http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/international/no-show-for-bible-burning-fest-in-malaysia/568324?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=jgnewsletter

No-Show for 'Bible Burning Fest' in Malaysia
Teo Cheng Wee - Straits Times | January 29, 2013

Kuala Lumpur. A "Bible-burning festival" organized through anonymous fliers 
fizzled out last Sunday when nobody turned up for the event at the proposed 
location in Penang.

Fifty police and local council enforcement officers were stationed from early 
morning at a field in Butterworth where the 10 a.m. "festival" was supposed to 
be taking place.

Penang police had warned the public a few days earlier not to take part in the 
activity.

"Nothing happened, thank God," said Seberang Perai municipal councillor Francis 
Ong, who is in charge of the area and was at the scene. About a dozen 
journalists were there as well.

Everyone dispersed by noon, Ong told The Straits Times.

But a dispute over the use of the word "Allah" in Malay-language Christian 
publications is unlikely to be resolved soon.

The government has appealed a High Court ruling that first sparked the 
controversy by allowing a Catholic publication to use the word in 2009.

A local Muslim leader has also defended a sermon last Friday by the federal 
Islamic authority on this topic, which had warned against Muslims selling out 
to others.

Malay-language newspaper Berita Harian on Sunday quoted Islamic Dakwah 
Foundation Malaysia founder Dusuki Ahmad as saying the sermon was not meant to 
incite hatred against Christians, but to remind Muslims of the sanctity of 
Islam.

The threat to burn Bibles stoked religious tensions in Malaysia over the past 
week, coming as it did amid the protracted dispute between Christians and 
Muslims over the use of the word "Allah".

On Jan. 19, the hardline Malay rights group Perkasa had called on Muslims to 
burn Malay-language Bibles containing the word "Allah".

A flier talking about a "Bible- burning festival" started circulating soon 
afterwards, supposedly organized by the little-known Anti-Malay Language Bible 
Action Group. 

"Burn, burn… Let's teach them a lesson!" it said. No names were attached to the 
flier.

The tussle over the word "Allah" in Malaysia has become increasingly heated in 
recent years, with many Muslims adamant that it is exclusive to Islam. But some 
Christians argue that they have been using "Allah" in their worship for years 
and that the word predates Islam.

At a press conference on Sunday, Penang police chief Abdul Rahim Hanafi thanked 
the public for not participating in any Bible burning, and urged everyone not 
to bring up issues that will hurt Malaysia's harmony.

He also noted that seven police reports had been lodged against Perkasa 
president Ibrahim Ali, who was the first to raise the idea of burning Bibles. 

"We will be calling him soon to take his statement over the reports," he said.

Following a backlash, Perkasa has begun distancing itself from the 
Bible-burning festival and has denied organising it. It said it was willing to 
meet Christian groups for discussions.

Reprinted courtesy of The Straits Times


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