Abstract

Previous chapters have discussed in considerable detail the compromises made by the Indonesian political Founding Fathers regarding the place of religion in the state system. These compromises were later made evident in the writing of the successive Indonesian constitutions in which the roles of government in religious affairs were maintained in the state legal system. How those roles were exercised by the government, particularly through the Ministry of Religious Affairs (MORA) in the period from 1945 to 1965, are of important part of the discussion in this chapter.

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