Saturday 17 December 2011

More anti-Christian policies Muhyiddin/ MOE?

Saturday, December 17, 2011

SteadyAku47 (HusseinHamid) says:
SMK Convent Bukit Nanas : Pray tell me Why?


What madness is this?

“For all those who have ears to hear
Who are these who speak dark counsel without knowledge?
Who are these who walk about in arrogant accord?
With their foreheads wrinkled and their hearts hardened?
Who are all these who speaks with serpents tongues?”

I cannot see any common sense justification for such an appointment except to confirm the absolute reality that a desperate UMNO is now reduce to taking desperate and dangerous actions to try and cling to power!

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"We have no qualms about race or religion of the principal
posted to our mission schools,” she said in an interview this week.
She said that Zavirah was not school’s first lay principal,
or the order’s first non-Christian school head;
but expressed disappointment that its nominees
had been sidelined by the ministry.
“What we want are principals who know
what the mission school is and stands for,” she stressed.
In his statement, Pakiam highlighted that Zavirah
had not been on a list submitted by the mission school authority."

Unease grows over Muslim head for top convent school

December 17, 2011

KUALA LUMPUR, Dec 17 — For Catholic Malaysians, Putrajaya’s latest pick of a Malay-Muslim principal to head the prestigious SMK Convent Bukit Nanas (CBN) underscores a worrying trend to disregard the Church’s contribution and rights in the country.

Archbishop of Kuala Lumpur Tan Sri Murphy Pakiam waded this week into a growing row between the 112-year-old school’s Catholic owners and the Ministry of Education (MOE) after its new principal Datin Seri Zavirah Mohd Shaari’s surprise arrival at its doorstep.

“The appointment of the principal of CBN is not only contrary to the government policy of maximum consultation but has given the impression that it is the government’s strategy to take over the mission schools in total disregard for the status, ethos and special character of mission schools, especially CBN,” Pakiam (picture) said in a statement published earlier this week in Catholic paper The Herald.

He was appealing to Education director-general Datuk Seri Abdul Ghafar Mahmud to reconsider the ministry’s decision and pick a suitably qualified person nominated by the school owners under the Infant Jesus (IJ) Sisters order. The school is considered among the top convent schools in the country.

The case comes on the heels of a recent drama over the police’s extra conditions for carolling permits on two South Klang churches less than two weeks ago.

Earlier this year, right-wing Malay-Muslim groups triggered a national uproar over persistent rumours that churches are on a campaign to convert their own and pushing unfounded allegations of a secret political plot to install a Christian prime minister in the next general election.

Christians say such issues are an attempt to erode their religious rights in Muslim-majority Malaysia.

CBN, which has produced notable personalities such as Bersih 2.0 chief Datuk Ambiga Sreenevasan and former International Trade Minister Tan Sri Rafidah Aziz, is one of 60 convent schools in Malaysia, Sister Rosalind Tan told The Malaysian Insider.

Tan is the mother provincial of the IJ Sisters and the person in charge of the order’s administration in the country.

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