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July 21, 2006

The Star July 21: What ethnic studies is

What ethnic studies is

In this respect, they have made a start by venturing into an area “where angels fear to tread”. 

However on the basis of almost a lifetime of studies, research and experience in this area I would like to make certain suggestions so that the course itself can continue, albeit in a different format.  

The first thing is to recognise that ethnic studies come within the rubric of “area of comparative” studies. 

This means simply that there are no specific answers to questions posed.  

In academic conceptualisation, there are no sufficient conditions (one-factor causation), only necessary conditions (more than one factor) to explain behaviour, and this too within a comparative perspective of the social sciences. 

This means that we look at the issues or problems mainly as political, economic and social causes. There are, of course, others as well.  

This is understandably the most difficult course to teach, particularly to a multi-ethnic student population. 

I have found that the most effective way to do this, at least initially, is to use the research findings undertaken by local lecturers (not discriminating against expatriates whose work tends to be somewhat more “complicated”). 

Lecturers could make a very useful start by prescribing some selected research findings in books or journals to students beforehand, providing guidelines, and then jointly discussing the material preferably in tutorial-style presentations. 

In this way, an important dimension can be included, which is the students’ own experiences. 

 

Dr COLLIN ABRAHAM,
Kuala Lumpur.
 

NST July 16: Opinion: Getting the story of Malaysia right

Opinion: Getting the story of Malaysia right

16 Jul 2006
Abdul Razak Ahmad


Do our history textbooks need to be reviewed? Some experts think so. They’re seeing errors, omissions and not enough emphasis on certain communities — signs that the story of Malaysia is veering off course. But is it? ABDUL RAZAK AHMAD finds out.

Experts have pressed for caution when discussing any perceived imbalance in history textbooks.

Ranjit says more is needed on Chinese and Indian migration

Jayum says he finds disheart- ening facts in texbooks

ASK schoolchildren today about Yap Ah Loy, Sybil Karthigesu and Gurchan Singh and the likely response could well be blank stares.

The reason: These three historical figures have been erased from Malaysian school history textbooks.

Yap played a big role in developing Kuala Lumpur in the late 19th century. Gurchan and Karthigesu resisted the Japanese occupation of Malaya.

They used to get some mention. But they were gradually removed from the Form 1 to Form 5 texts.

Their omissions are part of what some experts worry could be the gradual diminution of contributions made by non-Malay communities.

There are now suggestions for a review to get the story of Malaysia back on its proper track, so it can remain a story to which every citizen, regardless of race or religion, can relate.

Is a review necessary?

"Malaysia was and still is a melting pot of various races, but the contribution of the Chinese and Indian communities in the socio-economic development of our country is downplayed in our current history textbooks," says Dr Ranjit Singh Malhi, an author of history books.

Ranjit is a facts consultant for the current Form 3 History textbook and the author of the current Form 6 General Studies textbook.

Apart from the "disappearance" of specific historical figures, Ranjit says current school history textbooks should also include more on the Chinese and Indian migration to and adoption of Malaya as their country.

"In the initial stages, the communities’ loyalties were towards their country of origin.

"But the texts also need to tell of how they began shifting their allegiance to this country, and how we all now feel that we have a stake in Malaysia."

The concerns also prompted a Barisan Nasional lawmaker to raise the issue in Parliament in March.

Kelana Jaya MP Loh Seng Kok said history teachers and parents had come to him concerned about what they found — and did not find — in the textbooks.

"We don’t object to increasing content. But we shouldn’t omit facts and information about the civilisations and history of the various cultures and backgrounds of Malaysians, especially if we want to create greater understanding among ourselves," said Loh.

If Ranjit and Loh have a case, then it’s one with a bearing on Malaysia’s oft-repeated aspiration of creating a Bangsa Malaysia.

Historian Dr Paul Kratoska, who taught at Universiti Sains Malaysia, says the textbooks used to emphasise a plural society, where each group maintained its own social and cultural identity and met others only in the marketplace.

But the emphasis shifted. The texts now make a clear push for Bangsa Malaysia — a national culture and society integrating a variety of traditions.

"This approach has benefits in promoting national solidarity, but can only be effective if all Malaysians are able to identify with Bangsa Malaysia," he says.

Other experts, however, such as anthropologist Professor Dr Wan Zawawi Ibrahim, caution against any "group specific" approach when asking for a review.

Zawawi, deputy director of the Institute of the Malay World and Civilisation at Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia, says any call for "fairness" needs to take into account the perspectives of all the communities, not just the "dominant three" — Malay, Chinese and Indian.

"So if you want to include more historical figures in our textbooks, then you also have to look at all the minority communities like the Penan, Kelabit, Kadazan and Orang Asli.

"They too have a role in the making of Malaysia," says Zawawi.

Ethnic-relations expert Professor Jayum Jawan concurs.

"Overall, the content is good, but as I read through the textbooks, I found some disheartening things."Jayum says some key contributions made by historical figures from Sabah and Sarawak were either not mentioned, or summarily given "a line or two".

"All communities contributed to Malaysia. Our history textbooks need to be able to create this sense of shared belonging," says Jayum, a Universiti Putra Malaysia professor of politics and government, who helped draw up the syllabus for "Ethnic Relations", a recently mandated course for all public university undergraduates.

A call for review must therefore be approached very delicately.

In Malaysia, with its multitude of ethnic communities, one can inadvertently end up "stirring a hornet’s nest", as Wan Zawawi put it.

"Because when you cater to one group’s demands, another will ask: ‘What about me?’"

Wan Zawawi says that due to the country’s diversity, any review would need to bring together all the different interpretations of Malaysia’s history from the viewpoints of all the communities.

It needs to be a long-term collective effort, involving not just historians but spokespersons from the communities, scholars as well as leading "Malaysianists" — those from outside who study the country’s history.

"Any review must therefore be collective, consultative and knowledge-based, not based on emotion.

"You can’t just complain and then appoint one or two people and tell them our textbooks are weak in this area and please make necessary additions," says Wan Zawawi.

For political science lecturer Dr Mohamed Mustafa Ishak, calls for review must take into account another reality: that Malaysian history is, among others, rooted in an explanation of how and why the country reached the social contract agreed upon by all races at Independence and the formation of Malaysia.

"Yes, there are some uncomfortable things put in and left out of the textbooks, but it’s so that we gain an understanding of why, for example, our Constitution is written as it was, why there was emphasis on certain things and not others.

"Like it or not, the history of multiculturalism, per se, only properly developed from the 19th century.

"You cannot deny that our history goes back well before that, to the history of the Malay sultanates, which explains the emphasis given to it in the textbooks," says Mustafa, who teaches at Universiti Utara Malaysia.

Universiti Malaya’s Professor Emeritus Datuk Khoo Kay Kim also urges caution when discussing any perceived imbalance in the books.

At times, very complex factors shape events involving an ethnic community.

They can’t be forced into neat explanations to satisfy particular groups.

"Questions of ethnic relations in history must therefore be discussed in very neutral language, without saying who is right and who is wrong, or else it sparks off anger and animosity."

"That’s why I don’t like to use the word ‘contribution’, as in ‘the Chinese community’s contribution to Malaysia’," says Khoo.

"I prefer the word ‘role’, because then you can have detached views that do not unnecessarily praise or condemn any group."

Khoo feels that a review is timely. But he wants the aim to be to encourage pupils to look at history from even wider perspectives or, as he puts it, "to look at history in the round".

Khoo’s point is that most history texts today tend to deal with Malaysian society to the exclusion of other important aspects, especially the foreign environment.

"We need to know more about how the outside world impacted this country and how this country has managed its relationship with others."

"No country exists in isolation, and when you give a lopsided perspective of our history, there’s every possibility that it will be misunderstood, because in history you can always influence the student to look at things your way," he says.

Khoo, who sits on the Quality Control Committee for the Form One textbook, believes that history books have a role to play in promoting multi-culturalism.

"History must attempt to explain culture, but our school history books don’t seem to do that," he says.

"As a result, our young people don’t know each other’s cultures.

"Some are good friends, they can lepak with each other, but they still don’t really know each other."

Contested history
THERE are at least 10 factual errors in the current Form 5 textbooks, according to textbook writer Dr Ranjit Singh Malhi. They include:

• The Naning War, 1831-1833 (page 31). Actual date: 1831-1832.

• American War of Independence, 1776 (page 67). Actual date: 1775-1783.
• The All Malaya Council of Joint Action, formed in September 1946 (page 181). Actual date: Dec 22, 1946.

Important contributions of various historical personalities have been removed from the current textbooks. Among them:

• Sybil Karthigesu: She was one of Malaysia’s freedom fighters during the Japanese Occupation. "Even though she was tortured by the Japanese, she did not give up. She was a woman of principle and she had tremendous courage," says Ranjit.

• Gurchan Singh: Popularly known as the "Lion of Malaya", he resisted the Japanese takeover in World War II. He wrote and secretly distributed a newspaper during that period.

• Yap Ah Loy: The third Capitan China of Kuala Lumpur from 1868-1885, Yap played a major role in the development of Kuala Lumpur as a commercial and tin mining centre, particularly after the fire of 1881.

NST July 19: Editorial: Truth and reconciliation

Editorial: Truth and reconciliation

19 Jul 2006


IN the parliamentary kerfuffle over a Universiti Putra Malaysia textbook on ethnic relations, both Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Datuk Seri Nazri Aziz and Higher Education Minister Datuk Mustapa Mohamed had a point.

Any attempt at exorcising the demons of the nation’s past, according to Nazri, had to contend with the offence of sedition — a law designed to keep those demons in the bottle and which will continue to have its uses for some time to come. Mustapa, on the other hand, is determined to press on with the compulsory education of university students in Malaysian multiculturalism, warts and all, in the aim of having the demons slain by present and future generations.

No one can argue with that, and indeed no one did in the course of the emergency motion tabled by the DAP on Monday. The bone of contention appears to be some sections in the book which are said to have strayed an inference or two too far from a purely objective description of such sensitive subjects as the May 13, Kampung Medan and Suqiu incidents — all of them outbreaks of communal strife that most people hope would just go away. They won’t, and their banishment to the recesses of the collective memory continues to haunt the country in very visible ways. The multiracial panel of academics who took 18 months to outline the ethnic relations course would have been careful of the minefield they were about to tread. But they must also have known that too much walking on eggshells would have defeated the purpose of coming to terms with the sordid episodes in our history.

Given the dons’ highly delicate task, the textbook’s factual errors, and the admission that it was rushed to meet publishing deadlines, come as a surprise. If the job of ethnic relations is to be handed over to non-partisan academia, as it should, then such intellectual laxness is unforgivable. Mistakes must be corrected and the textbook checked again for disinterest and impartiality. There is a lesson here for politicians, too. The country will never get over the traumas of conflict until it works up the courage to have them examined in the cold light of day. No better place exists to take the first step than the lecture theatre, where unvarnished knowledge takes precedence over emotion and the blame game. Our MPs have a duty to question and to see that the laws are upheld. But they should not stand in the way of the young in the pursuit of the truth.

LimKitSiang July 17: Public Universities - to glorify UMNO and poison minds against Opposition?

Public Universities - to glorify UMNO and poison minds against Opposition?

Time & Date: July 17, 2006 @ 12: 31.57

The Higher Education Minister, Datuk Mustapha Mohamad has given a most unsatisfactory answer to my supplementary question in Parliament today on the biased, tendentious and divisive new Ethnic Relations course, compulsory for public university students.

The Ethnic Relations textbook used by Universiti Putra Malaysia (UPM), for instance, is highly objectionable on at least three specific grounds:

 

Condemning as “extremist” the 1999 Election Appeal of the Malaysian Chinese Election Appeals Committee (Suqiu), which was endorsed in principle by the Barisan Nasional parties, including the Prime Minister at the time, Tun Dr. Mahathir Mohamad before the general election;

 

Blaming Indian youths for the 2001 Kampong Medan incident;

Blaming DAP for the May 13, 1969 riots;

 

In his reply, Mustapha defended the reference to the Suqiu election appeals as “extremist” as a “historic fact”, which is both misleading, mischievous and utterly baseless – while he glossed over the other references with the vague statement that they are subject to different interpretations and open to review.

Is the biased, tendentious and divisive Ethnic Relations course the first concrete result of the Zahid Higher Education Report submitted last July, which could only aggravate racial polarization instead of promoting national unity among university students?

One of the 138 recommendations of the Zahid Report is that “the efforts to instill national unity be continued and extended to higher education” (No. 101). The Zahid Report admitted that “curriculum is such an important part of education that it can be considered the heart of any educational institution” and its role is “to achieve all-round self-development including spiritual, intellectual, emotional and physical development, as well as instill desirable moral values and convey knowledge and information”.

Is it now the role of the public universities, under the guise of fostering ethnic relations, to poison the minds of the new generation by feeding them with lies and half-truths about happened in recent Malaysian history?

Mustapha should realize that if the public universities are regarded by Malaysians, both the students and the public at large, as educational centres to glorify UMNO and to poison the minds of the new generation against opposition parties and dissent, then Malaysian public universities will become even worse centres of racial polarization than in the previous decades.

If public universities are used to distort history, glorify UMNO and poison the minds of the new generation against Opposition and dissent, they will aggravate racial polarization and destroy all efforts to forge national unity and attain Vision 2020 of a Bangsa Malaysa.

The Prime Minister, Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi and the Cabinet on Wednesday should give serious attention to this dangerous trend in public universities as a result of undesirable implementation of the Zahid Higher Education Report – turning public universities into institutions of national divisiveness instead of national unity.

LimKitSiang July 18: Historic lies in university textbook - stop “brainwashing”

Historic lies in university textbook - stop “brainwashing”

Time & Date: July 18, 2006 @ 11: 29.55

I welcome the strong stand taken by the Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department, Datuk Seri Nazri Aziz condemning as seditious the contents of the University Putra Malaysia (UPM) textbook on Ethnic Relations which has become a compulsory subject for all university students.

The textbook written by UPM lecturers Jayum Anak Jawan and Zaid Ahmad are a shame to the Malaysian academic community, demonstrating that lecturers should themselves be immersed and educated in a proper and balanced course in ethnic relations before they presume to educate the new generation of Malaysians university students on the subject, as they are promoting not ethnic relations but (to use Nazri’s words) “ethnic dis-relations”.

It is most shocking that the Higher Education Minister, Datuk Mustapha Mohamad could defend half-truths, untruths and the generally biased, tendentious and divisive accounts in the textbook as “historic facts” when they are in fact “historic lies”!

Among the “historic lies” of half-truths, untruths and the biased, tendentious and divisive accounts in the textbook are:

•Condemning as “extremist” the 1999 Election Appeal of the Malaysian Chinese Election Appeals Committee (Suqiu), which was endorsed in principle by the Barisan Nasional parties, including the Prime Minister at the time, Tun Dr. Mahathir Mohamad before the general election;

•Blaming Indian youths for the 2001 Kampong Medan incident;

•Blaming DAP for the May 13, 1969 riots;

•Biased and unbalanced account of the “social contract” reached by the forefathers of the major communities on the attainment of Independence of Malaya in 1957 on the cardinal principles of nation-building, viz that this is multi-racial, democratic and secular nation with Islam as the official religion but not an Islamic State.

•Biased and unbalanced account of the 20-Point Agreements reached with Sabah and Sarawak in the formation of Malaysia in 1963.

Although Mustapha said in Parliament yesterday that his ministry had no plans to suspend the subject or withdraw the textbook for the time being, I call on him to immediately withdraw the offending textbook.

On becoming the second Higher Education Minister in February, Mustapha has said that his biggest challenge is to restore academic excellence to Malaysian universities.

He should realize that if he continues to defend the “historic lies” in the Ethnic Relations textbook which tries to “brainwash” university students with UMNO propaganda turning them into robots rather than independent and critical citizens of a “First World” Malaysia, he will be undermining all his own efforts to raise university academic excellence and reduce the Malaysian universities into an international laughing-stock.

Mustapha must decide whether as the second Higher Education Minister, he wants to be remembered more as an UMNO politician who is prepared to “brainwash” university students with UMNO propaganda, half-truths and lies plunging Malaysian universities to a new mediocrity or as a Malaysian politician who had made the greatest contribution in restoring Malaysian universities to previous world-class standards.

If he wants to do the former, Mustapha will fail as a Higher Education Minister.

In fact, every day the tendentious and seditious Ethnic Relations textbook is allowed to be used in the Malaysian universities, it will polarize not only university students in the public universities but the larger Malaysian society.

Instead of promoting ethnic relations among students in the universities, Mustapha will be aggravating racial polarization in the country – one year before the nation celebrates its half-century of nationhood!

For this reason, Mustapha must act boldly and decisively by directing the immediate withdrawal of the offending Ethnic Relations textbook.

If Mustapha is not prepared to immediately withdraw the textbook concerned, then the Cabinet tomorrow should intervene and override Mustapha’s indecision in the larger national interest.

LimKitSiang July 18: May 13 riots - Commission of Inquiry to ascertain causes/events

May 13 riots - Commission of Inquiry to ascertain causes/events

Time & Date: July 18, 2006 @ 19: 31.40

(Speech in Parliament on the urgent motion on the biased and tendentious Ethnic Relations teaching guide which would further polarize race relations in the country)

It is sad and most unfortunate that we are having this urgent debate by the DAP MP for Bandar Kuching, Chong Chieng Jen on the biased and tendentious Ethnic Relations guidebook by two University Putra Malaysia (UPM) lecturers, Jayum Anak Jawan and Zaid Ahmad, which aggravate racial polarization instead fostering race relations.

This is because Parliament should be focusing on how we can restore academic excellence and eminence of our universities, but instead, we are bogged down with this issue of the misleading and biased guidebook on Ethnic Relations, which has become a compulsory subject for university students.

This is not a debate on whether the May 13, 1969 Incidents were caused by the DAP, the Taman Medan riots of 2001 caused by Indians, or whether the 1999 Election Appeal of the Malaysian Chinese Election Appeals Committee (Suqiu) were extremists – all of which are irresponsibly claimed by the Ethnic Relations guidebook.

The short time we have for the present debate is not adequate for any proper debate on the causes of May 13, 1969 riots, as there are many versions and published accounts. The guidebook named DAP, while other political parties like Gerakan and UMNO had been blamed.

Bapa Malaysia and the Prime Minister during the May 13, 1969 riots , Tunku Abdul Rahman in his book “Looking Back” (1977) which reprinted his article of 1st March 1976, said:

 

I refer to the tragedy of May 13, 1969 which caused the loss of many hundreds of innocent lives.

 

To know who manipulated the violence outside the part played by the Communists, we have to find out who it was who gave permission for the funeral procession of a dead Communist to pass through the streets of Kuala Lumpur.

 

Suffice for me to say that among those blamed for the May 13, 1969 Incident ( the official number of deaths was 196 but Tunku later spoke of “many hundreds of innocent lives”) were Tun Razak, Harun Idris and even the former Prime Minister.

It is in the public domain that the then Australian Deputy High Commissioner W.B. Prichett had at the time noted:

“…there can be no doubt that UMNO was solely responsible for the riots. Its members ran the communal campaign or allowed it to happen.”

This debate is not the occasion to establish who had caused the May 13, 1969 riots but why a subject purportedly to foster ethnic relations is so insensitive and irresponsible as to make baseless allegations, including:

•Condemning as “extremist” the 1999 Election Appeal of the Malaysian Chinese Election Appeals Committee (Suqiu), which was endorsed in principle by the Barisan Nasional parties, including the Prime Minister at the time, Tun Dr. Mahathir Mohamad before the general election;

•Blaming Indian youths for the 2001 Kampong Medan incident;

•Blaming DAP for the May 13, 1969 riots;

•Biased and unbalanced account of the “social contract” on the achievement of Merdeka in 1957.

•Biased and unbalanced account of the 1963 Malaysia Agreement bringing Sabah and Sarawak into the formation of Malaysia.

I agree that we should not run away from history. I call on the Cabinet tomorrow to establish a Commission of Inquiry to ascertain the causes and events of May 13, 1969 riots as we should not allow biased, tendentious and irresponsible accounts to be given by certain university lecturers.

The guidebook by Jaya Jawan and Zaid Ahmad is a most sloppy work.

For instance, in page 83 the guidebook said: “Perlembagaan Malaysia juga memperuntukkan DYMM Seri Paduka Baginda Yang di Pertuan Agong sebagai Ketua Agama Islam Negara Malaysia”.

There is just no such constitutional position of the Yang di Pertuan Agong as Ketua Agama Islam Negara Malaysia.

The guidebook has also given an unbalanced account of the “social contract” reached by the forefathers of the major communities on the attainment of Independence of Malaya in 1957 on the cardinal principles of nation-building, viz that this is a multi-racial, democratic and secular nation with Islam as the official religion but not an Islamic State.

Just now in Parliament, the Home Minister claimed that the Constitution provided for Islam as the official religion. In actual fact, the Constitution does not provide for Islam as the official religion as what is stated is that Islam is the religion of the Federation.

The non-Muslims have taken a very positive attitude in agreeing to Islam as the official religion but this does not mean that they have agreed for the provision to be stretched to mean that Malaysia is not a secular but an Islamic State.

There is also the unbalanced account of the Malaysia Agreement on the formation of Malaysia with Sabah and Sarawak, such as the position of the indigenous bumiputras in the two states, who had been left out of the mainstream of development in the past four decades, as well as the problem of the influx of illegal immigrants such as the Project Mahathir resulting in the foreign illegal immigrants exceeding local Sabahans in the state population.

Equally objectionable are the untruths about the Kampong Medan riots putting the blame on the Indians and the Suqiu incident.

Why had the guidebook failed to mention that the Suqiu electoral appeals were endorsed by the Barisan Nasional and the then Prime Minister, Datuk Seri Dr. Mahathir Mohamad before the 1999 general election in order to get the Chinese votes – only for Mahathir to accuse Suqiu and the Malaysian Chinese who supported it as acting like communists and Al-Maunah after the polls, with deplorable incidents like the threat by UMNO Youth leaders to burn down the Selangor Chinese Assembly Hall?

Among the Suqiu appeals listed in the guidebook is “Penghapusan system kuota untuk kemasukan ke universiti”. The government now claims that it has done away with the quota system for university student intake (although a genuine system of meritocracy has yet to be adopted) – but if such an appeal was “extremist”, does it mean that the government is also guilty of extremism in implementing it?

I am very disappointed by the Higher Education Minister, Datuk Mustapha Mohamad’s reply yesterday defending the guidebook as “historic facts” when they are actually “historic lies”. The May 13 Incident, the Taman Medan riots and the Suqiu Incident are “historic facts” but the various claims about them in the guidebook are historic lies.

The Ethnic Relations guidebook must be withdrawn immediately, or it will be a ticking time-bomb aggravating racial polarisatrion not only in the university campuses but also in the larger Malaysian society.

LimKitSiang July 20: Review all varsity courses and school history texbooks

Review all varsity courses and school history texbooks

Time & Date: July 20, 2006 @ 12: 27.50
Categories:

The withdrawal of the tendentious, divisive and mischievous University Putra Malaysia (UPM) Ethnic Relations guidebook announced by the Prime Minister, Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi after the Cabinet meeting yesterday was the right, proper and commendable thing to do.

Abdullah has again “saved the day”, as the guidebook by the two UPM lecturers, Jayum Anak Jawan and Zaid Ahmad, was a total failure in their purported purpose to foster ethnic relations, further aggravating racial polarization not only in the university campuses but in the larger Malaysian society with the biased and divisive slant of the country’s history seeking to pass off “historic lies” as “historic facts” – whether on the May 13 Incident in 1969, the Taman Medan riots in 2001 or the Suqiu electoral appeals controversy 1999-2000.

The question many Malaysians are asking is why the Higher Education Minister Datuk Mustapha Mohamad did not have the intellectual, moral and political courage and integrity to differentiate between right and wrong and announce during the parliamentary debate on the issue initiated by the DAP MP for Bandar Kuching Chong Chieng Jen the withdrawal of the defective and sub-standard Ethnic Relations guidebook.

What was even more unthinkable was that Mustapha could stand up in Parliament on Tuesday to defend the indefensible, claiming that the ‘historic lies” in the guidebook were “historic facts”, and that the guidebook would not be withdrawn?

Abdullah had talked so much about wanting to create a Malaysia with “First-World Infrastructure, First-World Mentality”, but after nearly three years as Prime Minister, Malaysia seems to have become even more “Third-Worldly” as illustrated by the UPM Ethnic Relations guidebook debacle.

What hope is there that Abdullah can make some progress towards a “First-World Infrastructure, First-World Mentality” Malaysia when even his Ministers have failed to develop a First-World mindset and outlook – refusing or unable to discharge their Ministerial responsibilities and having to run to the Cabinet or the Prime Minister on every controversy?

In a “First-World Infrastructure, First-World Mentality” Malaysia, an incident like the UPM Ethnic Relations guidebook debacle would have been properly resolved by the Higher Education Minister without having the issue being taken to the Cabinet – and for the Minister’s refusal to withdraw the guidebook to be countermanded by the Prime Minister!

In fact, there is the larger question. How can Malaysian universities become world-class centres of academic excellence and produce “towering Malaysians” with intellectual, spiritual, moral and political maturity and courage when the Higher Education Minister and lecturers lack these qualities as highlighted by the UPM Ethnic Relations guidebook debacle?

The UPM Ethnic Relations guidebook had been used for six months in the first semester of the UPM. Why had there been no lecturers who had spoken up against its tendentious and divisive content?

Are the two UPM lecturers Jayum Anak Jawan and Zaid Ahmad prepared to publicly apologise for the disservice they had done to ethnic relations, national unity as well as to Malaysian academia?

The special committee which has been set up by the Higher Education Committee to evaluate and review the UPM Ethnic Relations guidebook should not just focus on the three subjects of May 13 Incident, Taman Medan riots and Suqiu controversy which had caused offence, but also other objectionable chapters which failed to give proper recognition to Malaysia’s multi-religious character – particularly in the chapter on “Islam Hadhari dan Hubungan Ethnik” in its emphasis on Malaysia as an Islamic state, which is against the founding nation-building principles in the 1957 “social contract” of a multi-racial, democratic and secular nation with Islam as the official religion but not an Islamic state.

The special committee should also evaluate and review all university curriculum, courses, module and textbooks which misrepresents Malaysian nation-building and history, whether courses on Malaysian Studies, Islamic Civilisation, Malaysian Citizenship, etc.

This special committee should also evaluate and review secondary school textbooks and curriculum, such as secondary school history books where the history of Islamic World has virtually pushed out world history – which is not only ignoring Malaysia’s multi-racial, multi-lingual, multi-cultural and multi-religious characteristics but quite out of sync with the era of globalization.

The Star July 21: The Malaysian not there yet

The Malaysian not there yet

 

PETALING JAYA: A national survey has found that racial integration is still not yet a reality. 

The survey, conducted by the Merdeka Centre for Opinion Research, found that the majority of respondents still identified themselves according to their race and religion. 

When asked what they considered themselves to be first, 61% of the Malays surveyed gave their religion as the answer, while 28% said Malaysian. Interestingly, only 5% gave ethnicity as the answer. 

As for the Chinese, 47% gave their ethnicity as the answer while 44% answered Malaysian. Only 5% gave their religion as the answer.  

Of the Indians surveyed, 75% saw themselves as Malaysians, 14% by their ethnicity and 5% by their religion. 

The survey, entitled National Youth Opinion Poll on Civic Engagement, involved 1,505 Malaysians aged between 18 and 32.  

Of those surveyed, 52% were Malays, 20% Chinese, 8% Indians, 8% natives of Sabah and Sarawak and 2% others. There were 748 male and 757 female respondents. 

The answers were obtained via telephone interviews over a one-month period. 

When presented the statement “One’s responsibility should first begin by helping members of one’s ethnic group before helping others in society”, 63% of the Malay respondents agreed, as did 44% of the Chinese and 22% of the Indian respondents. 

However, on questions related to the future of Malaysian society, the survey found that the majority felt that Malaysians of various ethnic backgrounds were “coming closer together” rather than moving apart. 

When asked specifically what their expectations of Malaysian society were, 43% said they desired a society where the various races and cultures were treated equally, 27% wanted a more democratic society, 18% wanted a society where Islam played a bigger role and 6% said they wanted a Malay-dominant society. 

On the issue of morality, 62% said they wanted the Government to regulate it.  

In terms of ethnic breakdown, 73% of Malays and 67% of Indians wanted morality. As for the Chinese, the majority surveyed favoured morality being self-regulated or by the family. 

The survey also found that Malaysian youth were also not as uncaring as assumed to be.  

When asked whether they were concerned about the problems in their immediate community, 71% said they were. 

This, however, did not necessarily translate to action because 59% of the respondents had never taken part in any community service or any volunteer activity. 

Announcing the results of the survey yesterday, Merdeka Centre programmes director Ibrahim Suffian said the organisation conducted the survey to understand the perception of young Malaysians of society and how they related to issues and concerns affecting the country.  

Bernama July 19: Abdullah Says He Has No Problems With Dr Mahathir

Filed under: Scenic Bridge

Abdullah Says He Has No Problems With Dr Mahathir

PUTRAJAYA, July 19 (Bernama) — Prime Minister Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi said he had no problems with his predecessor Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad although the former prime minister had been criticising him and his administration.

Abdullah also said that he even did not harbour any ill-feeling following the criticisms by Dr Mahathir.

"Why should I have any ill-feeling towards anybody?" he said when asked whether he had any ill-feeling towards Dr Mahathir following criticisms by the latter.

Speaking to reporters at his office, here, Abdullah said he would usually greet Dr Mahathir, shake hands with him and engage in a conversation when he met the former prime minister on occasions.

When he was in Tokyo recently, Abdullah said, he was the one who made the effort to meet Dr Mahathir in the latter’s room after knowing that Dr Mahathir also stayed at the same hotel.

Abdullah said he contacted an officer of Dr Mahathir to enquire whether the former prime minister had the time for them to meet.

"I did not ask him to come and see me. I went to meet him. As a gesture of friendship, just to exchange greetings," he said.

Dr Mahathir had criticised Abdullah and his administration on, among other things, the decision by the government to scrap the project to build a half-bridge to replace the Johor Causeway, and even mentioned that Abdullah was not his first choice as successor.

Asked whether he would sit down with Dr Mahathir in sorting out their differences, Abdullah said: "I have been doing this. I don’t think it is a problem."

Commenting on a proposed mediator to help resolve their differences, Abdullah said that was not a decision of the party and government.

– BERNAMA

Bernama July 20: Syed Hamid Happy With Response To Briefing On Current Issues

Filed under: Scenic Bridge

Syed Hamid Happy With Response To Briefing On Current Issues


PUTRAJAYA, July 20 (Bernama) — Foreign Minister Datuk Seri Syed Hamid Albar Thursday brushed aside claims that he had been booed by Umno members during a session to explain current issues organised by the party.

He said he had been well received when he attended a recent briefing for Selangor Umno members but saw on the Internet later stories purporting that he had been the target of boos from the audience.

"I don’t know who provides this kind of information. I had my officers from my ministry. So I asked them did anybody boo me? I know that I had a lot of claps but no boos," he told a news conference at his ministry here.

Syed Hamid said his intention was to make Umno grassroots understand why the government had to take certain decisions, such as scrapping the proposed bridge to replace the Causeway.

"We explained the situation so that they will be able to make an assessment on the role of the government and the party. I think I’m very happy with the response so far. It has been very positive, it has enriched me and allowed me to explain a lot of issues," he said.

The minister said some of the questions that were of interest to Umno members were how the government arrived at the decision to abort the bridge and whether there really was any agreement on the project.

"We have explained the facts and we do not get into the emotive part of it, whether this is right or wrong. But we’d say this was how the government arrived at the decision," he said.

Syed Hamid pointed out that governments "do make decisions from time to time and sometimes change them".

Ministers and party leaders have been tasked to go to the ground and explain issues raised by former prime minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad when he questioned several government decisions.

Syed Hamid was also asked why the government had not declassified official documents pertaining to negotiations with Singapore over the bridge which occurred after Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi came to power.

He said : "I think no government in the world will open up all its files. The most important thing is we have told the truth on the issues that were raised and we have produced documents with respect to those issues."

It would be hard for the government to function, he said, if every little detail of what transpired during any negotiation were made public.

"No government will show this is the letter I write, this is why we do not write, this is the conversation that we had. I think that will make the function of government impossible. So, we have done what is relevant," he said.

"Even when you are making Coca-cola or Pepsi there are some recipes that you must keep (to yourself)," quipped Syed Hamid.

Earlier, Syed Hamid announced the appointment of Ambassador Mohd Arshad Manzoor Hussain as Malaysia’s Permanent Representative to the United Nations in Vienna, Austria.

On the conflict between Israel and the Hezbollah in Lebanon, the minister disagreed with a suggestion that the Organisation of Islamic Conference was not doing anything to stop Israeli attacks.

He said all parties were working together to see how best to address the situation.

Syed Hamid also received Thai Deputy Prime Minister Surakiart Sathirathai who is the Asean-endorsed candidate in the race for the United Nations’ secretary-general post.

The 48-year-old Surakiart told reporters later that he updated Syed Hamid on his campaign to become the UN supremo.

"Asean ambassadors in New York and elsewhere have been working together strategically and very hard to support me in this campaign. I really appreciate their effort," he said.

He will have a special session with all Asean foreign ministers next week in conjunction with the Asean Ministerial Meeting and other related meetings in Kuala Lumpur.

– BERNAMA

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