YOGYAKARTA
— UIN Sunan Kalijaga Yogyakarta hosted a large Ramadan pre-dawn gathering
featuring Indonesian humanitarian figure Shinta Nuriyah Abdurrahman Wahid,
drawing more than 1,000 participants to the university mosque for a discussion
on social solidarity and democratic values.
The
event, titled “Fasting Amid Disasters and a Shaken Democracy,” was held
in collaboration with the GUSDURian Network and brought together university
leaders, students, and members of the wider community. Among those attending
were Rector Noorhaidi Hasan, Vice Rector Mochamad Sodik, and Vice Rector Abdur
Rozaki.
Participants
reflected a broad cross-section of society, including ride-hailing drivers,
traditional pedicab associations from Yogyakarta, and citizens from different
religious backgrounds.
Organizers
described the gathering as more than a Ramadan ritual, positioning it as a
space for dialogue and encounter across social, religious, and professional
divides. Participants shared the pre-dawn meal together without formal seating
arrangements, creating what organizers called an atmosphere of equality and
solidarity.
Speaking
at the event, Noorhaidi said the presence of Shinta Nuriyah carried special
meaning for the university community. An alumna of UIN Sunan Kalijaga, she has
long been known for advocating humanitarian values, democracy, and interfaith
engagement.
He noted
that Ramadan provides not only a period of personal reflection but also a
moment to reaffirm moral responsibility and integrity in public life.
In her
remarks, Shinta Nuriyah reflected on how her intellectual journey at UIN Sunan
Kalijaga shaped her long-standing commitment to social justice. She recalled
accompanying her late husband, Indonesia’s fourth president Abdurrahman Wahid,
during their years at the State Palace, when she began organizing sahur
gatherings with marginalized communities.
“For me,
it has never been unusual to share sahur with construction workers under
bridges, market traders, street children, or waste collectors in city squares,”
she said.
For more
than two decades, she has maintained the tradition of traveling from city to
city to hold sahur gatherings with underprivileged groups and people with
disabilities, emphasizing dignity, equality, and social inclusion.
The event
at UIN Sunan Kalijaga reflected the university’s broader engagement with
humanitarian dialogue and social inclusivity, bringing together diverse
communities during Ramadan in a shared space of reflection and conversation.