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Muslim-Christian relations were an important element of the social
and political dynamics of Indonesia and an ever-sensitive subject
of government policy during the New Order period (1966-1998). Tense
relations and mutual suspicions between Indonesia's Muslim majority
and its significant Christian minority were reflected in Christian
fear of Muslim efforts to turn the country into an Islamic state
and Muslim anxieties about domestic Christian missionary
activities. At first the regime made heavyhanded efforts to contain
inter-religious conflict, but its attitude towards vocal Muslim
groups shifted from suppression to accommodation. State and private
institutions organized talks between the two communities, but they
proved ineffective at improving Muslim-Christian relations. These
socio-political developments in turn contributed to violence
coloured by Islamic and Christian sentiments after the fall of the
regime.
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