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Ethan Cole
Christian Post, Oct 30, 2009: Malaysian
authorities have seized more than 15,000 Bibles that
refer to God as “Allah” in recent months, said church
officials Thursday.
About 10,000 Bibles from Indonesia were confiscated by
authorities on Sept. 11, according to the Rev. Hermen
Shastri, general secretary of the Council of Churches of
Malaysia, according to The Associated Press. The other
5,100 Bibles, also from Indonesia, were seized in March,
according to an official from the Bible Society of
Malaysia, who requested that AP not identify him to
avoid angering the government.
In Malaysia, Christian publications cannot use the word
Allah to refer to God. The government contends the word
“Allah” is exclusively for Islam, but church officials
argue that Allah is not exclusive to Islam because it is
an Arabic word that existed before the religion.
The confiscated Bibles were translated into Malay, the
country’s official language, where the word for God is
“Allah.”
“Malay has borrowed from Arabic, just as it has from
Sanskrit and Portuguese,” said Shastri, according to
CNN. “We have maintained the community has the right to
use the word.
“But I think this has ignited a cause in the Muslim
communities, who are interpreting it as a siege on
Islamic beliefs.”
The government has said the use of Allah in Christian
publications could confuse Muslims and make Christian
ideas more appealing to them.
About 60% of Malaysia is Muslim and about 9% is
Christian. Buddhists make up 19% and Hindus, about 6% of
the population.
The Bibles are the latest incident in a long struggle
between the Christians and the government over the use
of the word Allah. The Catholic weekly, The Herald, has
been in an ongoing court battle for over two years after
the government threatened to revoke its license for
using the word Allah in its Malay edition.
But Shastri said, “For most of the Christians, this is
not an issue of going against the authorities. They have
been using [the word “Allah”] for a long time,” as
reported by AP.
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