By BosNewsLife Asia Service

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Riots began after The Herald newspaper won court ruling allowing non-Muslims to use "Allah" word.

KUALA LUMPUR, MALAYSIA (BosNewsLife)– Arsonists in Malaysia attacked a fourth church in the capital Kuala Lumpur after a High Court decision to end a government ban on the use of the word “Allah” by non-Muslims, church officials said.

Bishop Philip Loke told reporters that two firebombs were believed to have been thrown at his Good Shepherd Lutheran Church early Saturday, January 9, but missed the glass windows, hitting the building wall instead.

Earlier on Friday, January 8, Muslims protested at mosques and later arson attacks were reported on three other churches in Kuala Lumpur.

The three-story Pentecostal Metro Tabernacle Church was worst hit as its first-floor office was reportedly completely destroyed in a blaze a little after midnight. No injuries were reported.

The attacks were sparked by a December 31 court ruling that allowed a Catholic newspaper The Herald to use the word Allah, in reference to God, in its Malay-language editions.

Father Lawrence Andrew, the editor of The Herald, defended his paper’s decision to challenge the government ban on the use of Allah by non-Muslims. “We have been using the word Allah for a long, long time,” he said in an interview.

LONG HISTORY

He said the church had already penetrated in what is now Malaysia when the first dictionary appeared here in 1631. “This is a culture and a language we have been using. Why deprive us from this?” he wondered. “We have to continue living our culture. It is not just about the church [but] about the identity of all citizens who are not Muslims.”

He added that the court ruling confirmed that Christians “are able to live up to the constitution and enjoy the constitutional rigths.”

Yet, observers say the attacks risk dividing the mainly Muslim nation of 28 million people, which has significant religious minorities. They also complicate Prime Minister Najib Razak’s plan to win back support from the non-Muslims before the next elections by 2013, according to analysts.

Multi-ethnic Malaysia has kept racial tensions under control since race riots hit the country
in the late 1960s. However in recent years, minorities have increasingly complained of government discrimination and argue that the nation’s Sharia court, which rules on family matters for Muslims, is unfair to them, news reports said. (BosNewsLife’s Stefan J. Bos contributed to this story).

2 COMMENTS

  1. While the situation in Malaya cannot be resolved, it is essential that Sarawak and Sabah immediately assume their rightful place as independent nations.

    When the British occupied Sarawak at the end of World War II, they forced out our legitimate Rajah and then turned our people over to the oppressive rule of Kuala Lumpur. Now Sarawak and Sabah are among the last places where colonialism reigns.

    Singapore rightly left Malaysia and has prospered. Now we Sarawakis must also free ourselves from Malay rule and become independent. Let the Muslims have their penninsula, while our oil rich and non-Muslim Sarawak will worship the true Christian Allah as a free people.

    A free Sarawak and Sabah will no longer have their great mineral wealth stolen to serve the corrupt regime in KL. We Iban and other indigenous peoples, as well as Chinese and Indians will then be out from under Muslim oppression. Sarawak was once an independent kingdom ruled by Christian rajahs. We should be independent again.

    Count me among many thousands of Iban Christians willing to fight for my nation of Sarawak.

  2. Wonderful job right here. I genuinely enjoyed what you had to say. Keep heading because you absolutely bring a new voice to this subject. Not many people would say what youve said and still make it interesting. Properly, at least Im interested. Cant wait to see much more of this from you.

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