Tuesday, November 04, 2014

In Malaysia, ‘Allah’ is reserved for Muslims only...

As the students knelt in a circle at a Christian kindergarten near the shores of the South China Sea, a 6-year-old girl in pigtails read out a chapter from a children’s Bible: “Sepuluh hukum dari Allah” — God’s Ten Commandments.

Technically, she broke the law.

According to a series of government orders and rulings by Malaysia’s Islamic councils, the word for God in the Malay language — “Allah” — is reserved for Muslims. Malay-language Bibles are banned everywhere except inside churches. State regulations ban a list of words, including Allah, in any non-Muslim context.

Malaysia, with its collage of ethnic groups and religions, has a long history of tensions over issues ranging from dietary differences to the economic preferences enshrined in Malaysian law for the Malay Muslim majority.

But there is probably no dispute more fundamental and more emotionally charged than who owns the word God. Full story...

Related posts:
  1. Another Allah case arises in Malaysia...
  2. Growing Islamic fundamentalism seen pushing Malays to quit Malaysia...
  3. Malaysia's Allah issue seen from afar...
  4. Malaysian church attacked amid Allah dispute...
  5. Allah: Malaysia's God problem erupts, tarnishing moderate image...
  6. Call to burn Bibles heightens Malaysian election tensions...
  7. Christians in Malaysia to be banned from using the word "Allah..."
  8. Malaysia seizes 15,000 Bibles...

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