Christians Win the Right to Use Word ‘Allah’ in Malaysia
January 01, 2010
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350268Oh boy.... The circle continues. Surely these clerics could put thier time to better use. How about going to schools and educating students for 30 minutes at each venue on the positive aspects of Islam, the prophet (blessings be to him), and Allah. Yet another attempt is made to isolate and disengage from inter faith dialogue for the benefit of humanity.
Didn't someone great, once said..."O ye men of little faith?"
"It warned that allowing the Herald to use Allah could cause confusion among Muslims who may leave their faith."
Surely if it takes so little to lead people to leave a faith, then the bond is not very strong in the first place. Wouldn't it be great if people were told of the similarities and not the differences. Of course that is not going to happen while bigots are in power, who's only fear is loosing their grip.
Hmmm..or none at all, which is really more likely.
Now in Malaysia there are Islamic Allah and Catholic Allah......Hmmm, in the end there is one and only Allah.
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Kuala Lumpur. A Malaysian court has ruled that Christians have the
constitutional right to use the word “Allah” to refer to God, striking
down a government ban as illegal.
The landmark ruling on
Thursday appeared to be a victory for freedom of religion in the
Muslim-majority country, where the ban had become a symbol of what
minorities say is institutionalized religious discrimination.
Government
lawyers said they would consult with the Home Ministry before deciding
whether to appeal Judge Lau Bee Lan’s verdict in a higher court, where
the ban could still be reinstated. They have one month to appeal.
Lau
said in her judgment that Christians have the “constitutional right to
use Allah” and that the Home Ministry is “not empowered” to impose the
ban.
She was ruling on a lawsuit filed in late 2007 by the
Herald, the Malaysian Roman Catholic Church’s main publication, after
the government blocked non-Muslims from translating God as Allah in
their literature.
“This is indeed a landmark case for our
nation,” the Herald’s editor, Rev. Lawrence Andrew, said in a
statement. He said the verdict upheld the constitutional liberties of
freedom of speech, expression and religion.
Authorities have
insisted that Allah is an Islamic word that should be used exclusively
by Muslims, and its use by other religions would be misleading.
The
ban had affected the Malay-language edition of the Herald, which is
read mostly by indigenous tribes who converted to Christianity decades
ago. The Mandarin, English and Tamil editions do not use the word
Allah.
About 60 percent of Malaysia’s 27 million people are
Muslim Malays. A third of the population is ethnic Chinese and Indian,
and a large minority are Christians.
Thursday’s verdict means
“that the Bahasa Malaysia-speaking community of the Christian faith can
now continue to freely use the word Allah, a word that has been in
their worships and instructions in the faith without any interference
from the authorities,” Andrew said.
The government had argued
that the Herald’s online edition can be easily accessed by Muslims.
Although the government has not said it explicitly, the fear among
authorities is that Muslims might be tempted to convert to Christianity
by reading Christian literature.
Lau said the government
argument is outdated. She said the Herald’s readership was largely
limited to followers of Christianity and “that is a sufficient
safeguard.”
The country’s minorities have often said their
constitutional right to practice religion freely has come under threat
from the Malay Muslim-dominated government. The government denies any
discrimination.
Recently, the government confiscated 10,000
copies of Bahasa Malaysia-language Bibles from Indonesia because they
contained the word Allah.
The National Union of Malaysian Muslim Students urged the Home Ministry to appeal the court’s decision.
In
the Malaysian context, “the word Allah is exclusive and only refers to
the concept of God that is understood by Muslims,” it said in a
statement. It warned that allowing the Herald to use Allah could cause
confusion among Muslims who may leave their faith.
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