By Kapil Sethi (TMI)
SEPT 29 — Has PAS decided it is better to continue ruling a state or
two than take a shot at running the country and maybe lose a state or
two? It certainly looks like it when Nik Aziz Nik Mat reiterates his
insistence on turning Kelantan into a medieval caliphate, complete with
gibbets, stoning and amputations.
But why is the issue of implementation of hudud, which is after all a
part of wider sharia, such an emotive issue that it has the potential
to dramatically affect electoral fortunes? Why are the likes of Mahathir
Mohamad, Chua Soi Lek, Nik Aziz, Lim Guan Eng and Karpal Singh so
invested in this issue to issue rapid fire statements in this regard?
There are significant differences of opinion not only between PR and
BN, but internally too between Umno and the MCA, and between the DAP and
PAS.
Clearly while the image of Malaysian Islam is at stake, the issue
goes beyond being an internal Muslim community debate. At its core it is
actually a debate between liberals and conservatives, tradition and
modernity, regression and progress, and the state versus the individual.
While the concept and principles of hudud may be relatively
benign, it is the eye-catching nature of the punishments that distort
perception. Logically, is there a big difference in hanging people or
beheading them, or between flogging people behind bars or in public?
The conflict arises because in the Western paradigm of progress,
justice must shift broadly from a retributive to a rehabilitative
paradigm. Therefore, the increasing anger in the developed world over
the execution of convicts.
In a broad sense the liberal worldview sees itself as focused on individual liberty and as such humane, reformist and modern, and conservatives as barbaric, retributive and medieval.
The conservative worldview equally believes in the primacy of social
good and that the modern condition of an absence of shared values is
leading to a soulless world plagued by rising crime, greed and anarchy,
the solution to which is in a return to original guiding principles that
fostered social cohesion in an earlier time.
Therefore, the perception of the nature and impact of hudud depends on how well these differing worldviews mirror our own.
Conservatives, whether Muslim or otherwise, feel much more
comfortable with the status quo than with change. In an era of rapid
technological driven change and rising economic uncertainty, they look
for reassurance in that which is perceived as timeless such as
traditional occupations, traditional social and familial bonds, and
traditional spirituality and religion.
For this group the answers to the problems of modernity are all
around in a past based on a set of unchanging values, whether it is
caning our children if they break the rules or in chopping off the hands
of those who steal.
Liberals on the other hand want to deal with the uncertainties of
modernity by advocating even more change. Broadly in Malaysia, this
seems to boil down to the advocacy of reform in every sphere.
Reform the police to reduce crime, reform the government to save the
people and reform children through love. While we are at it why not just
a general slogan of Reformasi?
But for a lot of everyday people the boundaries are not so clear cut.
Especially in urban areas, people are forced to juggle the tightrope of
both tradition and modernity.
The reaction to the very cosmopolitan demands of urban public life is
often a retreat into tradition in our private lives. English at work
and the vernacular at home, foreign holidays and balik kampung, respect
for other races and faiths in public and looking down on them at home —
these contradictions are real and present in what is termed Middle
Malaysia.
This is why every politician recognises the power of this issue. Are
rural voters who are comfortable with tradition more important the urban
voters who have given up on the past in the quest for a brighter
future?
Or is it the large mass of people in between who handle these
apparently contradictory philosophies quite easily in their daily lives
the most important?
So advocating an Islamic state may be a no brainer in Kelantan, as is
advocating developed nation status in 2020 in Kenny Hills, but what
about ordinary people who want a combination of both?
For Middle Malaysia, the answer may lie in espousing the middle
ground. Is there a way to hold on to what is best in Malaysian
tradition, culture and faith in a way that does not make Malaysia look
out of step with the developed world?
Is there an interpretation and vision of sharia law that does not
make moderate Muslims and non-Muslims in Malaysia feel like they are
beginning to resemble Afghanistan under the Taliban? Is there an
interpretation of hudud within sharia that allows for a marriage between
traditional Islamic jurisprudence with the modernist notion of
punishment that emphasises rehabilitation rather than revenge?
Finally, the benchmark to measure the desirability of any kind of
change to the justice system should be whether the change narrows the
differences between Malaysians of different philosophical and spiritual
persuasions instead of raising mistrust.
In this instance the prime minister seems to have gotten it right
when he says the spirit of hudud is already present in Malaysian sharia
law, without its extremes.
* The views expressed here are the personal opinion of the columnist.
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