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Monday, August 5, 2019

Who’s afraid of khat?

I was a bit perturbed by the accusation that the Malay Jawi alphabet and stylistic khat writing was a sign of Islamisation.
From my knowledge, our Jawi alphabet is an adaptation of the Arabic alphabet to suit the local language, Bahasa Malaysia.
I was told that when coming up with an argument, flip it around a few ways to see if it is ridiculous. And this “Jawi promotes Islamisation” argument can be flipped so many ways to show how idiotic it is.
If Jawi and khat writing was a sign of Islamisation, would that mean the Malay right-wingers were right – that Lim Guan Eng putting Chinese calligraphy on the walls of the Ministry of Finance is in fact a sign that we were now linked to China?
Since Lim also said he had Jawi calligraphy on his wall, would that mean he was also promoting Islamisation?
Since I am typing this in Romanised English, am I promoting or supporting the English colonisation before Merdeka?
God, does that mean the lawyers and judges speaking in Latin have a direct line to the Pope?
Are Ichiban Ramen stores then supporting the past Japanese occupation?
Will anyone still using a sickle or hammer be promoting Soviet Russia?
This seems to be the mentality of the detractors, which seems to be in the same small minded mentality of the Malays who see a cross and think they will be converted.
Let’s just face the sad fact that the main argument here is that we want to remain limited and comforted in our racial silos with set boundaries against each and every culture. That we would prefer each and every race and religion boxed into their separate categories, not impacting or mixing with one another, even if Jawi is already on our bank notes.
If there were talk about how Jawi would be appropriate in this time and age, that khat was an outdated form of art, I would say the same about poetry.
Heck, wouldn’t we argue the same about all forms of art and artistic expression altogether from calligraphy to interpretive dance?
Why bother having a digital recreation of the Mona Lisa when someone can just post a selfie on Instagram, if we want to talk about current relevancy?
Personally, I’ve never understood art in any shape or form. Even going to the Victoria and Albert Museum in London and looking at a recreation of Michelangelo’s David does not mean I understand it.
Even if I find it a beautiful sculpture, I can’t explain why. Nor can I explain why I find Da Vinci’s The Last Supper intriguing, or that the Chinese calligraphy during every Chinese New Year season fascinating.
I might not understand the khat art of Cufica, but I notice people who appreciate it. Just as much as I notice people going nuts over Japanese script and block prints of a wave by Hokusai, Van Gogh’s Sunflower collection, the Gutenberg bible or even the gold leaf Koran.
Art, religion, calligraphy, cursive writing, Jawi, Latin or even Chinese characters used, none of this truly have an impact on future learning and technology such as artificial intelligence and coding, robotics and big data.
But what it does is this – it sets us apart from the technology we are developing. It is what makes humans human.
Now, of course given time, an AI could learn to write a haiku or deliver news in iambic pentameter, but only by viewing and recreating human work.
So when someone tells me culture should not be dictated in schools, I disagree as well. Culture is the one thing we should be teaching in schools because it makes us one nation that understands each other, even if it starts with taboos and customs.
That is the basis of unity and cultural preservation.
If you still don’t get why cultural preservation is important or in vogue, I suggest you rewatch Black Panther and understand that those are cultural representations of real African tribes united as one, albeit in a fictitious landscape.
Which is why Maszlee Malik should take heart in promoting all calligraphy, not just khat.
All this said, there are a lot of things wrong with our education system for sure.
But this idea isn’t one of them. It is not some move to radicalise school kids to Islam – if it was then every one holding a Malaysian ringgit would be promoting the same and we should be using the US dollar.
But then again, it has Latin on it and maybe that might make us all Catholic if we follow the mentality of those opposing the measure.
Hafidz Baharom is an FMT reader.

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