Ganjuran Church is located in Ganjuran, Bambanglipuro, Bantul, south of Yogyakarta. It is built on of land and in addition to the church has a parking lot, temple, residence for pastors, and other maintenance buildings., its total congregation is 8,000, consisting mostly of farmers, merchants, and labourers. The main church building is a joglo and is decorated with of traditional Javanese carvings, including parallelograms known as wajikan and wooden pineapples. The altar features angels dressed as wayang orang characters. Because of this architecture, the Dutch scholar of Indonesia M. C. Ricklefs has described the church at Ganjuran as perhaps one of the most dramatic manifestations of the Catholic Church's accommodations of Javanese culture, while the scholars Jan S. Aritonang and Karel A. Steenbrink described the church as "the most spectacular product of... European-guided indigenous art".
History
The land on which Ganjuran Church is now located was once part of a sugar factory, run by the Dutch brothers Joseph and Julius Schmutzer. In 1912 they began practising workers' rights as outlined in the encyclicalRerum novarum; they then began working on establishing educational facilities on the land, with seven boys' schools opened in 1919 and a girls' school opened in 1920. They also promoted Catholicism amongst their employees. With the proceeds from their factory, the Schmutzers established St Elisabeth Hospital in Ganjuran, first as a clinic. They also established Onder de Bogen in Yogyakarta proper. St Elisabeth is now managed by the Order of Carolus Borromeus. Also in 1920, Pr. van Driessch, a member of the Society of Jesus who had taught at Xaverius College in Muntilan, began giving sermons and working to establish a Catholic community in the area. By 1922 there were 22 native Javanese Catholics, a number which increased rapidly. On 16 April 1924 the Schmutzers established a church on their grounds, with van Driessch as its first pastor. The carvings and other facets were worked on by a Javanese sculptor named Iko. as a Javanese king Three years later the congregation began construction of a tall Hindu-styled temple, resembling the one at Prambanan Temple; Iko set statues of Mary and Jesus as Javanese royalty and teachers, which were adorned with batik motives. Stones were taken from the slopes of Mount Merapi to the north, while the entrance was pointed to southern sea; this orientation reflected a Javanese belief in the harmony between north and south. The temple was consecrated on 11 February 1930 by Bishop of Batavia Antonius van Velsen. Van Driessch died in 1934 and was replaced by Jesuit Father Albertus Soegijapranata as pastor; Soegijapranata served concurrently as pastor of Ganjuran and Bintaran. In this year the congregation totalled 1,350 people. The Schmutzers returned to the Netherlands that year. During the Indonesian National Revolution the sugar factory was razed, but the schools, church, and hospital survived. In 1947 Fr. Justinus Darmojuwono became pastor, serving until 1950. In 1981 the accommodations for pastors were expanded under Suryosudarmo, and seven years later, under Fr. Gregorius Utomo, the church began emphasising its Javanese influences. In 1990, the Federation of Asian Bishops' Conferences held a conference on agriculture and farmers' issues. Since 1995 the church has focused on its temple, and through donations has added reliefs depicting fifteen Stations of the Cross; the reliefs had initially been planned by the Schmutzers. After the old church was destroyed in the 2006 Yogyakarta earthquake, the church was redesigned in a Javanese style. The reconstruction cost Rp 7 billion. Activities at the church include regular Mass, economic programmes, and celebrations of special events. Liturgy can be in Javanese or Indonesian, and at times Javanese attire is required. There may also be gamelan music and keroncong performances.