Abdul Rozak Fachruddin

Abdul Rozak Fachruddin (February 14, 1916 – March 17, 1995) was the Indonesian Islamic religious leader hailed from Pakualaman, Yogyakarta. He served as the 10th chairman of the Islamic mass organization Muhammadiyah from 1968 to 1990.[1][2]


Abdul Rozak Fachruddin
Chairman of Muhammadiyah
In office
1968–1990
Preceded byFaqih Usman
Succeeded byAzhar Basyir
Personal details
Born(1916-02-14)February 14, 1916
Pakualaman, Yogyakarta
Died17 March 1995(1995-03-17) (aged 79)
Surakarta, Central Java
CitizenshipIndonesian

Early life

Fachruddin was born in Pakualaman, Yogyakarta on February 14, 1916. His father, Fachruddin, was a kyai and the village headman of Pakualaman, appointed by the grandfather of the ruler Paku Alam VIII. Her mother was Maimunah bint Idris from Pakualaman as well. During his childhood age, he studied at the Muhammadiyah schools, which is an Islamic seminary operated under the Muhammadiyah direction. In 1923, for the first time, Fachruddin went to a formal school at Standaard School Muhammadiyah Bausasran. After his father was dismissed from the headman office and his batik business also declined, he returned to Bleberan. In 1925, he moved to the Muhammadiyah Primary School of Kotagede and from there in 1928 he entered Madrasah Muallimin Muhammadiyah Yogyakarta. After studying at Muallimin, he went home to study with some kyais including his own father.[1][2]

In 1934, he was sent by Muhammadiyah for missionary missions as a teacher in ten schools and as a preacher in Talang Balai (today's Ogan Komering Ilir Regency) for ten years.[2] When Japanese occupational forces came, he moved to Muara Meranjat in Palembang until 1944. During this time, Fachruddin taught at the Muhammadiyah school there led and coached by Hizbul Wathan before returning home.[1]

Career

In 1944, he entered BKR Hezbollah for a year. Upon returning from Palembang and the beginning of preaching in Bleberan, he became a village official in Galur for a year as well. Subsequently, he became an employee of the Department of Religion.[2] In 1950, he moved to Kauman and studied under the early Muhammadiyah figures and kyais such as Bagus Hadikusumo, Basyir Mahfudz, Badilah Zuber and Ahmad Badawi.[1][3] It is considered that his devotion is not only within Muhammadiyah however, but also in the government and universities. Later he served as the head of the Ministry of Religious Affairs. Not long during his post, he joined the guerrilla against the Dutch. During 1950–1959, he became an employee at the Yogyakarta Religious Bureau office, then moved to Semarang, during which he was known as an extraordinary lecturer in Islamic studies at Sultan Agung Islamic University.

Muhammadiyah

Within the rank of Muhammadiyah, he started as the leader of Muhammadiyah Youth during 1938–1941. He became a leader starting at the branch level, then territorial and provincial, until the central executive level. Fachruddin was elected as the chairman At the 38th Muhammadiyah Congress 1968 in Ujungpandang. Fachruddin's position as the chairman of Muhammadiyah was succeeding Faqih Usman after his death. Subsequently, he served the top leader of the organization for almost a quarter of the 20th century, before being replaced by the late Azhar Basyir. After being admitted to the Jakarta Islamic Hospital, Fachruddin died on March 17, 1995, leaving seven sons and daughters.

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gollark: They probably make them from digital recordings anyway.
gollark: Vinyl is analog, it's *inherently* lossy.
gollark: What? No.
gollark: Those are outdated too and only useful, loosely speaking, as some kind of weird aesthetic statement.

References

  1. "KH Abdur Rozak Fachdrudin (1971–1985)". Muhammadiyah. Archived from the original on 2012-08-26. Retrieved 26 August 2012.
  2. Mohammad, Herry (2006). Tokoh-Tokoh Islam yang Berpengaruh abad 20. Jakarta: Gema Insani. ISBN 978-979-560-219-4.
  3. "Abdur Rozak Fachdrudin". Merdeka. Archived from the original on 2012-08-26. Retrieved 26 August 2012.
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