Jan. 13, 2010 - Issue #743: Broken Embraces
Dyer Straight
Uneasy peace
Malaysia's religious squabbles threaten years of hard work
In the late '80s, when I was in the Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia, a
friend suggested that I drive out into the desert near Jubail to see the
oldest extant Christian church in the world. And there it was, surrounded by
a chain-link fence to keep casual visitors and foreign archaeologists out.
Experts who saw the site before it was closed said that the church was built
by Nestorian Christians, and was probably used from the fourth to the ninth
century.
Its existence embarrassed the Saudi government, which prefers to believe that
Arabia went straight from paganism to Islam. But it confirmed the assumption
of most historians that Christianity was flourishing in the Arabian Peninsula
in the centuries before the rise of Islam. So what did these Arabic-speaking
Christians call God? Allah, of course.
I mention this because last week the Malaysian High Court struck down a
three-year old ban on non-Muslims using the word Allah when they speak of God
in the Malay language. The court's decision was followed by firebomb attacks
on three Christian churches in Kuala Lumpur on Thursday night, and on Friday
protesters at mosques in Kuala Lumpur carried placards reading "Allah is only
for us."
Prime Minister Najib Razak condemned the attacks on the churches, but he
supports the ban on Christians using the word "Allah" in Malay and is
appealing the decision.
"We ... have the right to use the word 'Allah,'" said Rev. Lawrence Andrew,
the editor of the Herald, the newspaper of the Catholic Church in Malaysia,
whose use of the word in its Malay-language edition triggered the crisis.
Parliamentary opposition leader Lim Kit Siang simply observed that "The term
'Allah' was used to refer to God by Arabic-speaking Christians before
Arabic-speaking Muslims existed."
Of course it was. Arabic-speaking Christians predate the rise of Islam by
three hundred years, and what else were they going to call God? The word
"Allah" is a contraction of the Arabic definite article al- and the noun
'ilah, which means god. In parts of ancient Arabia it once referred to the
creator-god (who was not the only god), but for a very long time it has meant
the One God.
This Arabic word was imported into the Malay language by converts to Islam,
which arrived in the region several centuries before Christianity. All ethnic
Malays are considered to be Muslim under Malaysian law, but there are
numerous Malay-speakers, especially in northern Borneo, who are Christian and
not ethnically Malay. They also use the word Allah for God.
What's the harm in that? Why are Malaysia's Muslims so paranoid? The real
paranoia, alas, is ethnic.
Malaysia is an ethnic time-bomb that has turned itself into a peaceful and
prosperous country by a huge effort of will. The original population was
mostly Malay, but under British rule huge numbers of Indian and Chinese
immigrants were imported to work the mines and plantations. By independence,
Malays were only 60 percent of the population, and much poorer than the more
recent arrivals. They resented the past, the present, and the probable
future.
After several bouts of savage anti-Chinese and anti-Indian rioting, the
country arrived at its current, highly successful compromise. The Malays
dominate politics, but the Chinese and the Indians thrive in trade and
commerce—and most people understand that they are ultimately in the
same boat, which is called Malaysia.
The state spends a lot of money to raise the living standards of the Malays,
and gives them preference for university places and government jobs. They
haven't done badly out of this deal, but nevertheless they feel perpetually
insecure. Since they are all Muslims, while few other Malaysians are, they
also feel their religion is under threat. Some respond by being aggressively
intolerant of minorities.
Not all Malays behave this way. Major Muslim organizations, including the
Islamic political party, PAS, have agreed that the other "Abrahamic
religions" —Christians and Jews—may call their God Allah in
Malay. But it's getting ugly, and it's high time for the Malaysian government
to stop playing along with the extremists.
It should take a lesson from the early Muslims of Arabia. Both the
archaeological and the textual evidence suggest that most Arabs in northern
Arabia and along the Gulf Coast had already been Christian for several
centuries when Islam first appeared in the seventh century. They were swiftly
conquered by Muslim armies, but they were not forcibly converted.
As in all early Islamic empires, Christians had to pay higher taxes, but they
were allowed to keep their property and practice their religion. It is highly
improbable that they were forced to change the word they used for God. They
did gradually convert to Islam, but the last Christian churches in the region
probably survived into the early ninth century.
The Christians, Hindus, animists and others who make up 40 percent of
Malaysia's people pay higher taxes, in the sense that they subsidise the
poorer Malay/Muslim majority. Few of them will ever convert to Islam, but
they are not its enemy either. Malaysia has achieved a fragile but workable
compromise that gives its people a good life. It should not endanger it so
frivolously. V
Gwynne Dyer is a London-based independent journalist whose articles are
published in 45 countries. His column appears each week in Vue
Weekly.
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