A Kuala Lumpur police officer inspects damage to the Metro Tabernacle Church, which was destroyed by a fire bomb a little after midnight on Friday. (AP Photo/Mark Baker)
Malaysia Churches Hit Over ‘Allah’ Row
Kuala Lumpur. Three churches in Malaysia were attacked with firebombs,
causing extensive damage to one, as Muslims pledged Friday to prevent
Christians from using the word “Allah,” escalating religious tensions
in the multiracial country.
Many Malay Muslims, who make up 60
percent of the population, are incensed by a recent High Court decision
to overturn a ban on Roman Catholics using “Allah” as a translation for
God in the Malay-language edition of their main newspaper, the Herald.
The
government says Allah, an Arabic word that predates Islam, is exclusive
to the faith and by extension to Malays. It refuses to make an
exception, even though the Herald’s Malay edition is read only by
Christian indigenous tribes in the remote states of Sabah and Sarawak.
At
Friday prayers at two main mosques in downtown Kuala Lumpur, young
Muslim worshipers carried banners and gave fiery speeches, vowing to
defend Islam.
“We will not allow the word Allah to be
inscribed in your churches,” one speaker shouted into a loudspeaker at
the Kampung Bahru mosque. About 50 other people carried posters reading
“Heresy arises from words wrongly used” and “Allah is only for us.”
“Islam
is above all. Every citizen must respect that,” Ahmad Johari, who
attended prayers at the National Mosque, said. “I hope the court will
understand the feeling of the majority Muslims of Malaysia. We can
fight to the death over this issue.”
The demonstrations were
held inside the mosque compounds to follow a police order against
protests on the streets. Participants dispersed peacefully afterwards.
Malaysia
is often held up as a model for other Islamic countries because of its
economic development, progressive society and generally peaceful
coexistence between the Malay majority and the ethnic Chinese and
Indian minorities who are mostly Christians, Buddhists and Hindus.
The
Allah controversy, however, has the potential to shatter that carefully
nurtured harmony, drive a deep racial wedge and scare away sorely
needed foreign investment as the country struggles to emerge from the
global financial crisis.
Prime Minister Najib Razak condemned
the attacks on the churches by unidentified assailants, who struck
before dawn in different suburbs of Kuala Lumpur. He said the
government would “take whatever steps it can to prevent such acts.”
Home Minister Hishammuddin Hussein said the country’s leaders were very concerned about the situation.
“We
don’t want this to spread out into something else. I am not only
assuring the minorities, I am assuring all Malaysians — anybody who is
in Malaysia — that they are safe,” Hussein said.
In the first
attack, the ground-level office of the three-story Metro Tabernacle
Church was destroyed in a blaze set off by a firebomb thrown by
attackers on motorcycles soon after midnight, police said. The worship
areas on the upper two floors were undamaged and there were no
injuries.
Kuala Lumpur police Chief Mohamad Sabtu Osman said
that a witness saw four people on two motorcycles breaking the glass
front of the Metro Tabernacle church and throwing an incendiary object
inside before fleeing the scene.He said police found a wrench, an empty
gasoline can and two scorched motorcycle helmets on church premises.
Two
other churches were attacked hours later, with one sustaining minor
damage while the other was not damaged. Church officials had earlier
said a fourth church was attacked but they later retracted the report
saying they were misinformed.
National police chief Musa Hassan said the report of the fourth attack was a rumor.
No arrests have been made.
The
tribespeople of Sabah and Sarawak, who speak only Malay, have always
referred to God as “Allah,” an Arabic word used not only by Muslims but
also by Christians in Muslim-majority countries such as Egypt, Syria
and Indonesia.
Many Malaysian Muslims say its use by others would mislead people, tempting them to convert to Christianity.
Since
the verdict, hateful comments and threats against Christians have been
posted widely on the Internet, but this was the first time the
controversy turned destructive.
The backlash against the court
verdict has reinforced complaints by minorities that they face
institutional discrimination. They say it is almost impossible to get
permission to build new churches and temples. Some Hindu temples have
been demolished in the past.
Court verdicts in religious disputes usually favor the country’s Muslims.
Associated Press
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Artemus Jones
5:12 PM January 10, 2010Great piece about this issue by Marina Mahathir, the daughter of former Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, in her blog (pity she didn't follow her dad into politics):
http://rantingsbymm.blogspot.com/2010/01/confident-people-do-not-get-confused.html