I think this case should be seen as unique to Malaysia. In Indonesia,
some well-known people, such as Nafa Urbach, converted from Islam to
Christianity and nothing happened to them. They have not lost their
popularity and remain accepted by the general public. The problem with
Malaysia is that under its Constitution, native Malays are
automatically designated as Muslims. Therefore, Lina Joy must surrender her
ethnic status if she wants to renounce Islam. This brings legal problems
whenever a Muslim decides to convert to another religion. It's going to take
some time to solve the legal imbroglio.
Farish is right. In Malaysia, there are more Buddhists or Christians
converting to Islam than Malay Muslims converting to Christianity or another
religion.


On 6/17/07, Sunny <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

   http://www.othermalaysia.org/content/view/83/55/


  *We Are Not A Tribe Called 'Muslims'* 
<http://www.othermalaysia.org/index2.php?option=com_content&do_pdf=1&id=83>

<http://www.othermalaysia.org/index2.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=83&pop=1&page=0&Itemid=55>

<http://www.othermalaysia.org/index2.php?option=com_content&task=emailform&id=83&itemid=55>
   *Written by Farish A. Noor *    Wednesday, 06 June 2007



How long can a country be at the crossroads of its history? It seems that
Malaysia in particular has been stuck at some empasse and has not been able
to move on; a situation that has been aggravated by the culture of
communitarian, sectarian politics that is rife in the nation, and which has
been elevated from the racial to religious register.

The stagnant state of Malaysian popular political culture was demonstrated
recently over the case of the Malaysian citizen Lina Joy, who was born a
Muslim and who has, for the past several years, been appealing to the
justice system of the country to allow her to be recognised as a Christian
after her conversion many years ago. Lina Joy's is not the only case in the
troubled land: At present several other cases are likewise trapped in the
imbroglio that is the Malaysian legal system. Now there is also a case of a
Malaysian who was accidentally switched at birth and brought up by a
Malay-Muslim family, who is claiming the right to be correctly recognised as
a Malaysian of Chinese origin and who wishes to return to the faith of his
original family…

What is most troubling about all these cases is how Malaysian citizens
like Lina Joy have been summarily denounced, demonised and vilified by
conservative Malay-Muslim groups and movements in Malaysia as a 'traitor' to
her race and religion. Yet we forget that the figures point to the opposite:
That despite everything, there are actually more non-Muslims converting to
Islam on a daily basis than the opposite. Yet oddly enough few of these new
converts to Islam are denounced as 'traitors' to their race and religion. So
why the double standards? And why do the right-wing conservatives in
Malaysia bemoan the insignificant 'loss' of one of their members, while
celebrating the conversion of others?

Lina Joy has now been forced to leave Malaysia in search of asylum
elsewhere, for fear that her life may be in danger. There is ample
justification behind this move, for indeed her life has been threatened by
hate mails, death threats, and public declarations of moral outrage by the
right-wingers. Lina's photo was circulated in the internet, her name and
reputation have been torn to shreds as a result of a malicious hate-campaign
spread through cyberspace, sms-es and public demonstrations. Yet the very
same right-wingers who have preached a discourse of hate now demand that she
returns to Malaysian to stand before a Shariah court, in order to
criminalise herself by declaring herself to be an apostate. Skewered justice
indeed.

Beyond the courtroom debates and legal fine-points, we often forget that
at the heart of the matter is a plight of a Malaysian citizen, who, for
reasons best known to herself, has made what has to be a difficult decision
to change her belief. It has even been suggested by some that Lina Joy's
conversion was something done at a whim, as if converting from one religion
to another is akin to choosing between Coke and Pepsi. To add insult to
injury, this lonely Malaysian who was the subject of so many hate campaigns
is now being treated in the most patronising manner.

Yet I write this as someone who has several Muslim friends who are
converts to Islam, and I know very well how difficult the choice was for
them. In the four cases I know, conversion to Islam led to ostracisation and
alienation from their former relatives and friends, and the lingering
suspicion of their motives. Their commitment to the religion of their
choice, however, remains steadfast and we commend them for their courage and
commitment- So why cant Muslims demonstrate that same understanding for
those who leave Islam for another creed? Why is the anguish of converts to
Islam more legitimate, more real, more authentic, compared to the anguish of
those who convert from Islam?

This reminds me of the words of the late Nurcholish Madjid, the most
prominent Muslim intellectual of postcolonial 20th century Indonesia. He
once said that "we Muslims still cannot go beyond the logic of tribalism,
and we think that being a Muslim is like belonging to a tribe called
'Muslims'. Muslims still think in these parochial, tribalist terms, and that
is why when one person leaves Islam he or she is denouced as a traitor to
the tribe. But Islam is not a tribal entity. Being a Muslim is not like
belonging to the Blue Tribe or the Green Tribe; it is a state of mind, an
existential state of being."

Whatever the circumstances may be at present, and despite the
legal-political obstacles placed before her, Lina Joy is a Christian and she
has been a Christian for the past several years. No ammount of slander,
abuse or threats of violence will change that. She also happens to be a
Malaysian and as Malaysians we should be ashamed that one of our number has
been forced to flee into asylum as she can no longer live in her country.

The right-wing hate-mongers and demagogues who have threatened her safety
have done so partly on the grounds that she constitutes a threat and a
danger to the Muslim community. But in their hate campaigns that have
divided Malaysia's multi-religious nation so clearly, one can argue that
these communitarian and sectarian bigots are the real peddlars of
anti-Malaysian and un-Malaysian ideas and sentiments. Who is the real victim
and who are the real culprits then?
 Last Updated ( Wednesday, 06 June 2007 )



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