"Lily's Room"

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

The term “Allah” issue again

1. MySinchewhttp://www.mysinchew.com/node/10459?tid=14
Archbishop Cries Foul Over Allah Word, 25 April 2008

KUALA LUMPUR: The government Friday (25 Apr) opposed the suit filed by the Titular Roman Catholic Archbishop of Kuala Lumpur regarding the use of the word "Allah" but has asked for the case to be adjourned to next Tuesday (29 Apr) to give its reasons. However, it is not objecting to the Archbishop's application for leave to pursue the matter. The court allowed the postponement.

In his application before Madam Justice Lau Bee Lan, Archbishop Datuk Murphy Pakiam contends that the Minister of Internal Security and the Federal Government are wrong in law for not allowing the Bahasa section of Herald-The Catholic Weekly to use the word "Allah." He is represented by Porres Royan, Leonard Teoh, S. Selvarajah, and Annou Xavier while the respondents are represented by senior Federal Counsel Suzanna Atan. The current minister is Syed Hamid Albar who has taken over this portfolio from Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi recently.

In his affidavit, Pakiam said, " I am advised by my solicitors that I have a legal right to use the word "Allah" in the Herald-The Catholic Weekly- (published by him) and this legal right stems from the right to freedom of speech and expression as enshrined in Article 10 of the Federal Constitution and from the right to profess and practice the Christian faith as enshrined in Article 11 of the Federal Constitution which includes and is not limited to propagating the faith amongst the non-English speaking faithful in Malaysia especially the Indonesians and the Arabic-speaking of the Christian faith."

He said the word "Allah" is the correct Bahasa Malaysia word for "God" and in the Bahasa Malaysia translation of the Bible, "God" is translated as "Allah" and "Lord" is translated as "Tuhan".

He added that for fifteen centuries, Christians and Muslims in Arabic-speaking countries have been using the word "Allah" in reference to the One God. The Catholic Church in Malaysia and Indonesia and the great majority of other Christian denominations hold that "Allah" is the legitimate word for "God" in Bahasa Malaysia. "Therefore state that it has now been universally accepted that the word 'Allah' is not exclusive to the religion of Islam both as a matter of faith and as a matter of the use of language," he said.

Pakiam also complained that he is constantly harassed by the minister and government to cease to use the word "Allah" in the Herald and the numerous threats to him to either suspend or revoke the Herald's publication permit over the use of the word "Allah" has infringed his legal right and has caused him much apprehension, anxiety and uneasiness.

He added that it is unfair, unreasonable and irrational for the respondents to classify and to continue to classify the use of the word "Allah" as a security issue which is purportedly causing much confusion and which threatens and endangers peace, public order and security when in fact in the thirteen years of the Herald's
publication, there has never been any untoward incident arising as a result of the use of the word "Allah" in the Herald.

The Herald's publishing permit for this year was subject to a condition dated 12 Feb 2008 which prohibits the use of the word "Allah" in the Herald. "I am advised by my solicitors and verily believe that the Respondents in making the decision dated 12.2.2008 acted in breach of the rules of natural justice, procedural and substantive fairness and the duty to act fairly,' he said.

He added that they had acted irrationally and unreasonably by prohibiting the Applicant from using the word "Allah" or directly quoting the word "Allah" from the Al-Kitab."

In doing so, they have created a state of affairs which endangers his right to publish the Herald which serves to disseminate news and
information weekly on the Catholic Church in Malaysia and elsewhere to a wide readership, Pakiam said. Hearing continues 29 April.

2. Kairos Research Centre (http://krisisprazis.ath.cx)
‘Allah’ vs. God, 24 April 2008
by Dr. Ng Kam Weng

I just received a news update on the court case regarding the prohibition of the use of ‘Allah’ in non-Muslim media:
The Minister for Internal Security issued a Publication Permit dated 12th February 2008 (for the period 1st January 2008 until 31st December 2008) to the Titular Roman Catholic Archbishop of Kuala Lumpur, the Publisher of the ‘ HERALD - The Catholic Weekly’ stating that the Publication Permit is subject to a “Garis Panduan Penerbitan” which prohibits the Publisher from using the word ALLAH in the HERALD - The Catholic Weekly.
The decision of the Minister for Internal Security was unacceptable and on 19th March 2008, an Application for Judicial Review was filed in the Kuala Lumpur High Court to challenge the decision of the Minister. The first state of the Application for Judicial Review (i.e. to seek leave or permission to proceed) is fixed for hearing at 9.00am on 25th April 2008. Archbishop Murphy Pakiam will be in the High Court for the hearing.
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I am supposed to be too busy and unable to write new posts. I also don’t normally repost articles from other sites. But I think the following article from the Los Angeles Times offers an interesting take on the controversy that complements what I have written so far. It is both timely and thought provoking.

From the Los Angeles Times
‘Allah’ vs. ‘God’Using English to Separate the Two has Become a Dangerous Practice
By Rabih Alameddine, April 6, 2008

All living languages are promiscuous. We promiscuous speakers shamelessly shoplift words, plucking bons mots and phrases from any tempting language. We wear these words when we wish to be more formal, more elegant, more mysterious, worldly, precise, vague. They flash on our fingers like gaudy rings, adorn our hair, warm our necks like rich foreign scarves. They become our favorite trousers, the shoes we cannot live without, our way of describing illness to our doctors, declaring love to our lovers, formulating policies, doing business. We believe we own them and are frequently astonished to discover their original roots in another language.
English, a mongrel from the start, greedily helps itself to foreign words more than any other. The Oxford English Dictionary lists more than 500,000 of them, whereas German has about 185,000 and French fewer than 100,000, according to “The Story of English” by Robert McCrum, William Cran and Robert MacNeil. Give us your tired, your poor, your fabulous words yearning to be free. We’ll take them.
English has always had a special fondness for other European languages, a neighborly soft spot — perhaps because Britain has been invaded by speakers of those languages from the onset of its recorded history.
But not so much fondness for the languages of non-neighbors. Despite huge increases in immigration from Africa and Asia in the last 50 years, English has resisted adopting words from these continents, except for the names of certain foods. Think of Mandarin words that have come into the language. How about from Tagalog? (”Kowtow,” “shanghai” and “typhoon” from Mandarin; “boondocks” and “yo-yo” from Tagalog.)
So whenever I come across an Arabic word mired in English text, I am momentarily shocked out of the narrative. Of course, English has pilfered numerous bits of Arabic — “artichoke,” “zero,” “genie,” “henna,” “saffron,” “harem,” “tariff” — but the appropriation was so long ago that few English speakers know the words’ origin. These dictionary entries were probably introduced by the Moors into Spanish first, and then by the Spaniards into English.
What has Arabic done for us lately?
If we take away the familiar food pilferages (”hummus,” “falafel”), words recently adopted from Arabic are all troublesome: “hijab,” “intifada,” “fatwa” and “jihad.” For an English speaker, the first suggest humiliation, the last three violence. In Arabic, the word “hijab” means any type of veil or cover. The American Heritage Dictionary defines it as “the head scarf worn by Muslim women, sometimes including a veil that covers the face except for the eyes.” In Arabic, “intifada” denotes rebellion, a throwing off of shackles. Merriam-Webster’s definition is an armed uprising of Palestinians against Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip. “Fatwa” isn’t simply a religious decree; it’s an Islamic religious decree. Even though a fatwa could be an exhortation by, say, a Moroccan cleric to raise literacy for women, in English, it is used almost exclusively in reference to the ignominious Salman Rushdie affair, in which former Iranian leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini ordered the death of the novelist because of Rushdie’s alleged blasphemy in his novel, “The Satanic Verses.”
And “jihad” comes from the word “excel,” juhd or ijtihad in Arabic. It means a holy war or righteous struggle. Some schools in the Middle East, religious and secular, will hold jihads — or special intense programs to get students to accomplish something — to improve math scores and raise reading levels. Although most English usage I’ve come across refers only to an Islamic holy war, I have begun to see “jihad” as a synonym for crusade (originally a Christian holy war, broadened now) and a vigorous fight against something. In other words, jihad, this English word, might one day encompass its full Arabic meaning.
English has yet to incorporate these words fully, and history suggests it might never do so. The language is filled with words that are culture specific: “sahib,” “coolie,” “effendi,” “bey.” The word “emir” simply means prince in Arabic, but in English it is a prince or ruler of an Islamic state. When my sister in Beirut tells her daughter a bedtime story, the emir kisses the sleeping princess awake. No mother in the U.S. or Britain would let an emir anywhere near a princess’ lips. No princess will ever sing “Someday My Emir Will Come.”
That in some ways is how it should be. Language, after all, is organic. You can’t force words into existence. You can’t force new meanings into words. And some words can’t or won’t or shouldn’t be laundered or neutered. Language develops naturally.
I bring all this up, however, to get to the word whose connotation I would love to see changed — “Allah.”
Allah means God.
In Arabic, Muslims, Jews, Christians and Zoroastrians all pray to Allah. In English, however, Christians and Jews pray to God, and Allah is the Muslim deity. No one would think of using the word “Allah” to talk about any other religion. The two words, “God” and “Allah,” do not mean the same thing in English. They should.
This isn’t about political correctness; it isn’t about language distortion. Altered or incomplete usage of words is natural, even amusing. “Confetti” in its original language means little bonbons or small sweets. And incomplete usage is at times explainable and logical. The words “beef,” “pork” and “mutton” arrived with the Norman invasion. They refer solely to the meat, never to the animal, whereas in the original French they refer to both (mouton is both sheep and mutton). That is primarily because French was integrated into the language of the upper classes, which ate the meat, and less so that of the farmers, who raised the animals.
God, however, is a big deal. The word for God matters quite a bit more than what lands on one’s table for dinner at night. We never say the French pray to Dieu, or Mexicans pray to Dios. Having Allah be different from God implies that Muslims pray to a special deity. It classifies Muslims as the Other. Separating Allah from God, we only see a vengeful, alarming deity, one responsible for those frightful fatwas and ghastly jihads — rarely the compassionate God. The opening line of every chapter in the Koran is “Bi Ism Allah, Al Rahman, Al Rahim”: In the name of God, the Gracious, the Merciful. In the name of Allah. One and the same.
The separation is happening on all sides. This year, the Malaysian government issued an edict warning the Herald, a weekly English newspaper, that no religion except Islam can use the word Allah to denote God. No such edict, or fatwa for that matter, is needed for the New York Times: a quick search through the archives shows that Allah is used only as the Muslim God.
In these troubled times, creating more differences, further parsing so to speak, is troubling, even dangerous. I suggest we either not use the word Allah or, better yet, use it in a non-Muslim context.
Otherwise, the terrorists win.
One nation under Allah?
・Rabih Alameddine is the author of the novel “The Hakawati,” due out this month.(http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/sunday/commentary/la-op-alameddine6apr06,0,4186700.story
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