The 10 young men have washed corpses according to Islamic rites, cried while counseling unmarried pregnant women and joined a police crackdown on teenage motorcycle racers — all before judges on national TV.
A Malaysian cable station has given a reality show makeover to its Islamic programing, and it’s taking this moderate Muslim-majority country by storm.
The show, called Imam Muda or “Young Leader,” is halfway through a 10-week run. With its blend of doctrine and drama, it is a natural fit for Malaysia, a Southeast Asian nation that has tried to defend its Islamic traditions while also welcoming high-tech industry and Western culture. It’s these parallel strains in society that the program taps so successfully.
The producers say they want to find a leader for these times, a pious but progressive Muslim who can prove that religion remains relevant to Malaysian youths despite the influence of Western pop culture.
Even the prizes combine both worlds: An all expenses paid pilgrimage to Mecca and a car.
“This is not like other programs that have no religious values,” says the show’s chief judge, Hasan Mahmud Al-Hafiz, a former prayer leader at Malaysia’s national mosque. “We have no shouting or jumping. We provide spiritual food. We’re not looking for a singer or a fashion model.”
In 21st century Malaysia, it’s a formula that works. The producers say the show has become the Islamic-themed channel’s most-watched program ever.
More than 1,000 men auditioned for the show. They were made to recite prayers, given tests on Islam and asked questions on current affairs such as naming world leaders. Background checks were done to ensure none had unsavory pasts.
In the end, 10 were left, including a bank officer, a farmer, a cleric and some university students.
Most of the contestants, photogenic men between 18 and 27, could pass as models. In some episodes, they appear in well-tailored suits and ties, albeit with Muslim caps on top. In others, they don traditional flowing robes, or simply fashionable slacks and shirts.
“We want to prove that our young Muslim Malaysians can keep up with the times,” Izelan Basar, the show’s creator and manager of the cable channel said. “We chose the brightest, most devout men for this program — young men whom our female viewers now want for their husbands or sons-in-law.”
Besides the pilgrimage and the car, the prizes include a job as prayer leader in a major mosque, a scholarship to study in Saudi Arabia, 20,000 ringgit (US$6,400) in cash and a laptop.
The contestants are sequestered in a mosque hostel with no access to family, friends or cellphones. They spend much of their time being tutored in Islamic studies. The cameras start rolling when they’re out on assignments.
“I want to fulfill my responsibility to my religion and my community by being here,” said Taufek Noh, a motivational speaker, during a break in filming at a mosque auditorium.
The 27-year-old was allowed time off to get married on June 12. He spent only one night with his bride before being whisked back into seclusion with the other contestants.
The show isn’t Malaysia’s first religion-based reality show, but it has generated more public excitement than its sedate predecessors, such as Akademi Al Koran, in which participants underwent training to recite Koranic verses.



