Friday, September 4, 2009

1Malaysia Rings Hollow

I have been hearing the phrase 1Malaysia bandied about for quite a while, and, frankly, to me, it rings hollow. It does not reflect reality; in fact it exposes everything that is wanting in Malaysian unity. The most basic definition we can give to 1Malaysia is racial integration, but, tell me, how on earth are we to achieve it when every institution in the country is associated by race and by that very characteristic diametricallly opposed to the concept of racial integration?

The Police is Malay-dominated, the armed forces is Malay-dominated, the judiciary is Malay-dominated, civil government is Malay-dominated, the petrol industry is Malay-dominated, the commercial sector is Chinese-dominated. The plantation sector used to be over-run by Indians but now it is taken over by foreigners.

Education, the one place where integration can take place, is also run by divide and rule. Public education veers in favour of Malay priorities; private education is led by the Chinese who pour millions of Ringgit Malaysia into their extremely well-supported and developed Chinese schools and additional millions in ancillary services to give their children the competitive edge in nearly every aspect of life. In addition, private colleges and university colleges are nearly all owned by the Chinese and run for the ultimate purpose of profit.

Divide and rule -- that has been BN polictics since Merdeka. For a semblance of peace, and to stay in power to spearhead Malay interests, UMNO carved out the nation, apportioning a few areas to its BN partners and entrenched the rule of divide and conquer into the fabric of Malaysian life.

No where is this more obvious than in the media. The New Straits Times is owned by UMNO, the STAR is owned by the MCA and now nearly all the Malay papers are also owned by UMNO or companies linked to it. The leading Chinese newspaper, Sin Chew Jit Poh, is MCA-owned. Nearly all the broadcast stations are owned by UMNO or companies linked to it. All present the government line because if they didn't they will lose the licence to operate.

Against this scenario, what place does 1Malaysia have? It is just a PR gimmick, at best, a slim hope that Malaysians will strive for oneness against the surging tide of partisan politics. But, seriously, when the country is racked by divisive rule and institutions identified by race, where do we start to integrate? People -- without being told -- have always tried to integrate where possible. But, when at every turn you come up against race-based politics that has smeared every aspect of Malaysian life, how do you integrate?

UMNO's rule has brought this nation to the current state of volatile and unmoored politics -- a politics that every thinking individual regards with utter contempt. Yet, changes have been resisted, and superficial where they were implemented.

I think we must forget 1Malaysia and Vision 2020 and all those PR pieces at supposedly unifying the people. Instead, we should put our heads together and come up with well thought of and executed policies that will eventually -- hopefully in the near future -- lead to integration and a win-win situation for all.

I, personally, feel there are only two things to do to get on the track of real integration. Firstly, make it illegal for political parties to own companies. Secondly, revamp the entire education system so that Bahasa Malaysia is the medium of education for all. But at the same time, set in place very strong English learning and pupils own languages programmes from the kindergarten level. If the latter programmes are well implemented, our children will become bi- and tri-lingual and, I believe, will be able to compete with each other irrespective of race. And, they will learn to grow and live together.

If only we have the will to do what is good and right........ !

2 comments:

Bernard said...

I'd like to share with you something that happened in my Feature Writing class today *it's gonna be lengthy, so be patient!*

My lecturer, Datin Noraini *not sure if you knew her* asked the class what do we think about the 1Malaysia concept. The class kept quiet for a while before Joshua Phua *not sure if you knew him* answered "1Malaysia - but for UMNO!".

The lecturer was genuinely in shock! She then opined that 1Malaysia is a good thing in trying times like this! And then, she said "Maybe I'm too optimistic about the whole 1Malaysia thingy"

Personally, I agree with you that 1Malaysia is good PR campaign. On the surface, everyone is harmonious, everyone is at peace with each other, but the real dirt lies with the whole country - the education, the extremist religious teachings, the ones in power...

Something drastic needs to be taken to wake those who are destroying the country! Something that makes sure everyone's rights and economic well-being well protected...

Day Dreamer said...

Well, by seeing how things are going, many young ones who go overseas to continue their studies seldom return after completing their education.

Many bright minds gone to other countries never to return. Don't they know that?

I hear and see *through my relatives* that their parents are urging them to study hard, get scholarships to go abroad and dont return. Australia being top on their list.

My parents, aunts and uncles, all say this country in heading downstream into disaster. Leave while its still possimle~~