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Asiaweek -
October 13, 2000
A Matter of
Personal Faith?
Concern grows over
an 'Islamizing' trend
By SANTHA OORJITHAM Kuala
Lumpur
Parti Islam SeMalaysia (Pas)
takes its religion seriously. For years, Malaysia's key opposition
party has tried to pass various Islamic laws, including one prescribing
the death penalty for Muslims who leave the faith. Now it appears
the government is taking a leaf out of Pas's books. Earlier this
year, one of the states passed a law providing for apostates
to be detained for "rehabilitation" for up to a year.
Then on Sept. 17, the parliamentary secretary in the prime minister's
department said a federal Restoration of Faith Bill, dealing
with similar matters, had been drafted and sent to the attorney-general
prior to being tabled in Parliament.
A sign of things to come? Maybe
not. On Sept. 29, Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, never a zealot
in religious matters, called the parliamentary secretary "a
little mixed up" and noted that debate over apostasy had
been going on for more than 1,400 years. "There is still
a difference of opinion about what it is and what to do to people
who have committed murtad [apostasy]," he said. He added
that the proposed bill had many weaknesses and it would take
some time before it was finalized.
Confused by the mixed signals?
So are many Malaysians. The various pieces of legislation are
part of a race between Pas and Mahathir's United Malays National
Organization (UMNO) to claim the mantle of defender of the Muslim
faith. They also reflect a process, begun in the 1970s, of Islam
entering the public domain; as religious consciousness has grown,
so has concern over Muslims renouncing their faith. Now both
Muslims and non-Muslims worry about the implications of such
legislation in a multireligious society.
A quick primer: Islam is the
official religion of Malaysia, but the country is not an Islamic
state. Article 11(1) of the Federal Constitution guarantees every
Malaysian "the right to profess and practice his religion."
But ethnic Malays, who with other indigenous bumiputras make
up about 55% of the total population, are considered Muslims
by birth: The Constitution defines a Malay as "a person
who professes the religion of Islam, habitually speaks the Malay
language and conforms to Malay customs."
UMNO, the dominant party in the
ruling coalition, has traditionally had a lock on this Malay-Muslim
bloc, but in the Nov. 29 general elections last year, at least
half of the ethnic Malay voters opted for the opposition
a result of the fallout from the controversial sacking and jailing
of former deputy PM Anwar Ibrahim. Pas, whose conservative agenda
includes setting up an Islamic state, retained control of northeastern
Kelantan state and gained neighboring Trengganu state. It almost
quadrupled its seats in Parliament and its president took over
as opposition leader.
The government has been trying
to fight back on Pas's own terms. In personal and family matters
(such as succession, betrothal, marriage, divorce and adoption),
Muslims are bound by the Islamic shariah law. Shariah law is
under state jurisdiction and each state has exclusive legislative
and executive authority. In March, northwestern Perlis state
passed the Islamic Faith Protection Bill 2000, which empowers
shariah enforcement officers to investigate suspected apostates.
An unrepentant offender would be detained for up to a year in
a faith rehabilitation center. If, after detention, he still
refuses to repent, the shariah judge may declare that he is no
longer a Muslim, dissolve his marriage and determine his liabilities
or obligations. Former Supreme Court judge Harun Hashim says
the Perlis provisions, which have not yet been implemented, were
modeled after the federal Restoration of Faith bill, which he
helped draft. "Our objective is to standardize Islamic law
throughout the country and codify it," he says.
Pas dismisses the government
moves as little more than a ploy. The Perlis and federal bills,
says Pas secretary-general Nasharudin Mat Isa, are a "response
to our pressure, a political move rather than a real effort to
come up with an Islamic solution." Abdul Rahman Embong,
a senior research fellow at the National University of Malaysia's
Institute of Malaysian and International Studies, agrees that
UMNO is responding to developments which may include the "erosion
of the Malay heartland" in the general elections. But, he
adds, "there is no consensus within the UMNO leadership."
Some groups within the party may be trying to "out-Islamize"
Pas, but Deputy PM Abdullah Ahmad Badawi has stressed that UMNO
would continue its moderate stand.
Still, Chinese and Indian Malaysians,
who number around 7 million, are worried. If the federal apostasy
bill is tabled in Parliament, says Kerk Kim Hock, secretary-general
of the predominantly Chinese opposition Democratic Action Party
(DAP), "it would certainly confirm the non-Muslims' fears
that UMNO is ready to compete with Pas." The Malaysian Consultative
Council of Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism and Sikhism has urged
the government not to enact laws that will inhibit "the
development of a progressive, cooperative and cohesive Malaysian
society."
Researcher Abdul Rahman believes
that since the 1970s Muslims in Malaysia have felt "a growing
consciousness" of their religion. "It has become more
meaningful and entered the public domain," he says. In response,
the government over the years adopted Islamic policies and introduced
such institutions as Islamic banking, insurance and tertiary
education. UMNO Supreme Council member Shahrir Abdul Samad adds
that the new legislation could be a response to the issue of
apostasy that was raised in the run-up to last year's polls:
"The general public was asking why the government was not
strict with people who renounced Islam."
But even among Muslims, opinion
is divided over the issue. Former judge Harun Hashim says that
all four schools of Islamic jurisprudence are unanimous in decreeing
punishment for apostates. He quotes ninth-century jurist Al-Bukhari:
"It is reported by Abbas [cousin of the Prophet Muhammad]
. . . that the messenger of Allah said: Whosoever changes his
religion [from Islam to anything else], bring an end to his life."
But others claim that apostasy
is a matter of individual faith that should be left to God to
judge. Sisters in Islam, a group advocating women's rights within
the Islamic framework, cites the Koran: "Let there be no
compulsion in religion." Its members note that in some 20
Koranic verses on belief and disbelief, no temporal punishment
is prescribed for apostasy. Abdul Rahman asks: "Why the
need for legislation? Any problem should be handled via education
and counseling, not by punitive measures. You shouldn't create
the impression that Muslims are so fragile in their faith that
you have to legislate to keep them in faith."
Given the diverse opinions over
the matter, Abdul Rahman thinks that UMNO could divide the Muslim
community further with its apostasy push which would be
ironic, given that the main aim of the initiative is seen as
wooing back the Malay voters it lost in November. The government,
it seems, has yet to get a full grasp of differentiating between
the personal and the political.
LOSING MY RELIGION
What is apostasy?
According to the opposition Parti Islam SeMalaysia, it is "any
acts or words" that are "detrimental to or have contradicted
the Islamic faith" and have been committed "in good
faith, voluntarily and with knowledge and without coercion by
anyone or situation." The Islamic Faith Protection Bill
passed by Perlis state does not directly mention apostasy, but
makes references to "any act by a Muslim who is a mukallaf
[adult subject to Islamic laws] on his own free will either by
word, deed or by any means that may be interpreted as an attempt
to change his aqidah [faith] and belief towards the religion
of Islam."
How should one deal
with apostates?
Conservative Muslims believe in punishments, ranging from jail
terms to the death sentence. Progressives, however, cite the
Koranic verse, "Let there be no compulsion in religion,"
and say it should be left to God to deliver the final judgment
on those who fall away from the faith.
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