Monday, June 29, 2009

No Point in Having Religion On MyKad

The recent case of an art director in Peninsular Malaysia shows that the National Registration Act's rule to have religion on the MyKad (national registration card) is of no use. In the case of the late Mohan Singh, whose body is still kept at a hospital mortuary pending the outcome of a court decision to see whether he would be buried as a Muslim or cremated as a Sikh.

The Islamic religious authorities claim that he had converted to Islam before he died and had therefore to be buried as a Muslim. His family on the other hand claims that he was a practising Sikh all his life. If the Islamic religious authorities get their way, the estate that Mohan left behind would not go to his family, but would be claimed by the Islamic authorities.

What is peculiar about the case is that on Mohan's MyKad, the word "Islam" is absent. "Islam" is printed on the MyKads of all Malaysian Muslims. The NRD database also shows his religion as being Sikhism. Now, if the MyKad shows that he is not a Muslim, why is there a necessity to claim that he is?

This shows that there is something clearly wrong with the National Registration Act and the National Registration Department.

Perhaps, it is time to have a law that would allow dead people to be given a funeral according to the rites of the religion of their immediate family members. Or perhaps, when applying for a MyKad, Malaysians should fill a form to say how they wish to be buried if they die.

Whatever it is, one thing for sure is that NRD is really confusing us. On one hand, if a person is a non-Muslim but has the word "Islam" wrongly printed on his MyKad, he cannot change it and has to go through the lengthy process of dealing with religious authorities.

On the other hand, if a person is a non-Muslim and has his religion correctly recorded as such, it can still be questioned!

2 comments:

Betty said...

i definitely agree with u. i think religion is a personal matter. Religions should unite people, but what happens today is far from it. Very sad really. And the saddest part is, we sometimes have no control or say over it when actually we have the right to it.

Anonymous said...

when visited Library in S'pore, Jakarta & London, found some articles shows that Melayu are immigrants from the multi-ethnic India (Malayalam origin)... they migrated to Sumantra and formed the Hinduism Sri Vijiya Kingdom but defeated by the Arab merchants... then Parameswara escape to Temasik then Melaka and tried re-formed the Melayu kingdom with the help of China dynasty's Navy and later on with the help from Europeans colonies to chase away the Thai ruler... However, Parameswara have no choice to give-in power to the Arab as he wants to maintain the Malay kingdom, therefore, fore goes the Hinduism ungratefully and take a bow to the new "imported" religion, Islam. So that the Pennisular Thai is forever occupied as a new kingdom called "Tanah Melayu" and wants to make this region's archipelago as one Malay-polynesian nation.
Afterall, M'sia constitution wants to labelled Malay as ethnic Muslim is not accurate, because Muslim is a (worldwide) religion, not for a particular ethnic... because in Philippines refer themself as Malay-polynesian with Catholic majority. In Bali, most of the people are Hinduism Malay-polynesian. In Timor, there are majority Christian Malay-polynesian.
So, that's why the KL kayu wants to put hardship to the non-muslim, real natives in Borneo and limits them to learn foreign languages and do research in other country to find the truth.
I come across a pharse which may warn the kayu in Tanah Melayu who think they can manipulate the country to regain their "lost kingdom", the pharse is: "A country that ban truth gives permission to lies, and this lies will cause harms eventually."