Indonesian Cleric Calls Selfies A Sin. Muslim Youth Respond With More Selfies.

Indonesian Cleric Calls Selfies A Sin. Muslim Youth Respond With More Selfies.
An Indonesian Muslim woman adjusts a selfie stick as she prepares to take a selfie during Eid al-Fitr prayer that marks the end of the holy fasting month of Ramadan on Parang Kusumo Beach in Yogyakarta, Indonesia, Monday, July 28, 2014. (AP Photo/Slamet Riyadi)
An Indonesian Muslim woman adjusts a selfie stick as she prepares to take a selfie during Eid al-Fitr prayer that marks the end of the holy fasting month of Ramadan on Parang Kusumo Beach in Yogyakarta, Indonesia, Monday, July 28, 2014. (AP Photo/Slamet Riyadi)

After a popular Muslim cleric declared selfies a sin, young Indonesians decided to take matters into their own hands -- by striking a pose and continuing to snap.

Felix Siauw, an Indonesian author and religious leader with a substantial social media presence, is arguing that people who take selfies are giving in to pride -- which means snapping a selfie may be a sin against God.

“If we take a selfie, sift through and choose our best pose, and then we’re awed and impressed by our selves – worryingly, that’s called PRIDE,” Siauw wrote during a Twitter rant, according to a translation provided by Coconuts Jakarta.

“If we take a selfie and we feel cooler and better than others – we’ve fallen into the worst sin of all, ARROGANCE,” he continued.

He then took aim at Muslim women, accusing them of taking selfies without shame.

“There are usually nine frames in one photo with facial poses that are just – My Goodness – where’s the purity in women?,” he wrote.

Siauw isn’t the only selfie-critic out there. In 2014, a Jeddah scholar condemned the practice of taking selfies during Muslim’s hajj pilgrimage to Mecca. The pilgrimage is meant to be a time of introspection, Scholar Sheikh Assim Al-Hakeem argued, and selfies seemed to be a way of boasting and showing off.

But Siauw’s tirade against the selfie wasn’t received well in Indonesia, Quartz reports, where the number of people using smartphones has surged in recent years. According to Google Trends, Indonesia was one of the first countries in Southeast Asia where people began searching for selfie sticks in earnest.

It wasn’t long before Indonesian youth retaliated in defense of the duck face. In fact, Siauw’s condemnation resulted in the explosion of even more selfies. Using the hashtag #Selfie4Siauw, Indonesians are fighting the idea that posting a selfie somehow taints your relationship with God.

Purity!@felixsiauw #Selfie4Siauw pic.twitter.com/VsvY8FB9Fj

— Myra Bari (@Myrazaheer) January 28, 2015

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