Posts Tagged ‘Religion’

SMC – 25 years of guidance

May 30th, 2007
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Divine guidance
 
 

SUGANTHI SUPARMANIAM

Students are all ears during a lesson at one of the SMC centres in Klang Valley.
Students are all ears during a lesson at one of the SMC centres in Klang Valley.

A tuition centre set up to help Indian students from the lower income group uses religious terms to motivate and help them perform better academically. Today, it celebrates its 25th anniversary and is basking in its recognition within the community.

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TWENTY-FIVE years ago, tuition centres were set up in four main towns in the country specifically to help Indian students from the lower income group who are poor in studies. » Read more: SMC – 25 years of guidance

Crucial decision in Lina Joy case

May 30th, 2007
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Crucial decision in Lina Joy case
 

By SHAILA KOSHY

KUALA LUMPUR: The Federal Court judgment today on the Lina Joy appeal will be a historic one with legal and social repercussions, whichever way the decision goes.  

This decision by the apex court will affect one’s constitutional freedom to choose one’s religion as well as who one can marry, especially for those who want to renounce Islam and for people who convert to Islam but later want to revert to their former religion. 

The judgment, which was reserved on July 4 last year, will clarify whether conversion is a religious matter or a constitutional matter. 

Lina Joy, 42, who was born to a Malay Muslim couple, became a Christian when she was 26. 

The sales assistant has taken her case all the way to the Federal Court because unless the government recognises her conversion, she cannot get married under civil law. 

While Lina managed – the second time around – to get the National Registration Department to change her name from Azlina Jailani in 1999, accepting that she had renounced Islam, it refused to remove the word “Islam” from her MyKad. 

The NRD said it could not do so without a syariah court order certifying she had renounced Islam. 

As long as the word “Islam” remains on her identity card, Lina cannot marry her Christian boyfriend, a cook, under the Law Reform (Marriage and Divorce) Act 1976. 

In 2001, she took her case against the NRD director-general, the Government and the Federal Territory Religious Council to the High Court. 

She lost – Justice Faiza Tamby Chik held that Malays could not renounce Islam because a Malay was defined in the Constitution as “a person who professes the religion of Islam,” adding it was the syariah court that had the jurisdiction in matters related to apostasy. 

Lina appealed to the Court of Appeal and lost again, this time in a majority decision – Justices Abdul Aziz Mohamed and Arifin Zakaria upheld the decision of the NRD but Justice Gopal Sri Ram said it was null and void. 

In 2006, she got leave to appeal to the Federal Court and asked the panel comprising Chief Justice Ahmad Fairuz Sheikh Abdul Halim, Chief Judge of Sabah and Sarawak Richard Malanjum and Federal Court Justice Alauddin Mohd Sheriff these questions: 

  • WAS the NRD entitled to require a person to produce a certificate or a declaration or an order from the syariah court before deleting “Islam” from his or her identity card; 

  • DID the NRD correctly construe its powers under the National Registration Regulations 1990 when it imposed the above requirement, which is not expressly provided for in the regulations?; and 

  • WAS the landmark case Soon Singh vs Perkim Kedah – which held that syariah courts have the authority over the civil courts to hear cases of Muslims renouncing Islam – correctly decided? 

    While Datuk Cyrus Das appeared for Lina Joy, Senior Federal Counsel Datuk Umi Khaltum Jamid appeared for the NRD director-general and the Government and Sulaiman Abdullah appeared for the religious council. 

  • PM says inter-cultural dialogue is way forward

    May 25th, 2007
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    and yet we can’t even have dialogues in our own backyard…what a joke 🙂

    Inter-cultural dialogue ‘is the way forward’
    source

    DIALOGUE between cultures and civilisations has now become another pre-condition to achieving the global goals of peace, security and prosperity, the prime minister said.

    Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi said dialogue could bridge the gap and generate greater understanding between cultures and civilisations especially between the West and the world of Islam. » Read more: PM says inter-cultural dialogue is way forward

    Pas targets non-Muslims next with new headquarters

    May 22nd, 2007
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    "Party president Datuk Seri Abdul Hadi Awang also spoke about Pas’ desire to win over more non-Malay support. But he sidestepped a question on whether the party was willing to withdraw its Islamic state agenda, which the DAP is vehemently against.

    "What’s more important to highlight is our success in Kelantan and the good response by non-Muslims to us," he said. "

     
    DAP+PKR=OK
    PKR+PAS=OK
    DAP+PAS=NOT OK
     
    So, DAP+PKR+PAS= ???
     
     
    Pas targets non-Muslims next with new headquarters
     
     

    KUALA LUMPUR: Pas yesterday opened its swanky new multi-million-ringgit national headquarters to mark what its leaders said was the party’s determination to maintain a central role in the opposition.

    » Read more: Pas targets non-Muslims next with new headquarters

    Vishu means a lot to the Malayalee

    May 18th, 2007
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    Vishu means a lot to the Malayalee
     

    By EDWARD RAJENDRA

    Vishu is the New Year celebration for the Malayalees and is celebrated in the Malayalam month of medam.  

    Some 350 people including families and friends gathered at the Malayalee clubhouse, Mamangam Illam, in Teluk Pulai, Klang, recently. 

    Klang Malayalee Association president Rajan Menon said the celebration was a success as a huge crowd turned up to share the joy of the New Year. 

    For a better year: Members of the association’s women’s wing offering prayers at the event.

    “For Keralites, Vishu means a lot as it fosters a spirit of closeness among loved ones. Vishu has nothing to do with religion though it is observed with religious solemnity,” he said. 

    He added that Malayalee buy new clothes for the occasion and the elders of the family distribute money to the children as by doing so, their children will be blessed with prosperity in the future. 

    Rajan said 11 authentic Malayalee vegetarian dishes or vishu sadhya were prepared by the association’s ladies’ wing for lunch that included a sweet dessert known as payasam. 

    Among those at the event was a 20-member troupe from Rotary Club of Ottapalam in Kerala, India. 

    They are in Malaysia for an official family-cum-friendship visit. 

    Other guests included the Indian High Commission First Secretary V.K.V. Raman, Mamangam patrons Datuk Ravindran Menon, Datuk Muraly Daran Menon and Klang Municipal councillor P.S. Maniam.