Saturday 16 January 2010

Govt Says ALLAH Can Stay with Non-Muslims in EAST Malaysia, BUT ALLAH Cannot Stay with Peninsular Non Muslims

Read for more on People's Parliament Blog

Malaysiakini reports today that the Federal Government has relented and agreed that Christians in the two Malaysian Borneo states can continue to use the term ‘Allah’ for God in Malay print as they have done for the last 300 years”.

But East Malaysians residing in West Malaysia will have to abide by the “Allah for Muslims Only” prohibition
.


(adapted from Peoples' Parliament blog)



Minister Nazri
explained this latest mind-blogging stance of the federal government.
“Christians in Sabah and Sarawak need not worry over this issue because it is a common tradition there. I have been to an Iban church service and I heard ‘Allah’ used there.”
On why the different positions for East and West Malaysia, this clown proffered that

the situation in the Peninsula is different as ‘Allah’ was only introduced into Christian worship and publication a few years ago”.

“Muslims in Peninsular Malaysia cannot accept it as ‘Allah’ was never used in Christian preaching until recently and they questioned the motive behind the substitution of Tuhan for ‘Allah".

On this explanation, can it then be taken that the Sikhs in West Malaysia are free to continue to use ‘Allah’ which has been in their liturgy, so I’m told, for as long as the faith has been practised?

And if so, why can’t the Christians here do likewise?

This wannabe stand up comic then proceeds to claw himself into this deep inextricable abyss and spews the rubbish that we have grown accustomed to hear from him.

Christians should recognise that using ‘Allah’ in their worship and publications is sensitive to Muslims, he says.

Therefore, he says, the government has a duty to stop acts of disrespect and provocation that inflame religious and racial feelings in the nation even if there was no law that stated that these acts were wrong.

Acts of worship where Allah is called upon is disrespectful and provocative?

Nazri cites as an example the cow head case in Shah Alam where, he says, although there was no law to criminalise cow-head stomping, the government moved to act against those perpetrators.

The logic being that, if it was not criminal to put one’s foot on a cow head, yet the government has taken action against the cow-head stompers of Shah Alam, surely we can understand that even though there is no law criminalising the use of “Allah” by adherents of other faiths besides Islam, the government can and must take action.

In case Nazri thinks we do not know, those stompers were his own party members, who were probably acting on the instructions of party higher-ups.

Certainly, we know that Home Minister Hishamuddin made a valiant attempt to defend their actions via a televised press conference. We all know about that one, don’t we?

Was the cow-head stomping an act of worship by the perpetrators, that this Minister should equate it with the mention of Allah by Christians in their worship?

If so, can someone please lodge a report against these stompers for deviant practises with the Jabatan Agama Islam Selangor.

This government bright spark insists that it was not the government that took this matter to court, thus leading to the crisis we now face in the country. He blames the Catholic Archibishop.

He has forgotten that had the Home Minsitry not gotten mischievous and issued its ban order, none of this would have happened.

This next statement takes the cake.

“Banning the use of ‘Allah’ by Christians was a pre-emptive move to stop outbreaks of religious violence in the nation”.

This fool of a minister, with reference to the finding by Justice Lau Bee Lan that “there was no evidence to show that the use of ‘Allah’ (by non-Muslims) could incite violence”, alludes to the attacks on the churches last week as proving that the government was right in its pre-emptive strike.

I had tea with some UMNO people early this week. They confirmed that UMNO was behind the initial church attacks.

Another Malaysiakini report today has it that a cabinet reshuffle may be underway.

Would it be too much to hope that we might all be put out of a misery of having to endure this fool anymore?
-"People's Parliament"

3 comments:

ktteokt said...

Already we had THE HIGH COURT OF MALAYA and THE HIGH COURT OF BORNEO for judicial purposes but now it appears that we will soon have THE PARLIAMENT OF MALAYA and THE PARLIAMENT OF BORNEO, each enacting different sets of laws for the peninsula and East Malaysia! So much for 1 MALAYSIA!

ktteokt said...

Are we living in TWO DIFFERENT COUNTRIES? 1 MALAYSIA? My footlah!

Anonymous said...

Nazri said it was not for the Courts to decide on the issue. Well, when he said the word can be used in East Malaysian States of Sabah and Sarawak, it was essentially his political opinion rather than anything else. So, no Courts, no politics. Back to square one. Not 1Malaysia.
malsia1206