The Freedom To Be


In his seminal work, “Islam And The Secular State: Negotiating The Future Of Shari’a” (Harvard; 2008), the noted scholar Abdullahi Ahmed An-Naim observes that it is not possible for people of any society to keep their religious belief, commitments and concerns out of their political decisions and choices.

He notes that the categories of understanding that people employ in their everyday life cannot neatly be parsed into the non-religious and the religious, an approach which has led to tensions and a spiral of mutual violence and destruction.

An-Naim as such propounds that it is both practical and healthy to recognise the role of religion and then regulate it as a source of guidance for political decision. This must however take place in the context of a secular state. An-Naim defines this as a state in which institutional separation between Islam and the state is maintained and the influence of religion in the public domain is open to negotiation, such negotiation being contingent upon the free exercise of the human agency of all citizens, Muslims and non-Muslims alike. Religion needs secularism, he argues, to mediate between different communities (religious and non-religious) as well as securing the legal and political space for religions to develop as they should. In this context, he observes that the safeguards of secularism, constitutionalism, human rights and citizenship are vital to set limits on the power of the majority and impede oppression.

The points An-Naim makes are of great relevance to us.

It is beyond question that Islam is closely linked to politics in this country with Malay-centric political parties PAS and UMNO making use of the religion for political advantage to their respective ends. For PAS, this has been portrayed as an advancing of its own ideological positions, centered on Islam as they are. UMNO on the other hand invokes Islam in aid of its Ketuanan Melayu ideology. In this, Islam has become political currency and a strategic weapon in the campaign against each other to the detriment of other political and civil society actors who have in any event been largely silenced by the stranglehold maintained by PAS and UMNO on Islam and Malay rights. The spectre of race riots and heavy-handed policing of anti-expression laws have stifled necessary and practical discussion of the very serious issues that arise and which affect all Malaysians.

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