The
Fasting Month of Ramadhan – A Comment
We are Malay-Muslims, we are entitled…
Syahredzan Johan asks during this holy month, are Malay-Muslims
entitled to better rights than others?
So you are fasting. The sun is bearing down on you, your
stomach is growling and your throat is parched. It is only 12.30 in the
afternoon; you still have hours to go before you may break your fast. All of a
sudden, a non-Muslim person appears before you, enjoying an icy cold can of
your favourite cola. He looks like he is savouring the cola. You could imagine
the sensation of that very same cola filling your throat with diabetes-inducing
caffeine goodness. So you flare up. How dare this person drink in front of you?
Does he have no respect for the holy month of Ramadhan, to be wantonly
quenching his thirst in full view of Muslims? Does he not know that Muslims
form the majority of this country and therefore must be respected?
This is the basic premise prevalent amongst many
Malay-Muslims in this country. Muslims form the majority and therefore they are
entitled to be respected. Malay-Muslim sensitivities must not be offended; the
Malay-Muslim public must be protected from harm, confusion and many other bad
and insidious things that may threaten the ummah. In recent times, these
deep rooted sentiments are brought to the fore by opportunistic politicians.
Thus it appeared as if Malay-Muslims have become more and more intolerant of
minorities.
Malay-Muslims are entitled not to have a Hindu temple in the
vicinity of their housing estate. Malay-Muslims are entitled to dictate what
names others may use to invoke the Creator. Malay-Muslims are entitled to stop
the sale of alcohol beverages and deny the establishment of a cinema in Malay
majority areas.
Every Friday, Malay-Muslims are entitled to abandon their
civic consciousness and park all over the place as if the streets belong to
them. Malays-Muslims are entitled to blare religious ceramahs to every
corner of the neighbourhood and into the wee hours of the night.
The prime minister must be Malay-Muslim, the civil service
must be filled with Malay-Muslims and government bodies are seen as Malay
institutions, tasked first and foremost to safeguard Malay and Muslim
interests.
This premise of entitlement has also been used to justify
the persecution and discrimination against sexual and religious minorities,
purportedly because Article 3 provides that Islam is the religion of the
Federation. So we say that LBGTs do not enjoy protection of the Constitution
because their sexual orientations are against Islam, although we conveniently
forget that other things, like gambling, are also forbidden in Islam but are
still legal in this country. Books are seized and banned and fatwas are
made absolute. In a recent decision, the Federal Court went so far to say that
the integrity of the religion needs to be safeguarded at all costs. Does ‘at
all costs’ include the supremacy of the Federal Constitution as the highest law
of the land?
Make no mistake, this is not about Islam. It is about how we
justify the discrimination, persecution and blatant disregard for fundamental
liberties, all in the name of religion. It is how we view and treat others as
inferior to us because we believe that we are entitled to do so. We permit
transgressions because we labour under this presumption that Malay-Muslims, by
virtue of being Malays and Muslims, are entitled to the best of the country as
they occupy a higher standing than the rest of the rakyat out there.
There is no legal or constitutional basis for this. Article 3
does not make Malaysia an Islamic state and Article 4 expressly provides that
the Federal Constitution is the supreme law of the land. Article 8
provides that every citizen is equal before the law and enjoys equal protection
of the law. The oft quoted Article 153 does not make Malay-Muslims superior in
law or fact, it only provides for the reservation of quotas for Malays and
natives of Sabah and Sarawak in certain matters.
So what if Muslims are the majority? We have such a flawed
understanding of democracy; as if in a democracy, the rights of minorities are
inferior to the rights of the majority. That is why we have a Constitution,
which protects and guarantees the fundamental liberties of citizens from the
tyranny of the majority.
We find ourselves up in arms at the fate of Muslims
minorities in other countries like Thailand, Philippines, Myanmar and
China. We invoke freedom of religion when we hear of minarets being
banned in Switzerland or burqas being banned in France. But if the
rights of Muslim minorities should be protected in the face of the majority,
why is it that we do not have the same vigour to protect the rights our
non-Muslim minorities? Why must the rights of others here only be exercised if
we deem those rights as exercisable?
So before you take offence at someone who is drinking in
front of you while you are fasting, take a step back and think of your
religion. Put aside your sense of entitlement and think; just because you are
fasting, does it mean that everyone else around you must stow away their food
and drinks?
Remember what Islam has instilled in you- not what
Muslims have told you
-
See more at:
http://www.loyarburok.com/2012/08/01/we-are-entitled-malay-muslim/#sthash.cn6uTmB7.dpuf
See
more at: http://www.loyarburok.com/2012/08/01/we-are-entitled-malay-muslim/#sthash.cn6uTmB7.dpuf
No comments:
Post a Comment