Categories
Liberty Society

[1616] Of the shahada no longer suffices

Islam in Malaysia is probably the most difficult religion to embrace in the country. Whereas once all it took to believe in the path shown by Islam was sincerity, now it takes paperwork and various declarations because the state demands it. If Islam is to be spared of red tapes, state’s role in the religion needs to be reduced or downright eliminated.

Not too long ago, a series of disputes over the religious status of deceased individuals caused discomfort among many Malaysians.[1] The central question was who has the greater claim over a dead body. Hilarious from afar maybe, but it is a serious emotional matter.

Those whom were directly involved suffered worse. Not only did they need to overcome grief caused by the loss of their loved ones, bodies of their loved ones were taken by force from them in the name of religion by Islamic religious department. Regardless of the religious belief of the deceased, if left unsolved, future episodes will offer polemicists from all sides to stroke distrust within our society and lower cooperation across different communities. Trust and cooperation are two of many ingredients to economic growth.

A solution is therefore required and the Abdullah administration looks to enforce a rule that requires non-Muslims whom wish to convert to Islam to inform his or her family of his or her action.[2] Fueling the rationale behind the policy is the elimination of asymmetric information. Through this policy, the state aims to ease opposition the Islamic religious authority typically faces in various similar disputes. It is a reasonable cause and effect link.

Yet, what is the root cause of the problem? Is it because the deceased failed to inform their family of his or her decision to embrace Islam or is it because of the existence of the religious department and their power to enforce religion on the dead?

I am in the opinion that religion is a personal matter and I am sure that I am not the only person believing it so. For many of these individuals, there are reasons why they refuse to inform their family members of their decision to embrace a religion, Islam or any other. Due to that, it is best to let these individuals to decide for themselves which action they wish to take. The responsibility of informing their family — if it is at all a responsibility — is their own, not others’ or the state’s. That responsibility cannot be relegated to the state. I do not believe in subsidizing others’ cowardice — if the reason behind secrecy is cowardice — and I will certainly not fund any religious department that take upon itself to substitute others’ cowardice with coercion.

Returning to the issue at hand, barriers to entry only discourages those that wish to embrace Islam. Some individuals are always in search of a belief system to satisfy themselves. These individuals are like shoppers. They would walk around to inspect and compare goods before purchase. If a shop prevents the shopper from inspecting and comparing goods by barring the shopper from entering the shop, the loss is of the shop’s, not the shopper’s, if the owner of the shop is interested in profit-making in the first place.

The idea runs parallel to free trade. The freer a country’s trade policy is, the more likely it is prosperous. Water flows to the path of least resistant and so do capital and labor. And so too consumers of religion, if I may say so: the most receptive communities to these ever-searching individuals are the most open communities. If the Muslim community is interested in attracting new Muslims, the community must do away with many of those barriers set up by the state. It must be noted that Islam itself does not impose those state-sanctioned barriers. It means that the state must stop playing the role of regulating religion, particularly Islam. Just in case if that is unclear: the state must stop playing god.

Red tapes imposed by the Malaysian government make the Muslim community exclusive and that is contrary to the claimed nature of Islam: universality. As a result, the state is turning Islam into something that goes against the teaching of the religion.

As a child, I went to two school system concurrently: one for my formal education and another was for religious education. I will be frank and say that I hated the latter so much because I could not make sense out of it. I did learn a few things from it nevertheless; I remember, the only requirement one must fulfill to demonstrate to the world of one’s belief in the Islamic teaching is to sincerely recite the shahada.[3] It is that simple.

The same cannot be said for Malaysian brand of Islam. To come to think of it, is the Malaysian Islam really Islam?

If the answer is no, I would blame the involvement of the state in personal belief as the cause of it. For any person that fears the state hijacking any religion, he has a case for secularization.

Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved

[1] — SEREMBAN – MALAYSIAN police have seized the body of a Chinese man in the latest dispute between the Islamic authorities and family members over a disputed conversion to the Muslim faith.

The eldest son of Mr Gan Eng Gor, who died on Sunday, aged 74, said his father became a Muslim last July, but his other children reject the claim and insist their father was a Buddhist.. [Another conversion dispute: Police seize body of Chinese Man. Straits Times via The Malaysian Bar. January 22 2008]

[2] — SEREMBAN – MALAYSIAN police have seized the body of a Chinese man in the latest dispute between the Islamic authorities and family members over a disputed conversion to the Muslim faith.

The eldest son of Mr Gan Eng Gor, who died on Sunday, aged 74, said his father became a Muslim last July, but his other children reject the claim and insist their father was a Buddhist.. [PM: Tell your family before you convert. The Star. April 11 2008]

[3] — See Shahada at Wikipedia.

Categories
Liberty Politics & government Society

[1615] Of China is no stranger to the politicization of the Olympics

In addressing the proposed boycott of the opening ceremony of the 2008 Olympics, supporters of People’s Republic of China are urging the world community to not to politicize the Olympic Games. That is a fair comment. After all, in ancient times, the Games offered an Olympic truce during war. Yet, supporters of China cannot really be truly honest about the issue of the politicization of the Olympics until they condemn China too; China itself is guilty of politicizing the Olympics on a number of occasions in the past.

China boycotted several Games to object to the participation of Taiwan in the Olympics from the 1950s up to the 1980s.[1] In 1976 in fact, not only China boycotted the Olympics, it forced the host Canada to pressure Taiwan on the issue of national identity. That eventually caused Taiwan to refrain from competing in the Games.[2] In 1980, China again showed its willingness to politicize the Olympics: it boycotted the Moscow Olympics to protest the invasion of Afghanistan by the Soviet Union.[3]

Supporters of China must acknowledge China’s past politicization of Olympics and criticize China for that if they would like to have the moral authority to criticize those whom propose a boycott of the Beijing Olympics.

Regardless of that, I do not support a boycott of the Olympics, be it in partial or in full. Rarely does a boycott work. In my opinion, the better way of highlighting issues associated with the Games is engagement. Witness the torch relay first hand, watch the opening and the closing ceremonies and follow the Games.

But do it in protest. While attending or watching the Games, whether in private or public, express your displeasure of China’s action peacefully. Put banners up. Distribute pamphlets around. Engage the crowd and make them aware of the situation in Darfur and Tibet as well as China’s record of disrespecting liberty.

It is only through greater awareness could the world gently realize of the issues at hand and apply gentle pressure on China to reform and respect liberty.

Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved

[1] — China participated in 1952 but boycotted the Games after the International Olympic Committee (IOC) recognized Taiwan. The Taiwanese team carried the “China” banner in 1956, and China did not return to Olympic competition until the 1980 Winter Games. [Cold War Olympics highlights. CNN. Accessed April 9 2008]

[2] — See the 1976 Summer Olympics at Wikipedia.

[3] — See the 1980 Summer Olympics boycott, at Wikipedia.

Categories
Economics

[1614] Of free water and personal responsibility

The Tragedy of the Commons could be seen as a story of personal responsibility. Or rather, the lack of it. When consumption of finite resources is not associated with its relevant cost, individuals will overuse it with gross disregard to scarcity. In the end, individuals will exhaust the resources and leave none behind. The Selangor state government will have to brace itself to face this scenario sooner or later.

Selangor under the new Khalid administration recently announced its intention to provide the residents of the state with 20m3 of free water supply. The intention is noble but the sustainability of the policy is in doubt. While Selangor does indeed experience water abundance, drought is not uncommon. Last year, water levels at various dams throughout Peninsular Malaysia, including Selangor, were something we all should be worried about. In fact, the previous administration has projected that the Klang Valley will experience severe water shortage beyond 2010 and to overcome the projected problem, the federal government has rolled out a plan to transfer raw water from rivers in Pahang to Selangor.[1]

In Malaysia where drought is closely linked to high temperature, water reservoirs face a combination of factors that contribute to water shortage. In the upstream, absence of rain prevents reservoirs from replenishing its supply while high temperature encourages evaporation. In the downstream, in fighting the heat, consumers would demand large volume of water to cool down. With higher rate of output compared to input rate, it is not hard to imagine what the ultimate consequence will be. Any inefficiency that exists within the local water distribution system only makes matter worse.

There is not much we can do to fight drought from appearing from time to time at the moment. I do not believe that we have the knowledge to consciously manipulate the climate effectively. What we can do however is to encourage conservation by instilling responsible usage of water. Responsible water usage does not come through slogans and songs unfortunately. It requires a system of carrot and stick that promotes conservation and the market does just that. By enforcing free water policy, the state government not only interfering with market mechanism, the state also goes against everything that is associated with conservation.

By providing free water, the state breaks the link between action and responsibility. A person is free to utilize water for whatever reason without considering its effect on the society. What makes the detachment between action and responsibility possible is the elimination of prices as signals.

Prices signal scarcity. Flexible pricing mechanism will fluctuate according to demand and supply. When demand increases relative to constant supply, prices will go up to signal scarcity; when demand goes down relative to constant supply, prices go down to signal abundance. Higher prices will demand greater appreciation of the resources from consumers; it encourages consumers to be more thoughtful when consuming resources.

Without prices as signals, many consumers will be unable to appreciate the very real idea of scarcity. Even in dire times when water should be priced as high as gold but offered free instead, do not be surprised to find somebody washing their car or watering their lawn. News of impending shortage will not change his behavior because he does not feel the pain. He does not or unable to read the signal of scarcity clearly because he has been insulated from the real world.

Under free water policy, the state effectively transfers the responsibility of conservation from individuals to the state. Individuals will not practice responsible usage of water because of the reason mentioned earlier. When the ultimate signal comes — water shortage — it may be already too late to begin to conserve. With the state taking the responsibility of conservation away from individuals, the state effectively creates a commons as described in the Tragedy.[2] Thus, the course is set.

Without a good pricing mechanism, the only way to overcome the Tragedy of the Commons from reaching its sad conclusion is to ration water at one stage or the other. Suffice to say, I do not think highly of any policy that leads to rationing when flexible pricing mechanism offers better solution.

Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved

[1] — KUALA LUMPUR, Nov 21 (Bernama) — The project involving supply of raw water from Pahang to Selangor is expected to be completed on schedule by the middle of 2013, the Dewan Rakyat was told Wednesday.

[…]

Shaziman said it was anticipated that the project would be able to resolve the problem of raw water supply which Selangor would begin to face over the next five years. [Pahang-Selangor Raw Water Project Ready By 2013. Bernama. November 21 2007]

[2] — For further but brief explanation of the Tragedy of the Commons, see Wikipedia.

Categories
Humor

[1612] Of plastics?

I just want to say one word to you, just one word…

Plastics, sir?

No. Fafblog.

Categories
Photography

[1611] Of a broken chair on March 8

The photo below is one of many which I shot on March 8.

Some rights reserved. By Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams.

This is not too far away from a spot where I shot an earlier photo.

I have not seen such chair in a very long time. I wonder if elementary schools in Malaysia still have that kind of wooden chair in classes.