Assalamualaikum..
Religions
The Malaysian
constitution guarantees freedom of religion while making Islam the state religion. According to the
Population and Housing Census 2010 figures, ethnicity and religious beliefs
correlate highly. Approximately 61.3% of the population practice Islam, 19.8% practice Buddhism, 9.2% Christianity, 6.3% Hinduism and 1.3% practice Confucianism, Taoism and other traditional Chinese religions. 0.7% declared no religion and the
remaining 1.4% practised other religions or did not provide any information.
All ethnic Malays are considered Muslim by law of the Constitution. Statistics from
the 2010 Census indicate that 83.6% of the Chinese population identify as
Buddhist, with significant numbers of adherents following Taoism (3.4%) and
Christianity (11.1%), along with small Hui-Muslim populations in areas like Penang. The
majority of the Indian population follow Hinduism (86.2%), with a significant
minority identifying as Christians (6.0%) or Muslims (4.1%). Christianity is
the predominant religion of the non-Malay bumiputera community (46.5%)
with an additional 40.4% identifying as Muslims.
Muslims are obliged to follow the decisions
of Syariah courts in matters concerning their
religion. The Islamic judges are expected to follow the Shafi`i legal school of Islam, which is the
main madh'hab of Malaysia. The jurisdiction of Shariah courts is limited to Muslims in
matters such as marriage, inheritance, divorce, apostasy, religious conversion, and custody among others. No other
criminal or civil offences are under the jurisdiction of the Shariah courts,
which have a similar hierarchy to the Civil Courts. Despite being the supreme courts of
the land, the Civil Courts do not hear matters related to Islamic practices.
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