"Lily's Room"

This is an article collection between June 2007 and December 2018. Sometimes I add some recent articles too.

Image and reality of Malaysia

1.World Wide Religious News (http://wwrn.org)
Malaysian Islamic Party Still Wants Stonings , 17 January 2008
(Reuters) Kampung Pulau Melaka, Malaysia - Malaysia's Islamist opposition party called on non-Muslims on Thursday to back its election campaign to apply strict sharia law, including amputations and stonings, for the country's Muslims.
Parti Islam se-Malaysia (PAS) is trying to broaden its appeal beyond the predominantly Muslim heartland at the next election, which is expected by political experts to be called by end-March and to be fought partly on the issue of rising street crime. "The people want the best and there is nothing better than Islam," Nik Aziz Nik Mat, 77, told Reuters after morning prayers at his home in the largely rural northeast state of Kelantan, ruled by PAS since 1990.
An Egyptian-educated scholar, Nik Aziz said non-Muslims had nothing to fear from strict sharia punishments, known as hudud, and a lot to gain from them, especially Malaysia's large and wealthy ethnic Chinese minority. "It is more important for the Chinese to accept hudud laws because those who steal do not steal from the poor," said Nik Aziz, who wore a skullcap, white shirt and sarong. "Who steals from the poor?"
Hudud laws would not apply to non-Muslims if the Pas campaign succeeds in the end. Nik Aziz's spartan, single-storey home of green brick and wood sits next to a mosque and a religious school in a traditional Malay village. Malays constitute virtually the entire Muslim population and are defined as Muslim under the constitution. "Thieves steal from the rich and the Chinese are more well-off than the Malays. If a thief's hand is amputated and he goes to the football field or he goes to the market, people can see that he is a thief," he said. "Everyone will be afraid and won't steal."
Malaysia, a collection of Islamic kingdoms in medieval times, still treats Islam as its only official religion, though waves of Chinese and Indian migration in the last two centuries have dramatically changed the racial and religious landscape. More than 40 percent of Malaysian are now non-Muslim.
"It's not impossible for hudud to be implemented," said a Muslim watch-seller who gave his name as Nor, as he sipped coffee near his stall at a street market in Kelantan. "It's a good deterrent, but it's not easy to be implemented because there are so many races."
Malaysia has been run since independence in 1957 by a multi-racial coalition of Malay, Chinese and Indian parties, which is considered the only political structure that can govern and keep a lid on Malaysia's religious tensions. But Malaysia's opposition factions have been unable to come together. The main opposition Democratic Action Party, which is backed by mainly Chinese voters, says it could never go into a coalition with PAS while it retains its Islamist platform.
"It appears they still have a political death wish," said Lim Guan Eng, secretary-general of the Democratic Action Party, when he was told of Nik Aziz's latest comments.
"That is why we cannot cooperate with PAS... We believe that a theocratic (federal) state is not appropriate for Malaysia. Even the Muslims themselves don't agree with a theocratic state."
Malaysia's current Islamic legal system deals mainly with issues such as apostasy and family matters, such as divorce. It cannot mete out severe punishments such as stoning for adultery. Even in Kelantan, the PAS state government says federal law prevents it from instituting these punishments.
In 2004, PAS fared poorly in general elections, just clinging onto Kelantan and losing power in neighboring Terengganu state. Since then, some younger and more pragmatic leaders have moved up the ranks, trying to move the party beyond its Muslim heartland. But the party platform remains unchanged.
Disclaimer: WWRN does not endorse or adhere to views or opinions expressed in the articles posted. This is purely an information site, to inform interested parties of religious trends.

2. Christian Today (http://au.christiantoday.com)
Malaysia can no longer be ‘Truly Asia’ ,18 January 2008
Taking a swipe against the motto, ‘Truly Asia,’ used by the Malaysian government, an Indonesian columnist wrote the multiracial and harmonious country was facing the ‘threat’ of disintegration unless it returned to its ancient cultural root of re-uniting its society.
by Christian Today Australia
Taking a swipe against the motto, ‘Truly Asia,’ used by the Malaysian government, an Indonesian columnist wrote the multiracial and harmonious country was facing the ‘threat’ of disintegration unless it returned to its ancient cultural root of re-uniting its society.
Anand Krishna, an interfaith humanist and nationalist, used two recent events to justify why the purported representation by the Malaysian government to being ‘Truly Asia’ should no longer be used given its failure to represent the diverse sections within its society.
Recently, an ethnic Indian woman who converted from Muslim to Hinduism was detained by the Islamic religious department and sent to ‘religious counselling’ because Islamic law forbid people born from a Muslim family to be converted.
Another prominent example was Lina Joy, who converted to Christianity to marry her fiancé, who found the highest civil court, following Islam law ruled that once a Muslim, always a Muslim. Ms. Joy cannot legally marry her fiancé, her children are considered Muslim and as such cannot be educated in a Christian environment, and her burial rites would be performed in accordance with Muslim tradition.
The National Evangelical Christian Fellowship Malaysia (NECF), recently, had deplored the ruling in Ms. Joy case, saying it indicated the creeping of Islamisation in society which had polarised its citizens from diverse backgrounds.
The Fellowship went further, stating the ‘unfair and untenable’ decision for Ms. Joy to comply with demonstrated the court was retreating in the face of relentless onslaught on their position as the third pillar in a democratic system of government.
Given the concern of the court ruling, NECF has called on the Malaysian Prime Minister to be a leader of all Malaysians and urged him to uphold the Constitution which protects the rights of everyone to choose a religion based on freewill.
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