Christian Churches support Malaysian Catholics under attack over Allah's name
Kuala Lumpur, Feb 13, 2014: Catholic and Protestant Churches around the world have
expressed their support for Christian leaders in Malaysia, who have come under attack
and increasing pressure as a trial approaches against non-Muslim Malaysians using
the word Allah.
The World Methodist Council (WMCI) is the latest body to express
its solidarity, shocked and dismayed by the Court of Appeal's ruling in October to
bar the Catholic weekly, Herald, from using the word.
In a letter addressed
to the Christian Federation of Malaysia, WMC general secretary Bishop Ivan Abrahams
wrote that the decision was a "rather troubling" attempt by the courts in Malaysia
to allow one religion to take ownership over a universal term. The World Methodist
Council represents over 80 million people, spread over 130 countries around the world.
"The
verdict has the possibility to create unnecessary division between Christians and
Muslims in Malaysia," Bishop Abrahams said. The prelate further noted that the use
of the word God in a believer's mother tongue was "not something that authorities
should be seen as politicising". The children of Abraham share the same God, and a
claim to exclusive ownership over the name would constitute a divisive action.
The
prayers of millions of WMC members follow the solidarity expressed last week by the
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA), which stated in a letter, "This is
not just a matter of faith, but also a reality of history and language." ELCA leaders
slammed Malaysian authorities for last month's raid when they seized 300 copies of
the Bible.
Even the United Nations weighed in on the Allah issue in Malaysia,
when its Special Rapporteur on freedom of religion and belief, Heiner Bielefeldt,
called on the Malaysian government to reverse the court's decision to ban the Catholic
weekly from using the word. The problem is not only terminological. Recently, Malaysia's
Catholic community has come in for direct attacks, with gravestones and tombs desecrated
in a cemetery and Molotov cocktails thrown at a church.
The dispute over the
use of Allah's name by non-Muslims broke out when the government took to court the
Herald, a Catholic weekly, and its editor, Fr Andrew Lawrence. In October last year,
a Court of Appeal ruled against the Catholic paper using Allah's name. An appeal was
filed against the decision and the case is scheduled to be heard on 5 March. The appeal
is not only designed to uphold minority rights, but also restore harmony and promote
peaceful coexistence among the nation's ethnic groups.
In Malaysia, a nation
of more than 28 million people, mostly Muslims (60 per cent), Christians are the third
largest religious group (after Buddhists) with more than 2.6 million members.
A
Latin-Malay dictionary published 400 years ago shows that the word 'Allah' was already
in use to describe the Biblical God in the local language. (Source: AsiaNews)