| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
A Malaysian court has ruled that non-Muslims cannot use the word Allah to refer to God.
马来西亚一座法院规定,非穆斯林成员禁用词语“安拉”来代表上帝。
The appeals court said that allowing non-Muslims to use the word would "cause confusion in the community".
Christians2 argue that they have used the word in Malay for decades and that the ruling violates their rights.
It came after the government said that a Catholic newspaper, The Herald4, could not use the word in its Malay-language edition to describe the Christian1 God.
The newspaper sued, and a court ruled in their favour in December 2009. The government then launched an appeal.
'Disappointed and dismayed'
Chief Judge Mohamed Apandi Ali said on Monday: "The usage of the word Allah is not an integral part of the faith in Christianity."
"The usage of the word will cause confusion in the community," he added.
The Herald editor Reverend Lawrence Andrew said he was "disappointed and dismayed", and would appeal against the decision.
"It is a retrograde step in the development of law in relation to the fundamental liberty of religious minorities," he said.
The newspaper's supporters have argued that Malay-language Bibles have used Allah to refer to the Christian God since before Malaysia was formed as a federal state in 1963.
"Allah is a term in the Middle East and in Indonesia it is a term both for Christians and Muslims. You cannot say that in all of the sudden it is not an integral part. Malay language is a language that has many borrowed words, Allah also is a borrowed word."
However, some Muslim groups have said that the Christian use of the word Allah could be used to encourage Muslims to convert to Christianity.
"Allah is not a Malay word. If they [non-Muslims] say they want to use a Malay word they should use Tuhan instead of Allah," Zainul Rijal Abu Bakar, a lawyer representing the government, told the BBC.
Dozens of churches and a few Muslim prayer halls were attacked and burned in the wake of the 2009 ruling, highlighting the intensity5 of feeling about issues of ethnicity and faith in Malaysia.
The case has baffled Muslim scholars outside the country, where the use of the word Allah by Christians is not controversial, the BBC's Jennifer Pak reports from outside the court in Putrajaya.
Some Malaysians believe the governing Malay-Muslim party is using the case to boost its Islamic credentials6 among voters, our correspondent adds.
Malay Muslims make up almost two-thirds of the country's population, but there are large Hindu and Christian communities.
点击收听单词发音
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
上一篇:美国宇航员斯科特·卡朋特逝世 下一篇:台风百合将抵达中越部分地区 |
- 发表评论
-
- 最新评论 进入详细评论页>>