The hudud debate is potentially an intellectual conundrum that frames Malaysia' current
problems into Muslim and non-Muslim issues. (Just as Obama probably intended in his widely publicised comments at the University Malaya.
Imagine the predictable public responses if he told an American audience that Christians should not be prejudiced against
non-Christians.)
We should not see this debate as some kind of national referendum (starting
with Kelantan) which can be decided by a simple majority vote just as one would simply decide whether or not to vote for capital punishment versus the abolishment of the death penalty. We need to probe
deeper and not be blind-sided by naive reasoning (e.g. it is a Muslim issue and therefore would neither affect nor concern non-Muslims).
But the 2 key points that distinguish the hudud issue from other less controversial issues (e.g. Goods & Services Tax) are that: (a) hudud is unconstitutional and (b) it is an issue that relates to the basis of the spiritual life of man.
This debate of legalism vs the mysterious sovereign will of God is a common
dilemma faced by all believers in the great religions of the world: Can
spiritual values be legislated or is legislating our faith-based values just an
outward symbol of righteousness?
When we, as Malaysians discuss hudud, we must be intellectually sharp to enlarge the debate in the
context of the bigger spiritual debate (which also includes the values of
atheists). We understand the perspective of the religious legalists in a world
of rampant crime and violence.
But the evil consequence of the human conscience being shackled and rendered
useless in a rules-based society means that we (whether Muslims, Christians, Buddhists or Hindus) become spiritual robots who allow external laws to infringe on our
inner life. The mercy of God extended to man is an affair purely between God
and an individual. Judgements of morality are never between the state or
religious councils and man.
Hudud is just another form of religious legalism that also exists in
catholic and Jewish religions. There is no need to educate us on the Kelantan version as legalism in any
religion is often an outward show of power and prestige masking the poverty of
our conscience to produce mercy and forgiveness to those considered
immoral/unethical. Let the judge who is without a single sin be the first to execute
punishment. This is the divine principle of making moral judgement as alluded by Jesus in the book of John chapter 8: verse 7 when the religious legalists asked him whether an adulteress should be stoned to death according to the laws of Moses:
"Let any one of you who is without sin be the first to throw a stone at her."
And punishing criminals with the pain of amputations or other capital punishments to extract feelings of repentance is neither morally or psychologically defensible. It only works on the fear factor and for some people of different world-views, capital punishment of this kind is akin to repaying a wrong with another wrong (i.e. an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth). True repentance starts with the realisation of the human conscience that a sin has been committed and a moral regeneration is urgently needed.
Is A Tree Not Known By Its Fruits?
Nonetheless, the on-line discussions on this hudud issue is also getting nowhere because both sides are not on the same page: for those against legalism, proof of the ill-effects of its actual practice is sufficient (i.e. look at Saudi Arabia, Iran, Pakistan, Afghanistan). In other words, a tree is judged by its fruits and this is the most practical way of assessing its viability.
But for the pro-legalists, there is no need to know if the practice of legalism is effective in curbing immorality or unethical conduct. To them, the tree itself is more important than its fruits, which seems quite illogical but understandably rational from their perspective.
It is with this insight that we can better understand that the concept of hudud from the legalists point of view is that it is a kind of flag or branding of a state, which is in itself, sufficient in endorsing the religious credentials or credibility of their community in the eyes of God.
The current problem with Malaysia is that this issue of religious legalism, while it is clearly to me an ancient problem, has been made more complex by politicians who use it as a means of dividing good people of all races and faiths.
The current problem with Malaysia is that this issue of religious legalism, while it is clearly to me an ancient problem, has been made more complex by politicians who use it as a means of dividing good people of all races and faiths.