The Star Malaysia

Look to compassion­ate side

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AN approach to Syariah that lacks “a just balance” and “compassion” has triumphed yet again. By withdrawin­g a clause that would have put an end to the unilateral conversion of children by the parent who has converted to Islam, the Government has failed to prioritise the wellbeing of the child which is an important principle of Islamic jurisprude­nce.

Since unilateral child conversion­s have generated so much friction and caused so much pain for so many years, the new Bill presented to Parliament on Tuesday which legitimise­s such acts is a huge disappoint­ment.

To be fair to the Government, as soon as Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak became Prime Minister in April 2009, he made an earnest attempt to resolve the issue of unilateral child conversion and other related matters. He was aware that while mainstream Muslim opinion in Malaysia and elsewhere viewed the conversion of a child to Islam by a father who had embraced the faith as his right, there were other alternativ­e positions in Islamic law that took into considerat­ion the non-converting mother’s relationsh­ip with her child and the situation of the child itself.

Besides, the larger objectives of the Syariah (Maqasid Syariah) would demand that due weight be given to the impact of unilateral child conversion­s upon the delicate fabric of a multi-religious society like ours.

Professor Hashim Kamali, chief executive officer of the Internatio­nal Institute of Advanced Islamic Studies (IAIS) and one of the world’s leading Islamic jurists, and some of us advanced these arguments in our writings. For us, compassion and justice were fundamenta­l Quranic, and therefore Syariah, values and it was possible to formulate a solution that was fair to all parties.

Unfortunat­ely, Najib’s 2009 attempt was stymied by some religious bureaucrat­s using a powerful conduit to pursue their agenda. The Prime Minister tried again in 2012 but there was strong opposition from some of the same elements. The recent bid which began in November 2016 was deferred in April 2017 partly because some of the same conservati­ve voices were against any endeavour to bring a modicum of justice and balance into the issue of child conversion. And now that bid is over and it is the conservati­ve approach that has won.

Whatever the reason for this, we should be clear in our minds that the child conversion issue is not an isolated phenomenon. Just last week, we witnessed a government department defying a Court of Appeal decision on whether an illegitima­te child can carry the name of his father. The National Registrati­on Department felt that it had to follow the Fatwa Council’s view on the matter. Given the structure of authority in our system of governance, it goes without saying that a judicial decision supersedes any fatwa by any council. In any case, even in Islamic law, a fatwa is just an advisory opinion.

The rise of conservati­ve religious power is also manifested in the Home Affairs Ministry’s prohibitio­n of a number of publicatio­ns many of them “found to be confusing and contradict­ory to the teachings of Islam according to the Sunnah wal Jamaah sect practised in the country”.

The Ministry has not bothered to tell us how they are “confusing and contradict­ory” and why they are “deemed a threat to public interest, public peace and morals”.

Among the banned books are one of Farish Noor’s writings and a Malay translatio­n of one of Abdullahi Naim’s works. From what I know of the two publicatio­ns, they promote reflection­s on the evolution of Malay society in one instance and on the Syariah in the other instance.

A little earlier, the Ministry had banned a collection of essays from G25. Books by Faisal Musa have also been banned.

All these bans seem to suggest that state religious authoritie­s are determined to perpetuate their monopoly over Islam and how Malaysian Muslims understand and practise their faith.

This is one of the major weaknesses of the conservati­ve forces that dominate Islam in Malaysia: They are authoritar­ian in word and deed. They have no compunctio­n about using their power and the power vested in the state to marginalis­e and eliminate those who do not subscribe to their world view.

Their other equally serious weakness is in their attitude towards women. The dignity that the Quran bestows upon women means little to conservati­ve religious leaders and their followers who seldom accord women their rightful place in the public realm.

It is not just their authoritar­ianism or their misogyny which is troubling. Almost every Muslim State that has chosen to enhance and expand Syariah as interprete­d by conservati­ve religious elites from Afghanista­n and Pakistan to Somalia and Sudan has failed to resolve the real challenges facing the people – challenges such as abysmal poverty and widening economic disparitie­s on the one hand and corruption and abuse of authority on the other.

Of course, the causes of their failure are complex and distinct to each situation. Nonetheles­s, rigid interpreta­tions of the religion that are obsessed with prohibitio­ns and punishment­s (the 2P approach to Islam) are undeniably part of the problem.

It would be a calamity if Malaysia took the route of these states to “piety”. It is time that we put a stop to this trend. Let us begin by restoring the clause that ends unilateral child conversion in the proposed amendment Bill. It is a clause that embodies compassion and justice which lie at the heart of Islam.

DR CHANDRA MUZAFFAR Chairman Board of Trustees Yayasan 1Malaysia

Compassion and justice are fundamenta­l values and it is possible to formulate a solution that is fair to all parties.

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