Catholic Bishop Paul Tan Chee Ing said a “gaping credibility gap” has
opened up between the publicly expressed intentions of the government
with respect to Muslim-Christian relations and the reality that “when
Christians are falsely accused they not entitled to apology or
assuagement.”
Expressing his dismay to Malaysiakini today,
the head of the Catholic Church in the Malacca-Johor diocese, said:
“More than a month has passed since the incursion by Jais on a function
organized by a Christian group in Damansara Utama in which a few Muslims
were present.
“Till today, no one
from the accusatory quarter can sustain the charge that Christian
proselytisation of Muslims did actually occur at that occasion.
“It
appears that Jais requires more than a month to compile their report.
Apparently, they have not heard of the Najib Razak administration's
'People first, performance now' motto, or if they have, they may well
think the Prime Minister was indulging in a peculiar sense of humour.”
The
Jesuit-trained prelate said it would be “folly to think that Christians
also sport a comparably peculiar sense of humour whereby they view
matters in which grave accusations have been preferred against them as a
lark, a charade, as some kind of joke.”
Bishop Tan (above),
who is concurrently president of the Catholic Bishops Conference of
Malaysia, said he felt no need to bring up the recent case of a private
TV station using fabricated footage in a documentary allegedly depicting
Christian proselytisation of Muslims.
“That
calumny inevitably follows upon the one visited upon Christians in the
case of the incursion of Jais on the Damnasara Utama Methodist Centre.
One fabrication begets another,” said the prelate.
Tan observed that the “patience of Christians was well nigh inexhaustible though our credulity in limited.”
He
warned the powers-that-be that they were in the same situation with
respect to Malaysian Christians that they were with regard to a “certain
community that came out in force to demonstrate their long-simmering
discontent nearly four years ago.”
Bishop
Tan observed that demonstration went largely unheeded but, he said,
that months later its impact registered at the ballot box.
“A
similar festering of discontent is at work and a comparable complacency
with respect to implications is on evidence,” he commented.
“Santayana was right: those who forget history are condemned to repeat it,” warned the bishop.
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