Cultural and religious festivals: the Malaysian experience

Malaysia, a multiethnic and multi-religious society in Southeast Asia, has a population of 27.7 million comprising three major ethnicities, consisting of 67% Malays/Bumiputras, 24.7% Chinese, and 7.4% Indians along with many smaller minority groups. The Federal Constitution of Malaysia declares Isla...

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Main Author: Ishak, Mohd. Shuhaimi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universiti Malaya 2010
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Online Access:http://irep.iium.edu.my/5412/1/cultural_and_religious_festivals-_the_malaysian_experience.pdf
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spelling my.iium.irep.54122011-11-23T01:20:37Z http://irep.iium.edu.my/5412/ Cultural and religious festivals: the Malaysian experience Ishak, Mohd. Shuhaimi DS Asia Malaysia, a multiethnic and multi-religious society in Southeast Asia, has a population of 27.7 million comprising three major ethnicities, consisting of 67% Malays/Bumiputras, 24.7% Chinese, and 7.4% Indians along with many smaller minority groups. The Federal Constitution of Malaysia declares Islam as the official religion, but guarantees religious freedom. Malaysian observes a number of celebrations according to the religious faith of its people. The Malays celebrate their Muslim festivals such as Aidil Fitri and Aidil Adha. The Chinese in Malaysia celebrate festivals like Chinese New Year and Chap Goh Mei where cultural celebrations such as the lion dances and Chingay procession take place. For the Hindus, apart from the Deepavali celebration, the festival of light, the Thaipusam is a celebration where more than one million people flock to Batu Caves. While in East Malaysia, the grandest celebration is Tadau Keamatan in Sabah, and Gawai Dayak in Sarawak. Both celebrations are of significance as the occasion to mark rice harvesting season. The paper attempts to highlight the celebrations of the major ethnics groups in Malaysia and depicts real experiences of individuals of each group to show that it accommodates the differences in culture and religious belief. Universiti Malaya 2010-12 Article REM application/pdf en http://irep.iium.edu.my/5412/1/cultural_and_religious_festivals-_the_malaysian_experience.pdf Ishak, Mohd. Shuhaimi (2010) Cultural and religious festivals: the Malaysian experience. Journal of Southeast Asian Studies (JATI), 15 (1). pp. 97-111. ISSN 1823-4127 http://bakkdev.um.edu.my/myjurnal/public/article-view.php?id=1694
institution Universiti Islam Antarabangsa Malaysia
building IIUM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider International Islamic University Malaysia
content_source IIUM Repository (IREP)
url_provider http://irep.iium.edu.my/
language English
topic DS Asia
spellingShingle DS Asia
Ishak, Mohd. Shuhaimi
Cultural and religious festivals: the Malaysian experience
description Malaysia, a multiethnic and multi-religious society in Southeast Asia, has a population of 27.7 million comprising three major ethnicities, consisting of 67% Malays/Bumiputras, 24.7% Chinese, and 7.4% Indians along with many smaller minority groups. The Federal Constitution of Malaysia declares Islam as the official religion, but guarantees religious freedom. Malaysian observes a number of celebrations according to the religious faith of its people. The Malays celebrate their Muslim festivals such as Aidil Fitri and Aidil Adha. The Chinese in Malaysia celebrate festivals like Chinese New Year and Chap Goh Mei where cultural celebrations such as the lion dances and Chingay procession take place. For the Hindus, apart from the Deepavali celebration, the festival of light, the Thaipusam is a celebration where more than one million people flock to Batu Caves. While in East Malaysia, the grandest celebration is Tadau Keamatan in Sabah, and Gawai Dayak in Sarawak. Both celebrations are of significance as the occasion to mark rice harvesting season. The paper attempts to highlight the celebrations of the major ethnics groups in Malaysia and depicts real experiences of individuals of each group to show that it accommodates the differences in culture and religious belief.
format Article
author Ishak, Mohd. Shuhaimi
author_facet Ishak, Mohd. Shuhaimi
author_sort Ishak, Mohd. Shuhaimi
title Cultural and religious festivals: the Malaysian experience
title_short Cultural and religious festivals: the Malaysian experience
title_full Cultural and religious festivals: the Malaysian experience
title_fullStr Cultural and religious festivals: the Malaysian experience
title_full_unstemmed Cultural and religious festivals: the Malaysian experience
title_sort cultural and religious festivals: the malaysian experience
publisher Universiti Malaya
publishDate 2010
url http://irep.iium.edu.my/5412/1/cultural_and_religious_festivals-_the_malaysian_experience.pdf
http://irep.iium.edu.my/5412/
http://bakkdev.um.edu.my/myjurnal/public/article-view.php?id=1694
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score 13.188404