By Terence Netto
Jun 7, 11 | MalaysiaKini
COMMENT Cynics may scoff but Anwar Ibrahim’s tack with regard to the rights of non-Muslims in Malaysia remains consistent, as the latest meeting between the PKR leadership and representatives of the Malaysian Consultative Council of Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Sikhism and Taoism (MCCBCHST) indicated.
Some attendees at last night’s meeting in Kuala Lumpur could not help but recall a similar encounter between PKR and MCCBCHST in Petaling Jaya in December 2007 that dealt with the same issues but was held in a less fraught atmosphere than presently prevailing.
Then, matters to do with forced conversions, temple demolitions and the incipient rise of the ‘Allah’ issue brought furrows to non-Muslim brows.
Now these issues have abated somewhat, not so much from the application of legislative or administrative nostrums as from an apparent let-up in the zeal of state functionaries intent on enforcing the letter more than the spirit of the law.
However, in the apparent lull, have risen conspiracy theorists, conjuring sinister plots about one religious community’s aim to supersede Islam’s special place in Malaysia’s constitutional order.
Few things can be more baleful than a vacant, desperate disposition with idle time to spare.
Anwar Ibrahim, who has plenty to be desperate over these days, but unlike conspiracy theorists has a stored mind for resource, has come up with the ‘maqasid syariah’ as response to the scare tactics of desperados.
In Anwar’s formulation, the ‘maqasid syariah’, said to be the higher objectives of Islamic law, is almost Jeffersonian in resonance.
Al-Shatibi, the 12th century Islamic jurist who first enunciated the maqasid syariah as the protection of religion, life, property, intellect and human dignity, in Anwar’s telling, appears to have been an ideological precursor to Thomas Jefferson whose incandescent “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness” defined the American search for self-fulfillment.
Anwar spoke at last night’s meeting with the MCCBCHST representatives about the twin pillars of PKR’s stance towards the religious question: uphold the status of Islam as the country’s official religion and respect for the rights of non-Muslims to freedom of worship.
Anwar said the charter of the maqasid syariah would be the guiding light of PKR’s adherence to the twin pillars.
As if in intuitive corroboration of this stance of the PKR leader, two newly-empowered PAS leaders, Dr Siti Mariah Mahmud and Dzulkefly Ahmad, sauntered into the meeting after it had started and were immediately made welcome, a healthy sign of emerging convergence between PKR and Pas on religious questions.
Siti Mariah, MP for Kota Raja, was elected deputy chief of Wanita Pas and Dzulkefly polled strongly in the election for the party’s central working committee.
Both federal legislators belong to the wing of PAS that wants broader engagement with non-Muslims, a stance Islamic supremacists disdain because it implies parity between Islamic and non-Islamic religions.
The MCCBCHST wants to engage with the newly-elected PAS leadership as part of ongoing efforts to build consensus on a broad range of issues.
The MCCBCHST has also gone on record as wanting to talk with the right-wing Malays rights body, Perkasa, which has caused widespread unease with its strident calls to Malays to wake up to alleged erosion of their rights and privileges.
Anwar and the loose opposition coalition, Pakatan Rakyat, he leads have navigated the potentially treacherous shoals between the non-Muslim demand for rights and Muslim constitutional imperatives by talking up the paramount importance of justice as an Islamic value.
By introducing the anodyne of the maqasid syariah, Anwar and Islamic intellectuals in PKR, joined hopefully by the outward-looking leaders PAS had endorsed at party elections last weekend, would be able to raise the level of dialogue on the vital questions of the day in Malaysian society.
The MCCBCHST emphasised at its meeting yesterday that it was concerned not just with religious rights per se, but with a host of issues – poverty, education, gender equality, institutional decay, etc – that periodically sizzle in the national arena.
As Reverend Thomas Phillips, current president of MCCBCHST, said in preliminary remarks at yesterday’s meeting that his organization wanted to explore the opinions of political leaders across the ideological spectrum in Malaysia “so that we can know what they feel and they can know what our views are.”
Dialogue, he said, was the best way to a “better future for our country”, a sentiment that Anwar expanded on when he offered his view that “extremism and a narrow parochialism” endangered the “twin pillars” of the Malaysian concordat on religion – Islam’s official status and non-Muslim freedom of worship.
He assured his interlocutors that PKR and Pakatan’s conception of Islam would not countenance the deprivation of the right of non-Muslims to practice their faith.
His interpretation of the maqasid syariah forbade the violation of human dignity such a deprivation would entail.
#1 by Jeffrey on Tuesday, 7 June 2011 - 5:10 pm
“Maqasid” has no Malay or Arabic translation. Anwar plucked it from medieval obscurity – from Al-Shatibi, the 12th century Islamic jurist. It is supposed to mean “the higher objectives of Islamic Law”. It’s “Jeffersonian resonance” is based on its emphasis on essence/substance (justice freedom etc) than form (rituals literal interpretation and procedures).
Now there are 2 pillars of Federal Constitution here : (i) the status of Islam as the country’s official religion and (ii) respect for the rights of non-Muslims to freedom of worship. Although Non Muslims can practise the other religions freely (whether under BN or PR) per (ii) the real issue is whether per (i) as Official Religion the status of Islam is superior and take precedence over the other religions
When Anwar told MCCBCHST that the charter of the maqasid syariah would be the guiding light of PKR’s adherence to the twin pillars, isn’t Anwar indirectly saying that, as far as PKR goes, Sharia is superior – the background norm to which (i) and (ii) are “guided” (meaning interpretated) through the prism of Islamic Sharia perspectives?
#2 by Jeffrey on Tuesday, 7 June 2011 - 5:18 pm
Anwar assured that PKR and Pakatan’s conception of Islam “would not countenance the deprivation of the right of non-Muslims to practice their faith” and that maqasid syariah “forbade the violation of human dignity such a deprivation would entail”. (Here he is trying to reconcile Islam with democracy). 2 Questions: (1) In what way is maqasid syariah different from Pak Lah’s Islam Hadari? (2) How is it different from ideology of an Islamic Theocratic state? Every Islamic theocratic state has espoused that non-Muslims could practise their faith and forbids “violation of human dignity”. Which Islamic theocratic state has espoused otherwise? If there is, I have yet to hear of it.
#3 by Jeffrey on Tuesday, 7 June 2011 - 5:32 pm
Islamic scholars from IKIM rejected religious pluralism, arguing that accepting it meant other religions were equal to Islam. Ikim said “not all religions were equal”.Datuk Seri Nazri Aziz said: “I disagree that Islam is more superior than other religions, that I cannot accept. I believe Islam does not ask you to say things like that. Nazri’s position is consitent with MCCBCHST’s position -The government must prove that every religious community can freely practise their belief without being forced to CONFORM to the rules of other religions (meaning indirectly the Official Religion).
When Anwar said the charter of the maqasid syariah would be the guiding light of PKR’s adherence to the twin pillars of the Constitution, his position is nearer IKIM’s in that something like maqasid syariah cannot be a “guiding light” to another (Constitution) unless that something is superior – manifestly and literally, so since maqasid syariah means “higher objectives of Islamic law”.
Where does Lord President Salleh Abas Federal Court decision in Che Omar bin Che Soh v Public Prosecutor that Malaysian state/constitution is secular stand next to Maqasid Syariah higher objectives of Islamic Law???
#4 by Jeffrey on Tuesday, 7 June 2011 - 5:35 pm
This is not a simple case of Anwar speaking different language to different audiences to score political brownie points. He was speaking to the Malaysian Consultative Council of Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Sikhism and Taoism or MCCBCHST!
#5 by Loh on Tuesday, 7 June 2011 - 9:29 pm
///Anwar spoke at last night’s meeting with the MCCBCHST representatives about the twin pillars of PKR’s stance towards the religious question: uphold the status of Islam as the country’s official religion and respect for the rights of non-Muslims to freedom of worship.
Anwar said the charter of the maqasid syariah would be the guiding light of PKR’s adherence to the twin pillars.///
Whether Anwar is guided by street lamp or torch light, he wants to see his way. He should be moving towards respecting the secular constitution of the country which allows freedom of worship. He can be inspired by the charter of masqasid syariah or even the teaching of communism. But what is important is the action.
#6 by Jeffrey on Wednesday, 8 June 2011 - 6:07 am
Yes what is important is action but no one knows what his action will be until he is in power and until then he is measured by what he says, whether it is principled and of “Jeffersonian resonance” or plain gobbledygook (a phrase popularised by ex judge N H Chan) (like his Sept take over of Federal Govt by 30+ crossovers)….
I appreciate that he walks a tight rope trying to reconcile and bridge for political objectives the diametrical opposite ideological positions of PAS & DAP, Islam and secular democratic leanings but what he says does come across with irony in that in the wake of PAS’s ‘Erdrogans’ victory in party polls he seems to define PR’s path towards an “enlightened” theocratic Islamic state based on maqasid syariah at the time when his nemesis TDM alleges PAS is influenced away from it by Karpal Singh and DAP!