Indonesia’s central bank uses Ramadan sermons to preach on inflation

Muslim clerics attend a sermon, led by Indonesia's central bank official, on the importance of managing inflation, at Islamic Center in Majalengka, West Java province, Indonesia March 6, 2025. (REUTERS)
1 / 2
Muslim clerics attend a sermon, led by Indonesia's central bank official, on the importance of managing inflation, at Islamic Center in Majalengka, West Java province, Indonesia March 6, 2025. (REUTERS)
Indonesia’s central bank uses Ramadan sermons to preach on inflation
2 / 2
Muslim clerics attend a sermon, led by Indonesia's central bank official, on the importance of managing inflation, at Islamic Center in Majalengka, West Java province, Indonesia March 6, 2025. (REUTERS)
Short Url
Updated 11 March 2025

Indonesia’s central bank uses Ramadan sermons to preach on inflation

Indonesia’s central bank uses Ramadan sermons to preach on inflation
  • Ramadan ends with the Eid Al-Fitr festival, which, like in other Muslim countries, typically marks peak demand in Indonesia, where Muslims make up the majority of the population of 280 million

MAJALENGKA, Indonesia: Waiting to break their fast during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, clerics in the Indonesian town of Majalengka gathered for an unusual briefing on the subject of inflation, led by the country’s central bank.
The address by a central bank official and two Muslim clerics in the town’s Islamic center was part of Bank Indonesia’s strategy to enlist preachers to warn against overconsumption during Ramadan, which can trigger price pressures in a country with a history of runaway inflation.
Though inflation has been brought under control in the past decade as authorities beef up efforts to strengthen food distribution along the supply chain, the central bank is keen to spread its message about the need to keep prices stable.




Muslim clerics attend a sermon, led by Indonesia's central bank official, on the importance of managing inflation, at Islamic Center in Majalengka, West Java province, Indonesia March 6, 2025. (REUTERS)

“We hope you as the ulemas (scholars of Islam) can be mediators to convey the message that inflation management is our common task,” said Agung Budilaksono, the senior central bank official for Majalengka.
“Inflation must be managed, because it’s like blood pressure ... If it’s too high, it will ruin your health in the long run and if it’s too low, you will get weak,” he told the clerics.
Ramadan ends with the Eid Al-Fitr festival, which, like in other Muslim countries, typically marks peak demand in Indonesia, where Muslims make up the majority of the population of 280 million.
Islamic clerics are influential among the public in Indonesia’s remote areas and towns like Majalengka in West Java, about three hours from the capital Jakarta.
“People tend to want more during Ramadan, so maybe we need to remind them again that the point of fasting is to control our lust,” said Mohamad Padil, 53, one of the clerics listening at the forum.
Inflation once ran hot in Southeast Asia’s largest economy, but in 2024 was 1.57 percent, near the lower end of the central bank’s target range, while West Java’s rate was 1.64 percent.
The rate dropped further in the first two months of 2025 due to a large increase in subsidies for electricity prices, and economists predict it will remain within the central bank’s 1.5 percent to 3.5 percent target range this year.
The central bank has run other unconventional initiatives including a podcast on spending management and programs to foster entrepreneurship as well as boost local food supply.
At the nearby Islamic boarding school of Santi Asromo, it helped build a greenhouse for students to plant Chinese cabbage and water spinach, constructing a fish farm for the school next door.


Nigerian aid groups help children accused of witchcraft to rebuild lives

Updated 1 sec ago

Nigerian aid groups help children accused of witchcraft to rebuild lives

Nigerian aid groups help children accused of witchcraft to rebuild lives
EKET: Accused by her aunt at age 13 of being a witch responsible for her family’s misfortunes, Faith ran away from her rural home in the southern Nigerian state of Akwa Ibom after being deprived of food for days on end.
Now aged 19, she is studying Science Laboratory Technology at a polytechnic in the town of Eket, also in the state, and has ambitions to train as a medical doctor.
“I want to prove I’m not what they said I was,” Faith, whose parents are both dead, told Reuters.
Reuters has withheld the full names of the victims to protect their identity, given the stigma attached to children accused of withcraft.
The turnaround in Faith’s fortunes came after a gruelling 20-km (12-mile) walk with no food to sustain her, she made it to a shelter run by CRARN, an aid group dedicated to helping children accused of witchcraft.
CRARN, which stands for Child Rights and Rehabilitation Network, estimates that more than 30,000 Nigerian children have faced accusations of witchcraft over the past 20 years.
Even though the Nigerian government has passed laws at both the federal and state level to prevent witchcraft-related child abuse, activists say the practice is still widespread.
“If a child is accused of witchcraft, they’re often beaten, abandoned, and left to roam the streets. We rescue them and give them a chance to learn,” said Ima Itauma, a program manager at CRARN.
The problem is most prevalent in the southern coastal states of Akwa Ibom and Cross River, which are majority Christian, but where traditional beliefs that attribute adversity to supernatural causes such as possession by malevolent spirits, are also widespread.
The phenomenon is also driven by the influence of evangelical pastors and witch doctors who offer to exorcise children possessed by Satan for a fee — a lucrative business for them.
Faith’s aunt accused her of witchcraft when her uncle’s motorcycle broke down and the family business faltered.
“Even when I took first position in school, my aunt said it was my witchcraft people that gave it to me,” she said.

DESPITE ADVOCACY, PROBLEM STILL PREVALENT CRARN and similar groups such as Street Mentors Network and Way to the Nations say education is the means for children accused of being witches to build a better future. The organizations, which are partially self-funded, provide food and shelter for the children as well as schooling.
Faith is one of about 200 young people who were accused of witchcraft as children and helped by CRARN to reach higher education since 2003, the organization says.
“When a child can read, write and think, they gain the power of choice,” said Anita Michael, founder of Street Mentors Network, which is currently caring for five children. All are attending school or learning vocational skills.
While accusations against children are made within families and during church services or exorcism ceremonies, few people who support such practices are willing to discuss them openly.
A pastor at a church in Eket where one of the rescued children had been branded a witch declined to comment. Another prominent local pastor, asked to comment in general on the issue, did not respond to calls or messages. Leonardo Santos, co-founder of Way to the Nations, said that despite years of advocacy, progress was frustratingly slow and accusations kept coming.
At the CRARN shelter, a 13-year-old student recounted how at age nine, his mother led him into the bush and attacked him with a machete, wounding his neck, shoulder and back, then covered him with grass and left him for dead. He had been accused of witchcraft by the pastor at a local church.
“I stayed in that bush for three days,” he said, crying as he spoke. “I couldn’t walk. I used my knees to crawl to the road.”
A passerby found him, gave him bread and took him to a hospital. After treatment, Friday was taken to a rehabilitation center where he now lives and attends school.
He wants to become a lawyer “so I can sue my mum for this.”