Attack on Indonesian prayer house injures children, triggers debate
Two children were wounded when a Christian prayer house in Padang City, Indonesia, was violently attacked by a group of Muslim men on July 27.
The midday assault, carried out as children participated in a religious education class, has sparked a nationwide debate regarding religious intolerance, law enforcement, and misunderstanding among communities, The Christian Post reported.
The incident occurred around 4 p.m. at a facility operated by the Anugerah Faithful Christian Church of Indonesia (GKSI) in Padang Sarai village, located in the Koto Tengah District of West Sumatra’s capital. The site was described by the church’s pastor, Fathia Dachi, as a legally operated education center for Christian children preparing for school evaluations in religious studies.
Youths, weapons, and slogans create chaos
According to Dachi, a mob of Muslim men emerged following Islamic afternoon prayers and quickly overwhelmed the area, chanting religious slogans and demanding a halt to the instruction. The crowd carried wooden blocks, knives, and stones, which they used to damage the prayer facility while children were still inside.
Two children, aged 7 and 11, suffered serious injuries during the assault. Congregation members captured parts of the attack on video, with one voice calling out a reminder that Indonesia is a Pancasila-based country guided by the rule of law.
Dachi recounted that the intruders began throwing stones through windows without warning, shattering glass, destroying equipment, and severing the building’s power. The property sustained significant damage, including broken window panes, a destroyed sound system, scattered chairs, and a wrecked religious pulpit.
Authorities respond, but reactions are mixed
Padang Mayor Fadly Aram later described the event as a “misunderstanding,” emphasizing that the building functioned as an educational center rather than a house of worship. He condemned the vandalism but insisted that the conflict did not stem from ethnic or religious tensions.
Pastor Dachi strongly refuted any illegal activity, stating he had long paused instruction during the Islamic call to prayer out of respect for Muslim neighbors. He expressed sorrow that those emerging from prayer would attack children engaged in learning the Christian gospel.
A conversation took place after the attack between Pastor Dachi and the heads of the local neighborhood associations, though no official details were released. Police responded quickly and have since arrested nine suspects allegedly involved in the attack, with further individuals still under investigation.
Community tensions surface amid blame
The situation has ignited finger-pointing across Padang’s religious and civic groups. The Padang Interfaith Cooperation Forum suggested that the confrontation stemmed from confusion caused by the shift from home-based religious education to a centralized location.
A local youth leader, Yen Danir, said the homeowners did not realize the property had become a prayer house and accused the congregation of being provocative. He cited overheard calls for violence among the Christian community as a contributing factor to the escalation.
An activist group known as the Indonesia for All Movement blamed the church for inflaming interfaith tensions. They demanded that the prayer house be closed, that Pastor Dachi be punished, and called for the release of the attackers, citing apologies and requests for a peaceful resolution.
National voices call for justice and healing
The Communion of Churches in Indonesia (PGI) condemned the attack, emphasizing the long-term psychological harm it could inflict on children present during the chaos. Rev. Jacky Manuputty lamented the emotional pain and called the targets of the violence innocent victims of rising intolerance.
Hendardi of the Setara Institute criticized the reluctance of public officials to label the attack a criminal offense, arguing that religious conservatism and discriminatory laws have fueled a climate of impunity and fear for minorities in Indonesia.
Pastor Nicky Wakkary referred to the assault as a manifestation of growing anti-Christian sentiment, calling on authorities to treat the matter as a warning sign. He said it reflected the increasing strain on interfaith cohabitation in regions where religious diversity has long coexisted unsteadily.
Senior leaders urge strong legal enforcement
Indonesian House of Representatives member Martin Daniel Tumbelaka commended law enforcement for prompt action and demanded continued transparency. He urged authorities to not only prosecute the attackers but also investigate any possible instigators who may have incited the violence from behind the scenes.
“There must be zero tolerance for vigilante actions,” Tumbelaka said, noting that the issue extended beyond physical damage to citizens’ sense of safety. “This demonstrates that the state will not remain silent in the face of violence and intolerance,” he added.
Vice President Gibran Rakabuming Raka visited 23 children impacted by the attack at a government facility in Padang several days later, underscoring the national level of concern and the attention the incident has drawn from Indonesia’s highest offices.
Wider implications for minority protections
Human rights advocacy group Open Doors noted that Christian communities involved in outreach efforts face elevated threats across parts of Indonesia, fueled by the rise of religious conservatism. The July 27 violence is now being viewed as evidence of this broader trend.
Amid ongoing dialogue and investigation, Pastor Dachi continues to insist that his church’s teachings merely aim to help young Christians fulfill academic requirements. “I educate them with the Word of God,” he said, “not with vice.”
While the investigation presses on and communities seek reconciliation, the traumatic events in Padang have reignited the national conversation on religious freedom, public safety, and the urgency of preventing more violence in the name of faith.




