Friday, August 25, 2006

Panic Grips Malaysian Muslim Leaders.

Note: This posting from the New York Times makes very interesting reading. Apparently local muslim worthies in Malaysia are worried that if this lady is able to beat the imams and exercise a real right to freedom of religion, "this would open the floodgates to many other requests of Muslims wanting to change their faith".

Why would so many muslims want to flee from Islam?

Read on and see if you can answer this question...





No joy for Malaysian Muslim convert to Catholicism


A Malaysian woman known only as "Lina Joy" is in hiding after threats from Islamic extremists who accuse her of apostasy after she renounced her Muslim faith and sought to marry her Christian fiance.

The New York Times reports that Lina Joy whose name is now a household word in majority Muslim Malaysia started proceedings five years ago in the civil courts to seek the right to marry her Christian fiancé and have children.

Because she had renounced her Muslim faith, Joy, 42, argued, Malaysia's Islamic Shariah courts, which control matters like marriage, property and divorce, did not have jurisdiction over her.

In a series of decisions, the civil courts ruled against her. Then, last month, her lawyer, Benjamin Dawson, appeared before Malaysia's highest court, the Court of Appeals, to argue that Joy's conversion be considered a right protected under the constitution, not a religious matter for the Shariah courts.

"She's trying to live her life with someone she loves," Dawson said in an interview.

For Malaysia, which considers itself a moderate and modern Muslim country with a tolerance for its multiple religions and ethnic groups of Malays, Indians and Chinese, the case has kicked up a firestorm that goes to the very heart of who is a Malay, and what is Malaysia.

Joy's case has heightened a searing battle that has included street protests and death threats between groups advocating a secular interpretation of the constitution, and Islamic groups that contend the Shariah courts should have supremacy in many matters.

About 60 percent of Malaysia's 26 million people are Muslims, 20 percent are Buddhists, nearly 10 percent are Christians and 6 percent are Hindus.

"Malaysia is at a crossroads," Dawson told the New York Times. "Do we go down the Islamic road, or do we maintain the secular character of the federal constitution that has been eroding in the last 10 years?"

In rulings in Joy's case, civil courts said Malays could not renounce Islam because the constitution defined Malays to be Muslims.

They also ruled that a request to change her identity card from Muslim to Christian had to be decided by the Shariah courts. There she would be considered an apostate, and if she did not repent she surely would be sentenced to several years in an Islamic center for rehabilitation.

Conversions of Muslims to Christianity are not common in Malaysia, though most converts do not seek official approval for marriage and therefore do not run into the obstacles that Joy confronted.

One 38-year-old convert, who provided only his Christian names, Paul Michael, described how he led a double life.

"Church members know us as who we are, and the outside world knows us as we were," he told the Times. He was fearful, he said, that if his conversion became public the religious authorities would come after him, and he could be sentenced to a religious rehabilitation camp.

Meanwhile, Asia News reports that pressure by Islamic extremists is intensifying daily: they are intent on preventing a positive outcome of the case that may pave the way for a "flight from Islam" by other believers.

Recently, for example, the parish where Lina Joy was baptised, Our Lady of Fatima, Brickfields in Central Kuala Lumpur, were informed about a police report against their parish.

According to the Harakah fortnightly paper dated August 16-31, a man called Taib Hisham reported the church, claiming that Joy's baptism went against Article 11 of the Constitution that says: "The law may control or restrict the propagation of any religious doctrine or belief among persons professing the religion of Islam." Taib was supported in his initiative by the youth wing of the Islamic Party of Malaysia (known as PAS) and Islamic NGOs. Article 11 also guarantees religious freedom.

. So while they wait for the sentence, they are taking their "precautions".

Local sources said no effort is being spared to convince the Muslim community to take up a stand "in defence of Islam" and several blogs and websites are calling for a verdict that "spells a victory for Islam" in Malaysia.




Comment: We all know that contemporary Islam and its muslim leaders do not believe in actual freedom of religion. Quotes from the Koran notwithstanding, the reality of life in 2006 is that Islamic leaders will take any action, including murder in some countries (but not yet in Malaysia), to prevent apostasy from a dying Islam.

This situation will continue and get worse, until the problems faced by Islam are actually addressed, instead of denied. The whole world can see the problems faced by contemporary Islam; only the muslim leaders and most of their deluded adherents refuse to see what everyone else can clearly see.

When will this stupidity stop?

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Ever muslim should take care of brothers in muslim. Islam is about peace in life and will save us from bad judgment(hell of fire) just after we left this world. May Allah Bless Malaysian muslim n U..