a massive crowd of people, he used to sell anything creatively saleable during the occasion.
Aa Gym’s parents once in a while attempted to stop this because they worried that it would have a bad impact on his study. Nevertheless, without belittling his parents’ concern, he continued his business and succeeded. It is thus evident that the parental apprehension was unnecessary and his parents were eventually proud of Aa Gym’s entrepreneurial spirit, which become his inherent characteristic. His parents were particularly proud when these characteristics proved fruitful. By the time Aa Gym graduated from SMP (Sekolah Menengah Pertama, Lower Secondary School), he already bought a motorcycle entirely from his own savings. Even more striking was that he could buy a car, again from his own savings, when he graduated from SMA (Sekolah Menengah Atas, Upper Secondary School). It is not surprising therefore that he would rely on himself during his tertiary study. He was as capable of meeting his educational fees as other students meet their needs for texts and notebooks. These were all the fruits of his “bisnis (business)” activities. “Aa [Gym] the tiasa milari rizqi sorangan (Overall, Aa [Gym] has a potent capability to make his own way in life),” concluded his mother. And it was this kind of entrepreneurial talent that brought Aa Gym to his current activities of Islamic entrepreneurship.
Underlying this outstanding characteristic is the fact that Aa Gym was clever as a boy and continues as a brilliant individual. By the time he was three, he could already recite by heart some shortest surah (chapters) of the Holy Qur’an. Also by this age he could recite the Latin alphabet from A to Z. It is therefore no surprise that when starting kindergarten he already had the capacity to write and read, commonly only achieved by Sundanese children when they have spent a year or so at primary school.
This intelligence gave Aa Gym special positions throughout his educational career. He was always at the top rank during his school periods at SD (Sekolah Dasar, Primary School) and then SMP. “When he graduated from SMP, he was awarded the juara umum (best graduate),” his father once told me. Such a distinctive reputation remained unshakeable throughout his SMA-period which qualified him to further his study at the university level.
Aa Gym purportedly used to have a dream to study at ITB (Institut Teknologi Bandung, Bandung Institute of Technology). He therefore sat the entry test, which was at that time known as SIPENMARU (Seleksi Penerimaan Mahasiswa Baru, Entry Selection for New Student), but unfortunately he did not pass and therefore did not gain a place at the institute of his dream.
Interesting to me is the narrative concerning this failure. It is purportedly said that the failure did not at all reflect Aa Gym’s incapability for undertaking a study at ITB because he is too clever to fail. Instead, the failure was due to an unfair competition in the process of the test. It was told that when preparing to do the SIPENMARU, Aa Gym made an endeavour to do his own preparation.[3] There were some SMA-graduates who joined Aa Gym in this self-study. Lacking academic ability and knowing Aa Gym was a brilliant SMA-student, they asked Aa Gym to guide and teach them.
The results of the SIPENMARU were extremely surprising to both Aa Gym and his family. Aa Gym failed while most of his fellows, whose academic ability was “upgraded” by Aa Gym himself, passed. Everyone had the same impression that it was astonishing, suspecting that there was something wrong. There was much speculation as to the reasons for such an unfair decision. One out of Aa Gym’s fellows was a son of an influential pejabat (governmental authority) in Bandung. The decision might therefore have been “intervened” by a special message from the family of the pejabat, as is sometimes the case. Also the test number of this pejabat’s son and that of Aa Gym were very close, with only one digit difference. This was believed to make a deliberate exchange not merely possible but also very easy. Based on at least these two reasons, the SIPENMARU decision was viewed as unfair and it implied that Aa Gym, as the victim of this unfair competition, was still of high reputation. This narrative plays its own significant contribution in keeping Aa Gym respectable in the eyes of his followers.
Although Aa Gym was unable to attend ITB, he took his place at UNPAD (Universitas Padjadjaran, Padjadjaran University) to study accountancy in the Faculty of Economics and Commerce. Accountancy was understandably incompatible with his spirit and thus he resigned from UNPAD after only one year.
Having only spent a year at UNPAD, he transferred to ATA (Akademi Teknologi Ahmad Yani, Ahmad Yani Technology Academy) which was renamed UNJANI (Universitas Jenderal Ahmad Yani, University of General Ahmad Yani). UNJANI is a private university unlike ITB, which is a public tertiary institute. The common impression is that the former is expensive but not as prestigious as ITB which is nationally prestigious yet inexpensive.
During his time at UNJANI, Aa Gym gained an excellent academic reputation and showed a high level of organisational leadership. He graduated from UNJANI in 1986 with an excellent cum laude record and was chosen as the best graduate of the year. In terms of leadership, he was elected as ketua senat, that is, president of the academy-level student association. In fact, Aa Gym had shown this talent for leadership earlier at other schools. He was several times chosen as the KM (Ketua Murid, head of students), as he once told me. The students’ trust in him to be their leader was a reflection of their admiration of his intelligence and leadership talent. Their trust was based on Aa Gym’s intellectual qualities and leadership skill rather than on his physical appearance since he is short and thin. (One metre and fifty-nine in height and about fifty-one kilograms on weight.)
There was a second incident of apparent “bad luck” suffered by Aa Gym besides his failure to attend ITB. His other purported dream was of joining ABRI (Angkatan Bersenjata Republik Indonesia, Indonesian Armed Forces). In this case, he wished to follow in his father’s footsteps having been heavily influenced by his military environment. His grandfather and father were ABRI officers and Aa Gym grew-up not only in an army family but in the midst of ABRI housing, that is KPAD (Komplek Perwira Angkatan Darat, Housing of Army Ground Forces) in Gegerkalong. When at UNPAD, he joined the MENWA (Resiment Mahasiswa, Students with Military Training) and he was qualified as a komandan (commander), the highest leadership rank in the MENWA.
When taking the entry test for ABRI, he could meet all cognitive requirements to be considered eligible to carry on military training, but, unfortunately, he failed the physical qualification: he lacked a centimetre in height to meet the minimum qualification. As a result, he missed out on his other dream.
These two failures might have left Aa Gym in a state of frustration. His father told me that frustration was seen in Aa Gym’s attitude following these failures. His father talked about this when we discussed Aa Gym’s motivation in doing i’tikaf and in the successive foundation of the pesantren. Such frustration is, I believe, quite understandable if we consider his successful educational career.
Given the two failures with their consequent state of frustration, Aa Gym looked for a place where he could express his feelings and thereby perhaps gain compensation. This place was, to Muslims quite rightly, a neighbouring mosque where he went on retreat observing the so-called i’tikaf and hence benefiting from the divine grant of lailatul qodar.
[1] Aa is a Sundanese term used intimately to address a respectable, usually young, man or boy of an honourable family. When calling or naming the person, the Sundanese usually add the word before, often shortening, the actual name. Gymnastiar is therefore respectfully called Aa Gym, the second word standing for Gymnastiar.
[2] Teh is Aa Gym’s intimate word to call his mother. It is, as a matter of fact, unusual to call one’s own mother by the word Teh because it is actually a Sundanese word commonly used in calling any respectably elder woman other than one’s mother. This misusage might be due to the influence of the surrounding people who call Aa Gym’s mother by this word. And such due-to-the-surrounding usage is not in fact uncommon in Sundanese society.
[3] It is common in Bandung, and all over Indonesia, that for the SIPENMARU, SMA-graduates tend to do the so-called BIMBEL (Bimbingan Belajar, an intensive short-course) which focuses heavily on the strategy for facing SIPENMARU. Aa Gym, however, did not attend this course and did his own study instead.