Stand up and be counted, Malaysia
26 August 2010
It is strange that in the 21st century, we are still having to face the problem of institutionalised racism.
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OVER the past week or so, there have been some developments in our country which are more disturbing than usual.
In particular, the two cases of alleged racist remarks by school heads; the accusations that Penang mosques have replaced the Yang di-Pertuan Agong with the Chief Minister’s name in their prayers; and the continued insistence that Article 153 of the Constitution is equal to an inalienable right that could not be questioned.
These events are interrelated and it seems to me that they indicate that there is a battle of ideology going on in the country now.
On one side is the idea that a person’s ethnicity and religion entitles him to be treated better than anyone else who is different. On the other side is the idea that equality is an aspiration that is both noble and necessary for nation building.
It is strange that in the 21st century we are still having to face the problem of institutionalised racism.
Looking at our history, one can see why this has occurred. The combination of race-based politics and poorly interpreted constitutional provisions have meant that the idea of racial and religious superiority has been allowed to grow and become the norm rather than something undesirable and out of the ordinary.
How else can one explain the possibility that teachers, the very people to whom we entrust the education of our children, can have such warped values and also have the gall to express those views publicly?
How else can we explain the near rabid attack on the Penang Chief Minister for something which he and the state religious department have vehemently denied and in fact would have been insane to attempt?
Let’s analyse this one step at a time. When the dominant political parties in this country do not have any political ideology to speak of and are instead, based on the principle that each race-based component has a duty to safeguard the interest of its community, what one has is a recipe for the kind of policy and rhetoric that divides rather than unites.
Historically, one can see the reasons why the politics of the nation was forged in this way. It was a necessary evil in the face of the divide-and-rule policy by the British to show that even when separate, the three major communities of the nation can still work together politically.
However, it is an unsustainable model and what started life as a fairly rosy example of racial cooperation too easily descended into crude racialist type politics.
Which is why the early aspirations that our founding fathers had for a society treated with equality has now been all but buried by the idea that one race is superior to others and in fact is the only race with any right to be here in Malaysia.
This is because in the battlefields of politics, it is easiest to appeal to base racialist emotions, especially when without those types of ideas, a party based on race will have no collateral to work with.
In this kind of political atmosphere, it is of no surprise that what has been forgotten is that the basis of this nation was one of justice and equality. And the document that is meant to protect that, the Federal Constitution, has been misinterpreted to the extent that there is no longer any trace of this aspiration in the mainstream discourse of the day.
Let us be absolutely clear on this matter, the Constitution does give powers to the government to take affirmative action and it does acknowledge the fact that Islam has a special place in the public life of the nation.
What it does not intend to do however is create a perpetual system of ethnic-based favourable treatment nor does it advocate the idea that all other religious beliefs must be subservient to Islam.
However, instead of this reasonable position, what we have today is the idea that affirmative action for Malays is unquestionable and to be continued in perpetuity becoming the norm.
This cannot be further from the truth as there are no legal justification for it at all.
Article 153 of the Federal Constitution is seen as the holy grail for those who hold this view. However, if we examine the provision closely we will notice two things.
Firstly, affirmative action is not a Malay right. Article 153 does not endow a right. What it does is to merely give government the power to take affirmative action despite the overarching ideal of equality which is enshrined in Article 8 of the Constitution.
To support this contention, we see that Article 8 clearly states that all citizens in this country are equal except for situations specifically provided for in the Constitution. Those “specific provisions” are found in Article 153 and there are not many of them.
They include the power to establish quotas for the civil service, permits and licences, scholarships and education.
Therefore anything other than these areas should not be subjected to affirmative action.
Furthermore, any affirmative action has to be reasonable. The idea of what is reasonable must surely be open to research and debate otherwise there will always be the risk of abuse and wastage of resources.
This being the case, although questioning the existence of such a power to have affirmative action is moot, discussion on the efficacy of affirmative action policies and programmes surely is not.
The way the discourse is today, and not merely by the racialist fringe but by mainstream politicians in power, is that even the implementation of Article 153 is not to be questioned at all.
This is surely wrong based both on the meaning of the Constitution as well as the principle held by the founding fathers that Article 153 was an unfortunate but necessary aberration from the ideals of equality and that it was to be used not in perpetuity.
With these kinds of distortion of law, is it any wonder then that we still get people actually classifying whole swathes of the citizenry as having no right to be here?
Is it any wonder then that a crazy accusation against a Chief Minister whose government has given twice as much money to the Islamic bodies in the state than the previous administration, can give rise to the belief that he is a threat to the faith?
If this country is to have any future as a true nation, the time has come for those who believe in the ideals of equality, ideals which were held by the political founding fathers of the country as well as the traditional Rulers of that time, to stand up and be counted.
To not be cowed by the bigots and to say that this is our country and it stands on noble humanitarian ideals, not opportunistic racialist thinking.
Why is affirmitive action racism? what do you define as racism?
It is a very wide brush that you use to defile a system that was set out properly at independence to assist the majority they being Malays.
Bearing in mind this is a democracy where the wishes and rights of a majority prevail however bitter that may be to a minority, the legislation and administrative machinery in place to assist Malays attain a level of economic and educational parity with the other two groups being the Chinese and Indians who benefitted under the British at the expense of the Malays.
The benefits to non Malays includes the over 1,000,000 unlawfully unconstitutionally granted citizenships by the Tengku to Chinese and Indians without Malay consent.
To have no sought the consent of the Malays is to have relegated them to a status of being less worthy of the other two races that the Tengku had to make that decision on theirr behalf. it is racism in its classic context.
As long as a government is empowered to rule, it is likely they will implement and extend where necessary the NEP to a point they are comfortable their political objectives are met, the rights of the Malays as a majority are preserved and the social fabric of the country retains the character of a Malay state.
The world does not recognize non Malays as being the original or true owners of Malaysia. It recognizes the Malays as custodians and the original inhabitants of the place regardless of what the opposition has to say about it as an insignificant loud minority.
Racism is not about name calling. It is about the caste system, it is about the Chinese treating everyone else with contempt and their refusal to provide jobs to others than Chinese, their exclusionof Indians and Malays from many of the benefits they grab from the state and their continued practice of illicit trades in drugs, prostitution, gambling, grand theft, pimping, arms trafficking and the underpaying of Malay and Tamil employees.
When one points thee out immediately they go into their corners calling us “anti Chinese’. Their concerted aggressive campaigns against the Malays disguising these cowardly attacks as “anti UMNO” or anti Barisan is simply an act of yellow livered cowardice.
Chinese and opposition dominated websiteds and blogs censor those who do not agree with their views however correct these views may be. It is not a democratic practice and we have to be careful of these totalitarians parading as democrats.
Dear Gopal Raj Kumar or whoever you are,
If your comment is about the above article then I think you are not getting the point. Affirmative action is necessary but should be based on needs and not race. It should not be a right issue but based on the actual need of the person. No one denied the fact that the Malays needed help but it should be based on need. So, are you saying that even a rich Malay who can afford to buy big bungalows and big cars still need to be given 15% discount on houses and all their children be sponsored?That is racism and discrimination! And I think we should stop the rhetorics about giving citizenship etc etc. There is no point talking about it after 54 years of independance!Everyone irrespective of race have sloughed for this country and contributed to the economy of this country. Remember, those days in most schools and even MARA colleges, it was the non-Malay teachers who thought and improved the status of the rural Malay students. UM was set up by non-Malays and the person who single handedly set up the medical faculty was an Indian. Same goes to the chinese educationist who thought in various institution of higher learning and schools. In fact, even during the communist emergency, many chinese contributed by being spies and sacrificed themselves for the country to defeat the communist. All of them considered themselves as Malaysian and contributed a lot for the country.
The government should lead by example but by having discriminatory policies will only prevent real unity and assimilation. Unless the government is not genuinely interested in having racial unity in the first place. The more the government plays the racial card, the more the people will be separated. I know the hidden agenda is to chase out all the non-Malays from this country. That time will come and the fun will begin after that when the Malays will be fighting among themselves. Whose right are you going to talk about after that? It will be a social class issue then.
I am not sure which history book you are following but if Malays are the orginal inhabitants of this place than where do you put the Orang Asli’s or Orang Asal? Who are they? Prof Maude Philips from Monash Malaysia has done extensive genetic studies among all the Orang Asli’s in malaysia and you will be surprised when you find out about their origins and how they came to this land, way before anyone inhabited this land.
The chinese are workaholics and they will do whatever it takes to make money, whether legal or illegal. BUT to say that only chinese are involved in prostitution, gambling etc etc is not true anymore. I know of Malays who are also learning fast. Just look at the recent Custom’s arrest, human trafficking ,sand mining etc ,they are all Malays!! so, you should not just point fingers at others. The number of social ills, including unwed mothers etc etc are highest among the Malays. The gov should concentrate on these issues if they really want to improve the lifes of the Malays.
NEP had a good intention at the beginning but it was hijacked by the UMNOputras. The general Malays did not really benefit much except for some false impression that they are doing well, becoming jaguh kampung. Any affirmative policies should be based on needs and NOT race. Every single race in this country who are left behind should be helped.
following my earlier reply, here I would like to share an email from a student which reaffirms my stand on this issue:
im sorry i send u 2 emails
just want 2 say that i was from a boarding school in kl
when i was in f4, i was shocked to know that many of my seniors are filthy rich
some of them r ank dato’s
theres a lot of businessmans children there
i thought sbp’s r only 4 those who r poor or come from a moderate-income family
the same goes to mrsm
i have a fren who has a fren that has ferrari, of course with a driver!
that makes me sad
4 ur information my father’s a teacher n my mother’s a housewife
thnk u doc