Malaysian-born Bakri Musa writes frequently on issues affecting his native land. His essays have appeared in the Far Eastern Economic Review, Asiaweek, International Herald Tribune, Education Quarterly, SIngapore's Straits Times, and The New Straits Times. His commentary has aired on National Public Radio's Marketplace. His regular column Seeing It My Way appears in Malaysiakini. Bakri is also a regular contributor to th eSun (Malaysia).
He has previously written "The Malay Dilemma Revisited: Race Dynamics in Modern Malaysia" as well as "Malaysia in the Era of Globalization," "An Education System Worthy of Malaysia," "Seeing Malaysia My Way," and "With Love, From Malaysia."
Bakri's day job (and frequently night time too!) is as a surgeon in private practice in Silicon Valley, California. He and his wife Karen live on a ranch in Morgan Hill.
This website is updated twice a week on Sundays and Wednesdays at 5 PM California time.
Deepening Malay Polarization More Dangerous Than Inter-Racial Divisions
Deepening Malay Polarization More Dangerous Than Inter-Racial Divisions
Bakri Musa
www.bakrimusa.com
Over 46 years ago a largely Chinese group of demonstrators
celebrating their party’s electoral victory triggered Malaysia’s worst
race riot. Last Wednesday, September 16, 2015, an exclusively Malay
rally in predominantly Chinese Petaling Street of Kuala Lumpur triggered
only the riot police’s water cannons.
What flowed on Petaling Street last Wednesday was clear
water, not red blood as in 1969. There was also minimal property damage
(except for loss of business) and no loss of life. That is significant;
that is progress.
Malaysia has come a long way since 1969, the current
shrill race hysteria notwithstanding. However leaders, political and
non-political, Malays as well as non-Malays, are still trapped in their
time-warped racial mentality of the 1960s. They still view the nation’s
race dynamics primarily as Malays versus non-Malays.
That is understandable as the horrific memories of that
1969 race tragedy, as well as the much earlier and more brutal Bintang
Tiga reign of terror, had been seared into the collective Malaysian
consciousness, permanently warping our national perception.
The challenge today is less the risk of inter-racial
conflagration of the 1969 variety, more a Malay civil war similar to
what is now happening in the Arab world and what has happened on the
Korean Peninsula. Last Wednesday’s red-shirt rally illustrates this
point.
While the earlier and visibly non-Malay Bersih 4.0 demonstrations had considerable Malay support,
including from such luminaries as Tun Mahathir and National Laureate
Datuk Samad Said, the exclusively Malay red-shirted Himpunan Rakyat
Bersatu drew condemnations from many Malays, leaders and otherwise.
The head of the Malay NGO Group of 25, Noor Farida,
contemptuously dismissed the red shirts as “rent-a-mob crowd.” As a
former diplomat I would have expected her to be, well, a bit diplomatic
and try to heal the division, not add to it.
The fact that these supposedly enlightened Malay
leaders saw fit to condemn and not try to at least understand the
aspirations and frustrations of those red-shirted protestors underscores
my contention.
Make no mistake. Ethnic and racial conflicts are still a
tragic reality today in much of the world, even in the enlightened
West. Witness the reaction in Western Europe to the current flood of
non-European refugees. Only a few months ago America went through
another of its all-too-frequent wrenching race riots in Ferguson,
Missouri, a century and a half following Reconstruction and over half a
century after the adoption of the Civil Rights Act.
In the Middle East, the Jews and Arabs are still at it.
Nonetheless and to put things in perspective, more Arabs have been
killed in modern times by fellow Arabs than by Jews, or the Jews and the
West combined.
That observation underscores the lethality of
intra-racial conflicts. The present undercurrent of Malay xenophobia
however, blinds us to this new emerging and far more dangerous reality.
This peril is amplified and abetted by the glaring
deficit in our community today of a buffering body or mediating
mechanism to bridge and heal the divisions within us. While our
traditional ethics and culture had served us well in the past, our
pseudo or culup modernity has destroyed those pristine values.
Consider that when the British imposed the Malayan
Union Treaty with the acquiescence of our sultans, Malays (except for
our sultans of course) were united in opposing it. Our grandparents
expressed their disagreement and displeasure with our sultans in our
traditional halus (subtle) ways – by demonstrating our loyalty
publicly. That mass display prevented our sultans from attending the
inauguration of what would have been the first British Governor of
Malaya. The protest was so subtle that our sultans missed the message.
Bless the British, they did not.
Back then we were blessed with “towering personalities”
like Datuk Onn. His courage led him to defy his own sultan in the
tradition of Hang Jebat, to the point that he (Onn) was once labeled a derhaka (traitor) and banished to Singapore.
Today we are bereft of such smart, strong and honest
leaders. Instead we are cursed with an abundance of the pseudo-towering
variety. Like Hang Tuah of yore, they are corrupt, incompetent, and
obsessed with sucking up to their superiors, the sultans as well as
sultan wannabes. These leaders do not bring us closer; they would rather
divide us so as to maintain their positions.
Najib personifies this type of leadership.
One expects our commonality of Islam to bind us. Far
from it! Islam and its institutions in Malaysia have failed miserably on
this front. Instead of bringing us together, Islam divides us, mocking
our Koran and the teachings of our Prophet.
Our muftis could not even agree as to what is halal and
haram. Our government-issued ulamas could not say enough kind words on
UMNO leaders, even blessing their corrupt deeds, all in the name of
Islam! Meanwhile those aligned with PAS would have us believe that not
voting for PAS would doom us to eternal hellfire.
In many villagers there are separate mosques for PAS
and UMNO followers. Even funerals and marriages have been boycotted in
the name of Islam.
This religious fissure goes deep. The intolerance of a hijab-clad Muslimah for her tudung-free sisters goes beyond attire.
There are other equally dangerous fissures. There are
those who consider English fluency an asset and strive hard to acquire
that for themselves and their children. Others view that as denigrating
our national language and culture, an act of treason no less. Again,
that reflects the profound differences in our worldview.
These fault lines are fast converging. Given their
proper alignment and timing, they could all explode simultaneously, with
catastrophic consequences to all, Malays as well as non-Malays.
I am less concerned with the differences between
non-Malay yellow-shirters and Malay red shirts, rather between
yellow-shirted and red-shirted Malays. The latter division is becoming
increasingly irreconcilable and more dangerous. Yet they share some
common elements beyond race and faith. Both recognize and value the
rights of citizens to demonstrate publicly and or otherwise petition
their grievances to the government.
Yes, both have a lot to learn about public
demonstrations. They are not alone. Even the University of California is
still grappling with the issue of where to draw the line between
freedom of speech and intolerance.
Barisan, specifically UMNO, must appreciate and address
the concerns of Bersih if it hopes to win the next election and then
govern without much harassment. Likewise Pakatan, specifically DAP, must
not dismiss the apprehensions and frustrations of the Himpunan Group.
Those red-shirted Malays may be crude in expressing their frustrations
nonetheless their concerns are legitimate.
The shrill offensive cries of Tanah Melayu and Balek Tongsan
are but emotional outbursts of those who feel marginalized and
helpless. Their emotions preclude them from seeing beyond. If all the pendatangs
were to leave and Malaysia to become exclusively Tanah Melayu, who
would fix those Mat Rempits’ motorcycles, defend them in courts, or sell
them smart phones at affordable prices?
Bersih and Himpunan need to appreciate each other’s
positions, and then help solve or at least ameliorate those differences.
To Himpunan, Bersih’s criticisms of the UMNO government are seen as
belittling Malay leadership specifically and the Malay race generally.
To Bersih, if only the government and UMNO leaders were to be a wee bit
more competent and a whole lot less corrupt, the plight of Malays
generally and those red-shirters in particular would be much better.
It does not take much effort to appreciate the other
side’s point of view. I was impressed with the recent incident at Bayan
Lepas when a redshirt leader came to disrupt a Berseh 4 gathering. The
quick and counterintuitive thinking of the organizer had that individual
address the gathering. Thus instead of confrontation, there
was communication. That is the sort of gestures that need to be done and
encouraged.
For Malays, we first need to build bridges, not dig
trenches within our own community. As for the offensive cries of pendatang and Balek Tongsan,
Zunar’s latest cartoon encapsulates my point well, and with lots of
humor. It depicts a Mat Rempit begging an Ah Peck to fix his (Mat’s)
motorcycle.
Intra-Malay fissure is not just a Malay problem.
Malaysia cannot be stable if its largest racial entity is fractured.
Have you seen the youtube video of the horrific mat rempit crash on the Kesas highway? What are your thoughts on the rempit phenomenon and do you have any suggestions to cure this ill?
How about stop looking from your biased glasses perhaps? Those rempit are no stranger than Arab youth with their cars trick nor young Japanese with their rempit mentality (albeit far lower numbers)
2 Comments:
Have you seen the youtube video of the horrific mat rempit crash on the Kesas highway? What are your thoughts on the rempit phenomenon and do you have any suggestions to cure this ill?
How about stop looking from your biased glasses perhaps? Those rempit are no stranger than Arab youth with their cars trick nor young Japanese with their rempit mentality (albeit far lower numbers)
Post a Comment
<< Home