Indonesia's Abdurrahman Wahid mourned by Mormon leaders

Utahn's chat with future leader led to friendship with LDS leadership

Published: Thursday, Dec. 31, 2009 12:00 a.m. MST
E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 

SALT LAKE CITY — When Hal Jensen first met Abdurrahman Wahid, he told the blind Islamic cleric he couldn't drink the tea that was offered him because he was a Mormon.

Intrigued, Wahid — who would later become the president of Indonesia — began peppering the Salt Lake City businessman with questions about his faith, wanting to know more about what Mormons believe and how the LDS Church's humanitarian service program worked. That simple conversation outside a mosque in Jakarta blossomed into a friendship that lasted for years and grew to include LDS leaders, especially President Boyd K. Packer, of the Quorum of the Twelve. It also built a bridge between the faiths of many Muslims and Mormons and paved the way for greater church presence in Indonesia, especially through humanitarian service.

"Wahid made such a remarkable change in our ability to have a close and friendly relationship as a Christian church with Indonesia," Jensen said Wednesday from his winter home in Deer Valley. "He loved the tenets of the Mormon Church. He was ready and willing to stand up for the church. He never hesitated."

Wahid, 69, died Wednesday during surgery to remove a blood clot from his heart. He had been in poor health due to complications from diabetes and kidney failure.

Known fondly by his nickname, Gus Dur, Wahid was a proponent of moderate Islam and a democratic reformer who led Indonesia from 1999 to 2001 after the downfall of late dictator Suharto. As his familiarity with the LDS Church grew, Wahid visited Salt Lake City in 1999 and underwent eye surgery, then visited with the First Presidency — then Presidents Gordon B. Hinckley, Thomas S. Monson and James E. Faust.

During the visit, Jensen said Wahid invited President Hinckley to visit Indonesia when Wahid became president. Roughly six months later, Wahid was elected president in a democratic election, and in 2000, President Hinckley and President Packer visited Indonesia and were invited to the palace for a dinner in their honor.

Wahid visited Utah five times, meeting with the LDS leaders each time to strengthen bonds of friendship. "They became close friends," Jensen said of Wahid and President Packer.

That close association with LDS leaders has influenced humanitarian service in the area, especially in 2004 when a devastating tsunami hit a widespread area of the Pacific. The LDS Church immediately responded by sending needed body bags, food, water, supplies and support for the overwhelmed nation. President Packer and Elder David A. Bednar of the Quorum of Twelve Apostles, with Gerrit Gong, a vice president at BYU, visited the country to view the devastation.

President Packer spoke during at a BYU devotional in 2006 introducing Dr. Alwi Shihab, a scholar, former Harvard professor and currently the Indonesian presidential adviser and special envoy to the Middle East. President Packer said, "Church members and Muslims share similar high standards of decency, temperance and morality. … As societal morality and behavior decline in an increasingly permissive world, the church and many within Islam increasingly share natural affinities."

After learning of Wahid's death President Packer said Wednesday, "Indonesia had lost an extraordinary leader and the church has lost a good friend."

e-mail: sisraelsen@desnews.com. Contributing: Associated Press.

Recent comments

TO 'WHAT IS A CHRISTIAN" -- Your debate is being aired in the wrong...

HIGHER LEVEL | Jan. 17, 2010 at 1:27 p.m.

We can debate scripture all day, and I can Biblically disprove the...

joutsen | Jan. 2, 2010 at 1:00 a.m.

Although the passing of Wahid is not "good news", it is great to read...

Bittersweet | Jan. 1, 2010 at 11:07 a.m.

rss icon

Recommended in Utah

Story

They sat in the shade of a canvas tarp waiting for the crowds to arrive for Camp Floyd Days.

Story

The preaching and proselytizing of the Mormon faith in central and eastern Europe has not been an inaugural endeavor in recent decades.

Story

Ever felt like you couldn't convince a very annoying someone to simply leave you alone? Several dozen sheep in Wasatch County know that precise feeling.

Advertisement
Advertisement
previousnext

Latest comments

This is a straw man argument. Those that come here legally do assimilate....

As legal and illegal immigrants from south of our border and other areas...

Misdemeanors, felonies, identity theft, stolen social security numbers, theft...

People who illegally cross our borders are outlaws, regardless of their...

Y. not getting much of a farewell

someone overheard from CT's office: ... Suddenly, Cougs are not half the...

It is important to remember that Islam and Islamic politics are the same....

thats not all that floated down the jordan river..

Quite a contrast between the way themtn tv analysts fawned over Utah and...

@one nil.... Here we go again, comparing resumes.... Funny how you want to...

conservOne got it exactly right, and LEFT is more interersted in...