Didapati hanya sekitar 5 peratus Melayu yang menjaga
Solat Fardhu 5 kali sehari.
Solat adalah tiang Islam,   tanpa solat runtuh
keIslaman seseorang.
95 % Melayu hanya pura-pura Islam dan tinggal nama
sahaja.
Penjara, pusat dadah, UMNO dan ward aids Malaysia
dipenuhi oleh golongan Murtad ini.


http://www.sydneyanglicans.net/southerncross/articles/muslim_women_who_share_a_secret_love/

Islam, rather than Western culture’s focus on sexual
freedom, shapes day-to-day reality for a third of the
world’s Anglicans. Malay women who convert to
Christianity are forced to live a double-life. KATRIN
ARNHOLZ spoke to one of them. 

Under Kamariah’s* photo on her Malaysian
identification card is her ethnicity. Right under that
her gender, and to the left: Islam. But the
28-year-old woman with the angular eyeglasses and the
broad smile is Christian. She belongs to the largest
ethnic group in Malaysia—the Malays. According to the
official census, Malays number 65 per cent of the
population. In Malaysia, Kamariah says, a Malay is a
Muslim by definition. “A Malay is a Muslim. Full
stop,” she says. Few dare to go public if they convert
to Christianity. 

One man who has publicly converted is the well-known
yachtsman, Datuk Azhar Mansor (a close friend of Tun
Mahathir Mohamed), who in 1999 sailed around the world
in 190 days without the aid of an engine. The main
mast of his yacht broke around Cape Horn. He managed,
nevertheless, to reach the Faulkland Islands to repair
the mast. What happened on the way between the cape
and the islands is subject to speculation. The
internet is full of questions by Muslims as to whether
Mansor – who no longer lives in Malaysia – is really
converted. And there is much discussion among
Christians as well. Kamariah’s version is that Mansor,
about to drown in the sea, was saved by a dolphin, and
that Jesus appeared to him soon after. (not told
publicly that Mahathir send Malaysian Air Force to
repair/replace Azhar's sailing equipment).

Lina Joy did not intend to become famous when she
requested officially to leave Islam in 2001. She
succeeded in changing her name, Azlina Jailani, to
Lina Joy, but the government’s National Registration
Department refused to delete ‘Islam’ from her
identification card. For such decisions, it is not the
government departments that are responsible, but the
Syariah Court – the court in Malaysia which supervises
Muslims’ adherence to Islam. To the disadvantage of
Lina Joy, the judge ruled, ‘As the plaintiff is a
Malay, she is subjected to the laws of Islam until she
dies’. 

She has appealed the decision several times, and her
latest appeal will appear soon before the High Court
in Kuala Lumpur. Then it will be determined whether
the Syariah Court has jurisdiction over those people
who want to convert out of Islam. Article 11 (of the
Malaysian Constitution) promises freedom of religion.
“It is true for all the other faiths, but not for
Muslims who want to leave Islam”, says Kamariah. 

She and the 34-year-old Natasha* are the only ethnic
Malays in the international church they visit. “Many
Malay Christians hide themselves and meet secretly”,
explains Kamariah. They are still registered as
Muslims. In two months, Kamariah will start a business
which plans weddings. But the business intends to do
much more: it will also offer free pre-marital
counselling. The counselling will be based on the
principles of the Bible. Kamariah had to negotiate
this plan with the relevant authorities - and the plan
was approved. 
The identification card of converted Muslims becomes a
problem when they want to marry, because by Islamic
law, a Muslim can only marry another Muslim. 

“The only way to get legally married is to marry a
Malay Christian who is also still on paper a Muslim”,
says the young woman. “But then our children will also
be Muslims on paper, and their children, and the
circle is never broken. But if we want to change our
identification cards, it won’t happen without
problems.” The Syariah Court can decide to put me in
prison”, explains Kamariah. Therefore she does not
think now of marrying or of changing her identity
card, and she lives – like most single adults in
Malaysia – with her Muslim parents. They do not know
that their daughter is a Christian. “Here I must be
careful whom I confide in”, Kamariah says. “Some
Malays are tolerant, but others would not hesitate to
turn me in to the Syariah Court. If they didn’t turn
me in, then others might think that they were
cooperating to hide me – and that is not good at all
in Islam.” 

Kamariah became a Christian in 2000 after being in a
two-year relationship with a Chinese Christian. “I was
always envious; he had a relationship with his God. My
God was far away, unattainable,” she remembers. “His
prayers were answered. Mine were not.” So Kamariah
decided one day to entrust her life to Jesus. Since
then much has changed. Even though she does not speak
with her parents about Christianity, she prays in her
house. “Suddenly my mother took the Koran verses off
the wall and instead hung up a picture of some
flowers”, she says happily. One day, she hopes, she
will not have to hide her faith any longer. “I wish
that more Malay Christians would come out publicly and
go to church and not meet secretly. That would be a
break-through in our society.” 






__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Tired of spam?  Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around 
http://mail.yahoo.com 


Alternatif-Net : A Discussion Forum Focusing on Issues Related to Justice
            Forum Perbincangan Maya Yang Fokus Kepada Isu Keadilan

Disclaimer: Messages sent do not represent the stand of the Barisan Alternatif 
(BA) unless otherwise stated

Complaint : Send to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To Sub    : Send blank e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To Unsub  : Send blank e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/alternatif-net/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/alternatif-net/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
    mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 


Reply via email to