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Yoga ban and faith control PDF Print
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Thursday, 27 November 2008 12:07

You can’t control what another believes because no fellow human being can truly tell what is going on in the mind of another.

BRAVE NEW WORLD
By AZMI SHAROM, THE STAR

 

I DON’T like yoga. With all due respect to yoga practitioners out there, I always found it a little wimpy. I mean, yeah, it’s a great party trick to be able to bend over backwards and look like Linda Blair in The Exorcist but, really, is that going to help me lug two suitcases up four flights of steps? I don’t think so.

Be that as it may, I do practise a bit of yoga. In between sets for my abdominal workout, I do a yoga thing.

I am not sure what it is called in yoga terms, but if I had to name it, I would call it “small hummingbird reaching for the moon”, and it’s great because it stretches out my ageing back.

I’ve been doing it for years and I must say that in all that time, not once did I get an urge to build a shrine to Vishnu in my dining room.

I’ve also lit an incense stick and stuck it in a pile of sand in front of a stone Buddha. And I’ve sung hymns in an abbey for two years’ worth of Wednesdays.

Neither activity made me want to be a Buddhist or join the Church of England. They were after all merely physical acts. What goes on in my mind and in my heart are completely different things.

And no one can tell me what my faith is or is not.

This brings me to the National Fatwa Council and its declaration that yoga is forbidden because it has Hindu elements in it which can cause poor simple Muslims to lose their fragile faith while sitting in the lotus position.

A lot has been said about this issue already and I don’t wish to add to the numerous points made on the legal effects of the declaration or its theological basis.

Instead I wish to point out that it is actually quite ludicrous to try to control that most private and intangible human trait: faith.

You can’t control what another believes because no fellow human being can truly tell what is going on in the mind of another.

And yet there are some who insist on trying. And so, because you can’t tell what goes on in a person spiritually, you try to control the surface issue, the physical manifestation of what you deem to be reflective of faith.

This obsession with form is not only shallow; it is also counter-productive. It breeds a mentality of “if I do the ‘right actions’, then I’m doing the right thing”.

It’s the kind of thinking that creates some horrible everyday blasphemies like people muttering “halal, ya?” after they accept a bribe.

As though the physical utterance of the right word is enough to blank out the intangible wrongness of the act.

It does not take much for a person to go to temple or church or mosque and carry out all the rituals. But such acts without the prerequisite emotional content of the rituals do not make you pious.

Just as performing things with roots in religions different from your own – the bersanding ceremony for example – without the corresponding emotional and spiritual content does not mean you are deviating from your faith.

This being the case, why bother trying to control a person’s actions? Perhaps it is the only way to try to assert authority, to force your perceived relevance onto others. If this is so, then it is a most futile effort.

I am not suggesting that there is no space for the fatwa councils of this country. There will always be people who want to get guidance from figures they believe are better qualified than themselves. Even in personal matters like faith. This is fine, but such bodies ought not to have the power to control how people choose to live their lives.

It is one thing for an authority figure to give advice; it is quite another for that same body to have the power to make rulings that have the effect of legislation, especially when it is not elected.

There is a sub-text to this episode and it concerns the recent calls by the ex- and current chief justices for the merging of Islamic law and civil law or the merging of the syariah courts and the civil courts. I do not think this is a good idea.

I have argued elsewhere that the emotive nature of any theologically based law and the exclusivity of such systems are not appropriate for a fundamentally democratic society.

Time and time again, I have heard the repeated argument that only those who are “qualified” can speak about Islamic law.

In a country where all its people should have a right to speak about matters that affect their lives, regardless of their education, this to me is an unacceptable approach to law-making.

However, my point here is that this recent declaration on yoga, which to my eyes reflects a terribly narrow world-view and a superficial understanding of this matter of faith, is made not by some obscure group. It was made by the National Fatwa Council.

This council is a part of officialdom and in the event that our Constitution is fundamentally changed to allow our civil and Islamic legal systems to be merged, the council’s voice will be a most prominent one in the hybrid system that is formed.

That is all the more reason then that this proposed merger is not allowed to happen.

Comments (14)Add Comment
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written by Tom n Jerry, November 27, 2008 12:15:43
Very informative & enligtening article;indeed yoga can make one more conscientious,compassionate & charismatic depending on which angle you want to look at this pathetic world in general and our nation in particular;more yogis would mean more mantras & divine intervention in the face of adversity!
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written by AngryTaxpayer, November 27, 2008 12:23:19
I'm still wondering how Star manage to get their paws on a gem like Azmi Sharom........
smilies/tongue.gif
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written by Kacang Tanah, November 27, 2008 12:26:10
Can someone please find out whether the members of the National Fatwa Council are Taliban.
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written by teo siew chin, November 27, 2008 12:55:54
ahhh but Azmi Sharom has a strong mind - he is definitely beyond control! but we do not ask much of ourselves or others, simple common sense will do, right? Azmi Sharom - i like your style man! "Humour is also a way of saying something serious." - plus it's a more amiable way.
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written by Celestial, November 27, 2008 12:59:16
Spot on, brother. You have won me wholeheartedly on this. Amen/Amin or whatever.
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written by Umar Rentaka, November 27, 2008 13:34:20
Dear Azmi,
at least you have understood that the real goal of yoga is attaining Lord Visnu rather than merging into Him as thought by the Jakim fellows and most Hindus.
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written by Umar Rentaka, November 27, 2008 13:37:05
Bhagavad Gita 6.47: Sri Krishna's concluding instruction on Astanga-Yoga:

yoginäm api sarvesäm
mad-gatenäntar-ätmanä
sraddhävän bhajate yo mäm
sa me yuktatamo matah

TRANSLATION
And of all yogis, the one with great faith who always abides in Me, thinks of Me within himself, and renders transcendental loving service to Me — he is the most intimately united with Me in yoga and is the highest of all. That is My opinion.
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written by Rainbowseahorse, November 27, 2008 14:25:02
I really don't know what the fuss is all about with regards to Yoga! In the exercise form, it has completely nothing to do with religion and should have been marketed with a different name, Younga or something like that!

I have never ever seen nor heard of any Muslim renouncing the faith due to practicing Yoga.
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written by gtl, November 27, 2008 14:29:54
saudara azmi, great article, very enlighten.
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written by teo siew chin, November 27, 2008 14:32:53
Dear Chipon

We do indeed live in a community - all are brethren. Your fatwah may be deemed to help your fellow Muslims and I respect that. If in helping your fellow Muslims, there is an infringement of basic liberties and your fellow Muslim seeks assistance, would you allow the non Muslims to help? Operative word is "assist" and not "resist". We must help each other for the good of ALL - inclusive, not exclusive.
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written by lovemalaysiarakyat, November 27, 2008 23:41:46
It is one thing for an authority figure to give advice; it is quite another for that same body to have the power to make rulings that have the effect of legislation, especially when it is not elected.

There is a sub-text to this episode and it concerns the recent calls by the ex- and current chief justices for the merging of Islamic law and civil law or the merging of the syariah courts and the civil courts. I do not think this is a good idea.

I have argued elsewhere that the emotive nature of any theologically based law and the exclusivity of such systems are not appropriate for a fundamentally democratic society.


Yes, Azmi, an unelected body having the power to make rulings into legislation ... smilies/shocked.gif smilies/shocked.gif smilies/shocked.gif A no no. Furthermore, it is a ruling specific for a certain religion but that which has consequences to all, much as we say it does not. Why then the sudden appearnace of alcohol, the tom-boys ban and fatwas etc.?

A theologically based law is always emotive and NOT APPROPRIATE for a fundamentally democratic society. Learning from the other civilisations especially the Christian Reformation should be a lesson learnt. The excesses of religiousity by the "experts" became the downfall of Christendom. Only monks were allowed to read the bible and ordinary folks had to hear from the experts how to live etc and what God seems to be saying to them...until one man Martin Luther had the audacity to stand up and change all that.

Faith is so personal. One can wear tudung and cover everything or wear a kopiah but still not be a a muslim. Same thing with yellow-robed monks whom we find a plenty now in our country going around with bowls asking for alms. I can shave my head bald and do the same thing. If the person has true faith, nothing can shake them.

We should ask ourselves, is our faith unshakeable? When we are overseas, with all the pretty ladies surrounding us ( aren't they pretty like the one Nazri Jr had?), we KNOW HOW TO BEHAVE? Or we succumb? Then we know the mettle we are made of. But if Nazri Jr is bold and brave, he can say this is my life, I have chosen this and let him say and any all they want. Or he may come back and wear a kopiah and long robes and start fatwaing for a while during semester break and go back partying after. Let us all choose our faith and the intensity or the depth of it.

That is democracy. And that will show the strength of the "religion".
Check out Wafa Sultan speaking on memritv.org on reformation and the clash of civilisations. Notice the cleric ranting away at her; I think she has more faith than then the imam.

The truth is don't hide behind a mask.
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written by Tom n Jerry, November 28, 2008 09:18:13
Everyone is watching the CNN & BBC throughout the day;for the past 48 hours non stop terrorism;shooting & grenades to innocent lives & desperate souls;we need to do some serious soul-searching why such things happen in Mumbai,one of the most sdensely populated place on earth;these terrorists just want to creat fear and bring the economy of India down to a standstill;all for a reason;just because of religious fanatism & extremism;how pathetic!Racial & religious extremism seems to be catching up in all corners of the globe;its time to extinguish these hatreds of human beings if this Planet is to continue to survive! smilies/sad.gif
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written by crayon, November 28, 2008 10:58:58
religious extremism is almost always caused by the religious leaders who had lost their way. and the problem lies largely with the supporters who obeys blindly all teachings and instructions from their "not-so holy" leaders. as we can see, a bad leader can easily manipulate his followers to do his bidding, even when it involves murdering others. sometimes it makes me think that religion is one of the strongest form of weaponry, and it is at the disposal of religious leaders.
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