BroFadhli, 013-3311 031
B.Sc, IIUM Kuantan.
 




----- Original Message ----
From: ab rahim abdul hamid <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, April 15, 2007 11:27:59 PM
Subject: The Muslims in Malaysia have not seriously played the role of 
'muballigh'-Datuk Dr Khoo Kay Kim









  


    
            
Malaysia An Unusual And Complex Country, Says Prof Khoo
  
  By Wan A Hulaimi

LONDON, April 14 (Bernama) - A veteran Malaysian academician has described his 
country as "very unusual and so complex" before an audience of British Muslims.

"Malaysia is truly Asia", Emeritus Professor of History, Datuk Dr Khoo Kay Kim 
said in an interview-discussio n which was part of the weekly event of the 
London City Circle Islamic group, when asked the question if there were lessons 
to be learnt from the role of Islam in Malaysia's plural society.

"It is not that we don't have problems. We do have problems but they stem from 
misunderstandings not hatred," he said.

He cited a recent event where Muslims demonstrated before a church after 
rumours about a group of Muslims being prepared for conversion to Christianity.

"It turned out that
 these boys were Indians, so the Hindu Indians made loud noises about the 
conversion of their children, then it turned out that these were the young 
children of Christian Indian parents being prepared for religious initiation," 
he added.

"Non-Muslims in Malaysia generally do not understand Islam because Muslims 
think Islam has nothing to do with non-Muslims. The Muslims in Malaysia have 
not seriously played the role of 'muballigh' (spreaders of religion).

"I can tell you that the Muslims are not explaining Islam to non-Muslims. 
Muslims also should not distance themselves (from them). I said this on TV and 
they got angry with me. You have to play your role as 'muballigh'.

"The young are not taught Islam properly, the fundamentals of Islam. As my 
Pakistani friend told me, the fundamentalist is a good Muslim who knows the 
fundamentals of Islam. He is not a terrorist," Prof Khoo said.

Citing the experience of his own family, he said that his son
 wanted to do a doctorate in Islamic Studies in Britain but was disappointed 
when he could not get financial assistance from Malaysian officials who asked 
him why a non-Muslim would want to pursue the subject of Islam.

There has been unrest in Malaysia even before the May 13 incident but generally 
Malaysia is a tolerant country.

The biggest statue of the reclining Buddha in that part of the world is not in 
Thailand but in the Islamist controlled state of Kelantan, he told the audience.

He said that the government recently wanted to promote 'Islam Hadhari', the 
idea of progressive Islam, but what is needed in Malaysia now is not Islam 
Hadhari but Muslim Hadhari, progressive Muslims who reach out to non-Muslims 
and explain their religion.

"Islam in Malaysia has never really been given the opportunity to cross over to 
the non-Muslims because they (the Muslims) have been told not to," he said.

Asked if the New Economic Policy affected the
 climate of tolerance in Malaysia, he said that tolerance is always there but 
the division of parties meant that the politicians are always looking at racial 
issues.

"We have to make our young comfortable with one another," he said.

"People like to preserve their cultural identity. But you have to explain to 
them that if they become part of a nation then questions like cultural identity 
will no longer matter."

He said that the government is now realising this and is looking for better 
ways to integrate the young through the education system.

Elaborating on the Rukunegara, he said that the children are asked to learn the 
principles of nationhood by rote without understanding its content.

"The Asian approach to education is very mechanical. They learn by rote, they 
believe in the correct answer. The Malaysian education system is like that, you 
must always give the correct answer, you must always ask the correct question.

The students
 are asked to memorise the Rukunegara, the Rule of Law and so on, but if you 
ask them what the Rule of Law is they don't know." he said.

Forty years on, Prof Khoo, a member of the panel that formulated the Rukunegara 
holds this view: "So far it has no serious effect on society."

But even with all that, Malaysia is still a 'blessed society', he said.

When a member of the audience told him that she was not as optimistic on the 
future of the country, Prof Khoo replied that he had lived 70 years in Malaysia 
through thick and thin, and the country had always been able to overcome its 
problems.

"You should not listen to people who complain too much; you should listen to 
people who take the trouble to know the country," he said.

 



      



 



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