MALAYSIA LAWS SAY OKAY TO CONVERT TO CHRISTIANITY
In a landmark ruling last week, a
Malaysian court upheld the rights of a Christian to convert from Islam.
The judgment establishes a precedent
in a country where religious conversions, particularly from Islam to
Christianity, have been steeped in controversy. The verdict reaffirms the right of freedom of religion,
guaranteed under Article 11 of Malaysia’s constitution.
Rooney Rebit, the plaintiff, argued
that his belief in Jesus was a fundamental human right, and the High Court in
Kuching, Sarawak state, agreed. The judge, Yew Ken Jie, said, “He is free to
exercise his right of freedom to religion, and he chose Christianity.”
Rebit was born into a Christian
family in 1975, but his parents converted to Islam when he was eight years old.
His Muslim name was Azmi Mohamad Azam Shah.
In 1999, Rebit embraced Christianity
and was baptized. In her decision, Yew ruled that
since Rebit was underage when he became a Muslim, he could not be considered an
officially professed Muslim. But when he became a Christian at the age of 24,
he was mature enough to make a conscious decision, she said.
Cases of conversion in Malaysia have
been plagued by official dissension and charges of apostasy as Muslim
authorities challenged verdicts by secular courts in Shari‘ah tribunals.
The most prominent suit involved
Lina Joy, who converted from Islam to Christianity in 1998 at the age of 26.
Her application to have her conversion legally recognized by Malaysian courts
was rejected in
2007 when the high court said it did not have jurisdiction over religious
matters.
In other cases, one parent (usually
the father) has converted children to Islam, and the appeals of the other
parent have been brushed aside by Islamic authorities.
In this video, Malaysian lawyer
Andrew Khoo discusses the recent case of a Hindu mother who challenged her
husband’s “unilateral” conversion of their two children to Islam. In failing to
rule on this, the federal court left the issue unresolved for Malaysia’s
minority faiths, he said.
http://zionica.com/2016/03/31/malaysia-laws-say-okay-to-convert-to-christianity/
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