Proceedings of the 3rd International Symposium on Religious Life, ISRL 2020, 2-5 November 2020, Bogor, Indonesia

Research Article

Opportunity for Harmony? Social Empathy of Ahmadi and Sunda Wiwitan Women during Pandemic

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  • @INPROCEEDINGS{10.4108/eai.2-11-2020.2305043,
        author={Siti Aliyuna Pratisti},
        title={Opportunity for Harmony? Social Empathy of Ahmadi and Sunda Wiwitan Women during Pandemic},
        proceedings={Proceedings of the 3rd International Symposium on Religious Life, ISRL 2020, 2-5 November 2020, Bogor, Indonesia},
        publisher={EAI},
        proceedings_a={ISRL},
        year={2021},
        month={3},
        keywords={religious harmony minority social empathy women},
        doi={10.4108/eai.2-11-2020.2305043}
    }
    
  • Siti Aliyuna Pratisti
    Year: 2021
    Opportunity for Harmony? Social Empathy of Ahmadi and Sunda Wiwitan Women during Pandemic
    ISRL
    EAI
    DOI: 10.4108/eai.2-11-2020.2305043
Siti Aliyuna Pratisti1,*
  • 1: PhD Student at Indonesia Consortium for Religious Studies, Universitas Gadjah Mada; Lecturer in International Relations Department, Universitas Padjadjaran
*Contact email: aliyunapratisti@gmail.com

Abstract

Within these couple months, we are witnessing series of shifting and changing of social landscapes due to the COVID-19 Pandemic. Despite the global experience, there are groups or communities which shaped their perception differently due to their particular dynamics. Women surely have their ideas of COVID-19 which can be differentiated from other sexual identities; even more specific with experiences shared by women in minority groups with a unique set of beliefs and interaction. The selection of particular groups (women in minority group), served as a micro topic to complete a larger frame of joint-research on “Reshaping New Urban Living: Indonesian Women and Coronavirus” conducted by Indonesia Consortium of Religious Studies (ICRS) and Ford Foundation. Social empathy promoted by women will be employed as a theoretical framework to depict whether or not repression to their beliefs affect their social interaction during the pandemic. To do so, an in-depth interview is conducted with women from Jamaah Ahmadi and Sunda Wiwitan as primary informants. A combined observation of social media (by following Whatsapp status, Facebook, and community website) served as a substitute for face to face gestures since this research is conducted during the period of physical distancing in Indonesia (from June to August 2020). Findings will be delivered in the last part of this article which reflects their perception and action of social empathy, also their relation with wider social groups.